1 00:00:01,200 --> 00:00:05,360 Speaker 1: The issues, the interviews and the insight. Ryan Bridge on 2 00:00:05,600 --> 00:00:09,680 Speaker 1: Earli Initia with one roof love where you live, news talks, 3 00:00:09,720 --> 00:00:10,120 Speaker 1: there'd be. 4 00:00:10,480 --> 00:00:13,480 Speaker 2: Good morning, Welcome to Friday. The calls for Willis and 5 00:00:13,560 --> 00:00:16,000 Speaker 2: Luxurn now to resign. We'll look at those, The shocker 6 00:00:16,120 --> 00:00:19,720 Speaker 2: Q two number, the black Ferns, Georgia Miller, the mystery injury, 7 00:00:19,840 --> 00:00:22,200 Speaker 2: mystery no more. We're in the UK with Trump and 8 00:00:22,239 --> 00:00:25,600 Speaker 2: Starmer and Mark Mitchell joins the program on the ankle 9 00:00:25,680 --> 00:00:30,360 Speaker 2: bracelet's go and walk about when they shouldn't. The agenda 10 00:00:30,480 --> 00:00:33,000 Speaker 2: it is Friday, the nineteenth of September. Trump and Starmer 11 00:00:33,040 --> 00:00:35,560 Speaker 2: of how to joint press this after the state visit. 12 00:00:35,640 --> 00:00:38,240 Speaker 2: During the state visits, and Trump has some advice to 13 00:00:38,280 --> 00:00:39,640 Speaker 2: Starmer on the border control. 14 00:00:40,080 --> 00:00:42,080 Speaker 3: I told the Prime Minis Teroe would stop it. 15 00:00:42,240 --> 00:00:45,160 Speaker 2: And it doesn't matter if you call out the military. 16 00:00:45,200 --> 00:00:46,960 Speaker 3: It doesn't matter what means you use. 17 00:00:47,080 --> 00:00:50,840 Speaker 4: But it's going to destroy it destroys countries from within. 18 00:00:52,320 --> 00:00:52,520 Speaker 1: Right. 19 00:00:52,720 --> 00:00:55,760 Speaker 2: They've also signed a tech deal. This is AI quantum computing, 20 00:00:55,840 --> 00:00:59,480 Speaker 2: nuclear power and big text piling and Microsoft dropping twenty 21 00:00:59,480 --> 00:01:03,160 Speaker 2: two billion pounds into the UK, biggest spend outside of America. 22 00:01:03,240 --> 00:01:07,040 Speaker 2: Google five billion for II research in Vidia five hundred 23 00:01:07,120 --> 00:01:09,920 Speaker 2: million pounds for new data centers. 24 00:01:09,280 --> 00:01:13,200 Speaker 3: Two one hundred and fifty billion pounds flowing both ways 25 00:01:13,280 --> 00:01:17,480 Speaker 3: across the Atlantic. That is a record expected to create 26 00:01:17,840 --> 00:01:21,640 Speaker 3: fifteen thousand jobs here in the United Kingdom, high skilled 27 00:01:21,760 --> 00:01:26,319 Speaker 3: jobs in cutting edge sectors where people can build careers 28 00:01:26,600 --> 00:01:27,479 Speaker 3: for the long term. 29 00:01:27,640 --> 00:01:29,880 Speaker 2: Back how I'm green and p Benjamin Doyle's gone, but 30 00:01:29,959 --> 00:01:30,600 Speaker 2: not before this. 31 00:01:31,240 --> 00:01:34,880 Speaker 5: I did not come here on my terms. I was 32 00:01:34,959 --> 00:01:43,039 Speaker 5: summoned under difficult and unexpected circumstances, but I accepted that call. Today, however, 33 00:01:43,480 --> 00:01:47,800 Speaker 5: I leave by choice, not because I want to, but 34 00:01:47,880 --> 00:01:50,640 Speaker 5: because I have chosen to put my child first. 35 00:01:54,200 --> 00:01:57,520 Speaker 1: Views and views you trust. To start your day, It's 36 00:01:57,600 --> 00:02:02,120 Speaker 1: early edition with Ryan Bridge roof love where you live? 37 00:02:02,400 --> 00:02:04,360 Speaker 2: News talks. He'd be so Dan as one of the greats, 38 00:02:04,400 --> 00:02:06,720 Speaker 2: won't they right? Eight minutes after five news talks, he'd 39 00:02:06,760 --> 00:02:09,920 Speaker 2: b I see that in the Herald this morning, Matthew 40 00:02:09,919 --> 00:02:13,880 Speaker 2: Howson unsurprisingly is piling on and saying, yes, this is 41 00:02:13,919 --> 00:02:16,160 Speaker 2: time for Luxe and to go. I'll read you just 42 00:02:16,200 --> 00:02:20,639 Speaker 2: a little bit, he says, no other option now. The 43 00:02:20,919 --> 00:02:24,800 Speaker 2: disastrous GDP result reveals Christopher Luxe has failed and what 44 00:02:24,919 --> 00:02:27,000 Speaker 2: voters say the most important part of his job is 45 00:02:27,080 --> 00:02:29,960 Speaker 2: I think his resignation is now the only sure way 46 00:02:30,040 --> 00:02:33,040 Speaker 2: to avoid the catastrophe of a labor green government reliant 47 00:02:33,080 --> 00:02:35,280 Speaker 2: on to party. Marti, I think he's wrong. We'll talk 48 00:02:35,320 --> 00:02:37,240 Speaker 2: about that a little later in the program. Keen to 49 00:02:37,280 --> 00:02:39,680 Speaker 2: hear your thoughts. Nine two ninety two is the number 50 00:02:39,720 --> 00:02:42,720 Speaker 2: to text eight minutes after five. Now to the US, 51 00:02:42,800 --> 00:02:46,440 Speaker 2: this Jimmy Kimmel business is nuts. I reckon, Have you 52 00:02:46,480 --> 00:02:49,480 Speaker 2: caught up with this? The right is now as guilty 53 00:02:49,520 --> 00:02:52,239 Speaker 2: as the left on cancel culture. They all need to 54 00:02:52,360 --> 00:02:55,120 Speaker 2: check themselves. Here's what he actually said on his show. 55 00:02:55,560 --> 00:02:57,960 Speaker 6: We had some new lows over the weekend with the 56 00:02:58,080 --> 00:03:01,519 Speaker 6: Maga gang desperately trying character to rise this kid who 57 00:03:01,600 --> 00:03:04,239 Speaker 6: murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, 58 00:03:04,280 --> 00:03:07,840 Speaker 6: and everything they can to score political points from it. 59 00:03:08,040 --> 00:03:10,799 Speaker 2: Okay, did he incite violence? No? Did he call for 60 00:03:10,880 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 2: civil war? 61 00:03:11,600 --> 00:03:11,639 Speaker 7: No? 62 00:03:11,919 --> 00:03:13,400 Speaker 2: Did he threaten harm to anyone? 63 00:03:13,480 --> 00:03:13,560 Speaker 8: No? 64 00:03:13,960 --> 00:03:17,400 Speaker 2: Was it insensitive? Yes, because someone's just died. But that's 65 00:03:17,440 --> 00:03:20,760 Speaker 2: no reason to cancel Somebody canceling a talk show host 66 00:03:20,800 --> 00:03:22,040 Speaker 2: for talking is bonkers. 67 00:03:22,800 --> 00:03:24,680 Speaker 6: This is the ultimate in cancel culture. 68 00:03:25,040 --> 00:03:28,480 Speaker 9: We're losing our our first Amendment rates it's freedom of. 69 00:03:28,480 --> 00:03:31,880 Speaker 2: Speech can canceled. 70 00:03:33,639 --> 00:03:35,360 Speaker 10: To me, that's bizarre. 71 00:03:35,800 --> 00:03:37,880 Speaker 11: It's fine if you don't like these comedians, and it's 72 00:03:37,880 --> 00:03:38,720 Speaker 11: fine if you don't like. 73 00:03:38,720 --> 00:03:44,040 Speaker 6: These shows, but what if you say something that someone 74 00:03:44,080 --> 00:03:44,560 Speaker 6: doesn't like. 75 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:48,400 Speaker 2: If anything, it might teach the far left the value 76 00:03:48,400 --> 00:03:50,880 Speaker 2: of free speech. You know, it's usually them that call 77 00:03:50,960 --> 00:03:54,000 Speaker 2: for the sackings, of course, but the far right, if 78 00:03:54,000 --> 00:03:56,040 Speaker 2: that's what they want to be called, should be equally 79 00:03:56,080 --> 00:03:59,480 Speaker 2: ashamed here. The more we cancel people, the less we listen, 80 00:03:59,800 --> 00:04:04,240 Speaker 2: the more divided we become. Ryan Bridge, just gone ten 81 00:04:04,280 --> 00:04:07,080 Speaker 2: after five nine two ninety two is the number to text. 82 00:04:07,080 --> 00:04:08,800 Speaker 2: We'd love to hear from you this morning. Now we 83 00:04:08,840 --> 00:04:11,520 Speaker 2: will get to Vincent mcavinie in the UK Europe. That's 84 00:04:11,560 --> 00:04:13,440 Speaker 2: around quarter to six this morning for the latest on 85 00:04:13,520 --> 00:04:16,279 Speaker 2: Trump and Starmer. Next though, we're going to Mark Mitchell 86 00:04:16,440 --> 00:04:19,520 Speaker 2: corrections Minister. Why Well, you know when you get a 87 00:04:19,560 --> 00:04:21,920 Speaker 2: little ankle bracelet instead of going to jail, you get 88 00:04:21,920 --> 00:04:23,760 Speaker 2: an ankle bracelet, and they say go home and be 89 00:04:23,800 --> 00:04:26,599 Speaker 2: a good boy or girl and stay there. Well they're not. 90 00:04:27,480 --> 00:04:28,400 Speaker 2: That's next. 91 00:04:31,360 --> 00:04:33,960 Speaker 1: The news you need this morning and the in depth 92 00:04:33,960 --> 00:04:38,479 Speaker 1: analysis Early edition with Ryan Bridge and one Root Love 93 00:04:38,520 --> 00:04:40,600 Speaker 1: where you live news talks a'd be Brian. 94 00:04:40,640 --> 00:04:43,719 Speaker 2: I think Nikola Willis needs to go because she's simply 95 00:04:43,760 --> 00:04:45,520 Speaker 2: out of her depth and you could see it yesterday 96 00:04:45,520 --> 00:04:47,880 Speaker 2: twelve after five. I'll give you the new SEAK employment 97 00:04:47,920 --> 00:04:50,920 Speaker 2: numbers shortly. First, if you've seen more people out with 98 00:04:50,960 --> 00:04:54,800 Speaker 2: the corrections ankle bracelets on lately, we know why. Ankle 99 00:04:54,880 --> 00:04:58,200 Speaker 2: monitor escapes have increased from sixty four and twenty fifteen 100 00:04:58,240 --> 00:05:00,839 Speaker 2: to more than eight hundred an in the last year. 101 00:05:01,240 --> 00:05:04,400 Speaker 2: The number of electronic monitoring is also up through the 102 00:05:04,520 --> 00:05:07,160 Speaker 2: roof though, from twelve hundred to six thousand, so there's 103 00:05:07,160 --> 00:05:09,760 Speaker 2: some context. Mark Mitch was the Corrections minister with us 104 00:05:09,800 --> 00:05:12,800 Speaker 2: this morning. Minister, good morning, Hey, good morning, Ryan. You're 105 00:05:12,800 --> 00:05:16,120 Speaker 2: still back in your finance minister. You know you're prime Minister. 106 00:05:16,520 --> 00:05:18,400 Speaker 2: What do you think of these calls for them to resign? 107 00:05:19,279 --> 00:05:21,120 Speaker 8: No hand Per said, I'd bet them. I mean, you know, 108 00:05:21,760 --> 00:05:24,320 Speaker 8: this is my second round in government. Is an actual 109 00:05:24,320 --> 00:05:27,159 Speaker 8: government and like the first time around, we had we 110 00:05:27,240 --> 00:05:30,320 Speaker 8: inherited a roup port economy and some real issues in 111 00:05:30,360 --> 00:05:32,159 Speaker 8: the economy, and it took us a while. We turned 112 00:05:32,160 --> 00:05:33,599 Speaker 8: it around, and I don't know if you've meant it. 113 00:05:33,640 --> 00:05:35,320 Speaker 8: But it used to be called the rock star economy. 114 00:05:35,800 --> 00:05:39,680 Speaker 8: This time around we inherited a much bigger problem and 115 00:05:39,720 --> 00:05:41,440 Speaker 8: it's going to take a bit of time to turn around. 116 00:05:41,880 --> 00:05:44,400 Speaker 8: The Finance minister is doing the outstanding job. 117 00:05:44,440 --> 00:05:47,360 Speaker 2: And so as the promise, would you call negative point 118 00:05:47,440 --> 00:05:48,240 Speaker 2: nine outstanding? 119 00:05:49,880 --> 00:05:52,159 Speaker 8: Well, like I said to you, there's some there's definitely 120 00:05:52,279 --> 00:05:54,040 Speaker 8: a few head ons there. There's no doubt about that. 121 00:05:54,040 --> 00:05:57,520 Speaker 8: There was some good growth before the negative point nine. 122 00:05:58,200 --> 00:06:00,440 Speaker 8: And like I just sit to you, we last time 123 00:06:00,440 --> 00:06:02,760 Speaker 8: I was in government and was nationally here John t 124 00:06:04,200 --> 00:06:07,040 Speaker 8: in Bill English, we inherited really big problems from. 125 00:06:06,880 --> 00:06:07,599 Speaker 2: The labor government. 126 00:06:07,640 --> 00:06:10,360 Speaker 8: This is this political cycle we seen to happen. It 127 00:06:10,360 --> 00:06:12,600 Speaker 8: seems to happen as that labor comes in, they throw money, 128 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:16,120 Speaker 8: were nothing gets delivered. They reach up huge debt for us. 129 00:06:16,720 --> 00:06:20,920 Speaker 8: I mean we're paying angrily about eight nine billion dollars ten. 130 00:06:22,120 --> 00:06:25,320 Speaker 2: All right, so just stick to the plan, stick. 131 00:06:25,160 --> 00:06:27,200 Speaker 8: Run the police force four times over on now. 132 00:06:27,279 --> 00:06:30,200 Speaker 2: Stick to the plan, stick to the script. All right, minister, 133 00:06:30,440 --> 00:06:33,679 Speaker 2: Let's talk about this electronic monitoring. So in twenty fifteen 134 00:06:33,800 --> 00:06:37,440 Speaker 2: in percentage increase becomes important because there's been an increase 135 00:06:37,440 --> 00:06:41,040 Speaker 2: in those who were getting electronic monitoring. Right, So twenty 136 00:06:41,120 --> 00:06:44,520 Speaker 2: fifteen it was five percent, twenty twenty five is absconding 137 00:06:44,680 --> 00:06:48,279 Speaker 2: is now fourteen percent? So what how did that happen? 138 00:06:50,200 --> 00:06:53,520 Speaker 8: Okay, well, you've got different numbers. I've I've got eleven percent, 139 00:06:53,560 --> 00:06:57,960 Speaker 8: but it's actually dropped significantly. They're doing equations are quite 140 00:06:58,320 --> 00:07:01,680 Speaker 8: quite SI, we're doing out standing job. Yes, to number 141 00:07:01,720 --> 00:07:06,040 Speaker 8: of people on electronic bail has increased, you know, it's 142 00:07:06,040 --> 00:07:10,560 Speaker 8: getting up towards thirty zerousand. The reason for that is 143 00:07:10,600 --> 00:07:14,960 Speaker 8: because there we're now wrapping consequences. Well, we want consequences 144 00:07:15,000 --> 00:07:16,800 Speaker 8: to actually that's the serious of the offense. And I've 145 00:07:16,840 --> 00:07:19,680 Speaker 8: also we've also had to deal with a massive increase 146 00:07:19,720 --> 00:07:23,640 Speaker 8: of people coming into the correction system that's so prioritizing 147 00:07:23,720 --> 00:07:24,400 Speaker 8: public safety. 148 00:07:24,520 --> 00:07:26,280 Speaker 2: So I've got here from newstalks. There be as a 149 00:07:26,320 --> 00:07:30,560 Speaker 2: proportion of individuals on electronically monitored bail, the absconding rate 150 00:07:30,680 --> 00:07:33,440 Speaker 2: increased from five percent to fourteen percent. Is that wrong? 151 00:07:35,320 --> 00:07:39,360 Speaker 8: Has gone from what twenty fifteen to eleven percent? Is 152 00:07:39,360 --> 00:07:41,160 Speaker 8: a thirty one July twenty twenty five. 153 00:07:41,400 --> 00:07:44,440 Speaker 2: Okay, so eleven percent or fourteen percent that's gone up? 154 00:07:45,520 --> 00:07:49,320 Speaker 8: Yeah, So yeah, So when it's actually coming down. So 155 00:07:49,360 --> 00:07:51,960 Speaker 8: if you look at what they're doing, it's actually starting 156 00:07:51,960 --> 00:07:55,640 Speaker 8: to come down. But then it's quite that basically Ryan 157 00:07:55,800 --> 00:07:57,600 Speaker 8: that there has been a big increase in people on 158 00:07:58,000 --> 00:08:00,600 Speaker 8: electronic bail, more than we would have liked because what 159 00:08:00,640 --> 00:08:03,080 Speaker 8: was happening is we wore there's people getting electroc bail 160 00:08:03,160 --> 00:08:05,480 Speaker 8: that we thought should literally be in prison. So that's 161 00:08:05,480 --> 00:08:08,440 Speaker 8: why we've made changes changed to the what. 162 00:08:08,400 --> 00:08:11,840 Speaker 2: Does absconding mean you like it is that cutting the. 163 00:08:11,800 --> 00:08:16,360 Speaker 8: Brace means basically, what it means is just not complying 164 00:08:16,800 --> 00:08:20,640 Speaker 8: with the orders that are in place. So Corrections have 165 00:08:20,720 --> 00:08:23,560 Speaker 8: got teams are working twenty four seven that are mooriforing 166 00:08:23,600 --> 00:08:25,640 Speaker 8: that they work very closely with the police. They informed 167 00:08:25,640 --> 00:08:28,320 Speaker 8: the police when someone breaches there electroc bail and the 168 00:08:28,320 --> 00:08:30,240 Speaker 8: police take exture on that. And that's why you start 169 00:08:30,280 --> 00:08:32,640 Speaker 8: to see our reduction as well as because you know 170 00:08:32,679 --> 00:08:35,160 Speaker 8: we are as the incoming government. We've been very clear 171 00:08:35,800 --> 00:08:38,480 Speaker 8: that there's going to be consequences that match, you know, 172 00:08:38,520 --> 00:08:40,880 Speaker 8: the serious. 173 00:08:39,880 --> 00:08:41,760 Speaker 2: Just how can you say it's coming down when the 174 00:08:41,840 --> 00:08:45,240 Speaker 2: rate's gone from five percent to that's eleven or fourteen, 175 00:08:45,679 --> 00:08:46,760 Speaker 2: that's going up, isn't it? 176 00:08:47,640 --> 00:08:49,840 Speaker 8: Well, No, no, because if you look at if you 177 00:08:49,840 --> 00:08:54,000 Speaker 8: look at twenty nineteen, it was nineteen percent, twenty twenty 178 00:08:54,040 --> 00:08:57,760 Speaker 8: seventeen percent, twenty twenty one to sixteen percent, twenty twenty 179 00:08:57,800 --> 00:09:01,840 Speaker 8: two fifteen percent, twenty twenty three, twenty twenty. 180 00:09:01,559 --> 00:09:03,079 Speaker 2: Four, fourteen. 181 00:09:04,520 --> 00:09:08,560 Speaker 8: To July twenty five eleven. Gotcha, So in the last 182 00:09:08,559 --> 00:09:09,600 Speaker 8: two years it's coming down. 183 00:09:09,640 --> 00:09:13,440 Speaker 2: All right, minister, appreciate your time. Mark Mitchell is the corrections. Minister, 184 00:09:13,480 --> 00:09:15,559 Speaker 2: time is seventeen after five, lots of your text to 185 00:09:15,600 --> 00:09:18,240 Speaker 2: get to next and we'll talk black ferns and that 186 00:09:18,320 --> 00:09:20,520 Speaker 2: injury for Georgia Miller. News Talk said B. 187 00:09:21,720 --> 00:09:24,240 Speaker 1: The first word on the News of the Day early 188 00:09:24,440 --> 00:09:28,600 Speaker 1: edition with Ryan Bridge and one roofe love where you live. 189 00:09:28,920 --> 00:09:29,760 Speaker 1: News Talk said B. 190 00:09:29,960 --> 00:09:32,560 Speaker 2: It is five nineteen Ryan, for goodness sake, it's the 191 00:09:32,559 --> 00:09:35,319 Speaker 2: Reserve Bank that needs to be held to account. Remember 192 00:09:35,480 --> 00:09:38,000 Speaker 2: they are independent, says Die morning. Ryan. We have a 193 00:09:38,040 --> 00:09:40,280 Speaker 2: saying on the farm. You have one bad year, it 194 00:09:40,320 --> 00:09:43,600 Speaker 2: puts you back five. These people that criticize this is 195 00:09:43,640 --> 00:09:47,480 Speaker 2: the people calling for the resignation of Luxon and Willis 196 00:09:47,600 --> 00:09:51,199 Speaker 2: or Willis. The people that criticize have bugger all understanding 197 00:09:51,200 --> 00:09:53,440 Speaker 2: of the economy. Chairs Hamish Hamish. Good morning to you. 198 00:09:53,520 --> 00:09:56,319 Speaker 2: It's just gone twenty after five and Ryan Bred share 199 00:09:56,360 --> 00:09:58,040 Speaker 2: my views with you on that in just a second. 200 00:09:58,080 --> 00:10:02,720 Speaker 2: First women's rugby the any final time is tomorrow's six am. 201 00:10:02,760 --> 00:10:06,720 Speaker 2: The Black Ferns, unbeaten against Spain, Japan, Ireland and South 202 00:10:06,760 --> 00:10:10,440 Speaker 2: Africa now take on second ranked Canada. Big chat is 203 00:10:10,480 --> 00:10:12,760 Speaker 2: about that injury to Georgia Miller. Ricky s fanelle Is 204 00:10:12,800 --> 00:10:16,280 Speaker 2: Skysport commentated with us this morning. Ricky, good morning morning 205 00:10:16,320 --> 00:10:18,280 Speaker 2: to hear Ryan. How are you very good? Thank you 206 00:10:18,640 --> 00:10:21,120 Speaker 2: Georgia Miller. I see there was there was apparently a 207 00:10:21,120 --> 00:10:23,920 Speaker 2: post put up by a New Zealand rugby contractor that 208 00:10:23,960 --> 00:10:26,360 Speaker 2: said it was a hamstring injury that was taken down 209 00:10:26,440 --> 00:10:28,840 Speaker 2: or edited or something. Do we know what's going on here? 210 00:10:29,800 --> 00:10:30,040 Speaker 8: Yeah? 211 00:10:30,040 --> 00:10:32,640 Speaker 12: Look I think probably a mountain has been made out 212 00:10:32,640 --> 00:10:35,040 Speaker 12: of a Molehillowey, but with this one it probably not 213 00:10:35,120 --> 00:10:38,719 Speaker 12: helped by this sort of the wording around it. From 214 00:10:38,720 --> 00:10:41,520 Speaker 12: my understanding, it's not a major injury, but it's obviously 215 00:10:41,640 --> 00:10:43,760 Speaker 12: enough to keep her out of a Rugby World Cup 216 00:10:43,760 --> 00:10:46,640 Speaker 12: semi final, which as we know, is a really unfortunate 217 00:10:46,679 --> 00:10:48,520 Speaker 12: for her as a person and a player, but for 218 00:10:48,679 --> 00:10:50,960 Speaker 12: New Zealand because she's I mean, she's a once in 219 00:10:51,000 --> 00:10:54,800 Speaker 12: a generation player, Georgia Miller on them. The bright side though, 220 00:10:55,080 --> 00:10:57,760 Speaker 12: her replacement Kennedy took awaf who is not a bad 221 00:10:57,800 --> 00:11:00,200 Speaker 12: player to be fish. He's very, very handy. I think 222 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:01,960 Speaker 12: was one of the best in Super rugby. And it 223 00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:04,480 Speaker 12: also means Leila Sati can come on to the bench 224 00:11:04,640 --> 00:11:07,600 Speaker 12: bench and she's had an outstanding tournament, so you know, 225 00:11:07,640 --> 00:11:09,800 Speaker 12: it gives the Black fans options. Yes, it is a 226 00:11:09,800 --> 00:11:14,400 Speaker 12: massive loss. Georgia is absolutely incredible. Fingers crossed if they 227 00:11:14,440 --> 00:11:17,560 Speaker 12: do go through that she would be available for a 228 00:11:17,600 --> 00:11:21,120 Speaker 12: potential final next week. As I understand, the injury isn't 229 00:11:21,120 --> 00:11:24,240 Speaker 12: a major and that's the case. But yeah, I guess 230 00:11:24,240 --> 00:11:26,160 Speaker 12: it's you know, for the Black Ferns and for Kenny 231 00:11:26,200 --> 00:11:28,160 Speaker 12: tok go off in particular, it's like, right, go out, 232 00:11:28,240 --> 00:11:30,200 Speaker 12: job done, and go out. 233 00:11:30,040 --> 00:11:33,440 Speaker 2: And do that job. And Canada, how have they been 234 00:11:33,480 --> 00:11:35,640 Speaker 2: performing so far in the competition and what do we 235 00:11:35,800 --> 00:11:37,520 Speaker 2: need to look out for most. 236 00:11:38,120 --> 00:11:40,560 Speaker 12: They've been outstanding. I think they've been the best team 237 00:11:40,600 --> 00:11:43,000 Speaker 12: in the competition. They played the best forty minutes of 238 00:11:43,040 --> 00:11:46,120 Speaker 12: any side in the first half against Australia last week. 239 00:11:46,200 --> 00:11:48,520 Speaker 12: They beat the Black Ferns last year, they drew with 240 00:11:48,600 --> 00:11:51,720 Speaker 12: them in May this year. They played very similar style 241 00:11:51,760 --> 00:11:53,560 Speaker 12: to New Zealand. They will they will want to play, 242 00:11:53,559 --> 00:11:55,960 Speaker 12: they want to run, they play really fast, but they 243 00:11:55,960 --> 00:11:59,480 Speaker 12: can be physical as well. So it is a superb matchup. 244 00:12:00,000 --> 00:12:02,560 Speaker 12: We've got Olympic silver medalists in their team, players who've 245 00:12:02,559 --> 00:12:03,040 Speaker 12: been on the. 246 00:12:02,960 --> 00:12:04,679 Speaker 2: Big stage that you know. 247 00:12:05,120 --> 00:12:07,200 Speaker 12: To me, it is the best match of the tournament 248 00:12:07,640 --> 00:12:09,760 Speaker 12: on paper at least looks like the wead is going 249 00:12:09,800 --> 00:12:11,800 Speaker 12: to be nice and dry for both teams too, so 250 00:12:12,120 --> 00:12:15,480 Speaker 12: that'll be a factor giving them that opportunity to run 251 00:12:15,520 --> 00:12:18,400 Speaker 12: and to rarely play. So it should be an absolute 252 00:12:18,440 --> 00:12:20,840 Speaker 12: belter and perfect time at six am on a Saturday 253 00:12:20,840 --> 00:12:22,880 Speaker 12: morning in New Zealand as well. That's that's a bacon 254 00:12:22,920 --> 00:12:25,080 Speaker 12: and eggs bricky, if ever there was one frigant. 255 00:12:25,120 --> 00:12:26,960 Speaker 2: We look forward to it. Ricky. Thank you, Ricky sonel 256 00:12:27,160 --> 00:12:31,400 Speaker 2: Skysport commentator. The game is tomorrow six o'clock Black Ferns, 257 00:12:31,440 --> 00:12:33,520 Speaker 2: be candidate. It's twenty two minutes after five. 258 00:12:35,160 --> 00:12:35,280 Speaker 8: Right. 259 00:12:35,320 --> 00:12:37,040 Speaker 2: Here's the good news for you this morning. Because we 260 00:12:37,080 --> 00:12:39,959 Speaker 2: have the shaker from Q two. We've had flat jobs 261 00:12:40,080 --> 00:12:44,199 Speaker 2: numbers from the Sikh New Zealand employment report from basically 262 00:12:44,240 --> 00:12:48,760 Speaker 2: October last year until May, and finally their August report 263 00:12:48,840 --> 00:12:51,840 Speaker 2: brings some good news and it is clear signs of 264 00:12:52,280 --> 00:12:55,920 Speaker 2: hiring activity picking up. So you know, here's a bright 265 00:12:55,960 --> 00:12:59,480 Speaker 2: spot for you. Volumes are up one percent month on 266 00:12:59,559 --> 00:13:02,400 Speaker 2: month and the prior two months they have been adjusted 267 00:13:02,520 --> 00:13:07,520 Speaker 2: up as well, so one percent increases respectively. Annual growth 268 00:13:07,600 --> 00:13:11,560 Speaker 2: now up four percent, first time that job abs have 269 00:13:11,640 --> 00:13:14,080 Speaker 2: grown year on year since November of twenty twenty two. 270 00:13:14,960 --> 00:13:18,280 Speaker 2: Applications are up two percent in July. That's a new 271 00:13:18,320 --> 00:13:22,800 Speaker 2: record high solid growth in the big industries Manufacturing, transport 272 00:13:22,840 --> 00:13:26,520 Speaker 2: logistics up three percent, trade in services up two percent. 273 00:13:27,240 --> 00:13:29,280 Speaker 2: And this is this is across the board. This is 274 00:13:29,400 --> 00:13:35,160 Speaker 2: broad based increases for most industries and crucially for the 275 00:13:35,280 --> 00:13:39,200 Speaker 2: larger regions including Auckland, which is now up two months consecutively. 276 00:13:39,640 --> 00:13:41,800 Speaker 2: Twenty three after five News Talks. 277 00:13:41,600 --> 00:13:46,320 Speaker 1: MB the early edition full show podcast on iHeartRadio powered 278 00:13:46,360 --> 00:13:49,040 Speaker 1: by Newstalks IV five. 279 00:13:49,040 --> 00:13:52,240 Speaker 2: Twenty five News Talks MB has Nikola Willis failed on 280 00:13:52,360 --> 00:13:56,040 Speaker 2: growth in her year of growth so far. Yes, we've 281 00:13:56,080 --> 00:13:58,920 Speaker 2: gone nowhere in six months. Quarter two basically wiped out 282 00:13:59,000 --> 00:14:04,000 Speaker 2: Quarter one. Should she resign? No? Why Trump's tarris She 283 00:14:04,080 --> 00:14:07,160 Speaker 2: didn't see them coming, sure, but nobody saw them coming. 284 00:14:07,679 --> 00:14:11,600 Speaker 2: Markets thought he was bluffing a negotiation tactic until he wasn't. 285 00:14:12,080 --> 00:14:14,240 Speaker 2: Businesses and mums and dads sat on the cash to 286 00:14:14,280 --> 00:14:16,200 Speaker 2: wait it out, which is a reasonable response to an 287 00:14:16,280 --> 00:14:20,400 Speaker 2: uncertain future. Should she borrow and spend more, she can't. 288 00:14:21,040 --> 00:14:23,800 Speaker 2: It'd be political sacrilege for a party elected to do 289 00:14:23,840 --> 00:14:27,760 Speaker 2: the opposite. Besides, she's already borrowing Robertson level cash, the 290 00:14:27,840 --> 00:14:31,600 Speaker 2: interest tabs nearing ten billion bucks, and rating agencies are 291 00:14:31,600 --> 00:14:35,080 Speaker 2: watching closely. The RBNZ printed money like it was going 292 00:14:35,120 --> 00:14:38,920 Speaker 2: out of fashion. Governments here and abroad overcook, the COVID 293 00:14:38,960 --> 00:14:42,440 Speaker 2: response with border controls, the world ground to a halt, 294 00:14:43,000 --> 00:14:48,400 Speaker 2: we artificially concocted, and the inflationary wildfire so hot that 295 00:14:48,440 --> 00:14:51,800 Speaker 2: the ambers burned close to the Central limits to this day. 296 00:14:52,560 --> 00:14:55,600 Speaker 2: As for those calls from Douglas and Cove for Willis 297 00:14:55,640 --> 00:14:59,560 Speaker 2: to her head on a stake. That's what they're asking for. 298 00:15:00,000 --> 00:15:02,880 Speaker 2: You've got to ask what exactly is it they want 299 00:15:03,320 --> 00:15:07,400 Speaker 2: and what impact would it have had had she gone 300 00:15:07,520 --> 00:15:10,480 Speaker 2: full Ruth Richardson in Budgets one and two, Getting the 301 00:15:10,520 --> 00:15:14,000 Speaker 2: books in line sooner. That growth number we saw yesterday, 302 00:15:14,240 --> 00:15:17,960 Speaker 2: the one that prompted the press release calling for her scalp, 303 00:15:18,120 --> 00:15:20,200 Speaker 2: would have been a hell of a lot worse than 304 00:15:20,320 --> 00:15:25,120 Speaker 2: zero point nine negative. So the waiting game continues, which 305 00:15:25,160 --> 00:15:28,000 Speaker 2: is cold comfort to many, but the medicine for such 306 00:15:28,040 --> 00:15:31,880 Speaker 2: a nasty illness was always going to be hard to swallow. 307 00:15:32,560 --> 00:15:36,000 Speaker 2: Bryan Bridge by twenty seven News Talks eb Over in 308 00:15:36,040 --> 00:15:38,440 Speaker 2: the UK. Nigel Farraj, I mean, this guy could seriously 309 00:15:38,480 --> 00:15:41,840 Speaker 2: be the next British Prime minister if you can keep 310 00:15:41,960 --> 00:15:44,760 Speaker 2: up the momentum and we'll see what happens with those 311 00:15:44,800 --> 00:15:47,440 Speaker 2: local elections are happening next year. But if you can 312 00:15:47,520 --> 00:15:50,680 Speaker 2: keep this momentum up and the immigration thing is still 313 00:15:50,680 --> 00:15:53,600 Speaker 2: a problem, then yeah, I mean he could be. It's 314 00:15:53,600 --> 00:15:57,440 Speaker 2: a potential. Now he along with people like Rudy Giuliani 315 00:15:58,400 --> 00:16:00,200 Speaker 2: doing this weird thing. I don't know if you know 316 00:16:00,200 --> 00:16:03,000 Speaker 2: about cameo. You might have been sent one of these 317 00:16:03,000 --> 00:16:06,840 Speaker 2: for your birthday. And a cameo gets celebrities and pays 318 00:16:06,880 --> 00:16:10,200 Speaker 2: them to send personalized sort of messages so you can say, 319 00:16:10,200 --> 00:16:11,880 Speaker 2: I want you to say this funny thing or that 320 00:16:11,920 --> 00:16:18,360 Speaker 2: funny thing. Farage does ninety five dollars. I'll say anything, 321 00:16:18,600 --> 00:16:21,880 Speaker 2: cameos and literally says anything. 322 00:16:22,080 --> 00:16:26,920 Speaker 1: Happy birthday, and this is from the lads, lads, lads. 323 00:16:27,240 --> 00:16:30,600 Speaker 2: And like there are ten to fifteen second videos. Now, 324 00:16:30,640 --> 00:16:33,640 Speaker 2: what he makes from this is apparently one hundred and 325 00:16:33,680 --> 00:16:36,600 Speaker 2: eighty thousand dollars in the last year, so ninety five 326 00:16:36,640 --> 00:16:39,080 Speaker 2: bucks a pop. He's just sitting in his office with 327 00:16:39,160 --> 00:16:43,080 Speaker 2: a microphone and a webcam and filming himself and then 328 00:16:43,120 --> 00:16:45,760 Speaker 2: sending them off one hundred and eighty thousand dollars. Now 329 00:16:45,800 --> 00:16:48,120 Speaker 2: he reckons, And I think this is actually quite interesting 330 00:16:48,120 --> 00:16:50,800 Speaker 2: because he's you know, it sort of looks a bit weird, 331 00:16:50,840 --> 00:16:53,480 Speaker 2: it could be a bit risky, but he reckons that 332 00:16:53,560 --> 00:16:56,680 Speaker 2: not only is he making a lot of money, he's 333 00:16:56,760 --> 00:17:00,240 Speaker 2: engaging with an audience that otherwise would have no idea 334 00:17:00,320 --> 00:17:03,680 Speaker 2: who he is or not find him particularly attractive. And 335 00:17:03,760 --> 00:17:06,239 Speaker 2: I've interviewed this as a Wall Street Journal article. They 336 00:17:06,280 --> 00:17:09,280 Speaker 2: interviewed a young guy who said, not sure I'd vote 337 00:17:09,280 --> 00:17:12,160 Speaker 2: for him, but it's hilarious how he'll just say anything, 338 00:17:12,280 --> 00:17:15,600 Speaker 2: and it's quite relatable content. So interesting, isn't it that 339 00:17:15,680 --> 00:17:19,320 Speaker 2: you could in a way campaign and get paid for it. 340 00:17:19,359 --> 00:17:22,000 Speaker 2: That's on top of his parliamentary salary. By the way, 341 00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:25,639 Speaker 2: Rudy Giuliani, you don't want to see this, but he 342 00:17:25,680 --> 00:17:28,760 Speaker 2: got a few hundred bucks for performing I'm a little teapot. 343 00:17:30,480 --> 00:17:34,160 Speaker 2: That's scream's desperation, doesn't it. Twenty nine after five news 344 00:17:34,240 --> 00:17:38,160 Speaker 2: talk zib to get to the GDP number before six 345 00:17:38,240 --> 00:17:39,439 Speaker 2: and the UK before that. 346 00:17:46,480 --> 00:17:50,159 Speaker 1: Get ahead of the headlines on early edition with Ryan 347 00:17:50,240 --> 00:17:54,199 Speaker 1: Bridge and one roof love where you live used talks be. 348 00:18:02,880 --> 00:18:05,359 Speaker 2: You're twenty four away from six news talk zbe bit 349 00:18:05,359 --> 00:18:07,240 Speaker 2: of a rock and a half place for Nicola Willis 350 00:18:07,320 --> 00:18:10,080 Speaker 2: really the text machines been lit up, Craig, says Ryan. 351 00:18:10,119 --> 00:18:12,880 Speaker 2: The fact that Willison Luckxon's government hasn't done something more 352 00:18:12,960 --> 00:18:15,840 Speaker 2: radical like reform the economy, which is what we expected 353 00:18:15,880 --> 00:18:19,240 Speaker 2: from them, as a sign that things will only get 354 00:18:19,240 --> 00:18:22,400 Speaker 2: worse to an extent, You're right. I mean people, some 355 00:18:22,680 --> 00:18:24,439 Speaker 2: on the right wanted them to come in and go 356 00:18:24,520 --> 00:18:28,560 Speaker 2: all Ruth Richardson, go all gung ho. And she did reform, 357 00:18:28,560 --> 00:18:32,800 Speaker 2: and she did cut deeply, much deeper than Willis as 358 00:18:32,840 --> 00:18:35,439 Speaker 2: I mean, she's still Willis borrowing as much as Richard, 359 00:18:35,560 --> 00:18:41,320 Speaker 2: as Grant Robertson. But if she had cut deeper that 360 00:18:41,520 --> 00:18:44,679 Speaker 2: number you're looking at yesterday would have been much worse. 361 00:18:45,119 --> 00:18:48,720 Speaker 2: That's what happens. Yes, Ruth Richardson got to five percent 362 00:18:48,760 --> 00:18:51,200 Speaker 2: growth eventually, but it took about three years to get there. 363 00:18:51,280 --> 00:18:54,320 Speaker 2: So you're looking at political cycles. You're looking at a party, 364 00:18:54,320 --> 00:18:58,800 Speaker 2: a national party, which is our centrist medal manager party, 365 00:18:59,200 --> 00:19:02,240 Speaker 2: isn't it. That's what they are. If we wanted what 366 00:19:02,320 --> 00:19:06,520 Speaker 2: you suggest, Craig, then we should have all voted act 367 00:19:06,840 --> 00:19:08,639 Speaker 2: you know what I mean. That's how you get you 368 00:19:08,840 --> 00:19:12,679 Speaker 2: to use their campaign's logan Real change time is anyway, 369 00:19:12,720 --> 00:19:15,160 Speaker 2: we'll talk about the GDP number before six and we'll 370 00:19:15,200 --> 00:19:18,520 Speaker 2: head to the UK for the Trump Starmer joint presser 371 00:19:19,000 --> 00:19:23,640 Speaker 2: in about ten minutes time. I'm thirteen away from six. 372 00:19:23,680 --> 00:19:25,880 Speaker 2: Now callen, Proctors and Dnedan for us this morning. Callen, 373 00:19:25,920 --> 00:19:29,800 Speaker 2: Good morning morning. Right time is ticking for prosecution over 374 00:19:29,840 --> 00:19:31,960 Speaker 2: the South Island's Sea lion killings. 375 00:19:33,040 --> 00:19:35,960 Speaker 11: Yeah, the Sea Lion Trust here has this fifty thousand 376 00:19:36,000 --> 00:19:40,280 Speaker 11: dollars reward out for information about three deliberate killings and 377 00:19:40,320 --> 00:19:42,440 Speaker 11: the captains last year of sea lions. 378 00:19:42,440 --> 00:19:43,080 Speaker 2: You may remember. 379 00:19:43,480 --> 00:19:45,439 Speaker 11: The prosecution though has to come within a year of 380 00:19:45,480 --> 00:19:49,600 Speaker 11: the incident, and tomorrow is the deadline for that action, 381 00:19:49,880 --> 00:19:53,760 Speaker 11: so the trust is disappointed. It's fair to say that 382 00:19:53,800 --> 00:19:56,879 Speaker 11: there's been no progress on this despite the reward. They 383 00:19:57,000 --> 00:19:59,320 Speaker 11: concerned that whoever did it may think they got away 384 00:19:59,320 --> 00:20:02,240 Speaker 11: with it and could do it again. The co chair 385 00:20:02,320 --> 00:20:04,680 Speaker 11: is Sean McConkie. He's told us he hopes the community 386 00:20:04,720 --> 00:20:07,960 Speaker 11: support and the reward, though encourages people in future to 387 00:20:08,000 --> 00:20:10,880 Speaker 11: think twice. All right, how's your weather are the odd 388 00:20:10,880 --> 00:20:14,640 Speaker 11: early shower clears to find southwester turns northerlyeds and Eden's 389 00:20:14,680 --> 00:20:15,960 Speaker 11: high though only twelve today? 390 00:20:16,080 --> 00:20:19,560 Speaker 2: All right? Chairs? Jamie Cunningham for christ Church Jamie, good morning, 391 00:20:20,119 --> 00:20:23,080 Speaker 2: Good morning Ryan. The Wildlife Photographer the Year exhibition has 392 00:20:23,160 --> 00:20:24,440 Speaker 2: returned to Canterbury Museum. 393 00:20:24,960 --> 00:20:27,679 Speaker 7: Yeah, that's right. A fresh batch of one hundred animal 394 00:20:27,720 --> 00:20:31,240 Speaker 7: images from around the world are online from London's Natural 395 00:20:31,280 --> 00:20:35,639 Speaker 7: History Museum, showcasing photographic talent from fifty nine thousand entries 396 00:20:35,680 --> 00:20:38,879 Speaker 7: and one hundred and seventeen countries. It gives visitors the 397 00:20:38,960 --> 00:20:41,040 Speaker 7: chance to see a grizzly bear fishing in his sub 398 00:20:41,119 --> 00:20:45,080 Speaker 7: zero Canadian river, the nocturnal glow of a Chilean volcano, 399 00:20:45,359 --> 00:20:48,880 Speaker 7: in the intimate world of tiny insects, Museum Director Anthony 400 00:20:48,920 --> 00:20:53,240 Speaker 7: Riots's previous exhibitions have been enormously popular in twenty nineteen 401 00:20:53,320 --> 00:20:56,680 Speaker 7: and last year. He sees the captivating images and stories 402 00:20:56,680 --> 00:21:00,000 Speaker 7: of the world's wildlife are loved by contabrians and visitors, 403 00:21:00,280 --> 00:21:02,359 Speaker 7: so they're delighted to bring it back to christ Church. 404 00:21:02,640 --> 00:21:03,560 Speaker 2: Right, how's your weather? 405 00:21:04,520 --> 00:21:07,800 Speaker 7: A few showers, clearing to find in the morning, southwesterlies 406 00:21:07,840 --> 00:21:08,919 Speaker 7: and a high of twelve. 407 00:21:08,960 --> 00:21:11,680 Speaker 2: All right, Max is in Wellington, Max, good morning, good morning. 408 00:21:11,720 --> 00:21:16,080 Speaker 2: Now I found this story quite hilarious, not funny, not funny. Yesterday, 409 00:21:16,119 --> 00:21:19,600 Speaker 2: this is about the public service still working from home? 410 00:21:20,240 --> 00:21:23,800 Speaker 13: Yes, it's fitting that this is a Friday, because really interesting. 411 00:21:23,880 --> 00:21:27,400 Speaker 13: Latest data from the Public Service Commission Flexible working arrangements 412 00:21:27,440 --> 00:21:30,239 Speaker 13: working from home taking a cheeky Friday off. It's all 413 00:21:30,240 --> 00:21:33,639 Speaker 13: still rampant, it seems across the public sector, despite what 414 00:21:33,760 --> 00:21:37,560 Speaker 13: the government and previous Minister Nikola Willis might desire, a 415 00:21:37,640 --> 00:21:40,760 Speaker 13: majority in fact still working flexibly sixty five percent. That 416 00:21:41,040 --> 00:21:45,040 Speaker 13: might also be adjusted or compressed hours, flexible start finish time. 417 00:21:45,560 --> 00:21:49,000 Speaker 13: Indeed working from home. The proportion of people working at 418 00:21:49,000 --> 00:21:53,400 Speaker 13: home only down slightly on the Commission's last survey. Shockingly, shockingly, 419 00:21:54,080 --> 00:21:56,760 Speaker 13: the most common day to take off is Friday. Almost 420 00:21:56,840 --> 00:22:01,160 Speaker 13: a quarter work from home on Fridays. No wonder Wellington's 421 00:22:01,200 --> 00:22:04,200 Speaker 13: hospitality industries in the pan. And what was also alarming though, 422 00:22:04,240 --> 00:22:06,600 Speaker 13: is that the Public Service Commission says it's now going 423 00:22:06,640 --> 00:22:11,600 Speaker 13: to stop collecting this type of data, which was perhaps 424 00:22:11,680 --> 00:22:14,679 Speaker 13: the problem in the first place. It's rationale is that 425 00:22:14,760 --> 00:22:18,240 Speaker 13: working from home arrangements are our agreements between staff and managers, 426 00:22:18,440 --> 00:22:21,480 Speaker 13: and it no longer needs to track who's working at home. 427 00:22:21,480 --> 00:22:24,960 Speaker 2: Went great, So even when we track them, we get nowhere. 428 00:22:25,000 --> 00:22:27,320 Speaker 2: And as soon as we stop tracking them, imagine where 429 00:22:27,359 --> 00:22:29,680 Speaker 2: it's going to go Thursday Friday. I mean, just take 430 00:22:29,720 --> 00:22:30,200 Speaker 2: the whole week. 431 00:22:30,400 --> 00:22:32,200 Speaker 13: You know a lot of people listening to the show 432 00:22:32,200 --> 00:22:33,440 Speaker 13: and bed I think today. 433 00:22:33,440 --> 00:22:36,440 Speaker 2: Yeah, that's your Wither. No, they're listening. 434 00:22:36,640 --> 00:22:41,440 Speaker 13: They're listening to Arned in Wellington, Perhapsia the Odd Show. 435 00:22:41,520 --> 00:22:43,879 Speaker 13: Otherwise find Strong Southerly's ten today. 436 00:22:43,920 --> 00:22:46,359 Speaker 2: All right, thanks mix, No, our listeners are up in 437 00:22:46,400 --> 00:22:49,639 Speaker 2: Adam already, Neva's and Auckland Neva good Morning, Happy Friday, 438 00:22:49,760 --> 00:22:52,560 Speaker 2: hopy Friday, and currently only and Wayne Brown are up 439 00:22:52,560 --> 00:22:54,919 Speaker 2: and Adam they're going to a stage event today for 440 00:22:55,000 --> 00:22:55,399 Speaker 2: a debate. 441 00:22:55,720 --> 00:22:58,360 Speaker 14: Just get your popcorn. Oh my goodness, gracious me. So 442 00:22:58,480 --> 00:23:01,359 Speaker 14: today's Meet the Candidates of Now. This is hosted by 443 00:23:01,440 --> 00:23:05,919 Speaker 14: Gray Power. It will see those two give short speeches 444 00:23:06,480 --> 00:23:09,840 Speaker 14: and then take questions from the audience. So Leoni's criticized 445 00:23:09,840 --> 00:23:11,800 Speaker 14: Brown in the past, you know, for not showing up 446 00:23:11,840 --> 00:23:16,000 Speaker 14: to debates. So apparently a recent freshwater pole, this was 447 00:23:16,000 --> 00:23:18,760 Speaker 14: commissioned by Brown, shows him firmly in the driver's seat 448 00:23:18,760 --> 00:23:21,480 Speaker 14: with about sixty five percent of likely voters backing him. 449 00:23:21,880 --> 00:23:25,200 Speaker 14: That same pole showed Leoni head just six percent support, 450 00:23:25,280 --> 00:23:28,000 Speaker 14: although she says, you know, like her internal polling paints 451 00:23:28,040 --> 00:23:30,840 Speaker 14: a very different picture. Of course it does. So you know, 452 00:23:30,880 --> 00:23:33,120 Speaker 14: that'll be interesting today. I think quite a few media 453 00:23:33,160 --> 00:23:35,440 Speaker 14: people are going to head along to that. That's at 454 00:23:35,440 --> 00:23:38,200 Speaker 14: the north Shore. On the North Shore one pm, Shall 455 00:23:38,240 --> 00:23:39,840 Speaker 14: I say where netballed North Harbor? 456 00:23:40,040 --> 00:23:42,480 Speaker 2: Great? Do you know? I had had one Brown on 457 00:23:42,480 --> 00:23:44,399 Speaker 2: the show last week or was it week before, and 458 00:23:44,720 --> 00:23:48,000 Speaker 2: he had his first candidates event. I said, oh, Wayne, 459 00:23:48,000 --> 00:23:50,800 Speaker 2: how did it go? And he goes it was insufferable. 460 00:23:52,840 --> 00:23:54,760 Speaker 14: And I could just see his face. I could just 461 00:23:54,840 --> 00:23:58,880 Speaker 14: pat Oh right, it's sufferable. I mean it's quite comical. 462 00:23:58,920 --> 00:24:01,560 Speaker 2: Really, he's the grinch, but everyone kind of likes it. 463 00:24:01,560 --> 00:24:05,120 Speaker 2: It's right right neither. How's our weather cloudy show. 464 00:24:05,040 --> 00:24:07,840 Speaker 14: Is clearing to find this afternoon? Yay sixteen the high 465 00:24:07,880 --> 00:24:09,119 Speaker 14: first day school holidays. 466 00:24:09,400 --> 00:24:11,840 Speaker 2: Have a fantastic weekend. Good to see you. It is 467 00:24:11,920 --> 00:24:14,440 Speaker 2: twelve sorry eighteen minutes away from six or on news 468 00:24:14,440 --> 00:24:18,119 Speaker 2: Talk SeeDB we will talk GDP just before six o'clock. 469 00:24:18,160 --> 00:24:21,600 Speaker 2: Will get to Vincent mcavenie and the UK next News 470 00:24:21,600 --> 00:24:24,800 Speaker 2: Talk SeeDB. If you run a small business, you know 471 00:24:24,840 --> 00:24:27,640 Speaker 2: the pain of waiting to get paid. You finish the job, 472 00:24:27,720 --> 00:24:30,000 Speaker 2: you send the invoice, and then you spend weeks chasing 473 00:24:30,000 --> 00:24:33,080 Speaker 2: people up like some sort of debt collector. Zero's tap 474 00:24:33,160 --> 00:24:35,840 Speaker 2: to pay pound by Stripe changes all of this. Your 475 00:24:35,840 --> 00:24:39,080 Speaker 2: customer taps their card on your phone and boom bam 476 00:24:39,160 --> 00:24:42,200 Speaker 2: you're paid on the spot. No fancy payment terminal needed, 477 00:24:42,359 --> 00:24:45,480 Speaker 2: just the zero accounting app. Here's the really smart but 478 00:24:45,600 --> 00:24:48,400 Speaker 2: though once the payment goes through, the invoice is automatically 479 00:24:48,440 --> 00:24:52,159 Speaker 2: marked as paid in zero. This is ready to be reconciled. 480 00:24:52,200 --> 00:24:55,000 Speaker 2: Less admind less making around with the paperwork, more time 481 00:24:55,080 --> 00:24:57,200 Speaker 2: running your actual business, which is what you want to 482 00:24:57,240 --> 00:25:00,240 Speaker 2: be doing. It's secure, it's instant, and it kee your 483 00:25:00,320 --> 00:25:04,040 Speaker 2: cash flow moving instead of grinding to a halt every month. 484 00:25:04,640 --> 00:25:07,440 Speaker 2: Except payments on the spot as soon as the job's complete. 485 00:25:07,480 --> 00:25:10,560 Speaker 2: No more awkward. I'll keep that invoice to your conversations. 486 00:25:10,600 --> 00:25:13,520 Speaker 2: For small businesses, this could genuinely be a game changer. 487 00:25:13,720 --> 00:25:17,520 Speaker 2: Less time chasing late payments, more time focusing on what 488 00:25:17,640 --> 00:25:21,359 Speaker 2: you do best. Supercharge your business with zero tap to 489 00:25:21,400 --> 00:25:24,399 Speaker 2: pay getting paid just got a whole lot easier search, 490 00:25:24,640 --> 00:25:25,560 Speaker 2: zero tap. 491 00:25:25,400 --> 00:25:30,120 Speaker 1: To pay, International correspondence with ends and eye insurance, peace 492 00:25:30,119 --> 00:25:32,960 Speaker 1: of mind for New Zealand business sporting away. 493 00:25:32,760 --> 00:25:35,359 Speaker 2: From six News talks too. Trump's offered some advice to 494 00:25:35,560 --> 00:25:38,680 Speaker 2: Kiir Starmer at a joint press conference. This is during 495 00:25:38,680 --> 00:25:41,560 Speaker 2: his state visit. The Vincent Mecavin Exact UK europe correspondent 496 00:25:41,640 --> 00:25:44,480 Speaker 2: joining me this morning, Vincent. They seem to be getting 497 00:25:44,480 --> 00:25:47,400 Speaker 2: along quite well, Yeah, very well. 498 00:25:47,440 --> 00:25:50,560 Speaker 9: Donald Trump likes a winner, and he saw that historic 499 00:25:50,640 --> 00:25:53,960 Speaker 9: victory that Kair Starmer had in last year's election, securing 500 00:25:53,960 --> 00:25:56,840 Speaker 9: that massive mandate. Yes, he's having a bit of trouble 501 00:25:56,880 --> 00:25:59,720 Speaker 9: domestically at the moment, but Donald Trump and Kairs Starmer 502 00:25:59,760 --> 00:26:02,640 Speaker 9: c to have developed quite a strong bond, in part 503 00:26:02,680 --> 00:26:06,240 Speaker 9: because Kirs Starmer went out and met with Donald Trump 504 00:26:06,240 --> 00:26:09,119 Speaker 9: in sort of summer twenty twenty four ahead of his 505 00:26:09,200 --> 00:26:12,520 Speaker 9: election victory. So Donald Trump felt sort of flattered and 506 00:26:12,680 --> 00:26:15,159 Speaker 9: enamored by that. But over the past two days of 507 00:26:15,160 --> 00:26:17,920 Speaker 9: this visit, first the sort of royal day at Windsor 508 00:26:17,960 --> 00:26:20,680 Speaker 9: and then today at Checkers, the Prime Minister's country residence, 509 00:26:21,200 --> 00:26:24,040 Speaker 9: Trump's deep affection for the United Kingdom, his mother was 510 00:26:24,080 --> 00:26:26,960 Speaker 9: of course Scottish has been on full show and he 511 00:26:27,000 --> 00:26:29,439 Speaker 9: hasn't really put a foot out of line. 512 00:26:29,640 --> 00:26:32,119 Speaker 2: And what about this tick deal that they're talking up? 513 00:26:32,240 --> 00:26:34,800 Speaker 2: Is this serious? Is it going to happen? Is it 514 00:26:34,800 --> 00:26:35,800 Speaker 2: guaranteed to heppen? 515 00:26:37,200 --> 00:26:40,040 Speaker 9: Well, this tech deal is interesting, it's sort of tens 516 00:26:40,080 --> 00:26:42,880 Speaker 9: of billions of pounds. But what has been coming from 517 00:26:42,880 --> 00:26:45,000 Speaker 9: the US side is it would be much more if 518 00:26:45,040 --> 00:26:47,760 Speaker 9: the UK would do two things. Get rid of its 519 00:26:47,800 --> 00:26:52,040 Speaker 9: digital services tax and get rid of its new online regulation. 520 00:26:52,400 --> 00:26:54,560 Speaker 9: These are two things that Downing Street simply won't get 521 00:26:54,680 --> 00:26:57,399 Speaker 9: rid of because they say that the sort of the 522 00:26:57,440 --> 00:27:00,719 Speaker 9: online sales services tax, for instance, there has to be 523 00:27:00,800 --> 00:27:04,320 Speaker 9: some contribution to these massive online companies, the likes of Amazon, 524 00:27:04,359 --> 00:27:07,080 Speaker 9: that have taken away business from the high streets and 525 00:27:07,119 --> 00:27:09,639 Speaker 9: the high streets have to pay things like business rates 526 00:27:09,680 --> 00:27:12,520 Speaker 9: and rental rates for shops and all that kind of stuff. 527 00:27:12,640 --> 00:27:14,600 Speaker 9: And when it comes to the sort of dangers of 528 00:27:14,600 --> 00:27:17,560 Speaker 9: the internet, the online regulation built. You can't access, for instance, 529 00:27:17,600 --> 00:27:20,760 Speaker 9: pornography here in the UK anymore online without going through 530 00:27:20,760 --> 00:27:23,520 Speaker 9: an age certification process. And the Prime Minister was clear 531 00:27:23,560 --> 00:27:25,959 Speaker 9: that he didn't want children to be able to access 532 00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:28,320 Speaker 9: that kind of meat material and that there has to 533 00:27:28,359 --> 00:27:31,480 Speaker 9: be curves online of access to for instance, terrorist material 534 00:27:31,560 --> 00:27:34,760 Speaker 9: as well. So a downing Streets are very resolute that 535 00:27:34,800 --> 00:27:36,879 Speaker 9: the UK won't fold on this. Trump is trying to 536 00:27:36,880 --> 00:27:39,520 Speaker 9: put the same kind of pressure on the European Union 537 00:27:39,560 --> 00:27:43,280 Speaker 9: as well, because the likes of Mark Zuckerberg and all 538 00:27:43,320 --> 00:27:46,160 Speaker 9: those other tech bros are constantly putting pressure on him 539 00:27:46,160 --> 00:27:48,119 Speaker 9: to try and get other nations to get rid of 540 00:27:48,119 --> 00:27:50,400 Speaker 9: this before it becomes the international norm. 541 00:27:50,640 --> 00:27:52,720 Speaker 2: All right, interesting stuff, Thans and making of any UK 542 00:27:52,800 --> 00:27:56,040 Speaker 2: europe correspondent time as twelve away from six Ryan, we 543 00:27:56,160 --> 00:27:57,720 Speaker 2: dealt with the politics of this. Now let's get to 544 00:27:57,720 --> 00:28:00,440 Speaker 2: the numbers. So GDP fell point nine percent in the 545 00:28:00,520 --> 00:28:03,240 Speaker 2: last quarter. That's double what the economists had fared and 546 00:28:03,440 --> 00:28:06,160 Speaker 2: lot three times what the Reserve Bank had fared and 547 00:28:06,440 --> 00:28:09,080 Speaker 2: joining me this morning, Mark Smith asb Senior Economists, Mark, 548 00:28:09,080 --> 00:28:09,800 Speaker 2: good morning. 549 00:28:10,240 --> 00:28:10,760 Speaker 10: Good morning. 550 00:28:10,840 --> 00:28:15,679 Speaker 2: Right, So yes, worse quarter two change decline. Does it 551 00:28:15,800 --> 00:28:19,520 Speaker 2: change your prediction for the quarter three number now that 552 00:28:19,560 --> 00:28:20,560 Speaker 2: we've gone so low? 553 00:28:21,960 --> 00:28:24,800 Speaker 10: Yeah, probably a little bit. Yeah, the bigger the whole, 554 00:28:25,480 --> 00:28:27,919 Speaker 10: I suppose for the larger of the rebounds, so we 555 00:28:28,000 --> 00:28:29,880 Speaker 10: do have a little bit more of a bounce back, 556 00:28:30,400 --> 00:28:32,359 Speaker 10: but the thing is the whole is bigger. 557 00:28:33,560 --> 00:28:33,800 Speaker 2: Why. 558 00:28:35,840 --> 00:28:39,760 Speaker 10: Well, essentially we saw quite a pretty strong start the year, 559 00:28:40,280 --> 00:28:43,600 Speaker 10: and really what we saw on Q two was very 560 00:28:43,680 --> 00:28:46,480 Speaker 10: much an unwining of those things and it happened a 561 00:28:46,520 --> 00:28:49,920 Speaker 10: lot more significant than what we thought. And really what 562 00:28:49,960 --> 00:28:52,240 Speaker 10: we're seeing now is that the economy does not really 563 00:28:52,280 --> 00:28:54,120 Speaker 10: have a lot there that can really push it up, 564 00:28:55,000 --> 00:28:58,160 Speaker 10: apart from really monetary policy. And it's really the key. 565 00:28:58,560 --> 00:29:01,719 Speaker 2: Would a double cut last time, I mean, it wouldn't 566 00:29:01,720 --> 00:29:03,320 Speaker 2: have made a difference to this number because it was 567 00:29:03,360 --> 00:29:06,360 Speaker 2: backwards looking, right, But now everyone's thinking they'll do a 568 00:29:06,360 --> 00:29:07,960 Speaker 2: double cut next time. 569 00:29:09,360 --> 00:29:12,160 Speaker 10: Possibly with the benefit of hindsight. I think with the 570 00:29:12,200 --> 00:29:16,280 Speaker 10: Reserve Bank, they're focuses as inflation, and I think we're 571 00:29:16,280 --> 00:29:18,640 Speaker 10: getting a lot more confident now that we will see 572 00:29:18,640 --> 00:29:22,240 Speaker 10: inflation pick up a bit in Q three, but we're 573 00:29:22,280 --> 00:29:24,400 Speaker 10: more confident now that's going to be lower further down 574 00:29:24,440 --> 00:29:26,800 Speaker 10: the tracks. And that's really why that there is a 575 00:29:26,920 --> 00:29:29,680 Speaker 10: bank with confidence can cut a bit more strongly. 576 00:29:29,840 --> 00:29:32,320 Speaker 2: Does the fact that FED is cutting in the US 577 00:29:32,440 --> 00:29:36,040 Speaker 2: despite their inflation still being outside band, does that have 578 00:29:36,120 --> 00:29:40,320 Speaker 2: any effect on the inflation calculation here going forward? 579 00:29:41,880 --> 00:29:45,160 Speaker 10: At the margin? You know, the extent that have fixed 580 00:29:45,240 --> 00:29:48,360 Speaker 10: long term interest rates here and the extent that fixed 581 00:29:48,400 --> 00:29:51,680 Speaker 10: the New Zealand dollars into the margin. But really it's 582 00:29:51,680 --> 00:29:54,200 Speaker 10: the same sort of dilemma that that we're facing as well. 583 00:29:55,760 --> 00:29:58,520 Speaker 10: I've gone back a while. I suppose the risk was 584 00:29:58,840 --> 00:30:02,720 Speaker 10: inflation will high for longer. I think the comfort now 585 00:30:03,000 --> 00:30:05,840 Speaker 10: for both central banks is that there's enough to be 586 00:30:05,880 --> 00:30:08,560 Speaker 10: a capacity in the economy and that will result in 587 00:30:08,560 --> 00:30:11,920 Speaker 10: inflation falling over time. And now it's also the focus 588 00:30:12,000 --> 00:30:14,360 Speaker 10: it's more on the labor market rather than inflation. 589 00:30:14,720 --> 00:30:16,920 Speaker 2: So where do you where do you see? How low 590 00:30:16,960 --> 00:30:19,360 Speaker 2: do you see the OCA going two point two five? 591 00:30:20,680 --> 00:30:22,960 Speaker 10: Yeah, by the end of the year, to give you 592 00:30:22,960 --> 00:30:26,160 Speaker 10: an idea of where things are. Typically, if you're like 593 00:30:26,200 --> 00:30:29,480 Speaker 10: your goldly locks rates about three percent, So we think 594 00:30:29,600 --> 00:30:31,240 Speaker 10: the Reserve Bank will need to put the foot on 595 00:30:31,280 --> 00:30:35,040 Speaker 10: the gas pedal to try and get the economy going. Previously, 596 00:30:35,080 --> 00:30:37,200 Speaker 10: when the flation was too high, the foot was on 597 00:30:37,240 --> 00:30:39,080 Speaker 10: the brake, and now the foot will need to go 598 00:30:39,120 --> 00:30:39,840 Speaker 10: on the gas pedal. 599 00:30:39,920 --> 00:30:42,160 Speaker 2: Give us an economy, Give us an idea of what 600 00:30:42,160 --> 00:30:44,560 Speaker 2: that would mean for a mortgage interest rate? How low 601 00:30:44,560 --> 00:30:44,960 Speaker 2: could it go? 602 00:30:46,600 --> 00:30:48,680 Speaker 10: A lot of it is already priced in. But you 603 00:30:48,680 --> 00:30:51,800 Speaker 10: know we will see for those floating rates will move down, 604 00:30:51,920 --> 00:30:55,480 Speaker 10: you know pipelike ware margin. Those fixed rates move not 605 00:30:55,560 --> 00:30:58,080 Speaker 10: so much because it's already priced in to some extent. 606 00:30:58,360 --> 00:31:00,520 Speaker 10: So certainly those variable rates will will come down. 607 00:31:00,560 --> 00:31:02,360 Speaker 2: By This is the thing, right because last time the 608 00:31:02,440 --> 00:31:05,080 Speaker 2: Reserve being sure they didn't do a double hit, but 609 00:31:05,160 --> 00:31:08,160 Speaker 2: they essentially did a seventy you could aigue a seventy 610 00:31:08,160 --> 00:31:11,440 Speaker 2: five point cut because they signaled the rest to come right, 611 00:31:12,720 --> 00:31:13,800 Speaker 2: which has been priced in. 612 00:31:15,360 --> 00:31:17,400 Speaker 10: Yeah, I think they're signals we want to see the 613 00:31:17,440 --> 00:31:20,840 Speaker 10: economy start to start to ready to move. I think 614 00:31:20,840 --> 00:31:23,360 Speaker 10: they worry is if it does not move enough, they've 615 00:31:23,360 --> 00:31:27,800 Speaker 10: all needed it more. So you know, again, what what 616 00:31:27,920 --> 00:31:31,040 Speaker 10: will happen to the official cash rate is really conditional 617 00:31:31,080 --> 00:31:34,120 Speaker 10: on the economic outlook and without there being enough tail 618 00:31:34,160 --> 00:31:36,560 Speaker 10: when suit the economy going, it's going to come more 619 00:31:36,560 --> 00:31:37,720 Speaker 10: on the OCI to do that. 620 00:31:38,440 --> 00:31:41,560 Speaker 2: Appreciate your time, Mark Mark Smith ASB Senior Economists. You're 621 00:31:41,600 --> 00:31:42,520 Speaker 2: on News Talk sad B. 622 00:31:43,760 --> 00:31:47,600 Speaker 1: On your radio and online on Iheard Radio Early edition 623 00:31:47,920 --> 00:31:51,520 Speaker 1: with Ryan Bridge and one roof Love where you Live, 624 00:31:51,840 --> 00:31:52,680 Speaker 1: News Talks. 625 00:31:52,520 --> 00:31:54,360 Speaker 2: EDB six or six on News Talk SEDB. 626 00:31:54,600 --> 00:31:54,680 Speaker 8: SO. 627 00:31:54,800 --> 00:31:57,760 Speaker 2: Then yesterday, Simon Brown puts out a press statement says 628 00:31:57,800 --> 00:32:00,720 Speaker 2: that they've offered one hundred and sixty million dollars extra 629 00:32:00,800 --> 00:32:03,640 Speaker 2: to the doctors five and a half thousand senior doctors 630 00:32:03,680 --> 00:32:06,360 Speaker 2: over a sixteen month term, and they've walked away from it. 631 00:32:06,440 --> 00:32:09,120 Speaker 2: So it strikes happening forty eight hours. Next week goes ahead, 632 00:32:09,160 --> 00:32:14,240 Speaker 2: thirteen thousand treatment appointments postponed, eighteen hundred elective procedures, thirty 633 00:32:14,240 --> 00:32:17,440 Speaker 2: six hundred specialists, seven thousand follow ups, and eight hundred 634 00:32:17,480 --> 00:32:22,040 Speaker 2: outpatients delayed. There you go. Good news Friday morning five 635 00:32:22,080 --> 00:32:26,240 Speaker 2: to six, Ryan Breede Morning, Mike Morning. Sorry, what's on 636 00:32:26,280 --> 00:32:26,920 Speaker 2: the show today? 637 00:32:27,080 --> 00:32:29,560 Speaker 4: Well, we got John Key and we've got Nichola Willis. 638 00:32:29,800 --> 00:32:32,760 Speaker 4: You should read if you haven't read already. Thomas Coglin's yeah, 639 00:32:32,840 --> 00:32:35,280 Speaker 4: he gat one of them. Yeah, he's like he sums 640 00:32:35,320 --> 00:32:38,760 Speaker 4: up yesterday extremely well in the sense he's sort of 641 00:32:39,000 --> 00:32:42,080 Speaker 4: I mean, it's in the weeds. But Labour's inability to 642 00:32:42,280 --> 00:32:45,680 Speaker 4: focus on the day came in with questions about education, 643 00:32:46,840 --> 00:32:49,200 Speaker 4: whether they pulled them out of a basket or whatever 644 00:32:49,240 --> 00:32:51,280 Speaker 4: they do. But their day to kill the government was 645 00:32:51,400 --> 00:32:53,960 Speaker 4: yesterday and they failed miserably. 646 00:32:54,040 --> 00:32:54,560 Speaker 2: They was sick. 647 00:32:54,920 --> 00:32:58,280 Speaker 4: But Nikola Willis equally had no real comeback in the sense. 648 00:32:58,320 --> 00:33:00,000 Speaker 4: And here's the interesting thing for me in ald time 649 00:33:00,000 --> 00:33:01,840 Speaker 4: talk to her about it because she's on the program. 650 00:33:02,200 --> 00:33:04,320 Speaker 4: So when the parme miniter came on the program a 651 00:33:04,360 --> 00:33:06,520 Speaker 4: couple of weeks ago, you remember I got him to 652 00:33:06,520 --> 00:33:09,040 Speaker 4: criticize the Reserve Bank because he is the real issue, 653 00:33:09,040 --> 00:33:11,680 Speaker 4: and he all the op ed writers got all angsty 654 00:33:11,680 --> 00:33:13,680 Speaker 4: about that, said you can't do it. They're independent, blah 655 00:33:13,720 --> 00:33:18,440 Speaker 4: blah blah. But they've been just demonstrably let down by 656 00:33:18,480 --> 00:33:20,920 Speaker 4: the Reserve Bank. So if you just chart this, April, 657 00:33:21,040 --> 00:33:24,040 Speaker 4: May and June was the quarter we're dealing with. They 658 00:33:24,080 --> 00:33:26,520 Speaker 4: came out in July. By that time all was gone, 659 00:33:26,960 --> 00:33:29,480 Speaker 4: Hawksby was in and what did they do in July? 660 00:33:29,960 --> 00:33:33,240 Speaker 4: It was nothing that was die. So we've just watched 661 00:33:33,280 --> 00:33:36,280 Speaker 4: a quarter. We now know it's zero point nine contract 662 00:33:36,320 --> 00:33:38,320 Speaker 4: in a major way, and their view of it was 663 00:33:38,360 --> 00:33:39,680 Speaker 4: we don't need to do anything more. 664 00:33:39,760 --> 00:33:42,440 Speaker 2: These calls for her to resign from it, that's the 665 00:33:42,520 --> 00:33:45,960 Speaker 2: usual crad. It's crap, but it's crap for a particular reason. 666 00:33:46,360 --> 00:33:48,960 Speaker 4: I just I disagree with what you said earlier. But 667 00:33:49,000 --> 00:33:50,320 Speaker 4: the only thing I would say. 668 00:33:50,240 --> 00:33:54,640 Speaker 2: Is that that if she had cut, she would have 669 00:33:54,800 --> 00:33:57,560 Speaker 2: been far worse. And therefore why put a pressure release 670 00:33:57,600 --> 00:33:58,480 Speaker 2: out on it yesterday? 671 00:33:58,520 --> 00:34:01,120 Speaker 4: Because at the end of the day, the problem with Douglas, 672 00:34:01,240 --> 00:34:04,000 Speaker 4: or the thing about Douglas is Douglas is my financial 673 00:34:04,120 --> 00:34:07,000 Speaker 4: minister hero, that guy. We're in many respects, in the 674 00:34:07,040 --> 00:34:09,759 Speaker 4: same position. You're too young to remember, but we're in 675 00:34:09,800 --> 00:34:12,239 Speaker 4: the same position now that we were in when he 676 00:34:12,320 --> 00:34:15,239 Speaker 4: came in at eighty four and he blew the place up, 677 00:34:15,800 --> 00:34:18,960 Speaker 4: and we're probably requiring the same restaurant. 678 00:34:19,000 --> 00:34:21,120 Speaker 2: Now, look forward to the show today. Mike has looked. 679 00:34:21,280 --> 00:34:25,040 Speaker 2: Next Happy Friday, everyone, I'm on Driday next week, Star. 680 00:34:25,040 --> 00:34:26,359 Speaker 2: I'll capture the following. 681 00:34:28,719 --> 00:34:31,680 Speaker 1: For more from early edition with Ryan Bridge, listen live 682 00:34:31,800 --> 00:34:34,799 Speaker 1: to news Talks. It'd be from five am weekdays, or 683 00:34:34,880 --> 00:34:36,800 Speaker 1: follow the podcast on iHeartRadio.