1 00:00:00,680 --> 00:00:03,440 Speaker 1: Pressing the newsmakers to get the real story. 2 00:00:03,640 --> 00:00:07,080 Speaker 2: It's Ryan Bridge on Hither duplicy, Ellen Drey with one 3 00:00:07,160 --> 00:00:09,639 Speaker 2: New Zealand coverage like no one else. 4 00:00:10,119 --> 00:00:12,240 Speaker 1: News Talk said, be seven after four. 5 00:00:12,080 --> 00:00:14,960 Speaker 3: On your Thursday afternoon, coming up on the show. GDP 6 00:00:15,160 --> 00:00:18,040 Speaker 3: is up, Glory of A's School is closed, Jenny Wiley 7 00:00:18,120 --> 00:00:21,079 Speaker 3: is out, the Ye Mine expansion is on, the milk 8 00:00:21,120 --> 00:00:23,480 Speaker 3: price is down, Murray Olds is in Australia for US 9 00:00:23,480 --> 00:00:24,680 Speaker 3: and and the Brady's in the UK. 10 00:00:25,560 --> 00:00:26,320 Speaker 1: Ryan Bridge. 11 00:00:26,640 --> 00:00:29,440 Speaker 3: Quick little message, Christmas message if you will, to all 12 00:00:29,480 --> 00:00:34,760 Speaker 3: the PR people out there advising sports people and sporting organizations, 13 00:00:35,200 --> 00:00:39,440 Speaker 3: could you please start talking like now. The less you talk, 14 00:00:39,680 --> 00:00:42,720 Speaker 3: the dodgier you look. Stop hiding your CEOs and your 15 00:00:42,720 --> 00:00:45,559 Speaker 3: board chairs under bushes and the hope that scandals and 16 00:00:45,600 --> 00:00:48,680 Speaker 3: poor decisions will be overlooked and forgotten and swept under 17 00:00:48,720 --> 00:00:51,680 Speaker 3: the carpet. Because if twenty twenty five has taught us 18 00:00:51,720 --> 00:00:55,560 Speaker 3: anything it's that they won't and they don't. Jenny Wiley 19 00:00:55,720 --> 00:00:58,320 Speaker 3: is gone from Netbull New Zealand. No surprises there, and 20 00:00:58,320 --> 00:01:01,840 Speaker 3: there'll be no surprises either when half the board probably 21 00:01:01,920 --> 00:01:04,120 Speaker 3: follows her out the door. They'll be lining that up 22 00:01:04,160 --> 00:01:06,960 Speaker 3: as we speak, with announcements to come soon. I would 23 00:01:07,000 --> 00:01:10,199 Speaker 3: have thought, But like cricket, we've got the top dog 24 00:01:10,360 --> 00:01:14,160 Speaker 3: at a top sporting body disappearing before Christmas without a 25 00:01:14,200 --> 00:01:17,000 Speaker 3: once over, and the press from their higher ups. Matt 26 00:01:17,040 --> 00:01:21,080 Speaker 3: Winner Ray is not fronting on this. Jenny's gone Winner 27 00:01:21,160 --> 00:01:24,880 Speaker 3: Rays apparently, I don't know, clearly on holiday somewhere somewhere, 28 00:01:24,880 --> 00:01:28,240 Speaker 3: not here. In the world of American football right now, 29 00:01:28,440 --> 00:01:32,199 Speaker 3: much is being made of Travis Kelcey's media management. He's 30 00:01:32,200 --> 00:01:35,640 Speaker 3: refused to do a bunch of interviews postmatch because well, 31 00:01:35,720 --> 00:01:38,960 Speaker 3: they lost a game. Yes that's Taytay's boyfriend for those 32 00:01:38,959 --> 00:01:41,280 Speaker 3: who are interested, and yes that's the Kansas City Chiefs. 33 00:01:41,319 --> 00:01:44,840 Speaker 3: They've won a few Super Bowls recently of late, and 34 00:01:44,840 --> 00:01:46,720 Speaker 3: now they're not even going to make the playoffs. So 35 00:01:46,840 --> 00:01:50,840 Speaker 3: he's upset. Obviously doesn't want to talk to pesky journos. 36 00:01:51,400 --> 00:01:55,120 Speaker 3: And I get that. I understand that because they're athletes, 37 00:01:55,880 --> 00:01:58,880 Speaker 3: they're emotional, they're up and down like a yo yo. 38 00:01:59,400 --> 00:02:02,800 Speaker 3: But when some thing goes down in the business of sport, 39 00:02:03,240 --> 00:02:05,840 Speaker 3: in my view, you should front it in the same 40 00:02:05,880 --> 00:02:09,360 Speaker 3: way as a regular company CEO or a politician would. 41 00:02:10,040 --> 00:02:13,680 Speaker 3: The fans are the voters, the shareholders, and they deserve 42 00:02:13,760 --> 00:02:18,320 Speaker 3: some respect. Respect is shown through communication, and right now 43 00:02:18,400 --> 00:02:21,320 Speaker 3: they are getting the corporate equivalent of a middle finger. 44 00:02:22,160 --> 00:02:24,840 Speaker 3: And all of this is made worse by the fact 45 00:02:25,280 --> 00:02:26,960 Speaker 3: that this is what got them into the mess to 46 00:02:27,000 --> 00:02:30,959 Speaker 3: begin with. With Dame Knowles. They didn't front. When they did, 47 00:02:31,440 --> 00:02:34,720 Speaker 3: they didn't say anything, and then the mood reached fever 48 00:02:34,800 --> 00:02:38,600 Speaker 3: pitched and almost every single silver fern who'd ever donned 49 00:02:38,600 --> 00:02:40,720 Speaker 3: a bib came out and had their say through their 50 00:02:40,760 --> 00:02:44,520 Speaker 3: five cents into the bucket. Then the government steps in. 51 00:02:45,120 --> 00:02:49,240 Speaker 3: Then finally things changed. One of the reasons I quite 52 00:02:49,280 --> 00:02:51,040 Speaker 3: like Netbull, in fact that one of the reasons I 53 00:02:51,080 --> 00:02:53,359 Speaker 3: love Netbull and watching it and following it as a 54 00:02:53,400 --> 00:02:56,480 Speaker 3: sport is because of the straight up, hard as Nail's 55 00:02:56,520 --> 00:03:00,880 Speaker 3: personalities that tend to dominate it. They're no nonsense, that 56 00:03:01,040 --> 00:03:04,000 Speaker 3: straight up the guts, and I think management ought to 57 00:03:04,000 --> 00:03:05,680 Speaker 3: take a leaf out of their book. 58 00:03:06,639 --> 00:03:16,200 Speaker 4: Rayanbridge is the number to text, especially if you're Matt 59 00:03:16,240 --> 00:03:17,840 Speaker 4: Winner A ten minutes after four. 60 00:03:18,320 --> 00:03:20,919 Speaker 3: Now, as we all head off into far flung corners 61 00:03:20,960 --> 00:03:24,080 Speaker 3: of the country, it's an interesting question who has the 62 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:27,359 Speaker 3: final say on whether a helicopter is deployed in an 63 00:03:27,360 --> 00:03:30,760 Speaker 3: emergency situation or not. It is a question that the 64 00:03:30,840 --> 00:03:34,960 Speaker 3: Professional Firefighters Union wants settled after a police refused the 65 00:03:35,080 --> 00:03:38,960 Speaker 3: use of a rescue chopper to pick up a teenager 66 00:03:38,960 --> 00:03:42,680 Speaker 3: who was stuck on a cliff. Now sadly, her friend 67 00:03:42,720 --> 00:03:45,640 Speaker 3: had already fallen off this cliff and died, and police 68 00:03:45,680 --> 00:03:49,240 Speaker 3: admit that they wrongly thought that the girl had died too, 69 00:03:49,560 --> 00:03:52,280 Speaker 3: and thus they declined the use of a chopper because 70 00:03:52,320 --> 00:03:56,119 Speaker 3: of the cost. Martin Campbell is the Professional Firefighters Union 71 00:03:56,200 --> 00:04:00,520 Speaker 3: Vice president and joins me this afternoon. Good afternoon, Martin, afternoon, 72 00:04:00,520 --> 00:04:02,360 Speaker 3: how's it going very well? Thank you, thanks for being 73 00:04:02,400 --> 00:04:05,040 Speaker 3: with me. Whose job is it, Martin, to make the 74 00:04:05,120 --> 00:04:08,120 Speaker 3: call about whether you send a chopper to rescue someone 75 00:04:08,240 --> 00:04:08,440 Speaker 3: or not? 76 00:04:09,760 --> 00:04:12,720 Speaker 5: Well, unfortunately, that's sort of the sixty thousand dollars question, 77 00:04:12,840 --> 00:04:14,720 Speaker 5: so to speak. At the moment, there is a bit 78 00:04:14,760 --> 00:04:18,080 Speaker 5: of confusion as to who as who actually is able 79 00:04:18,120 --> 00:04:20,760 Speaker 5: to make that call, who has the statutory authority to 80 00:04:20,760 --> 00:04:24,640 Speaker 5: make that call. In some cases, police are saying it's 81 00:04:24,720 --> 00:04:28,920 Speaker 5: their call and foreign emergency and the past have made 82 00:04:28,960 --> 00:04:31,880 Speaker 5: that call. So it's a bit of confusion and misunderstanding it, 83 00:04:32,160 --> 00:04:33,000 Speaker 5: I think at the moment. 84 00:04:33,160 --> 00:04:35,400 Speaker 3: So have there been other cases, because we've got this 85 00:04:35,440 --> 00:04:38,680 Speaker 3: girl obviously in Hajei, But have there been cases where 86 00:04:39,279 --> 00:04:42,200 Speaker 3: the rescue team on the ground says, give us a chopper, 87 00:04:42,279 --> 00:04:45,120 Speaker 3: it'll save a life and police has said no. 88 00:04:46,520 --> 00:04:49,320 Speaker 5: Well, I certainly know there has been certainly confusion at 89 00:04:49,320 --> 00:04:54,880 Speaker 5: the foreign emergency end about deploying our friends resources utilizing helicopters. 90 00:04:55,360 --> 00:04:59,760 Speaker 5: I know for myself I've encountered these delays and misunderstandings. 91 00:05:00,200 --> 00:05:03,520 Speaker 5: Who has the authority to ask for helicopters, who's going 92 00:05:03,600 --> 00:05:05,240 Speaker 5: to have to pay the bill so to speak for 93 00:05:05,279 --> 00:05:08,680 Speaker 5: the helicopters, And how do we get our fend resources 94 00:05:08,720 --> 00:05:11,880 Speaker 5: as quickly as we can to the incidents. 95 00:05:12,200 --> 00:05:14,960 Speaker 3: Because you need a chopper, doesn't matter whether it's a 96 00:05:15,120 --> 00:05:19,799 Speaker 3: rescue helicopter or whether it's a police one. You need fence, 97 00:05:20,040 --> 00:05:21,760 Speaker 3: you know, you need your fire fighters. You need your 98 00:05:21,760 --> 00:05:25,680 Speaker 3: rescuers and a chopper getting their quick as well. 99 00:05:25,880 --> 00:05:29,720 Speaker 5: Most certainly particularly when the incident is some distance away 100 00:05:29,720 --> 00:05:32,680 Speaker 5: from the fire station. The ha Hey one obviously is 101 00:05:32,720 --> 00:05:35,880 Speaker 5: quite a distance from the Hamilton fire station. The rescues 102 00:05:35,960 --> 00:05:38,839 Speaker 5: up here are all out of the Auckland Central fire Station, 103 00:05:39,000 --> 00:05:41,320 Speaker 5: so obviously we would need to be chopping to a 104 00:05:41,320 --> 00:05:43,159 Speaker 5: lot of our incidents that are sort of on the 105 00:05:43,200 --> 00:05:46,280 Speaker 5: outskirts of Auckland. So getting a helicopter with our fire 106 00:05:46,279 --> 00:05:49,560 Speaker 5: fighters and their equipment is critical to us getting there quickly. 107 00:05:50,000 --> 00:05:52,840 Speaker 3: Martin. Everyone's about to head out all over the place 108 00:05:52,880 --> 00:05:56,160 Speaker 3: for there holidays over summer, and you want to know 109 00:05:56,240 --> 00:05:58,599 Speaker 3: that help is going to come as fast as possible 110 00:05:58,839 --> 00:06:02,200 Speaker 3: as the situations. Can we be sure of that. 111 00:06:03,600 --> 00:06:05,400 Speaker 5: I'm not one hundred percent sure at the moment that 112 00:06:05,440 --> 00:06:08,960 Speaker 5: we can be sure that we can well, not certainly, 113 00:06:09,040 --> 00:06:12,400 Speaker 5: not without some sort of delay or confusion. And it's 114 00:06:12,440 --> 00:06:14,640 Speaker 5: the lay of confusion that's been felt by the front 115 00:06:14,680 --> 00:06:18,840 Speaker 5: line staff both. I think frontline firefighters in frontline police 116 00:06:19,360 --> 00:06:22,560 Speaker 5: would be experiencing these concerns. It's a problem I think 117 00:06:22,600 --> 00:06:25,400 Speaker 5: that's being created and needs to be solved by upper 118 00:06:25,480 --> 00:06:28,880 Speaker 5: level managements from foreign emergency and police to make sure 119 00:06:28,920 --> 00:06:31,160 Speaker 5: there are no delays and New Zealanders are getting the 120 00:06:31,240 --> 00:06:32,520 Speaker 5: quickest help as they can. 121 00:06:32,640 --> 00:06:34,760 Speaker 3: And this is not like a union thing, and I 122 00:06:34,760 --> 00:06:37,159 Speaker 3: don't mean to be I'm not just being disparaging of unions, 123 00:06:37,200 --> 00:06:38,880 Speaker 3: but you know, sometimes the unions can just put the 124 00:06:38,880 --> 00:06:41,200 Speaker 3: boot in for the take of it. This is actually 125 00:06:41,240 --> 00:06:43,600 Speaker 3: you guys are saying what is you know, you make 126 00:06:43,640 --> 00:06:45,880 Speaker 3: the call and you're sitting around tidding your thumbs saying, 127 00:06:45,880 --> 00:06:47,120 Speaker 3: what the hell are they doing up there? 128 00:06:48,120 --> 00:06:51,320 Speaker 5: That's right, that's certainly it's not a union thing. In fact, 129 00:06:51,360 --> 00:06:54,440 Speaker 5: this the latest ha Hay incident I believe was raised 130 00:06:54,440 --> 00:06:58,680 Speaker 5: by foreign emergency management themselves. So it's not a union thing. 131 00:06:58,720 --> 00:07:01,680 Speaker 5: It's a thing and police thing that needs to be 132 00:07:01,960 --> 00:07:03,920 Speaker 5: sorted out as quickly as possible. 133 00:07:04,000 --> 00:07:07,120 Speaker 3: Well, let's hope that is soon for all of our sakes, Martin. 134 00:07:07,160 --> 00:07:09,680 Speaker 3: Thank you Martin Campbell as the professional firefighters and your 135 00:07:09,760 --> 00:07:13,320 Speaker 3: vice president. Time as fourteen after four ran a news 136 00:07:13,400 --> 00:07:16,280 Speaker 3: talk said, b would you be surprised if I was 137 00:07:16,320 --> 00:07:18,360 Speaker 3: to tell you there's been a certain passenger on a 138 00:07:18,440 --> 00:07:21,200 Speaker 3: jet Star flight today and a little birdie has told 139 00:07:21,280 --> 00:07:24,480 Speaker 3: us that this passenger was I'm assuming in the front row. 140 00:07:25,200 --> 00:07:27,560 Speaker 3: Would you be surprised if I told you that our 141 00:07:27,640 --> 00:07:37,200 Speaker 3: Prime minister was flying Jetstar from Wellington to Auckland. Now, 142 00:07:37,280 --> 00:07:40,440 Speaker 3: a couple of things that make this kind of newsworthy. One, 143 00:07:40,560 --> 00:07:43,760 Speaker 3: he's the Prime minister and this is our national carrier. 144 00:07:44,280 --> 00:07:46,800 Speaker 3: But also he's a former CEO of the in New 145 00:07:46,840 --> 00:07:50,120 Speaker 3: Zealand and he's on a jet Star flight now, Laura. 146 00:07:50,160 --> 00:07:52,600 Speaker 3: He has rung the PM's office and they've apparently said 147 00:07:52,640 --> 00:07:54,880 Speaker 3: it was not it was full of logistical reasons, not 148 00:07:55,000 --> 00:07:58,120 Speaker 3: price reasons. But anyone who's anyone who's tried to book 149 00:07:58,160 --> 00:08:01,840 Speaker 3: a flight residently knows how bloody expensive it is. But 150 00:08:02,000 --> 00:08:04,680 Speaker 3: is anyone shocked by that? I don't know. When I've 151 00:08:04,720 --> 00:08:06,720 Speaker 3: looked at fly I was looking at flights last night 152 00:08:06,760 --> 00:08:11,119 Speaker 3: to christ Church next year and the price difference between 153 00:08:11,200 --> 00:08:14,560 Speaker 3: Jetstar and News you know, it's massive. But also Jetstar 154 00:08:14,680 --> 00:08:17,920 Speaker 3: has more frequent flights that go to christ Church on 155 00:08:17,960 --> 00:08:21,560 Speaker 3: this particular in May for a concert, and I'm like, oh, 156 00:08:21,880 --> 00:08:24,640 Speaker 3: if one of them falls over, there's more that are 157 00:08:24,680 --> 00:08:28,480 Speaker 3: backing up. So I don't know, can you blame the guy? 158 00:08:28,760 --> 00:08:30,960 Speaker 3: Quarter past four News Talks EB Darcy. 159 00:08:31,080 --> 00:08:35,920 Speaker 2: Next, it's the Heather Dubissie Allan Drive Full Show podcast 160 00:08:36,080 --> 00:08:38,840 Speaker 2: on iHeartRadio powered by News Talks B. 161 00:08:39,760 --> 00:08:42,200 Speaker 3: News Talks It B. It is four eighteen Good on 162 00:08:42,200 --> 00:08:43,880 Speaker 3: the No One seems to have a problem with the 163 00:08:43,880 --> 00:08:47,320 Speaker 3: PM going on a Jetstar flight. Good on the PM 164 00:08:47,400 --> 00:08:50,280 Speaker 3: says this text good on lux and can't bloody rely 165 00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:53,280 Speaker 3: on in New Zealand to get you anywhere at the moment, 166 00:08:53,320 --> 00:08:55,920 Speaker 3: and the prices are a total ripoff. So there you go. 167 00:08:56,280 --> 00:08:58,960 Speaker 3: As someone else says that this is not newsworthy at all, 168 00:08:59,120 --> 00:09:01,640 Speaker 3: I think it. I think it's worth talking about. I 169 00:09:01,640 --> 00:09:05,840 Speaker 3: think it's interesting to talk about because he's the former 170 00:09:05,880 --> 00:09:07,640 Speaker 3: boss of the in New Zealand. But I'm not saying 171 00:09:07,640 --> 00:09:11,160 Speaker 3: it's the biggest scandal in the world by any stretch. 172 00:09:11,440 --> 00:09:18,000 Speaker 2: For eighteen Sport with tb bed Live with in playing responsibly. 173 00:09:17,760 --> 00:09:20,720 Speaker 3: Join him in ours, Darcy, Darcy, Good afternoon, are good 174 00:09:20,720 --> 00:09:24,200 Speaker 3: after Baboon? Ryan, Now, Jenny Wiley has resigned as the 175 00:09:24,240 --> 00:09:26,160 Speaker 3: Boston Netball New Zealand and we're not going to hear 176 00:09:26,160 --> 00:09:28,520 Speaker 3: from Genny Wiley, and we're not gonna hear apparently either. 177 00:09:28,600 --> 00:09:31,480 Speaker 6: Doesn't sound so surprised, Ryan, Have you not been following 178 00:09:31,480 --> 00:09:33,079 Speaker 6: this story the last four months? 179 00:09:33,120 --> 00:09:35,000 Speaker 3: I have, But it doesn't make it any less annoying. 180 00:09:35,400 --> 00:09:38,040 Speaker 6: Precisely, No, we're not not to say anything. Oh, we're 181 00:09:38,040 --> 00:09:39,520 Speaker 6: tied up with this, and we're tied up with that. 182 00:09:39,600 --> 00:09:41,439 Speaker 6: We're not going to do that. And there's employment law 183 00:09:41,559 --> 00:09:44,360 Speaker 6: verse and is this that that and that that you're 184 00:09:44,440 --> 00:09:47,840 Speaker 6: running one of the biggest games in New Zealand. 185 00:09:48,520 --> 00:09:53,679 Speaker 3: Say something, suck it up, say anything, front up please now, please. 186 00:09:54,880 --> 00:09:57,319 Speaker 6: Talk back on this subject. Of the last three months. 187 00:09:57,320 --> 00:09:59,720 Speaker 6: I've never had the phone jam up so much about 188 00:09:59,800 --> 00:10:03,960 Speaker 6: net So what that says is there is huge engagement 189 00:10:04,000 --> 00:10:07,320 Speaker 6: that sport out there. People really care and it's not 190 00:10:07,360 --> 00:10:11,160 Speaker 6: about ars's media swine. It's about the people that play 191 00:10:11,160 --> 00:10:14,040 Speaker 6: the game, the other ones that's you representing. 192 00:10:14,520 --> 00:10:18,199 Speaker 3: Talk now. Final Black Caps West Indies test is underway 193 00:10:18,280 --> 00:10:20,679 Speaker 3: right now. How are we looking? How shit going well? 194 00:10:20,720 --> 00:10:22,600 Speaker 6: I don't know, because you've turned it onto the ashes. 195 00:10:22,679 --> 00:10:23,800 Speaker 3: Oh I have got the ashes on. 196 00:10:23,960 --> 00:10:27,640 Speaker 6: Oh my, my, my my, oh. Last time lot we'd 197 00:10:27,679 --> 00:10:31,280 Speaker 6: scored ten bazillion runs and we're doing particularly well. Look, 198 00:10:32,200 --> 00:10:36,600 Speaker 6: Tom Latham is scoring runs. Devin Conway's picked up a 199 00:10:36,600 --> 00:10:40,640 Speaker 6: ton two hundred and sixteen for the loss of none, 200 00:10:41,200 --> 00:10:45,520 Speaker 6: and so Latham's eighty seven unlucky number for Australian batsment. 201 00:10:45,720 --> 00:10:47,600 Speaker 6: It's thirteen away from the ton. They don't like that 202 00:10:47,679 --> 00:10:50,760 Speaker 6: one and one hundred and twenty for Devin Conway, which 203 00:10:50,800 --> 00:10:54,960 Speaker 6: is just fantastic news. Tonight, are on the on the 204 00:10:55,040 --> 00:10:57,880 Speaker 6: issue around who's next. I expect this is a case 205 00:10:57,920 --> 00:11:02,000 Speaker 6: of netball dominoes someone else go wake at the Bay 206 00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:05,840 Speaker 6: of Plenty of Magic. Team relationship manager Gary Dawson joins us, 207 00:11:06,120 --> 00:11:08,080 Speaker 6: I've had him on the show before. Talking about what 208 00:11:08,160 --> 00:11:10,480 Speaker 6: has to happen is pretty because the other one's about 209 00:11:10,480 --> 00:11:11,040 Speaker 6: what is to happen. 210 00:11:11,040 --> 00:11:13,520 Speaker 3: They're the ones that wanted to hurt someone to go 211 00:11:13,600 --> 00:11:14,240 Speaker 3: in the first place. 212 00:11:14,280 --> 00:11:16,520 Speaker 6: Wasn't they that club level? So he's going to talk 213 00:11:16,559 --> 00:11:19,199 Speaker 6: to us about that. And I've got I've got do 214 00:11:19,240 --> 00:11:21,680 Speaker 6: you know, Sirian Taylor, not personally, but you know the 215 00:11:21,760 --> 00:11:26,960 Speaker 6: name Virtual I and Virtualie of the company there basically 216 00:11:27,200 --> 00:11:31,679 Speaker 6: started digital coverage of sport. Remember the America's Cup when 217 00:11:31,679 --> 00:11:34,440 Speaker 6: they actually you could follow, yes, the boats and how 218 00:11:34,440 --> 00:11:37,920 Speaker 6: big that became, and they've moved on into baseball now 219 00:11:37,960 --> 00:11:40,920 Speaker 6: they do cricket. I'm getting him on to talk about 220 00:11:41,200 --> 00:11:43,560 Speaker 6: the snicko and what happened last night in the Test 221 00:11:43,600 --> 00:11:47,600 Speaker 6: match and where the advancers are in coverage of TV 222 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:51,320 Speaker 6: when it comes to AI contributions to the game. 223 00:11:51,400 --> 00:11:56,280 Speaker 3: So seven o'clock Darcy water Grave, sports talk host on 224 00:11:56,320 --> 00:11:58,480 Speaker 3: News Talk c B. It is twenty one minutes after 225 00:11:58,559 --> 00:12:01,439 Speaker 3: four nine two nine two is number of text. Keep 226 00:12:01,440 --> 00:12:04,560 Speaker 3: your text coming, and I know much many of you 227 00:12:04,679 --> 00:12:06,920 Speaker 3: are praising lucks, and lucks have just gone up in 228 00:12:06,920 --> 00:12:11,920 Speaker 3: my estimation for flight Jetstar. People are ditching their Kordu memberships. 229 00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:14,280 Speaker 3: Apparently this is a thing now. I know of a 230 00:12:14,320 --> 00:12:16,640 Speaker 3: story of a guy who was meant to flight in 231 00:12:16,720 --> 00:12:19,640 Speaker 3: Napier from Auckland. This is just in the last couple 232 00:12:19,640 --> 00:12:23,000 Speaker 3: of months, and flight gets canceled and he was going 233 00:12:23,040 --> 00:12:25,959 Speaker 3: for a specific event at midday or twelve thirty or 234 00:12:25,960 --> 00:12:30,040 Speaker 3: something in the afternoon, and flight gets canceled, and so 235 00:12:30,160 --> 00:12:32,040 Speaker 3: he goes, I'm okay, well I'll just go home there 236 00:12:32,040 --> 00:12:35,679 Speaker 3: because I'm not going to get there. And that rings 237 00:12:35,920 --> 00:12:38,080 Speaker 3: the any zeal On desk and they say, oh, well, 238 00:12:38,080 --> 00:12:39,640 Speaker 3: what did you want to go for? They said, we 239 00:12:39,679 --> 00:12:41,520 Speaker 3: can offer your flight tomorrow, and he said, but I've 240 00:12:41,559 --> 00:12:43,840 Speaker 3: just told you what. You know, I'm going for an 241 00:12:43,840 --> 00:12:47,200 Speaker 3: event that is today. It starts in an hour. And 242 00:12:47,240 --> 00:12:50,880 Speaker 3: they said, oh, so it's not just that flights are 243 00:12:51,080 --> 00:12:55,960 Speaker 3: inconveniently timed and overpriced, It's that there's a feeling, I 244 00:12:56,000 --> 00:12:58,439 Speaker 3: think amongst people that there's just not a lot of 245 00:12:58,440 --> 00:12:59,760 Speaker 3: common sense going on either. 246 00:13:00,320 --> 00:13:03,320 Speaker 1: For twenty two, the name you trumped to get the 247 00:13:03,360 --> 00:13:04,680 Speaker 1: answers you need. 248 00:13:04,960 --> 00:13:08,480 Speaker 2: It's Ryan Bridge on either duplicy Ellen Drive with one 249 00:13:08,559 --> 00:13:10,880 Speaker 2: New Zealand coverage like no one else. 250 00:13:11,240 --> 00:13:13,080 Speaker 1: News TALKSV four twenty five. 251 00:13:13,200 --> 00:13:17,640 Speaker 3: Interesting development this has come out of Wellington re Gloria Vale, 252 00:13:17,679 --> 00:13:20,680 Speaker 3: the Christian School at Gloria Vale. So not the Wholk. 253 00:13:20,720 --> 00:13:22,959 Speaker 3: You can't shut a community down, but they are shutting 254 00:13:23,240 --> 00:13:27,120 Speaker 3: the school down. The registration for Gloria Vale Christian School 255 00:13:27,520 --> 00:13:31,040 Speaker 3: is being canceled and the Secretary for Education is doing 256 00:13:31,080 --> 00:13:34,360 Speaker 3: this really quickly, so basically straight away, take effect from 257 00:13:34,440 --> 00:13:36,480 Speaker 3: the twenty third of January. So there are one hundred 258 00:13:36,480 --> 00:13:40,360 Speaker 3: and ten kids at this school and as of January 259 00:13:40,600 --> 00:13:43,480 Speaker 3: they won't know where they're going. And I don't know 260 00:13:43,520 --> 00:13:45,959 Speaker 3: what happens to kids. And this is after the era. 261 00:13:46,040 --> 00:13:47,800 Speaker 3: I mean, you know the issues with Gloria Vale and 262 00:13:47,840 --> 00:13:50,160 Speaker 3: the Aero report that came out said there was a 263 00:13:50,160 --> 00:13:53,840 Speaker 3: bunch of you're going to have eight boxes ticked for registration. 264 00:13:54,000 --> 00:13:56,680 Speaker 3: They didn't take three of them. You know, couldn't be. 265 00:13:57,080 --> 00:14:00,920 Speaker 3: It wasn't a safe place emotionally and physic A whole 266 00:14:00,960 --> 00:14:04,760 Speaker 3: bunch of things going on at Gloriavale. But to close 267 00:14:04,800 --> 00:14:09,040 Speaker 3: it down so quickly, what happens to the kids and 268 00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:12,040 Speaker 3: do they just get homeschooled now? And is there any better? 269 00:14:12,080 --> 00:14:13,839 Speaker 3: I don't know, but we're going to talk to Brian Henry. 270 00:14:13,880 --> 00:14:16,240 Speaker 3: He's a lawyer for the gloriavale Levers group. He's with 271 00:14:16,360 --> 00:14:20,880 Speaker 3: us after five this evening across the Tasman Albanezi. He 272 00:14:20,960 --> 00:14:23,600 Speaker 3: says more needs to be done. He's under pressure, right, 273 00:14:23,600 --> 00:14:25,960 Speaker 3: He's been copying a lot of flat for his response 274 00:14:26,520 --> 00:14:30,600 Speaker 3: to the rising tide of anti Semitism in Australia. So 275 00:14:30,640 --> 00:14:32,880 Speaker 3: he's come out with a bunch of changes and he's 276 00:14:32,880 --> 00:14:33,840 Speaker 3: just done a press conference. 277 00:14:33,920 --> 00:14:36,240 Speaker 7: Ever, listen, it is clear we need to do more 278 00:14:36,760 --> 00:14:41,600 Speaker 7: to combat this evil scourge, much more. Today I'm announcing 279 00:14:41,600 --> 00:14:46,400 Speaker 7: a significant number of additional actions to build on the plan. Firstly, 280 00:14:46,480 --> 00:14:49,320 Speaker 7: the Attorney General and Minister for Home Affairs will develop 281 00:14:49,360 --> 00:14:52,920 Speaker 7: a package of legislative reforms to crack down on those 282 00:14:52,920 --> 00:14:56,120 Speaker 7: who spread hate, division and radicalization. 283 00:14:56,960 --> 00:15:00,440 Speaker 3: That's Anthony Ebnezi in Australia. We'll talk to murriol about 284 00:15:00,440 --> 00:15:04,280 Speaker 3: that's get some regage, some reaction. He's basically making some 285 00:15:04,480 --> 00:15:09,640 Speaker 3: changes or recommending some changes, including hate speech. A couple 286 00:15:09,720 --> 00:15:11,440 Speaker 3: of tweeks here I will talk to Murray get to 287 00:15:11,480 --> 00:15:14,160 Speaker 3: the bottom of that. Also, we'll talk to brad Olsen 288 00:15:14,200 --> 00:15:20,120 Speaker 3: after five on this GDP read four quarter three full ahead, 289 00:15:26,800 --> 00:15:27,600 Speaker 3: You Love. 290 00:15:27,440 --> 00:15:33,440 Speaker 2: Me on your smart speaker, on the iHeart app and 291 00:15:33,480 --> 00:15:35,080 Speaker 2: in your car on your drive home. 292 00:15:35,240 --> 00:15:37,960 Speaker 1: It's Ryan Bridge on hither duplus the Ellen Drive. 293 00:15:38,120 --> 00:15:41,240 Speaker 2: With one New Zealand and the power of satellite mobile 294 00:15:41,400 --> 00:15:42,280 Speaker 2: news talks, they'd be. 295 00:15:50,880 --> 00:15:52,880 Speaker 3: Pretty five away from five year on Newstalks, we'd be 296 00:15:52,960 --> 00:15:55,120 Speaker 3: Barry Sober. We'll take a look back at last night's 297 00:15:55,280 --> 00:15:57,960 Speaker 3: German debates who had the best zingers. He's coming up 298 00:15:57,960 --> 00:15:59,400 Speaker 3: in just a few seconds, and we'll get to brad 299 00:15:59,400 --> 00:16:02,680 Speaker 3: Olsen on the GDP number out for September quarter bats 300 00:16:02,720 --> 00:16:06,720 Speaker 3: coming up after five. You know, Stephen Topless from BNZ 301 00:16:06,920 --> 00:16:08,520 Speaker 3: is their head of research. You would have seen him 302 00:16:08,520 --> 00:16:10,400 Speaker 3: on the tally, heard him on the station at number 303 00:16:10,400 --> 00:16:12,920 Speaker 3: of times. Anyway, he's come out with an interesting take 304 00:16:13,440 --> 00:16:16,560 Speaker 3: on the September because it's up one point one percent 305 00:16:16,640 --> 00:16:19,440 Speaker 3: and the RBNZ and most of the economists were saying 306 00:16:20,200 --> 00:16:23,600 Speaker 3: zero point nine, which so we've beaten expectations should be 307 00:16:23,600 --> 00:16:27,240 Speaker 3: a good thing. However, he says, just just simmer down, 308 00:16:27,720 --> 00:16:29,800 Speaker 3: just be a little bit skeptical and just be a 309 00:16:29,840 --> 00:16:32,480 Speaker 3: little wary of all the noise. And he runs you 310 00:16:32,560 --> 00:16:35,920 Speaker 3: through the last five quarters. So, over the last five quarters, 311 00:16:35,960 --> 00:16:40,520 Speaker 3: starting with twenty twenty four's third quarter, the economy has, 312 00:16:40,600 --> 00:16:44,680 Speaker 3: he says, allegedly, plummeted one point three percent, stalled at 313 00:16:44,800 --> 00:16:49,160 Speaker 3: zero point one percent, sawed one point one percent, crashed 314 00:16:49,240 --> 00:16:53,040 Speaker 3: one percent, and sawed again in quarter three, this time 315 00:16:53,080 --> 00:16:55,640 Speaker 3: by one point one percent. He asked the question, I 316 00:16:55,680 --> 00:16:58,680 Speaker 3: think it's a reasonable one. Does anyone feel that this 317 00:16:58,760 --> 00:17:02,360 Speaker 3: is a true reflection of what is happening in their lives? 318 00:17:02,400 --> 00:17:05,760 Speaker 3: Do we really think we are currently growing at the 319 00:17:05,800 --> 00:17:08,760 Speaker 3: same pace as China one point one percent for quarter 320 00:17:08,800 --> 00:17:12,560 Speaker 3: three and three times out of Australia zero point four 321 00:17:12,600 --> 00:17:15,480 Speaker 3: for the quarter. He's basically just making the point. You 322 00:17:15,560 --> 00:17:18,400 Speaker 3: need to look at the number across the year, which 323 00:17:18,440 --> 00:17:20,879 Speaker 3: is one point three percent higher than it was a 324 00:17:20,960 --> 00:17:24,040 Speaker 3: year ago. So we are coming out of a recession. 325 00:17:24,480 --> 00:17:27,560 Speaker 3: It has been slow, it has been protracted, but we're 326 00:17:27,560 --> 00:17:32,159 Speaker 3: on the up. However, caution warning, its early days. Twenty 327 00:17:32,160 --> 00:17:32,720 Speaker 3: three to five. 328 00:17:33,320 --> 00:17:36,600 Speaker 2: It's the world wires on newstalks, Edy drive. 329 00:17:36,960 --> 00:17:39,840 Speaker 3: Let's go to the US. Trump's now saying stolen land 330 00:17:40,000 --> 00:17:42,800 Speaker 3: is the new reason for going after Venezuela, although no 331 00:17:42,840 --> 00:17:45,320 Speaker 3: one's really sure exactly what he means by that. 332 00:17:45,600 --> 00:17:46,879 Speaker 8: Getting land oil right. 333 00:17:47,040 --> 00:17:49,680 Speaker 6: Whatever we had they took it away because we had 334 00:17:49,720 --> 00:17:53,480 Speaker 6: a president maybe wasn't watching, but. 335 00:17:53,359 --> 00:17:54,320 Speaker 9: They're not going to do that. 336 00:17:54,720 --> 00:17:57,800 Speaker 3: We wanted back more on him later. Former Australian Treasurer 337 00:17:57,920 --> 00:18:01,919 Speaker 3: Josh Friedenberg has had AIRI interview on the ABC. This 338 00:18:02,000 --> 00:18:05,240 Speaker 3: is after yesterday his criticism of Elbow over the handling 339 00:18:05,280 --> 00:18:06,320 Speaker 3: of the Jewish community. 340 00:18:06,400 --> 00:18:10,479 Speaker 9: How do we not see this through a political lens, 341 00:18:11,480 --> 00:18:14,080 Speaker 9: I mean the case that you're making a personal case 342 00:18:14,080 --> 00:18:15,040 Speaker 9: against the Prime minister. 343 00:18:16,040 --> 00:18:18,199 Speaker 10: I'm deeply offended by what you just said. 344 00:18:18,240 --> 00:18:19,240 Speaker 11: That is an insult. 345 00:18:19,840 --> 00:18:23,480 Speaker 8: That is an insult to say that there's any political 346 00:18:23,520 --> 00:18:24,800 Speaker 8: motivation in this now. 347 00:18:24,840 --> 00:18:28,560 Speaker 3: Of course he was from the Liberal Party, Elbow from Labour. Finally, 348 00:18:28,640 --> 00:18:32,240 Speaker 3: a female polar bear in Canada has adopted a new cub. 349 00:18:32,640 --> 00:18:36,080 Speaker 3: It's extremely rare for polar bears to adopt. This is 350 00:18:36,240 --> 00:18:39,720 Speaker 3: only the thirteenth beer adoption on record in the Western 351 00:18:39,800 --> 00:18:42,520 Speaker 3: Hudson Bay area and they've studied something like four and 352 00:18:42,560 --> 00:18:46,280 Speaker 3: a half thousand beers. A conservation group says the polar 353 00:18:46,320 --> 00:18:49,119 Speaker 3: beer cubs don't tend to last long if they're on 354 00:18:49,160 --> 00:18:49,560 Speaker 3: their own. 355 00:18:49,800 --> 00:18:53,159 Speaker 12: The survivalry for cubs to make it to adulthood is 356 00:18:53,480 --> 00:18:54,040 Speaker 12: not great. 357 00:18:54,119 --> 00:18:57,080 Speaker 3: It's around fifty percent give or tech depending on the year. 358 00:18:57,520 --> 00:18:59,960 Speaker 13: But we know that if a little cub has NORMA, 359 00:19:00,200 --> 00:19:01,399 Speaker 13: it has almost no chance. 360 00:19:01,880 --> 00:19:04,760 Speaker 3: Now, this story seems so cute and friendly and cuddly 361 00:19:04,840 --> 00:19:07,560 Speaker 3: and nice, but how do we know that the mum 362 00:19:07,600 --> 00:19:09,960 Speaker 3: didn't steal the baby from another mum? 363 00:19:10,800 --> 00:19:14,720 Speaker 2: International correspondence with Ends and Eye Insurance, Peace of mind 364 00:19:14,760 --> 00:19:15,840 Speaker 2: for New Zealand business. 365 00:19:17,280 --> 00:19:20,480 Speaker 3: While we're being skeptical about things, let's go to Murray, 366 00:19:20,480 --> 00:19:23,480 Speaker 3: Old's Australia correspondent who joins us now. Murray, good afternoon, 367 00:19:24,040 --> 00:19:26,760 Speaker 3: Hi Ryan, good afternoon to you. Now, Albaneze has made 368 00:19:26,760 --> 00:19:29,560 Speaker 3: an announcement about hate speech laws. What's he said? 369 00:19:30,680 --> 00:19:33,920 Speaker 14: Well, look, it's a whole lot. There's been a sort 370 00:19:33,960 --> 00:19:38,400 Speaker 14: of a massive info dump today from the government under pressure. 371 00:19:38,600 --> 00:19:42,119 Speaker 14: I saw the interview last night Josh Friedenberg. 372 00:19:42,600 --> 00:19:45,520 Speaker 11: He's Jewish. He was very very upset. 373 00:19:45,560 --> 00:19:49,439 Speaker 14: He was at Bondai yesterday bondeou Beach, met other Jewish leaders, 374 00:19:49,480 --> 00:19:55,280 Speaker 14: attended at a funeral. He was well wound up personally, deeply, 375 00:19:55,359 --> 00:19:58,080 Speaker 14: deeply affected, but for him to say there's no politics 376 00:19:58,080 --> 00:20:01,920 Speaker 14: in this is patently ridiculous. I'm not in any way 377 00:20:01,960 --> 00:20:07,640 Speaker 14: diminishing the deep feelings of grief and sorrow and whatever 378 00:20:07,960 --> 00:20:10,640 Speaker 14: word you want to use. Freedenberg and the Jewish community 379 00:20:10,640 --> 00:20:14,600 Speaker 14: here are deeply traumatized. But it's just wrong to say 380 00:20:14,640 --> 00:20:16,679 Speaker 14: there's no politics in this. We'll have a look at 381 00:20:16,680 --> 00:20:18,800 Speaker 14: that in just a moment. ALBANIZI not at the funeral 382 00:20:19,480 --> 00:20:21,960 Speaker 14: of the little girl, the youngest victim ten years old, 383 00:20:21,960 --> 00:20:25,960 Speaker 14: but Susan Lee is now that's clearly political. But anyway, 384 00:20:26,000 --> 00:20:29,920 Speaker 14: back to your point, and there's a whole suite of measures. 385 00:20:30,240 --> 00:20:33,119 Speaker 14: The government will step up the fight against anti Semitism. 386 00:20:33,440 --> 00:20:35,159 Speaker 14: People are saying, where the hell was it in the 387 00:20:35,200 --> 00:20:37,879 Speaker 14: last two years. He also admits he and the government 388 00:20:37,880 --> 00:20:40,360 Speaker 14: could have done a whole lot more to combat the 389 00:20:40,400 --> 00:20:44,720 Speaker 14: hate that's fested within the community. The target now will 390 00:20:44,720 --> 00:20:46,919 Speaker 14: be hate preachers, these people who use the net to 391 00:20:46,960 --> 00:20:50,480 Speaker 14: spread these evil messages to their weird followers. Penalties for 392 00:20:50,520 --> 00:20:54,840 Speaker 14: hate speech to be amped up. Hate will be an 393 00:20:54,920 --> 00:20:59,120 Speaker 14: aggravating factor now to be considered by judges and magistrates 394 00:20:59,119 --> 00:21:02,680 Speaker 14: and sentencing. Is convicted of online threats and harassment plus 395 00:21:02,720 --> 00:21:04,600 Speaker 14: The government's going to draw up a program to list 396 00:21:04,720 --> 00:21:08,840 Speaker 14: organizations that are found to promote hatred and division much 397 00:21:08,920 --> 00:21:14,000 Speaker 14: tougher visa checks Ryan to, you know, to potentially weed 398 00:21:14,040 --> 00:21:17,000 Speaker 14: out these dreadful people to want to come here and 399 00:21:17,119 --> 00:21:19,800 Speaker 14: sew division and maybe even go further. There's to be 400 00:21:19,800 --> 00:21:23,560 Speaker 14: an education task force to make your education that the 401 00:21:23,600 --> 00:21:27,080 Speaker 14: system has the tools to respond to antisemitism. You know, 402 00:21:27,119 --> 00:21:30,919 Speaker 14: in Australian university's not all of them. Jewish students have 403 00:21:31,000 --> 00:21:34,160 Speaker 14: to go and study in secure areas within the campus. 404 00:21:34,560 --> 00:21:38,080 Speaker 14: Messis ridiculous. This is Australia. It's not the bloody Middle East. 405 00:21:38,400 --> 00:21:40,959 Speaker 14: The government says this is brand new legal territory for it, 406 00:21:41,280 --> 00:21:44,880 Speaker 14: and it is. But you do get the feeling it's 407 00:21:44,880 --> 00:21:47,600 Speaker 14: playing catch up after the dreadful events of last Sunday. 408 00:21:48,440 --> 00:21:49,720 Speaker 14: Very much playing catch. 409 00:21:49,560 --> 00:21:53,119 Speaker 3: Up and an over correction. You know, are you at 410 00:21:53,200 --> 00:21:55,560 Speaker 3: risk of that of an overcorrection given the pressure is 411 00:21:55,680 --> 00:21:57,320 Speaker 3: under I don't think. 412 00:21:57,200 --> 00:21:59,040 Speaker 14: As anyone in this country is going to say you 413 00:21:59,080 --> 00:22:02,120 Speaker 14: can overcorrect too much. Not what we saw on Sunday. 414 00:22:04,000 --> 00:22:05,760 Speaker 14: This country has been changed forever on the back of 415 00:22:05,760 --> 00:22:08,400 Speaker 14: what happened on Sunday. I think there's been. 416 00:22:08,280 --> 00:22:10,120 Speaker 11: A lot of a lot of soul searching. 417 00:22:10,760 --> 00:22:13,840 Speaker 14: A lot of people, me included, thought it'll never happened here. 418 00:22:13,840 --> 00:22:17,320 Speaker 14: We're far too far away from the hotbeds of hate 419 00:22:17,359 --> 00:22:19,480 Speaker 14: around the you know, the rest of the world. Well, 420 00:22:20,440 --> 00:22:22,879 Speaker 14: that bubble was well and truly pricked last weekend. 421 00:22:23,000 --> 00:22:27,640 Speaker 3: Was Murray the funeral situation you mentioned it briefly, was 422 00:22:27,640 --> 00:22:29,960 Speaker 3: was he invited? Was Elbow invited to the funeral and 423 00:22:30,000 --> 00:22:32,720 Speaker 3: didn't go like, what's it's very. 424 00:22:32,560 --> 00:22:38,679 Speaker 14: Well, it's been pardon me portrayed here today. His office 425 00:22:38,720 --> 00:22:41,480 Speaker 14: did not reach out to the family of this little 426 00:22:41,480 --> 00:22:45,080 Speaker 14: girl who died last Sunday. The family was on the 427 00:22:45,119 --> 00:22:48,399 Speaker 14: record very very angry at what it believed to be 428 00:22:48,480 --> 00:22:53,920 Speaker 14: the government's failure to tackle anti Semitism. So his office said, 429 00:22:54,320 --> 00:22:57,040 Speaker 14: we did not want to offend the family. We didn't 430 00:22:57,040 --> 00:22:59,600 Speaker 14: want to upset them any more than they were already upset, 431 00:22:59,600 --> 00:23:02,600 Speaker 14: for goodness sake, so we did not put that call in. 432 00:23:03,160 --> 00:23:08,280 Speaker 14: Tanya Tanya Plebasek, who is a government front bencher. Her 433 00:23:08,359 --> 00:23:12,280 Speaker 14: electorate is where this little girl's grandparents live, so she's 434 00:23:12,320 --> 00:23:15,960 Speaker 14: there in that capacity representing the federal government. Susan Lee, 435 00:23:16,040 --> 00:23:19,160 Speaker 14: the opposition leader, is also there at the funeral. Today 436 00:23:19,520 --> 00:23:23,520 Speaker 14: and she went through the office of Liberal frontbencher Julian Lisa, 437 00:23:23,520 --> 00:23:29,320 Speaker 14: who was himself a Jew. He or his officer, i 438 00:23:29,320 --> 00:23:33,160 Speaker 14: should say, contacted the family, may we please attend and 439 00:23:33,240 --> 00:23:35,720 Speaker 14: they said yes, of course, come along. So Susan Lee 440 00:23:35,760 --> 00:23:37,760 Speaker 14: is there and the Prime Minister is not. 441 00:23:39,720 --> 00:23:43,080 Speaker 3: Murray appreciate that. Murray Old's are Australia correspondent. It is seventeen 442 00:23:43,119 --> 00:23:45,720 Speaker 3: to five Barry Soaper with politics, next. 443 00:23:45,800 --> 00:23:49,440 Speaker 2: Politics with centrics, credit check your customers and get payments. 444 00:23:49,119 --> 00:23:52,280 Speaker 3: Certainty five and that means Barry's here. Very good afternoon, 445 00:23:52,400 --> 00:23:55,320 Speaker 3: good afternoon, right, yay. Can we celebrate growth? 446 00:23:55,440 --> 00:24:01,120 Speaker 15: Oh, we most certainly can. Congratulations, jubilation. We've got growth 447 00:24:01,240 --> 00:24:04,600 Speaker 15: of over one percent for the quarter, one point one percent, 448 00:24:04,960 --> 00:24:07,160 Speaker 15: and I've got to say if you look around the world, 449 00:24:07,560 --> 00:24:11,160 Speaker 15: that's a strong growth rate compared even to Australia they 450 00:24:11,200 --> 00:24:15,080 Speaker 15: had zero point four percent for the September quarter. The 451 00:24:15,200 --> 00:24:19,639 Speaker 15: UK has zero point one percent. So New Zealand's looking 452 00:24:19,680 --> 00:24:22,520 Speaker 15: pretty good. And of course it's a great Christmas present 453 00:24:23,040 --> 00:24:27,880 Speaker 15: for Nikola Willis. She's beaming from air to air today. 454 00:24:28,680 --> 00:24:31,520 Speaker 15: The point that she makes is that she's pleased with 455 00:24:31,680 --> 00:24:35,679 Speaker 15: particularly the growth areas two point two percent in the 456 00:24:35,680 --> 00:24:40,600 Speaker 15: manufacturing sector and one point seven percent in construction, one 457 00:24:40,600 --> 00:24:43,960 Speaker 15: point six percent in business services. Now, you know, we've 458 00:24:43,960 --> 00:24:48,080 Speaker 15: been harping on on this program for some time that 459 00:24:48,440 --> 00:24:51,159 Speaker 15: things are going to turn the corner, and this is 460 00:24:51,200 --> 00:24:54,560 Speaker 15: the first indication that they are turning the corner. And 461 00:24:54,600 --> 00:24:56,960 Speaker 15: I think next year is going to be a vastly 462 00:24:57,000 --> 00:25:01,080 Speaker 15: difficult year. As you know, Ryan will have to have 463 00:25:01,200 --> 00:25:04,520 Speaker 15: to approach a year with confidence, and this will hopefully 464 00:25:05,000 --> 00:25:07,439 Speaker 15: give them a bit of confidence exactly. 465 00:25:07,480 --> 00:25:09,600 Speaker 3: And all of those sectors you've just mentioned are all 466 00:25:09,680 --> 00:25:12,200 Speaker 3: job rich ones, right, So that's been part of the puzzle. 467 00:25:12,440 --> 00:25:15,399 Speaker 3: The only thing is, because you know, Beans has come 468 00:25:15,440 --> 00:25:18,280 Speaker 3: out with something on this comparison with China and with 469 00:25:18,359 --> 00:25:21,000 Speaker 3: Australian stuff, is that we are coming off a lower 470 00:25:21,040 --> 00:25:24,119 Speaker 3: but a lower base, So it doesn't feel like we 471 00:25:24,480 --> 00:25:26,840 Speaker 3: probably don't feel like we're doing three times better than 472 00:25:26,840 --> 00:25:28,120 Speaker 3: the Australian you know what I mean. 473 00:25:28,119 --> 00:25:31,479 Speaker 15: I think we're just getting over Adrian or pumping us 474 00:25:31,520 --> 00:25:32,200 Speaker 15: into restation. 475 00:25:32,440 --> 00:25:35,639 Speaker 3: Exactly. They're exactly right, very exactly right now. Our parliament 476 00:25:35,640 --> 00:25:37,480 Speaker 3: wound up last night a bit of a roasting. I 477 00:25:37,520 --> 00:25:41,320 Speaker 3: had to look at the best bits last night wasn't 478 00:25:41,320 --> 00:25:42,080 Speaker 3: that great, wasn't it? 479 00:25:42,320 --> 00:25:42,560 Speaker 1: Well? 480 00:25:43,160 --> 00:25:45,679 Speaker 15: One roasting I really well, it was several that I 481 00:25:45,760 --> 00:25:49,479 Speaker 15: actually liked. Was Chris Lackson, who, of course you mentioned, 482 00:25:49,680 --> 00:25:52,520 Speaker 15: was on a jet Star yes afternoon coming back to Aukland. 483 00:25:53,080 --> 00:25:56,359 Speaker 15: It won't be for cost reasons. It'll be schedule, I 484 00:25:56,359 --> 00:25:58,439 Speaker 15: would think, but you wouldn't believe it. 485 00:25:58,560 --> 00:25:58,800 Speaker 11: Goes. 486 00:25:59,280 --> 00:26:01,920 Speaker 15: Heather has raved on about us going on jet Star 487 00:26:02,000 --> 00:26:04,240 Speaker 15: for the first time a couple. 488 00:26:04,119 --> 00:26:04,680 Speaker 3: Of weeks ago. 489 00:26:05,320 --> 00:26:09,080 Speaker 15: For the first time we were jet Star virgins, and 490 00:26:09,720 --> 00:26:13,560 Speaker 15: the number of virgins that we came across outside the 491 00:26:13,640 --> 00:26:17,399 Speaker 15: Cora Club sitting in the the you know, out in 492 00:26:17,440 --> 00:26:18,560 Speaker 15: the public concourse. 493 00:26:18,640 --> 00:26:21,000 Speaker 10: Oh god, they were all virgins going. 494 00:26:20,800 --> 00:26:25,560 Speaker 15: On anyway, I've said enough about that clearly, you guys, well. 495 00:26:25,400 --> 00:26:28,359 Speaker 3: I like sorry. So this is I don't have a 496 00:26:28,440 --> 00:26:31,720 Speaker 3: core membership and I probably have flown in the last 497 00:26:31,720 --> 00:26:34,399 Speaker 3: three years more on Jetstar than I have in New Zealand. 498 00:26:34,560 --> 00:26:38,320 Speaker 15: Oh dear, oh listen, can I leave. 499 00:26:38,760 --> 00:26:40,800 Speaker 3: I haven't been I haven't been here long enough to 500 00:26:40,840 --> 00:26:41,959 Speaker 3: get a core membership. 501 00:26:42,000 --> 00:26:43,679 Speaker 15: Well, I'll tell you how the price is compared. It 502 00:26:43,720 --> 00:26:47,840 Speaker 15: was one fifty bucks to fly to Wellington from Auckland 503 00:26:48,320 --> 00:26:50,600 Speaker 15: and New in New Zealand, same flight, four hundred and 504 00:26:50,640 --> 00:26:51,120 Speaker 15: fifty bucks. 505 00:26:51,160 --> 00:26:52,840 Speaker 3: Yes, that's outrageous, it is. 506 00:26:53,080 --> 00:26:56,800 Speaker 15: But anyway, look anyway to the roasting on Winston Peter's 507 00:26:57,680 --> 00:26:59,400 Speaker 15: Chris Lux and I thought it was a great line. 508 00:26:59,480 --> 00:27:02,639 Speaker 15: He said, he's on a sterling job representing New Zealand 509 00:27:02,680 --> 00:27:06,800 Speaker 15: on the world stage. He's actually such a dedicated foreign 510 00:27:06,800 --> 00:27:11,080 Speaker 15: minister that he's mastered French. And every time he gets 511 00:27:11,080 --> 00:27:14,920 Speaker 15: a post or post something on social media, he replies. 512 00:27:15,960 --> 00:27:17,440 Speaker 3: It was quite good. It was good. 513 00:27:17,800 --> 00:27:18,880 Speaker 15: I think that's very clear. 514 00:27:19,119 --> 00:27:21,600 Speaker 3: The other one I quite liked is self deprecating one 515 00:27:21,600 --> 00:27:24,080 Speaker 3: where he said he spoke to Jesus every night. That's right, 516 00:27:24,119 --> 00:27:26,040 Speaker 3: that was. 517 00:27:26,280 --> 00:27:29,880 Speaker 15: Seymour, he said. Earlier this year, David said that Jesus 518 00:27:30,000 --> 00:27:33,280 Speaker 15: very well might support act and he said, but I 519 00:27:33,320 --> 00:27:35,560 Speaker 15: talked to the guy every night, and I've never heard 520 00:27:35,680 --> 00:27:36,800 Speaker 15: him say anything about it. 521 00:27:37,160 --> 00:27:39,280 Speaker 3: But you always wonder who's writing these jokes. 522 00:27:39,720 --> 00:27:42,000 Speaker 15: Of course, you know, I mean, you can't take it 523 00:27:42,000 --> 00:27:44,680 Speaker 15: away from him. He had to deliver it. But I mean, 524 00:27:44,800 --> 00:27:47,760 Speaker 15: Chris Hopkins, he had some pretty good ones as well, 525 00:27:48,160 --> 00:27:54,919 Speaker 15: he said on Chris Bishop. For one, he said he 526 00:27:55,040 --> 00:27:58,800 Speaker 15: should be the host of a barbecue. He prepares one 527 00:27:58,840 --> 00:28:03,520 Speaker 15: special meal a wild mushroom stroggen Off. But it's only 528 00:28:03,560 --> 00:28:07,920 Speaker 15: for Chris Luxon, you know. So there was some good, good. 529 00:28:07,760 --> 00:28:12,080 Speaker 3: Cut and we had after t MP for her name 530 00:28:12,160 --> 00:28:15,359 Speaker 3: escape sing singing and what she has a beautiful voice. 531 00:28:15,400 --> 00:28:16,760 Speaker 3: I mean she can belt it out. 532 00:28:16,680 --> 00:28:17,800 Speaker 15: Totally out of tune. 533 00:28:18,280 --> 00:28:24,560 Speaker 3: I'm sorry, Oh no it was crane. I saw it 534 00:28:24,560 --> 00:28:27,639 Speaker 3: cut up. I thought it was okay, Now go back 535 00:28:27,680 --> 00:28:31,080 Speaker 3: and listen again. The Green said they're going to tighten selection. 536 00:28:31,480 --> 00:28:34,040 Speaker 3: Look I find Jetstar, so clearly I've got no class, 537 00:28:34,800 --> 00:28:37,680 Speaker 3: no taste. Green sad they're going to tighten the selection 538 00:28:37,800 --> 00:28:39,320 Speaker 3: processes for their party. 539 00:28:39,760 --> 00:28:43,200 Speaker 15: Well yes, and one would you would have to say, 540 00:28:43,800 --> 00:28:49,360 Speaker 15: indeed they need to because Darlene Tana remember her, and 541 00:28:49,720 --> 00:28:55,320 Speaker 15: remember Benjamin Doyle. He faced serious threats when he and 542 00:28:55,440 --> 00:28:59,760 Speaker 15: vitriol before he decided to quit parliament after even less 543 00:28:59,800 --> 00:29:03,680 Speaker 15: than a year. Chloe Swarwrick said that they were really 544 00:29:03,760 --> 00:29:08,480 Speaker 15: proud of their MPs and focusing on what they're going 545 00:29:08,520 --> 00:29:10,200 Speaker 15: to do for next year's election. 546 00:29:10,320 --> 00:29:11,760 Speaker 6: Well, certainly I. 547 00:29:11,720 --> 00:29:14,680 Speaker 15: Think they have to look at their selection process because 548 00:29:15,040 --> 00:29:17,880 Speaker 15: it really hasn't stood the test this year. 549 00:29:18,200 --> 00:29:20,640 Speaker 3: No, it's certainly not very appreciate. 550 00:29:20,160 --> 00:29:22,360 Speaker 15: That nowice to talk to you jetstar man. 551 00:29:22,400 --> 00:29:24,240 Speaker 3: I may or may not see you in a core 552 00:29:24,440 --> 00:29:28,360 Speaker 3: lounge in the sometime in the futures. With politics, there's 553 00:29:28,640 --> 00:29:30,440 Speaker 3: nine to five News Talks, the bet. 554 00:29:30,960 --> 00:29:35,120 Speaker 2: The headlines and the hard questions. It's the mic asking breakfast. 555 00:29:35,240 --> 00:29:38,680 Speaker 12: Government has finally killed its road cone hotline, which despite 556 00:29:38,720 --> 00:29:41,040 Speaker 12: the name, actually wasn't a hotline at all, and ninety 557 00:29:41,040 --> 00:29:43,320 Speaker 12: three percent of the road cones were actually within the rules. 558 00:29:43,360 --> 00:29:46,200 Speaker 12: Brook van Velden is the Minister for Workplace Relations in safety. 559 00:29:46,240 --> 00:29:46,959 Speaker 3: Why'd you kill it? 560 00:29:47,040 --> 00:29:49,520 Speaker 16: Well, after six months it was pretty clear what the 561 00:29:49,600 --> 00:29:52,680 Speaker 16: data was coming back with. Even though there weren't people 562 00:29:52,680 --> 00:29:55,800 Speaker 16: on the ground putting out excessive use of road cones, 563 00:29:55,880 --> 00:29:59,200 Speaker 16: eighty six percent of them were compliant with council approved 564 00:29:59,360 --> 00:30:02,920 Speaker 16: temporary trap management plans, which really pointed the finger the 565 00:30:02,960 --> 00:30:06,320 Speaker 16: fact that the council have excessive use with their plans. 566 00:30:06,720 --> 00:30:10,320 Speaker 2: Heather duplicy Ellen on the my hosting Breakfast Fact Tomorrow 567 00:30:10,360 --> 00:30:12,880 Speaker 2: at six am, We're the Defender News. 568 00:30:12,680 --> 00:30:15,520 Speaker 3: Talks EDB six to five on News Talks, he'b We'll 569 00:30:15,520 --> 00:30:17,840 Speaker 3: talk to Brian Henry after five about Gloria Vale, the 570 00:30:18,080 --> 00:30:22,480 Speaker 3: Ministry of Educations deregistering, shutting, basically shutting the school down. 571 00:30:22,520 --> 00:30:26,520 Speaker 3: There this Texas, says Ryan. Gloria Vale is an hour 572 00:30:26,520 --> 00:30:29,920 Speaker 3: from Graymouth. There are a couple of small schools closer 573 00:30:29,960 --> 00:30:34,240 Speaker 3: to Muana and a Hoder A Hoder, I should say, 574 00:30:34,600 --> 00:30:36,440 Speaker 3: but there is no way they could take them. Is 575 00:30:36,480 --> 00:30:39,000 Speaker 3: the ministry going to send six buses up every morning 576 00:30:39,040 --> 00:30:41,840 Speaker 3: to bring them to already overcrowded schools? This is crazy. 577 00:30:41,960 --> 00:30:44,479 Speaker 3: Should have been done gradually. I tend to agree, Like 578 00:30:44,560 --> 00:30:47,160 Speaker 3: what you can't just close the school down? The effective 579 00:30:47,240 --> 00:30:50,560 Speaker 3: date is twenty third of January. So you've got parents 580 00:30:50,600 --> 00:30:52,880 Speaker 3: who are thinking their kids are going to a school 581 00:30:53,800 --> 00:30:57,200 Speaker 3: starting after Christmas and that school will no longer be 582 00:30:57,240 --> 00:31:00,000 Speaker 3: in existence. So what do you do They all got 583 00:31:00,120 --> 00:31:02,720 Speaker 3: to be homeschooled or what is the plan. We'll talk 584 00:31:02,760 --> 00:31:05,920 Speaker 3: to Brian Henry about that. After five now loads of 585 00:31:05,920 --> 00:31:08,720 Speaker 3: texts on Jetstar, Ryan, nothing wrong with Jetstar. It's not 586 00:31:08,800 --> 00:31:10,480 Speaker 3: five Star, but it gets you from A to B, 587 00:31:10,720 --> 00:31:14,959 Speaker 3: says Die. I like that, Die, and it's true. The 588 00:31:15,000 --> 00:31:17,600 Speaker 3: only thing with Jetstar that I have encountered in the 589 00:31:17,640 --> 00:31:20,600 Speaker 3: past is that if you get on there the first 590 00:31:20,640 --> 00:31:23,880 Speaker 3: flight in the morning, the very early one, they would 591 00:31:23,880 --> 00:31:26,040 Speaker 3: often cancel it, and so you get a text at 592 00:31:26,080 --> 00:31:28,600 Speaker 3: like three am if it's a six thirty am flight, 593 00:31:28,640 --> 00:31:31,200 Speaker 3: you get a text at three am saying we've canceled it. 594 00:31:31,240 --> 00:31:33,080 Speaker 3: And that did happen to me quite a few times. 595 00:31:33,120 --> 00:31:35,760 Speaker 3: And then if you want to rebook it, would you'd 596 00:31:35,760 --> 00:31:39,320 Speaker 3: basically have to wait a day or two. So you can't. 597 00:31:39,440 --> 00:31:41,880 Speaker 3: You have to be a little flexible with Jetstar. That's 598 00:31:41,920 --> 00:31:44,280 Speaker 3: the only caveat for you, which I don't think would 599 00:31:44,280 --> 00:31:50,520 Speaker 3: suit very clearly. Ryan, isn't this is from Pauline Good afternoon, 600 00:31:50,520 --> 00:31:54,360 Speaker 3: puling right? Isn't it a great pity? And most amusing 601 00:31:54,400 --> 00:31:57,800 Speaker 3: that Ruth Richardson has checked out of this confrontation with Nicola. 602 00:31:57,880 --> 00:32:00,520 Speaker 3: It was meant to happen this afternoon, Remember it was 603 00:32:00,560 --> 00:32:03,720 Speaker 3: meant to happen on this show actually until Nicola got 604 00:32:03,720 --> 00:32:06,840 Speaker 3: all carried away with herself. Anyway, we did, did we did? 605 00:32:06,840 --> 00:32:10,200 Speaker 3: We try again today? For a laugh? Which for a 606 00:32:10,280 --> 00:32:13,240 Speaker 3: laugh we tried again today? We thought, well, well, you 607 00:32:13,280 --> 00:32:15,720 Speaker 3: know who cares. Nicola'd be feeling good off the back 608 00:32:15,760 --> 00:32:18,040 Speaker 3: of these GDP numbers. Surely she'll be have a spring 609 00:32:18,040 --> 00:32:19,480 Speaker 3: in new step. Should we wanted to come and do 610 00:32:19,560 --> 00:32:22,880 Speaker 3: battle with Ruth Richardson. Anyway, we didn't hear back from 611 00:32:22,880 --> 00:32:23,480 Speaker 3: either of them. 612 00:32:24,520 --> 00:32:26,360 Speaker 17: I mean, we know they're not busy doing a debate 613 00:32:26,360 --> 00:32:28,320 Speaker 17: because they're not doing it, so I don't know what 614 00:32:28,320 --> 00:32:28,960 Speaker 17: else they could be. 615 00:32:28,920 --> 00:32:32,479 Speaker 3: Doing exactly, and what's the harm. It's nearly Christmas. Just 616 00:32:32,520 --> 00:32:35,320 Speaker 3: come on and have a bit of a buffo. Anyway. 617 00:32:35,360 --> 00:32:37,600 Speaker 3: I don't think we're missing much. We know what Ruth 618 00:32:37,640 --> 00:32:40,480 Speaker 3: would say, we know what Nichola would say, and we 619 00:32:40,520 --> 00:32:43,040 Speaker 3: can all just you know, talk to Brad Olson instead. 620 00:32:45,280 --> 00:32:49,200 Speaker 3: He's coming up after five o'clock. Brian Henry on Gloria Vale, 621 00:32:49,720 --> 00:32:53,000 Speaker 3: We'll talk Jenny Wiley with Mark Foster, former Silver Fern 622 00:32:53,080 --> 00:32:56,760 Speaker 3: and absolute legend. All ahead on your Thursday afternoon here 623 00:32:56,800 --> 00:33:04,120 Speaker 3: on News Talk zmbhening me, isn't it so? 624 00:33:04,360 --> 00:33:04,479 Speaker 18: Then? 625 00:33:04,560 --> 00:33:08,360 Speaker 3: Made bed Tim and Middle Hien. 626 00:33:08,760 --> 00:33:09,920 Speaker 11: Is Little. 627 00:33:13,680 --> 00:33:16,840 Speaker 2: The only drive show you can try to ask the questions, 628 00:33:17,200 --> 00:33:20,800 Speaker 2: get the answers, find the facts and give the analysis. 629 00:33:21,040 --> 00:33:23,760 Speaker 2: Ryan Bridge on hither du for c Ellen Drive with 630 00:33:24,040 --> 00:33:28,880 Speaker 2: One New Zealand and the Power of Satellite Mobile NEWSORGZIBB. 631 00:33:28,760 --> 00:33:31,640 Speaker 3: Seven after five years talk said b quarter three GDP 632 00:33:31,840 --> 00:33:34,960 Speaker 3: up one point one percent. Nikola Willis is cracking the 633 00:33:35,040 --> 00:33:38,600 Speaker 3: Champagne a little early for Christmas. A huge turnaround from 634 00:33:38,640 --> 00:33:42,000 Speaker 3: the second quarter when the economy shrank one percent. Looking 635 00:33:42,040 --> 00:33:44,880 Speaker 3: at the past year, we were was we're actually a 636 00:33:44,920 --> 00:33:47,560 Speaker 3: bit smaller, point four percent smaller than in the year. 637 00:33:47,560 --> 00:33:51,000 Speaker 3: Two September twenty four, Brad Lsin, Informetric's principal economist is 638 00:33:51,000 --> 00:33:53,880 Speaker 3: with me tonight bred good evening, good evening. Quite the 639 00:33:53,920 --> 00:33:54,680 Speaker 3: turnaround there. 640 00:33:55,640 --> 00:33:58,160 Speaker 19: It was quite a turnaround. But you're right that realistically 641 00:33:58,200 --> 00:34:01,680 Speaker 19: the economy is still not necessarily been growing by leaps 642 00:34:01,720 --> 00:34:03,640 Speaker 19: and bounds. It's more tried to fill in the hole 643 00:34:03,720 --> 00:34:06,320 Speaker 19: that we had earlier this year. There was a little 644 00:34:06,360 --> 00:34:09,120 Speaker 19: bit more activity at the start of the year, of course, 645 00:34:09,120 --> 00:34:11,720 Speaker 19: a bit more of a cratering in the second quarter, 646 00:34:11,800 --> 00:34:14,239 Speaker 19: and then a bounce back in September. So that's good 647 00:34:14,400 --> 00:34:17,000 Speaker 19: and I think probably the most pleasing part of that result, 648 00:34:17,320 --> 00:34:19,160 Speaker 19: and I don't want to overreg it, but you did 649 00:34:19,200 --> 00:34:22,440 Speaker 19: see that fourteen of the sixteen measured industries that statsn 650 00:34:22,520 --> 00:34:24,840 Speaker 19: Z looks at did see an improvement, so it was 651 00:34:24,840 --> 00:34:27,560 Speaker 19: a bit more broad based over all of the figures, 652 00:34:27,560 --> 00:34:30,000 Speaker 19: which is encouraging. You know, you were seeing a lift 653 00:34:30,040 --> 00:34:32,360 Speaker 19: in the likes of manufacturing, you were seeing more coming 654 00:34:32,400 --> 00:34:36,359 Speaker 19: through from professional and business services, so that was encouraging that. Again, 655 00:34:36,440 --> 00:34:39,040 Speaker 19: momentum is starting to build, but it's building from a 656 00:34:39,040 --> 00:34:41,160 Speaker 19: weak spot. So we're certainly not saying that, you know, 657 00:34:41,200 --> 00:34:44,319 Speaker 19: the economy is completely back, but it is on a 658 00:34:44,320 --> 00:34:45,000 Speaker 19: better track. 659 00:34:45,120 --> 00:34:48,000 Speaker 3: And that's the point important point to make, isn't it 660 00:34:48,040 --> 00:34:50,480 Speaker 3: that while the numbers, if you look at the number 661 00:34:50,600 --> 00:34:53,800 Speaker 3: as a noomenal figure, we're growing three times as fast 662 00:34:53,800 --> 00:34:56,399 Speaker 3: in this quarter than as the Australians. We're growing as 663 00:34:56,440 --> 00:34:59,360 Speaker 3: fast as China in this quarter. But it won't feel 664 00:34:59,400 --> 00:35:01,480 Speaker 3: like that because we're coming off a very low base. 665 00:35:02,480 --> 00:35:03,160 Speaker 3: Well exactly. 666 00:35:03,200 --> 00:35:05,600 Speaker 19: And look if you look at you know, the Australian 667 00:35:05,600 --> 00:35:09,240 Speaker 19: figures compared to where we were you know last time, 668 00:35:09,320 --> 00:35:13,320 Speaker 19: so you know, New Zealand was down you know, one percent, 669 00:35:13,400 --> 00:35:16,520 Speaker 19: whereas the Australians they were still growing. And so if 670 00:35:16,560 --> 00:35:18,959 Speaker 19: you sort of look at them all together, they grew 671 00:35:19,000 --> 00:35:21,520 Speaker 19: i think, point six percent on the second quarter. We were 672 00:35:21,480 --> 00:35:24,239 Speaker 19: down one percent. We've then come back one point one 673 00:35:24,280 --> 00:35:26,319 Speaker 19: percent in this quarter they were up point four So 674 00:35:26,560 --> 00:35:29,320 Speaker 19: you add them together, we're basically in a pretty similar position. 675 00:35:29,600 --> 00:35:31,200 Speaker 19: We just had to go through a world of pain 676 00:35:31,239 --> 00:35:33,040 Speaker 19: to sort of get there where they've had sort of 677 00:35:33,080 --> 00:35:35,880 Speaker 19: more consistent growth, and that's probably the piece we're looking 678 00:35:35,920 --> 00:35:37,759 Speaker 19: for a lot more next year, is can we just 679 00:35:37,800 --> 00:35:40,920 Speaker 19: get a bit more consistency. Everyone's asking, of course, for 680 00:35:41,000 --> 00:35:44,040 Speaker 19: better economic numbers, and yes, that's totally true, but you 681 00:35:44,120 --> 00:35:46,880 Speaker 19: also need a bit more of that consistency before businesses 682 00:35:46,880 --> 00:35:50,120 Speaker 19: and households really buy into an economic recovery and say, look, 683 00:35:50,280 --> 00:35:52,960 Speaker 19: it's actually happening, happening, I can plan my life around it, 684 00:35:53,080 --> 00:35:55,239 Speaker 19: rather than everyone going well, look it was good now, 685 00:35:55,280 --> 00:35:56,759 Speaker 19: but then it might sort of pull back and then 686 00:35:56,800 --> 00:35:58,680 Speaker 19: it might be better in the future. That sort of 687 00:35:58,680 --> 00:36:02,440 Speaker 19: stopped start element of the economy is not helpful going forward, 688 00:36:02,520 --> 00:36:05,160 Speaker 19: and so these figures, being broad based, do support a 689 00:36:05,160 --> 00:36:06,920 Speaker 19: little bit more of that uptick as we head through 690 00:36:06,920 --> 00:36:08,080 Speaker 19: into twenty twenty six rare. 691 00:36:08,160 --> 00:36:10,799 Speaker 3: Do we need to worry too much about Fonterra downgrading 692 00:36:10,880 --> 00:36:13,200 Speaker 3: it cutting its forecast? I mean, we know the price 693 00:36:13,280 --> 00:36:15,360 Speaker 3: has been dropping on the global dairy trade options, but 694 00:36:15,400 --> 00:36:16,799 Speaker 3: do we need to be worried about the fact that 695 00:36:16,840 --> 00:36:19,080 Speaker 3: this is coming down? Does that affect the growth for 696 00:36:19,160 --> 00:36:19,640 Speaker 3: next year? 697 00:36:20,360 --> 00:36:22,640 Speaker 19: Look, it doesn't make it quite as easy to maintain 698 00:36:22,719 --> 00:36:25,920 Speaker 19: that sort of same growth profile. But equally, look, this 699 00:36:26,000 --> 00:36:28,560 Speaker 19: has been signaled when Fontira came out with their first 700 00:36:28,600 --> 00:36:31,560 Speaker 19: price for the year, they deliberately had it a bit 701 00:36:31,600 --> 00:36:33,799 Speaker 19: more open and sort of signaled that, look of things 702 00:36:33,840 --> 00:36:35,759 Speaker 19: turned around, then we could be getting back to these 703 00:36:35,800 --> 00:36:38,120 Speaker 19: sort of levels. It's still a decent payout, I mean, 704 00:36:38,160 --> 00:36:40,480 Speaker 19: for goodness sake, it's still over nine bucks. That's a 705 00:36:40,480 --> 00:36:43,919 Speaker 19: good number, but it does start to again just trim 706 00:36:43,960 --> 00:36:45,520 Speaker 19: it a back a bit. And we know that the 707 00:36:45,560 --> 00:36:48,200 Speaker 19: primary sector, although they have had more money in recent 708 00:36:48,239 --> 00:36:51,040 Speaker 19: times coming through, they haven't necessarily spent it straight away. 709 00:36:51,120 --> 00:36:54,000 Speaker 19: So look, you've still seen some good recovery in parts 710 00:36:54,000 --> 00:36:56,360 Speaker 19: of provincial and rural New Zealand. But I think it 711 00:36:56,480 --> 00:36:58,160 Speaker 19: just goes to show that we sort of can't bank 712 00:36:58,200 --> 00:37:01,080 Speaker 19: on anyone bit being the silver bullet for economic growth 713 00:37:01,120 --> 00:37:02,719 Speaker 19: in the next year. It does have to be a 714 00:37:02,760 --> 00:37:05,680 Speaker 19: little bit more across the board, and those global shops, 715 00:37:05,719 --> 00:37:08,359 Speaker 19: those global factors that we can't control at home are 716 00:37:08,360 --> 00:37:10,160 Speaker 19: still things that we're going to have to watch out for. 717 00:37:10,239 --> 00:37:12,879 Speaker 3: Thank you, Brad brad Olsen in for metrics. They by 718 00:37:12,920 --> 00:37:17,480 Speaker 3: the way, the Fonterra price forecast cut from nine to 719 00:37:17,480 --> 00:37:20,560 Speaker 3: fifty down to nine dollars their midpoint. And as I said, 720 00:37:20,600 --> 00:37:22,680 Speaker 3: the global dairy trade options have been coming down. But 721 00:37:22,760 --> 00:37:27,720 Speaker 3: if you look prices down for since the May peak 722 00:37:27,920 --> 00:37:32,239 Speaker 3: are down a quarter and Fonterra's price now down since 723 00:37:32,280 --> 00:37:35,760 Speaker 3: the start of the season ten percent, and supply obviously 724 00:37:35,760 --> 00:37:39,680 Speaker 3: has been going up. What does it do to on 725 00:37:39,960 --> 00:37:44,720 Speaker 3: farm costs, on farm profits. We'll talk to David mckaye, 726 00:37:44,719 --> 00:37:46,399 Speaker 3: host of the Country After Six on that later. 727 00:37:47,200 --> 00:37:49,040 Speaker 1: Bryan Bridge, the school at. 728 00:37:49,000 --> 00:37:51,120 Speaker 3: Gloria Vale is going to be shut down next year. 729 00:37:51,160 --> 00:37:53,080 Speaker 3: This has just come out this afternoon, the Sectuary of 730 00:37:53,160 --> 00:37:57,600 Speaker 3: Education canceling their registration. They've had two failed Arrow audits. 731 00:37:57,640 --> 00:38:02,080 Speaker 3: The de registration will take effect January twenty third. Brian 732 00:38:02,120 --> 00:38:04,759 Speaker 3: Henry is a lawyer acting for former Glory of our 733 00:38:04,840 --> 00:38:08,280 Speaker 3: members and he joins me now, Brian, good evening, Good evening, 734 00:38:08,800 --> 00:38:11,400 Speaker 3: what is your reaction to that news. 735 00:38:12,040 --> 00:38:15,000 Speaker 20: I've got two reactions. The first is I do not 736 00:38:15,200 --> 00:38:19,040 Speaker 20: understand how the school, which has been under the control 737 00:38:19,200 --> 00:38:22,680 Speaker 20: of two convicted sex offenders for the last fifty years, 738 00:38:23,320 --> 00:38:26,920 Speaker 20: has ever been allowed to pass any hero reports or 739 00:38:27,000 --> 00:38:30,560 Speaker 20: carry on. The second is I think we have to 740 00:38:30,600 --> 00:38:34,879 Speaker 20: acknowledge that this minister in the ministry. I believe it's 741 00:38:34,880 --> 00:38:39,360 Speaker 20: been an eighteen month process, have finally taken the cudgels 742 00:38:39,360 --> 00:38:42,160 Speaker 20: in their hands and finally reached the decision. 743 00:38:42,239 --> 00:38:43,399 Speaker 11: I think is totally right. 744 00:38:43,480 --> 00:38:47,359 Speaker 20: This school is the enabler of sex offending, and it's 745 00:38:47,400 --> 00:38:51,880 Speaker 20: the enabler of basically enslaving young children born in the community. 746 00:38:52,200 --> 00:38:53,240 Speaker 20: It keeps them ignorant. 747 00:38:53,640 --> 00:38:56,960 Speaker 3: Brian deliberately, Brian, what happens now? What happens to the 748 00:38:57,000 --> 00:38:59,479 Speaker 3: Apparently they're about one hundred and ten roughly one hundred 749 00:38:59,480 --> 00:39:01,719 Speaker 3: and ten student at the school. Where do they go? 750 00:39:03,360 --> 00:39:06,239 Speaker 20: Well, they need to go into the state system. There 751 00:39:06,239 --> 00:39:08,440 Speaker 20: needs to be a process to introduce them into it. 752 00:39:08,840 --> 00:39:12,960 Speaker 20: But the sooner they integrate with the general state education 753 00:39:13,120 --> 00:39:16,600 Speaker 20: and they get educated properly, the better. Because these are 754 00:39:16,840 --> 00:39:21,520 Speaker 20: young kids who are just stifled in life. They cannot 755 00:39:21,520 --> 00:39:25,800 Speaker 20: get ahead in the open world because they're just not educated. 756 00:39:25,960 --> 00:39:29,759 Speaker 20: They kept unworldly using their own words, and that's just 757 00:39:29,880 --> 00:39:31,840 Speaker 20: kept ignorant and that's very bad. 758 00:39:32,640 --> 00:39:34,560 Speaker 3: Is there a what do you worry that they might 759 00:39:34,640 --> 00:39:36,520 Speaker 3: just be homeschool or something like that. 760 00:39:38,160 --> 00:39:41,520 Speaker 20: I understand that they will try to home school, but 761 00:39:41,560 --> 00:39:45,839 Speaker 20: I also understand the home schooling is not successful in 762 00:39:45,880 --> 00:39:49,520 Speaker 20: the sense that they're not getting good pass rates. The 763 00:39:49,560 --> 00:39:53,240 Speaker 20: whole thing is the parents are ill educated. They can't 764 00:39:53,360 --> 00:39:57,040 Speaker 20: educate their kids because they've been through this process themselves. 765 00:39:57,120 --> 00:40:00,120 Speaker 20: As I said, it's fifty years of the school in 766 00:40:00,160 --> 00:40:03,759 Speaker 20: it's fifty years of bringing up adults who are literally 767 00:40:04,520 --> 00:40:09,200 Speaker 20: not worldly, not well educated, have no great understanding. 768 00:40:08,640 --> 00:40:11,320 Speaker 11: Of the world. How do they teach their children? They can't. 769 00:40:11,360 --> 00:40:16,640 Speaker 20: All they do is teach the same stifled slave environment. 770 00:40:17,400 --> 00:40:20,000 Speaker 3: Brian, appreciate your time tonight. Thank you, Brian Henry, who's 771 00:40:20,000 --> 00:40:23,080 Speaker 3: the lawyer. It is thirteen minutes after five m bridge. 772 00:40:23,160 --> 00:40:25,200 Speaker 3: By the way, the Ministry of Education has given us 773 00:40:25,200 --> 00:40:27,560 Speaker 3: a statement. They say, you legally have to have your 774 00:40:27,640 --> 00:40:30,239 Speaker 3: kid en rolled in a school and then you have 775 00:40:30,320 --> 00:40:34,680 Speaker 3: to apply for an exemption to homeschool them. So then 776 00:40:34,719 --> 00:40:36,560 Speaker 3: it's up to the parents whether they apply for the 777 00:40:36,600 --> 00:40:39,719 Speaker 3: exemption or not. And obviously that exemption has to be granted, 778 00:40:40,239 --> 00:40:43,000 Speaker 3: which is not a given. And they go on to say, 779 00:40:43,040 --> 00:40:44,920 Speaker 3: this is the ministry statement. There are a number of 780 00:40:44,960 --> 00:40:48,760 Speaker 3: schools near Gloria Vale so and they're not big ones. 781 00:40:48,880 --> 00:40:51,000 Speaker 3: The ones that are close to Gloria Vale, so look out. 782 00:40:51,120 --> 00:40:54,040 Speaker 3: The school role might be expanding somewhat come January twenty 783 00:40:54,040 --> 00:40:57,120 Speaker 3: third next year, now to Australia, very quickly, the Bondi 784 00:40:57,200 --> 00:41:00,800 Speaker 3: terrorist susible. This is the suspect and the dead terrorist. 785 00:41:01,120 --> 00:41:02,799 Speaker 3: We used say we spoke about and we spoke to 786 00:41:02,800 --> 00:41:04,960 Speaker 3: that expert about them going to the Philippines and it 787 00:41:05,000 --> 00:41:06,839 Speaker 3: was like, what are they doing in the Philippines? Why 788 00:41:06,880 --> 00:41:09,400 Speaker 3: were they there for a whole month? A bunch of 789 00:41:09,480 --> 00:41:12,040 Speaker 3: journalists have got in touch with the hotel where they 790 00:41:12,120 --> 00:41:16,160 Speaker 3: stayed for a month. They initially only booked for a week, 791 00:41:16,440 --> 00:41:18,960 Speaker 3: and then they kept extending by a week so that 792 00:41:19,040 --> 00:41:22,240 Speaker 3: they ended up being there a month. Now the entire 793 00:41:22,480 --> 00:41:24,759 Speaker 3: four week visit, they spoke to the cleaners, spoke to 794 00:41:24,760 --> 00:41:28,160 Speaker 3: the reception, you name it. For the entire four week visit, 795 00:41:29,120 --> 00:41:32,440 Speaker 3: they were in their hotel rooms except for an hour 796 00:41:32,600 --> 00:41:36,239 Speaker 3: or so at a time. Very bizarre. The hotel room 797 00:41:36,320 --> 00:41:40,280 Speaker 3: is just like an empty box. There's nothing, there's no internet, 798 00:41:40,320 --> 00:41:43,560 Speaker 3: there's no TV. What are they doing in there? For 799 00:41:43,719 --> 00:41:46,239 Speaker 3: twenty three hours of the day. They reckon, They left 800 00:41:46,239 --> 00:41:48,759 Speaker 3: occasionally for an hour at a time. Never saw them 801 00:41:48,800 --> 00:41:52,880 Speaker 3: get into anyone's car, or be meet anyone or talked 802 00:41:52,880 --> 00:41:56,880 Speaker 3: to anyone. Very bizarre. So what happened in the Philippines, 803 00:41:56,960 --> 00:41:58,640 Speaker 3: Why did they go there? It's all a bit of 804 00:41:58,640 --> 00:42:02,560 Speaker 3: a mystery. Five News talks the b Marg Foster on 805 00:42:03,040 --> 00:42:06,480 Speaker 3: Netball in z next. Staying connected isn't just convenient, it's 806 00:42:06,520 --> 00:42:09,760 Speaker 3: absolutely critical. You know that with one New Zealand satellite, 807 00:42:09,840 --> 00:42:12,839 Speaker 3: you get mobile coverage across the country, even in those 808 00:42:12,840 --> 00:42:15,560 Speaker 3: spots where the cell towers don't quite reach, which by 809 00:42:15,600 --> 00:42:17,840 Speaker 3: the way, is around forty percent of our land mass. 810 00:42:17,880 --> 00:42:20,120 Speaker 3: You'll even get coverage out to sea up to eighty 811 00:42:20,160 --> 00:42:24,239 Speaker 3: five nautical miles. Because you know, I know, we all know. 812 00:42:24,560 --> 00:42:27,200 Speaker 3: Business doesn't just happen in the office anymore. It happens 813 00:42:27,280 --> 00:42:30,160 Speaker 3: pretty much everywhere. With a satellite ready phone and a plan, 814 00:42:30,280 --> 00:42:33,680 Speaker 3: your team can text, send photos, voice notes and short 815 00:42:33,760 --> 00:42:36,160 Speaker 3: videos from anywhere in the country that they can see 816 00:42:36,200 --> 00:42:40,680 Speaker 3: the sky and when the unexpected hits think storm, power outage, 817 00:42:40,719 --> 00:42:44,640 Speaker 3: even natural disasters, satellite coverage means your business stays connected, 818 00:42:44,680 --> 00:42:46,839 Speaker 3: offering and an added layer of safety for your team. 819 00:42:47,280 --> 00:42:49,560 Speaker 3: Not only do you get better coverage, but there's an 820 00:42:49,560 --> 00:42:52,440 Speaker 3: added layer of safety for your people as well, whoever 821 00:42:52,760 --> 00:42:56,399 Speaker 3: wherever work takes them. The only place to get this 822 00:42:56,480 --> 00:42:59,720 Speaker 3: world first satellite mobile connectivity is with One New Zealand 823 00:42:59,760 --> 00:43:02,600 Speaker 3: sop online and visit one in z Slash satellite or 824 00:43:02,680 --> 00:43:04,160 Speaker 3: visit them in store to learn more. 825 00:43:04,480 --> 00:43:05,960 Speaker 1: Brian Bridge, You're on. 826 00:43:05,920 --> 00:43:08,719 Speaker 3: News Talk zeb five nineteen. Jenny Wiley is out at 827 00:43:08,760 --> 00:43:11,719 Speaker 3: Netball in ZED. She's leaving with immediate effect after nine 828 00:43:11,800 --> 00:43:15,960 Speaker 3: years as chief executive and has acknowledged quote challenges along 829 00:43:16,000 --> 00:43:18,640 Speaker 3: the way under the spotlight of the Dame nol Saga 830 00:43:18,880 --> 00:43:21,640 Speaker 3: former self with ferend Mark Foster with me tonight, Mark, 831 00:43:21,680 --> 00:43:22,560 Speaker 3: good evening. 832 00:43:23,239 --> 00:43:25,840 Speaker 21: Good evening, Merry Christmas. 833 00:43:25,200 --> 00:43:27,960 Speaker 3: Merry Christmas to you too? Are you a little more 834 00:43:28,000 --> 00:43:30,239 Speaker 3: mery knowing that Jenny Wiley's out? 835 00:43:31,440 --> 00:43:34,520 Speaker 21: Oh yeah, it's good. It's a great time to be 836 00:43:34,600 --> 00:43:39,080 Speaker 21: able to reset and move forward. And like, you know, yeah, 837 00:43:39,120 --> 00:43:42,080 Speaker 21: I think it's obviously it's only going to be good 838 00:43:42,080 --> 00:43:43,640 Speaker 21: for our sport. We need to do something. 839 00:43:44,360 --> 00:43:47,160 Speaker 3: Do you think that there'll be more from where this came? 840 00:43:47,239 --> 00:43:48,920 Speaker 3: You know, all the board go or some of the 841 00:43:48,960 --> 00:43:50,640 Speaker 3: board members go to should. 842 00:43:50,360 --> 00:43:54,680 Speaker 21: They Well, hopefully in that respect, because you know, when 843 00:43:54,719 --> 00:43:57,799 Speaker 21: you're bringing fresh change, you've got to have people that 844 00:43:57,880 --> 00:44:00,960 Speaker 21: really support your vision and you know in there and 845 00:44:01,000 --> 00:44:04,960 Speaker 21: you're working collective. Lisa, it's an absolute opportuing time to 846 00:44:05,440 --> 00:44:08,759 Speaker 21: you know, like to have a complete sweep out. And 847 00:44:08,800 --> 00:44:11,680 Speaker 21: if you look at it over in Australia with what 848 00:44:11,719 --> 00:44:14,600 Speaker 21: they did with Netble Australia, they did this, they went 849 00:44:14,640 --> 00:44:17,839 Speaker 21: through this situation and they have got the most amazing 850 00:44:18,040 --> 00:44:21,840 Speaker 21: Liz Alice running the show with her board and they're 851 00:44:21,880 --> 00:44:27,200 Speaker 21: just flying. They are accelerating at a huge rate, which 852 00:44:27,239 --> 00:44:29,680 Speaker 21: is incredible. And that's why don't we just use the 853 00:44:29,680 --> 00:44:32,920 Speaker 21: same templates and then just add a little bit of kivy. 854 00:44:32,719 --> 00:44:36,799 Speaker 3: Toss to it. Yeah, I like what the plan you're 855 00:44:36,840 --> 00:44:39,200 Speaker 3: laying out for us here, marg Who do you think? 856 00:44:39,480 --> 00:44:41,080 Speaker 3: Who do you think could be a good CEO? 857 00:44:42,719 --> 00:44:46,120 Speaker 21: Well, look, I think it's obviously someone that's got those 858 00:44:46,400 --> 00:44:49,120 Speaker 21: those skills, that's really passionate about netball and has got 859 00:44:49,120 --> 00:44:52,359 Speaker 21: the energy and you know, like you know what it's 860 00:44:52,480 --> 00:44:54,680 Speaker 21: like being a leader. You know, you've got to be 861 00:44:54,719 --> 00:44:59,280 Speaker 21: able to walk alongside but also be flashing the slip 862 00:44:59,320 --> 00:45:03,240 Speaker 21: and torch you're going in the tunnel wherever we are going. 863 00:45:03,719 --> 00:45:05,839 Speaker 21: And I think that that light just kind of went 864 00:45:05,880 --> 00:45:10,120 Speaker 21: out and we didn't have that same direction. So, you know, 865 00:45:10,520 --> 00:45:15,520 Speaker 21: hoping that some amazing people male or female that have 866 00:45:15,600 --> 00:45:19,239 Speaker 21: a real passion for our sport. Really step up and think, yeah, 867 00:45:19,360 --> 00:45:21,400 Speaker 21: I want to take take it on board because it 868 00:45:21,480 --> 00:45:24,040 Speaker 21: is a big I mean, it is a challenge, but 869 00:45:24,120 --> 00:45:26,600 Speaker 21: you've got to surround yourself by the right people. 870 00:45:28,000 --> 00:45:30,319 Speaker 3: You're not looking for a job, are you, marg No. 871 00:45:30,480 --> 00:45:31,160 Speaker 10: Absolutely not. 872 00:45:31,760 --> 00:45:34,520 Speaker 21: But I'd love to be part of the board, like 873 00:45:34,680 --> 00:45:38,160 Speaker 21: just to put my fifty cents worth in because I've 874 00:45:38,160 --> 00:45:42,120 Speaker 21: always been outspoken. But but obviously it's all about the sport, 875 00:45:42,239 --> 00:45:46,359 Speaker 21: like about Netborns never ever so you know, like no, it' 876 00:45:46,440 --> 00:45:47,920 Speaker 21: turely presents itself on the air. 877 00:45:48,239 --> 00:45:50,520 Speaker 3: Well, yes, you're certainly trying to line that up tonight. 878 00:45:50,600 --> 00:45:52,160 Speaker 3: Make how good to have you on the show? 879 00:45:52,280 --> 00:45:52,719 Speaker 1: Good to share. 880 00:45:52,760 --> 00:45:56,600 Speaker 3: It's almost Mark Foster's former Silver firm and very cheeky 881 00:45:56,640 --> 00:45:59,000 Speaker 3: indeed cutting. 882 00:45:58,800 --> 00:46:00,440 Speaker 1: Through the noise to get the facts. 883 00:46:00,680 --> 00:46:04,160 Speaker 2: It's Ryan Bridge on either duplicy Ellen Drive with one 884 00:46:04,280 --> 00:46:07,400 Speaker 2: New Zealand coverage like no one else News Talks. 885 00:46:07,400 --> 00:46:09,839 Speaker 3: They'd be five twenty four great to have your company tonight. 886 00:46:09,960 --> 00:46:12,680 Speaker 3: There's a really interesting piece in the Jewish Independent today 887 00:46:12,800 --> 00:46:16,759 Speaker 3: basically saying that Jews will never be safe anywhere in 888 00:46:16,920 --> 00:46:20,560 Speaker 3: the world, despite the best intentions of governments around the 889 00:46:20,600 --> 00:46:22,799 Speaker 3: world to try and protect them, and they name Czech 890 00:46:22,880 --> 00:46:27,799 Speaker 3: New Zealand, Australia, Europe, even Israel. Doesn't matter where they are, 891 00:46:28,120 --> 00:46:31,360 Speaker 3: they will never be one hundred percent safe from persecution. 892 00:46:31,840 --> 00:46:34,600 Speaker 3: And the reason for that is pretty simple. No country, 893 00:46:35,320 --> 00:46:38,040 Speaker 3: no matter how strong its hate speech laws or its 894 00:46:38,040 --> 00:46:42,879 Speaker 3: anti racism campaigns, can stamp out hatred completely because that's 895 00:46:42,960 --> 00:46:46,440 Speaker 3: what humans do. Sadly, humans hate and rage. It's sort 896 00:46:46,480 --> 00:46:50,640 Speaker 3: of part of the human condition. And so across the 897 00:46:50,719 --> 00:46:53,160 Speaker 3: Tasman Elbows come out with a bunch of changes today 898 00:46:53,320 --> 00:46:57,480 Speaker 3: under massive political pressure, almost fighting for his political survival 899 00:46:58,040 --> 00:47:02,319 Speaker 3: or at least his reputation, ons which he says these 900 00:47:02,440 --> 00:47:07,640 Speaker 3: changes will make Australians safe, except do we believe that? 901 00:47:08,080 --> 00:47:12,080 Speaker 3: Do we think they will do much? Whatever law they pass, 902 00:47:12,120 --> 00:47:15,440 Speaker 3: saying be nice quickly undone by a couple of social 903 00:47:15,520 --> 00:47:20,440 Speaker 3: media videos that radicalize everyday Australians into Middle Eastern politics. 904 00:47:20,880 --> 00:47:24,480 Speaker 3: Same goes for the Muslim community. They won't be totally 905 00:47:24,560 --> 00:47:27,600 Speaker 3: safe either, even with the strictest laws in a modern 906 00:47:27,640 --> 00:47:30,600 Speaker 3: democracy that you can muster. John Howard was a bit 907 00:47:30,800 --> 00:47:33,279 Speaker 3: right when he said that the gun law stuff is 908 00:47:33,360 --> 00:47:36,600 Speaker 3: being used as escapegoat. The annoying thing about all of 909 00:47:36,680 --> 00:47:41,160 Speaker 3: this is that with March fifteen, new gun laws shouldn't 910 00:47:41,360 --> 00:47:45,160 Speaker 3: actually have been needed. The Aussie terrorist who did this 911 00:47:45,320 --> 00:47:47,839 Speaker 3: should never have got a gun license in the first place, 912 00:47:47,920 --> 00:47:51,840 Speaker 3: and the Royal Commission found that procedures by police weren't 913 00:47:52,040 --> 00:47:57,320 Speaker 3: followed properly, there were systemic failures, etc. Etc. Getting the 914 00:47:57,400 --> 00:48:01,880 Speaker 3: laws right and following them may they not have stopped 915 00:48:01,960 --> 00:48:04,919 Speaker 3: the killing. And that is what the Royal Commission made clear. 916 00:48:05,520 --> 00:48:07,799 Speaker 3: But it just goes to show that no matter how 917 00:48:07,920 --> 00:48:10,839 Speaker 3: stringent and tight your laws, no matter how well they 918 00:48:10,880 --> 00:48:14,080 Speaker 3: are followed, bad things can and do still happen. And 919 00:48:14,239 --> 00:48:18,200 Speaker 3: in Bondi they allowed a guy to buy guns whose 920 00:48:18,320 --> 00:48:22,400 Speaker 3: son was mates with some ISIS dudes, which the security 921 00:48:22,480 --> 00:48:26,480 Speaker 3: agencies apparently knew about. That's not smart, that's not common 922 00:48:26,600 --> 00:48:30,480 Speaker 3: sense and if that is illegal, sorry, if that is legal, 923 00:48:30,600 --> 00:48:33,960 Speaker 3: then it should damn well be illegal. Bryan Bridge five 924 00:48:34,080 --> 00:48:37,000 Speaker 3: twenty seven on Newstalk, Sa'd be lots of farmers getting 925 00:48:37,040 --> 00:48:41,120 Speaker 3: in touch because the fonter has dropped that forecasts priced down. 926 00:48:41,840 --> 00:48:42,040 Speaker 11: Ryan. 927 00:48:42,080 --> 00:48:45,080 Speaker 3: I'm a dairy farmer. This is from Brad. I tell 928 00:48:45,120 --> 00:48:47,440 Speaker 3: you this. All the people in New Zealand think that 929 00:48:47,520 --> 00:48:49,959 Speaker 3: when the milk price goes up. We all have money. 930 00:48:50,080 --> 00:48:53,200 Speaker 3: It's bs. Everything that we need to run a business 931 00:48:53,239 --> 00:48:55,839 Speaker 3: has gone up as well, product services. This is your 932 00:48:55,880 --> 00:48:59,759 Speaker 3: on farm costs problem a your honor, says Brad, is 933 00:48:59,840 --> 00:49:02,120 Speaker 3: the fact that when the milk price comes down again, 934 00:49:02,560 --> 00:49:04,600 Speaker 3: the cost that we have to pay don't. So don't 935 00:49:04,640 --> 00:49:08,160 Speaker 3: expect primary industry to fix New Zealand because it won't. 936 00:49:09,200 --> 00:49:11,680 Speaker 3: On that cherry note, Bred, thank you. We will go 937 00:49:11,800 --> 00:49:13,360 Speaker 3: to news hard. 938 00:49:13,280 --> 00:49:17,600 Speaker 2: Questions, strong opinion Ryan Bridge on hither dupisy Ellen drive 939 00:49:18,040 --> 00:49:21,160 Speaker 2: with one New Zealand and the power of satellite mobile 940 00:49:21,400 --> 00:49:22,400 Speaker 2: news storks MB. 941 00:49:33,760 --> 00:49:36,279 Speaker 3: Pretty far away from six on newstalgs NB after six 942 00:49:36,360 --> 00:49:38,640 Speaker 3: that hy he mind the gold mine there is getting 943 00:49:38,800 --> 00:49:41,839 Speaker 3: an expansion, been given the green lights under the fast track. 944 00:49:41,920 --> 00:49:45,120 Speaker 3: We'll look at that. Also. We will talk to Jamie McKay, 945 00:49:45,160 --> 00:49:47,160 Speaker 3: host of the Country, on the milk price. Now, the 946 00:49:47,360 --> 00:49:50,040 Speaker 3: back to the Bondaier terror situation for a second. The 947 00:49:50,120 --> 00:49:53,200 Speaker 3: two terr well one alleged terrorists now one dead terrorist 948 00:49:53,880 --> 00:49:58,080 Speaker 3: who traveled to the Philippines and was just talking about 949 00:49:58,160 --> 00:50:01,000 Speaker 3: what were they doing there, because initially it was the 950 00:50:01,120 --> 00:50:03,560 Speaker 3: question was were they getting some sort of training because 951 00:50:03,560 --> 00:50:06,360 Speaker 3: they were there for a whole month, and then you 952 00:50:06,520 --> 00:50:08,600 Speaker 3: had the people come out, the experts say, well, a 953 00:50:08,680 --> 00:50:11,160 Speaker 3: month's not actually have of a long time to get 954 00:50:11,760 --> 00:50:15,400 Speaker 3: you know, some sort of ISIS style boot camp training, 955 00:50:16,320 --> 00:50:19,239 Speaker 3: terrorist training camp. And now we find out that they 956 00:50:19,280 --> 00:50:21,080 Speaker 3: were in a hotel room the whole time, and this 957 00:50:21,200 --> 00:50:23,800 Speaker 3: is according to the hotel staff that have been spoken 958 00:50:23,880 --> 00:50:26,040 Speaker 3: to by journalists and a whole bunch of other people. 959 00:50:26,200 --> 00:50:30,759 Speaker 3: And so has is that evidence? And that's a question 960 00:50:30,840 --> 00:50:32,880 Speaker 3: that one of you is asking Ryan, this is Steve, 961 00:50:33,000 --> 00:50:35,040 Speaker 3: the hotel and the Philippines. They may not be telling 962 00:50:35,120 --> 00:50:36,920 Speaker 3: the truth about what they were up to on this 963 00:50:37,040 --> 00:50:39,680 Speaker 3: one month's day, which is a good point. And also 964 00:50:39,840 --> 00:50:43,080 Speaker 3: the president of the Philippines has come out and said, no, no, no, 965 00:50:43,280 --> 00:50:46,000 Speaker 3: this is nonsense. They weren't here being trained for any 966 00:50:46,120 --> 00:50:49,239 Speaker 3: such activity. But then you think, well, you would say, 967 00:50:49,280 --> 00:50:51,560 Speaker 3: you know, I mean, you don't exactly want to promote 968 00:50:51,640 --> 00:50:56,400 Speaker 3: your tourist destination as one associated with an ISIS as 969 00:50:56,440 --> 00:50:58,040 Speaker 3: an ISIS hotbed, do you? 970 00:50:58,320 --> 00:50:58,360 Speaker 1: So? 971 00:50:58,800 --> 00:51:02,520 Speaker 3: Who do you believe? Twenty three bread Rich Totaling A 972 00:51:02,600 --> 00:51:06,200 Speaker 3: city council is going to ask residents which services they 973 00:51:06,360 --> 00:51:09,560 Speaker 3: want to catch when their rate cap comes in twenty 974 00:51:09,600 --> 00:51:12,000 Speaker 3: twenty eight councils will only be allowed to increase rates 975 00:51:12,040 --> 00:51:15,439 Speaker 3: by four percent a year max. And totong Is current 976 00:51:15,520 --> 00:51:18,239 Speaker 3: long term plan is forecasting an increase of between five 977 00:51:18,400 --> 00:51:21,320 Speaker 3: and eleven percent a year. So the council has agreed 978 00:51:21,360 --> 00:51:24,279 Speaker 3: to do public consultation. Marha Drysdale is the mayor and 979 00:51:24,600 --> 00:51:27,720 Speaker 3: joins us now. Mah, good evening, good evening. 980 00:51:27,880 --> 00:51:28,880 Speaker 11: Good to speak to you and. 981 00:51:29,000 --> 00:51:32,120 Speaker 3: To you too. So can we first of all, I 982 00:51:32,600 --> 00:51:34,839 Speaker 3: know what the first thing that total and residents will say, 983 00:51:34,840 --> 00:51:37,520 Speaker 3: They'll say, cut your coffee budget and move out of 984 00:51:37,560 --> 00:51:38,640 Speaker 3: your nice flash digs. 985 00:51:40,160 --> 00:51:40,759 Speaker 11: Yeah, that's right. 986 00:51:41,239 --> 00:51:45,320 Speaker 22: Look, we're we're looking at every cost and we're taking 987 00:51:45,840 --> 00:51:48,800 Speaker 22: cost out wherever we can. But you know, if you 988 00:51:48,880 --> 00:51:51,800 Speaker 22: look at this year's capital budget that has a rates 989 00:51:51,880 --> 00:51:54,880 Speaker 22: increase next year of six percent, and that is just 990 00:51:55,000 --> 00:51:58,960 Speaker 22: interest and depreciation. So if we're building infrastructure that has 991 00:51:59,239 --> 00:52:02,360 Speaker 22: an operation and cost and you know, so we're going 992 00:52:02,440 --> 00:52:05,800 Speaker 22: to have to not only cut cut costs just to 993 00:52:05,880 --> 00:52:07,640 Speaker 22: get down to the four percent, but we're going to 994 00:52:07,680 --> 00:52:10,800 Speaker 22: have to start looking at, you know, potentially services that 995 00:52:11,200 --> 00:52:13,759 Speaker 22: we're no longer going to be able to deliver if we're. 996 00:52:13,640 --> 00:52:16,680 Speaker 11: Going to live with now within within those targets. 997 00:52:16,840 --> 00:52:19,400 Speaker 3: What would you because you've been elected mayor, right, what 998 00:52:19,560 --> 00:52:20,560 Speaker 3: would you you cut? 999 00:52:23,480 --> 00:52:26,319 Speaker 22: Look, it's it's hard because you know, as I said, 1000 00:52:26,360 --> 00:52:29,359 Speaker 22: we've we've cut the easy things. We took thirty eight 1001 00:52:29,400 --> 00:52:32,840 Speaker 22: million dollars out of our budget and the past twelve months, 1002 00:52:33,400 --> 00:52:36,520 Speaker 22: so you know, the easy stuff's been done, and now 1003 00:52:36,680 --> 00:52:39,759 Speaker 22: we've we've actually got to start looking at at services. 1004 00:52:40,200 --> 00:52:42,879 Speaker 11: There's not there's not a good option. I think that's 1005 00:52:43,000 --> 00:52:44,319 Speaker 11: really the key. 1006 00:52:44,440 --> 00:52:47,360 Speaker 22: There's there's things that you'd say maybe aren't core services, 1007 00:52:48,080 --> 00:52:53,160 Speaker 22: you know, supporting community organizations, helping you know, deal with 1008 00:52:53,360 --> 00:52:56,560 Speaker 22: with some of the homeless people, things like that. I 1009 00:52:56,640 --> 00:53:00,360 Speaker 22: think they're quite important services to deliver out to community 1010 00:53:00,400 --> 00:53:02,239 Speaker 22: because it's what they want. But how many of the 1011 00:53:02,320 --> 00:53:03,400 Speaker 22: sort of things we're going to look at. 1012 00:53:03,480 --> 00:53:04,959 Speaker 3: What's your overall budget. 1013 00:53:06,600 --> 00:53:10,360 Speaker 22: We spend about this year is around five hundred and 1014 00:53:10,400 --> 00:53:11,959 Speaker 22: ninety million dollars, right. 1015 00:53:12,480 --> 00:53:15,000 Speaker 3: And so you got rid of thirty eight so dropping 1016 00:53:15,040 --> 00:53:18,600 Speaker 3: the ocean and that what your services, your community organizations, 1017 00:53:18,640 --> 00:53:21,279 Speaker 3: your homeless stuff. I'm assuming that's going to be a 1018 00:53:21,400 --> 00:53:24,160 Speaker 3: fraction as well. What are your big ticket items that 1019 00:53:24,239 --> 00:53:27,000 Speaker 3: you would be looking to cut to actually make this work? 1020 00:53:27,040 --> 00:53:30,760 Speaker 22: You reckon well, I guess where we have been looking 1021 00:53:31,400 --> 00:53:34,040 Speaker 22: is and what we have done A lot of that 1022 00:53:34,200 --> 00:53:38,800 Speaker 22: thirty eight million is around personnel costs, consultants, you know, 1023 00:53:39,080 --> 00:53:42,560 Speaker 22: those those sort of big ticket items. But you know, 1024 00:53:43,000 --> 00:53:45,120 Speaker 22: as I say, we've done a lot of that and 1025 00:53:45,239 --> 00:53:49,680 Speaker 22: we're doing more. We're looking at all those those costs. 1026 00:53:49,760 --> 00:53:52,320 Speaker 22: But you know, then then you know, the big items 1027 00:53:52,360 --> 00:53:58,000 Speaker 22: are things like depreciation, interest, those costs if you build infrastructure, 1028 00:53:58,040 --> 00:54:01,440 Speaker 22: you borrow money, those costs effective just come out the 1029 00:54:01,560 --> 00:54:04,480 Speaker 22: next year. So you know, those are things that we 1030 00:54:04,960 --> 00:54:09,920 Speaker 22: can't control. So outside of that and those personnel costs, 1031 00:54:10,000 --> 00:54:13,360 Speaker 22: then then we're we're starting to start to. 1032 00:54:13,400 --> 00:54:14,080 Speaker 11: Scrape the barrel. 1033 00:54:14,120 --> 00:54:15,920 Speaker 3: Really, how many staff have you got. 1034 00:54:17,640 --> 00:54:19,799 Speaker 11: At the moment. We've got about twelve hundred stuff. 1035 00:54:20,040 --> 00:54:22,160 Speaker 3: Wow, for total on the city council. And how many 1036 00:54:22,239 --> 00:54:24,600 Speaker 3: do you think you should have or how many do 1037 00:54:24,680 --> 00:54:25,359 Speaker 3: you actually need? 1038 00:54:27,120 --> 00:54:30,080 Speaker 22: Well, that all comes down to what services you want 1039 00:54:30,120 --> 00:54:32,880 Speaker 22: us to deliver. So you know, that's that's the conversation 1040 00:54:33,960 --> 00:54:37,360 Speaker 22: that we're we're now got to have so to deliver 1041 00:54:37,480 --> 00:54:38,400 Speaker 22: the current services. 1042 00:54:39,480 --> 00:54:40,880 Speaker 11: You know, that's that's. 1043 00:54:40,800 --> 00:54:44,879 Speaker 22: Probably around the right number. But you know, if we're 1044 00:54:44,920 --> 00:54:48,160 Speaker 22: prepared to stop doing things, then then we can cut that, 1045 00:54:49,080 --> 00:54:50,319 Speaker 22: you know, a lot, a lot further. 1046 00:54:50,440 --> 00:54:52,759 Speaker 3: All right, I appreciate your time. Maha Drysdale, mayor of 1047 00:54:52,840 --> 00:54:55,439 Speaker 3: Toto on they are going out for consultation to find 1048 00:54:55,480 --> 00:54:58,439 Speaker 3: out what residents, what rate pays think they should cut 1049 00:54:58,960 --> 00:55:01,920 Speaker 3: to get under the rates cap. Nineteen away from six the. 1050 00:55:02,040 --> 00:55:05,279 Speaker 2: Huddle with New Zealand Southby's International Realty, a name you 1051 00:55:05,360 --> 00:55:07,440 Speaker 2: can trust locally and globally. 1052 00:55:08,160 --> 00:55:10,919 Speaker 3: Joining me on the huddle tonight is Craig Rinny, who 1053 00:55:11,239 --> 00:55:13,839 Speaker 3: will soon be surely a laboring p and nickle get 1054 00:55:13,840 --> 00:55:17,200 Speaker 3: infrastructure in New Zealand. Good evening, good evening, good earing. 1055 00:55:17,320 --> 00:55:19,080 Speaker 3: Good to have you both on the show. Craig, I 1056 00:55:19,160 --> 00:55:21,279 Speaker 3: want to get your tech fist on that GDP number 1057 00:55:21,280 --> 00:55:25,719 Speaker 3: today is I mean, can we at least celebrate something or. 1058 00:55:25,719 --> 00:55:28,600 Speaker 9: We can absolutely celebrate that we're not continuing to decline. 1059 00:55:29,520 --> 00:55:32,920 Speaker 9: You know, the economy rose quarterly one point one percent, 1060 00:55:33,040 --> 00:55:36,840 Speaker 9: but annually it's still down zero point five percent. We 1061 00:55:37,000 --> 00:55:41,520 Speaker 9: still see falls in manufacturing, in construction. Business investment is 1062 00:55:41,560 --> 00:55:43,960 Speaker 9: lower than it was in twenty twenty three. The economy 1063 00:55:44,080 --> 00:55:46,719 Speaker 9: is smaller than it was in twenty twenty three. So 1064 00:55:47,080 --> 00:55:49,120 Speaker 9: there's a whole bunch of stuff in there. Yes, it's 1065 00:55:49,160 --> 00:55:51,800 Speaker 9: a good number, but it's one good number when you 1066 00:55:51,880 --> 00:55:55,080 Speaker 9: said it in the context of rising unemployment and a 1067 00:55:55,200 --> 00:55:58,440 Speaker 9: range of other indicators that shows the economy is definitely 1068 00:55:58,520 --> 00:55:59,440 Speaker 9: not out of the woods. 1069 00:56:00,080 --> 00:56:02,719 Speaker 3: Came soon, no, and we're just one shock away from 1070 00:56:02,760 --> 00:56:03,919 Speaker 3: everything going tits up again. 1071 00:56:04,040 --> 00:56:08,560 Speaker 23: Nick, Yeah, I mean it does feel as though there's 1072 00:56:08,600 --> 00:56:11,080 Speaker 23: still an element of risk here. And the thing I 1073 00:56:11,120 --> 00:56:13,799 Speaker 23: always look for. I think in real time we can 1074 00:56:13,960 --> 00:56:18,040 Speaker 23: feel a bit of an improvement around New Zealand, but 1075 00:56:18,680 --> 00:56:23,080 Speaker 23: the real challenge is always confidence. Are people confident to 1076 00:56:24,160 --> 00:56:27,080 Speaker 23: spend a bit more to buy the new house or 1077 00:56:27,160 --> 00:56:29,400 Speaker 23: the new car, or that they're going to have a 1078 00:56:29,520 --> 00:56:31,719 Speaker 23: job that perhaps pays more in a year's time. And 1079 00:56:31,840 --> 00:56:36,160 Speaker 23: I just don't feel we're quite there yet, certainly where 1080 00:56:36,200 --> 00:56:41,480 Speaker 23: it comes to infrastructure. The country feels next year as 1081 00:56:41,520 --> 00:56:44,320 Speaker 23: though there's going to be more happening, but it's still 1082 00:56:44,760 --> 00:56:47,919 Speaker 23: very tentative, and I think we need a greater shot 1083 00:56:48,000 --> 00:56:50,440 Speaker 23: in the arm before we can sort of pop any corks. 1084 00:56:51,360 --> 00:56:53,880 Speaker 3: Craig, what do you say when people come at your 1085 00:56:53,920 --> 00:56:57,000 Speaker 3: with like, yeah, you can criticize this government, but why 1086 00:56:57,080 --> 00:56:58,640 Speaker 3: will we in the mess to begin with? And it 1087 00:56:58,760 --> 00:57:01,359 Speaker 3: was labor and charge at that time, and and what's 1088 00:57:01,440 --> 00:57:03,840 Speaker 3: to stop us getting back during in under labor. You know, 1089 00:57:03,880 --> 00:57:05,360 Speaker 3: if you did it once, you can do it twice. 1090 00:57:07,080 --> 00:57:10,000 Speaker 9: During the election, the economy was grown by two point 1091 00:57:10,080 --> 00:57:13,600 Speaker 9: four percent. A yeah, it's now declined by zero point five. 1092 00:57:15,320 --> 00:57:16,600 Speaker 3: And so we had to creation. 1093 00:57:18,360 --> 00:57:21,720 Speaker 9: What caused the recision, right, and our reflation story, Ryan 1094 00:57:21,920 --> 00:57:25,320 Speaker 9: is absolutely bog standard in relation to every other country 1095 00:57:25,360 --> 00:57:28,840 Speaker 9: that we compare ourselves to, and they're all growing, their 1096 00:57:28,880 --> 00:57:31,640 Speaker 9: economies are all growing in ours is not. And so 1097 00:57:32,040 --> 00:57:33,960 Speaker 9: when we look at things at the performance of services 1098 00:57:34,000 --> 00:57:37,200 Speaker 9: in decks around the world, that's all positive except in 1099 00:57:37,280 --> 00:57:42,680 Speaker 9: New Zealand totally, you know, So you fix that problem, 1100 00:57:42,840 --> 00:57:46,600 Speaker 9: and the current prescription we're getting from the government is 1101 00:57:47,000 --> 00:57:49,720 Speaker 9: seems to be exacerbating the problem here when we look 1102 00:57:49,760 --> 00:57:50,480 Speaker 9: at other countries. 1103 00:57:50,800 --> 00:57:53,560 Speaker 3: I think that's where you potentially have some mirrant in 1104 00:57:53,600 --> 00:57:56,360 Speaker 3: the argument. Do you buy that as well, that if 1105 00:57:56,400 --> 00:57:58,600 Speaker 3: the government had rolled out more money for I don't know, 1106 00:57:58,800 --> 00:58:01,800 Speaker 3: infrastructure for example, earlier on in the piece, that we 1107 00:58:02,040 --> 00:58:04,320 Speaker 3: wouldn't necessarily be as bad as we are now. 1108 00:58:05,200 --> 00:58:08,080 Speaker 23: Well, I would say yes, wouldn't I? But I think 1109 00:58:08,200 --> 00:58:12,200 Speaker 23: that Look, Craig talks a lot about investment, you know, 1110 00:58:12,560 --> 00:58:15,440 Speaker 23: and getting value from things, and I do actually think 1111 00:58:15,520 --> 00:58:19,880 Speaker 23: that should be the focus for the country. We should 1112 00:58:19,960 --> 00:58:23,520 Speaker 23: have looked at projects, particularly infrastructure, but not limits to 1113 00:58:23,640 --> 00:58:26,680 Speaker 23: but also social spending where we would know that investment 1114 00:58:26,760 --> 00:58:30,440 Speaker 23: would give us value. And I do think there was 1115 00:58:30,520 --> 00:58:35,560 Speaker 23: too much stopping and cutting. But I think that whichever, 1116 00:58:35,680 --> 00:58:38,240 Speaker 23: you know, both major parties next year will be forced 1117 00:58:38,320 --> 00:58:42,280 Speaker 23: to provide a responsible view as to how we're not 1118 00:58:42,400 --> 00:58:44,920 Speaker 23: going to spend so much that inflation gets out of control. 1119 00:58:45,000 --> 00:58:47,400 Speaker 23: But also we want a government to invest so the 1120 00:58:47,480 --> 00:58:51,240 Speaker 23: economy grows and people have access to jobs and access 1121 00:58:51,360 --> 00:58:53,440 Speaker 23: to the right kind of services that help them live 1122 00:58:53,440 --> 00:58:53,919 Speaker 23: a good life. 1123 00:58:54,800 --> 00:58:56,880 Speaker 3: Nickley get Craig Rennie on the Huddle tonight. It is 1124 00:58:57,000 --> 00:58:58,240 Speaker 3: called six back in a jiffy. 1125 00:58:59,280 --> 00:59:04,400 Speaker 2: The Huddle, New Zealand Southby's International Realty the only truly global. 1126 00:59:04,120 --> 00:59:07,080 Speaker 3: Brand thirteen Sex on News Talks inb We've got Craig 1127 00:59:07,160 --> 00:59:09,720 Speaker 3: running from the CTU and Nickliget from Infrastructure and Z 1128 00:59:09,840 --> 00:59:13,160 Speaker 3: on the Huddle tonight. Did you see Craig the story 1129 00:59:13,240 --> 00:59:17,120 Speaker 3: about Glory Vale. So the Ministry of Education is shutting 1130 00:59:17,160 --> 00:59:21,240 Speaker 3: it down, like deleting its registration and doing it quite 1131 00:59:21,320 --> 00:59:24,240 Speaker 3: quickly from January twenty third next year. So you're going 1132 00:59:24,280 --> 00:59:26,680 Speaker 3: to have one hundred kids who basically need to find 1133 00:59:26,720 --> 00:59:29,160 Speaker 3: new schools end quick Yeah. 1134 00:59:29,200 --> 00:59:31,560 Speaker 9: I think there's been a range of concerns about that 1135 00:59:31,640 --> 00:59:34,000 Speaker 9: school that have been you know, thought about over over 1136 00:59:34,120 --> 00:59:36,760 Speaker 9: what appears to be quite a long period of time. 1137 00:59:37,080 --> 00:59:39,000 Speaker 9: I appreciate it. You know, it's going to be incredibly 1138 00:59:39,040 --> 00:59:42,000 Speaker 9: disruptive for those children, But making sure that those children 1139 00:59:42,080 --> 00:59:44,560 Speaker 9: get a quality education and the best start in life 1140 00:59:45,000 --> 00:59:48,560 Speaker 9: is much more important than the school's registration or its 1141 00:59:48,600 --> 00:59:51,360 Speaker 9: ability to continue. And if it's not delivering the education 1142 00:59:51,480 --> 00:59:54,040 Speaker 9: that we want to see for those children, then really 1143 00:59:54,360 --> 00:59:55,840 Speaker 9: we should be supporting its closure. 1144 00:59:56,160 --> 00:59:56,360 Speaker 11: Yeah. 1145 00:59:56,360 --> 00:59:59,760 Speaker 3: And I guess once you've made that decision, if it's 1146 00:59:59,800 --> 01:00:03,160 Speaker 3: not safe, even if it doesn't deserve to be registered, 1147 01:00:03,320 --> 01:00:04,960 Speaker 3: I guess you just got to do it quickly, don't 1148 01:00:04,960 --> 01:00:05,800 Speaker 3: you rip the band aid of. 1149 01:00:05,840 --> 01:00:09,040 Speaker 9: Absolutely, you can't make sure that this is the best 1150 01:00:09,080 --> 01:00:12,080 Speaker 9: continuing to delay the education of children back around. 1151 01:00:12,160 --> 01:00:14,320 Speaker 3: Yeah, Neick, what do you think, Well. 1152 01:00:14,200 --> 01:00:17,640 Speaker 23: There's no easy way, right. These kids have to be safe, 1153 01:00:18,040 --> 01:00:21,560 Speaker 23: and I think every New Zealander would expect that they're 1154 01:00:21,640 --> 01:00:23,800 Speaker 23: right to have an education is preserved and is the 1155 01:00:23,840 --> 01:00:27,200 Speaker 23: same as any of our children, and I think it's 1156 01:00:27,280 --> 01:00:30,600 Speaker 23: the right thing to do and that hopefully in the 1157 01:00:30,640 --> 01:00:32,480 Speaker 23: new year they'll be able to start new schools that 1158 01:00:32,560 --> 01:00:34,760 Speaker 23: are close enough to home. Now it's going to be 1159 01:00:34,800 --> 01:00:36,520 Speaker 23: difficult on the West Coast because a hundred and in 1160 01:00:36,560 --> 01:00:38,560 Speaker 23: fact of one hundred kids into the school is going 1161 01:00:38,600 --> 01:00:41,800 Speaker 23: to be a bit of a resourcing challenge, but at 1162 01:00:41,880 --> 01:00:44,920 Speaker 23: least they've got some time to get The Education Ministry's 1163 01:00:44,920 --> 01:00:47,160 Speaker 23: got some time to sort that out. But I Lot 1164 01:00:48,160 --> 01:00:51,920 Speaker 23: the first priority here is those kids accessing what they're 1165 01:00:52,080 --> 01:00:54,400 Speaker 23: entitled to and that is a decent New Zealand education. 1166 01:00:55,120 --> 01:00:58,960 Speaker 3: Nowick, when the Wellington water business was going on, you 1167 01:00:59,600 --> 01:01:03,440 Speaker 3: are recall very distinctly fronted up here on Newstalk SB 1168 01:01:03,680 --> 01:01:06,000 Speaker 3: number of times, might have even come on the Herald 1169 01:01:06,040 --> 01:01:08,360 Speaker 3: Show as well. You know you out there and you 1170 01:01:08,480 --> 01:01:13,000 Speaker 3: were fronting it. This netball New Zealand thing whenever anything happens. 1171 01:01:13,320 --> 01:01:16,560 Speaker 3: And it's not just netballne neusic, it's sporting bodies. There's 1172 01:01:16,600 --> 01:01:19,080 Speaker 3: something wrong with them that they just don't front up. 1173 01:01:19,600 --> 01:01:21,560 Speaker 3: And I don't think it's good enough. What do you think. 1174 01:01:23,040 --> 01:01:23,840 Speaker 11: I think? 1175 01:01:24,240 --> 01:01:29,680 Speaker 23: Well, Ryan Lot, full disclosure, being upfront apologizing, laying it 1176 01:01:29,760 --> 01:01:32,120 Speaker 23: all out there and showing how you're going to improve 1177 01:01:32,920 --> 01:01:35,000 Speaker 23: is the way it should be done. And yeah, I 1178 01:01:35,080 --> 01:01:39,080 Speaker 23: think Netball New Zealand, I mean it's clearly an organization 1179 01:01:39,320 --> 01:01:43,360 Speaker 23: that has grappled with the challenges that has faced. I 1180 01:01:43,480 --> 01:01:47,560 Speaker 23: think Dame Nolean has been done a disservice and clearly 1181 01:01:47,680 --> 01:01:53,160 Speaker 23: now there's some USU being taken out on parts of 1182 01:01:53,200 --> 01:01:56,840 Speaker 23: the organization and it's happening in you know, a really 1183 01:01:56,960 --> 01:02:00,439 Speaker 23: poor way. So yeah, I think actually come and clean 1184 01:02:00,480 --> 01:02:03,520 Speaker 23: and actually describing what's happened, even though that'll be uncomfortable, 1185 01:02:03,840 --> 01:02:06,320 Speaker 23: would be the best way forward for Netball New Zealand 1186 01:02:06,520 --> 01:02:08,280 Speaker 23: so they can preserve some credibility. 1187 01:02:08,440 --> 01:02:10,760 Speaker 3: Yeah, Craig, I'm assuming you agree. 1188 01:02:10,520 --> 01:02:13,760 Speaker 9: With this absolutely. I think you know, the key thing 1189 01:02:13,800 --> 01:02:17,160 Speaker 9: about leadership is it's about leading, and you know, someone 1190 01:02:17,280 --> 01:02:20,360 Speaker 9: needs to be leading here and saying this is not 1191 01:02:20,520 --> 01:02:24,240 Speaker 9: working if k hasn't been working for a while, and 1192 01:02:24,560 --> 01:02:28,200 Speaker 9: that probably needs to be a look more generally at 1193 01:02:28,280 --> 01:02:30,840 Speaker 9: how this how Netball New Zealand, which is a really 1194 01:02:30,840 --> 01:02:33,760 Speaker 9: important organization in New Zealand, is working, and whether or 1195 01:02:33,800 --> 01:02:36,200 Speaker 9: not it's really delivering for in non New Zealand as 1196 01:02:36,240 --> 01:02:37,520 Speaker 9: in terms of those who follow. 1197 01:02:37,360 --> 01:02:39,720 Speaker 3: That born here. So, Craig, does that mean because you're 1198 01:02:39,720 --> 01:02:42,440 Speaker 3: about to have a big, long, illustrious political career and 1199 01:02:42,640 --> 01:02:45,880 Speaker 3: things will go wrong, They'll be scandaled, There'll be something 1200 01:02:45,960 --> 01:02:49,360 Speaker 3: will happen that every time that happens, you promise, you 1201 01:02:49,520 --> 01:02:51,760 Speaker 3: promise us all here and now, that you will come 1202 01:02:51,800 --> 01:02:54,360 Speaker 3: on news talks on the day that that happens. 1203 01:02:55,600 --> 01:02:58,720 Speaker 9: I am I amber John Key famously saying that it 1204 01:02:58,880 --> 01:03:02,200 Speaker 9: was never the stake, it was always the cover up 1205 01:03:02,440 --> 01:03:04,960 Speaker 9: that led to the problem. And there are very few 1206 01:03:05,000 --> 01:03:07,440 Speaker 9: things I agree with John Key about, but that's one 1207 01:03:07,480 --> 01:03:11,160 Speaker 9: of the few things I do agree with you. I 1208 01:03:11,200 --> 01:03:12,360 Speaker 9: haven't killed yes, because then. 1209 01:03:12,280 --> 01:03:14,600 Speaker 24: There will be other radio stations available at the time. 1210 01:03:15,520 --> 01:03:18,360 Speaker 6: So I will well, I'll tell. 1211 01:03:18,200 --> 01:03:20,080 Speaker 9: You, I'll tell you what if I'm ever, if I'm 1212 01:03:20,120 --> 01:03:23,600 Speaker 9: ever in the situation where I'm looking at something as 1213 01:03:23,640 --> 01:03:26,600 Speaker 9: bad as what appears to be Netball New Zealand, then 1214 01:03:27,280 --> 01:03:30,000 Speaker 9: I will absolutely be standing in front of you telling 1215 01:03:30,040 --> 01:03:31,040 Speaker 9: you this needs to change. 1216 01:03:33,720 --> 01:03:36,320 Speaker 3: I'm not even gonna try for more than that, Craig think, 1217 01:03:36,680 --> 01:03:39,240 Speaker 3: thank you, Craig Green to ute economists and nick le 1218 01:03:39,320 --> 01:03:42,280 Speaker 3: get infrastructure he did on your handle. It's eight minutes 1219 01:03:42,320 --> 01:03:43,320 Speaker 3: away from six. 1220 01:03:44,440 --> 01:03:47,680 Speaker 2: It's the hitherto per Se Alan Drive Full Show podcast 1221 01:03:47,840 --> 01:03:50,320 Speaker 2: on my hard radio powered by News Talks. 1222 01:03:50,360 --> 01:03:50,640 Speaker 1: It'd be. 1223 01:03:53,400 --> 01:03:56,480 Speaker 3: Five to six on News Talks. Everyone remembers Susan Ball. 1224 01:03:56,520 --> 01:03:59,320 Speaker 3: You remember Susan Ball, don't you? From Britain's got talent. 1225 01:04:11,640 --> 01:04:13,720 Speaker 3: Quite a weird story that's come out today. Well it's 1226 01:04:13,760 --> 01:04:15,760 Speaker 3: not that weird, I guess, but he would have been 1227 01:04:15,840 --> 01:04:18,960 Speaker 3: quite young when that happened. And apparently he's quite a 1228 01:04:19,040 --> 01:04:21,880 Speaker 3: fan of Susan Boyle. This is Timothy Shella made. This 1229 01:04:22,040 --> 01:04:26,080 Speaker 3: is the actor very famous now in Hollywood. He's named 1230 01:04:26,160 --> 01:04:29,480 Speaker 3: Susan Boyle as one of the figures. One of the 1231 01:04:29,560 --> 01:04:32,080 Speaker 3: greatest Britons that has ever lived. 1232 01:04:32,240 --> 01:04:35,200 Speaker 1: We Brits would be worthy a. 1233 01:04:35,200 --> 01:04:39,880 Speaker 18: Great question man, you know Lewis Hamilton, Victoria and David 1234 01:04:41,040 --> 01:04:41,479 Speaker 18: who else? 1235 01:04:41,560 --> 01:04:41,720 Speaker 14: Man? 1236 01:04:42,840 --> 01:04:52,080 Speaker 18: Fake mank Susan Boyle? Why she dreamt big? She dreamt 1237 01:04:52,080 --> 01:04:54,240 Speaker 18: bigger than all of us? Who was a moved by that? 1238 01:04:55,480 --> 01:04:57,200 Speaker 18: I remember that like it was yesterday. That was like 1239 01:04:57,280 --> 01:04:58,440 Speaker 18: the advent of YouTube, you know. 1240 01:05:09,640 --> 01:05:11,000 Speaker 1: So I don't know how. 1241 01:05:11,000 --> 01:05:13,080 Speaker 3: Seriously you should take his comment. It did seem a 1242 01:05:13,120 --> 01:05:15,440 Speaker 3: little bit like a throwaway comment. But anyway, Susan Boyle 1243 01:05:15,640 --> 01:05:19,200 Speaker 3: was absolutely chuffed and was asked about it, and I 1244 01:05:19,360 --> 01:05:21,840 Speaker 3: responded that it's one of the kindest things anyone has 1245 01:05:21,880 --> 01:05:24,000 Speaker 3: ever said about her, so she was very happy with that. 1246 01:05:24,960 --> 01:05:27,760 Speaker 3: Coming up after sex, we're going to talk about the 1247 01:05:28,120 --> 01:05:31,520 Speaker 3: milk price. We're going to talk about the fact that 1248 01:05:31,680 --> 01:05:34,560 Speaker 3: the mind the expansion and why he that. You know, 1249 01:05:34,640 --> 01:05:37,120 Speaker 3: they wanted to get it through the fast track. It's 1250 01:05:37,200 --> 01:05:38,920 Speaker 3: getting through the fast track. It's going to get a 1251 01:05:39,000 --> 01:05:41,000 Speaker 3: green light. This is good. This is part of the 1252 01:05:41,080 --> 01:05:44,480 Speaker 3: growth story. So we'll talk about that, and I'll tell 1253 01:05:44,520 --> 01:05:49,000 Speaker 3: you also this interesting story about BP. They've got a 1254 01:05:49,080 --> 01:05:52,200 Speaker 3: new CEO. They've been in big trouble lately, as you 1255 01:05:52,280 --> 01:05:55,960 Speaker 3: may know, and normally they recruit internally. They've gone for 1256 01:05:56,040 --> 01:05:58,680 Speaker 3: an outsider this time for a very good reason. That 1257 01:05:58,800 --> 01:06:01,080 Speaker 3: story and more straight AHA News Talks MB. 1258 01:06:13,680 --> 01:06:36,840 Speaker 1: Your husband is coming keeping track of where the money 1259 01:06:37,120 --> 01:06:37,680 Speaker 1: is flowing. 1260 01:06:38,160 --> 01:06:42,800 Speaker 2: The Business Hour with Ryan Bridge and Mass Motor Vehicle Insurance. 1261 01:06:43,080 --> 01:06:44,800 Speaker 1: Your future is in good Hands. 1262 01:06:45,120 --> 01:06:48,400 Speaker 3: News Talks EDB Good Evening at seven after six This 1263 01:06:48,560 --> 01:06:50,800 Speaker 3: is the business our. Sam Dickey wraps the year on 1264 01:06:50,880 --> 01:06:53,720 Speaker 3: the markets for twenty twenty five. That's after six thirty. 1265 01:06:53,760 --> 01:06:56,080 Speaker 3: The evening into Brady In the UK. Jamie mckaye, Host 1266 01:06:56,080 --> 01:06:58,960 Speaker 3: of the Country, joins us too. A big mining project 1267 01:06:59,000 --> 01:07:02,040 Speaker 3: has gained fast tra approval to expand operations and Why 1268 01:07:02,160 --> 01:07:05,000 Speaker 3: He approval time for Why He North was cut from 1269 01:07:05,040 --> 01:07:08,920 Speaker 3: an estimated weight for it five years to consent to 1270 01:07:09,040 --> 01:07:12,040 Speaker 3: one hundred and twelve days. Hodaki District Me to Toby 1271 01:07:12,040 --> 01:07:14,040 Speaker 3: Adams's with me tonight, Toby, good evening. 1272 01:07:14,600 --> 01:07:15,120 Speaker 24: Good evening. 1273 01:07:15,160 --> 01:07:15,680 Speaker 18: How are you right? 1274 01:07:15,760 --> 01:07:17,440 Speaker 3: Good thing your shoes? That's quick, isn't it? 1275 01:07:19,040 --> 01:07:19,120 Speaker 1: Well? 1276 01:07:19,240 --> 01:07:20,800 Speaker 24: Me answering the phone all the time it took for 1277 01:07:20,840 --> 01:07:21,320 Speaker 24: them to get. 1278 01:07:21,240 --> 01:07:25,280 Speaker 3: The content both Toby, Yeah, no, yeah, no, that. 1279 01:07:25,360 --> 01:07:25,560 Speaker 18: Is that. 1280 01:07:27,440 --> 01:07:28,880 Speaker 24: It took a little bit of a process to get 1281 01:07:28,880 --> 01:07:30,600 Speaker 24: it to the fast track content. But yeah, that is 1282 01:07:30,800 --> 01:07:32,480 Speaker 24: that is a quicker way of doing things for sure. 1283 01:07:32,800 --> 01:07:35,560 Speaker 3: Do you think that this means you will get pushed, 1284 01:07:35,680 --> 01:07:38,280 Speaker 3: you know, more pushback than you would otherwise have gotten 1285 01:07:38,400 --> 01:07:42,360 Speaker 3: to because the community hasn't had as much of a say, I. 1286 01:07:42,400 --> 01:07:44,040 Speaker 24: Mean, the community did get a little bit of a 1287 01:07:45,360 --> 01:07:46,800 Speaker 24: you know, there was a short amount of time that 1288 01:07:46,840 --> 01:07:49,720 Speaker 24: they could put some submission, but council got a little 1289 01:07:49,720 --> 01:07:51,640 Speaker 24: bit of time and we'd we'd you know, we'd worked 1290 01:07:51,640 --> 01:07:53,280 Speaker 24: on it previously, so we have been working with the 1291 01:07:53,320 --> 01:07:55,000 Speaker 24: company for a number of years. We kind of knew 1292 01:07:55,040 --> 01:07:56,440 Speaker 24: the type of things that we needed to put in 1293 01:07:56,520 --> 01:07:58,280 Speaker 24: there for a submission, and we've got a lot of 1294 01:07:58,320 --> 01:08:01,920 Speaker 24: those things through, so we're quite comfortable that the communities 1295 01:08:02,240 --> 01:08:02,840 Speaker 24: has been heard. 1296 01:08:03,080 --> 01:08:06,360 Speaker 3: You've done the leg work, what are They're definitely done 1297 01:08:06,360 --> 01:08:07,760 Speaker 3: the leg work. What are the benefits? 1298 01:08:09,560 --> 01:08:12,160 Speaker 24: I mean, there's a lot of benefits for the workforce 1299 01:08:12,200 --> 01:08:15,760 Speaker 24: for sure. You know, it brings economic wealth into the region. 1300 01:08:16,280 --> 01:08:18,320 Speaker 24: And there's a lot of people that say that the 1301 01:08:18,439 --> 01:08:21,360 Speaker 24: gold profits go overseas, and that may well be true, 1302 01:08:22,360 --> 01:08:26,000 Speaker 24: but there's a lot of employment locally within the Herdakei 1303 01:08:26,080 --> 01:08:29,160 Speaker 24: region and further afield that really get that benefit out 1304 01:08:29,200 --> 01:08:30,679 Speaker 24: of it. Good paying, well paying jobs. 1305 01:08:31,080 --> 01:08:33,800 Speaker 3: Yeah, it's the five point two billion in additional gold 1306 01:08:33,840 --> 01:08:36,439 Speaker 3: and silver exports, but that is the exports. Do you 1307 01:08:36,640 --> 01:08:38,719 Speaker 3: know how many jobs are Do you have a number 1308 01:08:38,760 --> 01:08:41,640 Speaker 3: of extra jobs for this particular. 1309 01:08:41,280 --> 01:08:44,360 Speaker 24: Mind, Yeah, I mean I've been talking an extra three 1310 01:08:44,439 --> 01:08:47,679 Speaker 24: hundred jobs, So that's a that's a that's a big employer. 1311 01:08:47,800 --> 01:08:52,400 Speaker 24: So that just creates more families. Yeah, permanent jobs. 1312 01:08:53,120 --> 01:08:56,519 Speaker 3: Right, what's not to like? What about the environment? Do 1313 01:08:56,600 --> 01:08:59,000 Speaker 3: you know, what is the worst case scenario with this 1314 01:08:59,240 --> 01:09:01,439 Speaker 3: or is it kind of like it's why we already 1315 01:09:01,479 --> 01:09:03,800 Speaker 3: do mining, people are used to it, or are there 1316 01:09:03,920 --> 01:09:09,320 Speaker 3: specific environmental potentially environmental flow on effects from this particular project. 1317 01:09:10,479 --> 01:09:14,160 Speaker 24: There's always an environmental aspect to mining or any sort 1318 01:09:14,160 --> 01:09:17,040 Speaker 24: of mineral distraction, whether it's a quarry, coal, gold, silver, 1319 01:09:17,160 --> 01:09:20,120 Speaker 24: whatever it is, is always going to be that environmental issue. 1320 01:09:20,640 --> 01:09:23,439 Speaker 24: This is a company that we've worked with for a 1321 01:09:23,600 --> 01:09:26,680 Speaker 24: number of years and I have to say that they 1322 01:09:26,800 --> 01:09:29,800 Speaker 24: try as much as they can to be as environmentally 1323 01:09:29,840 --> 01:09:33,240 Speaker 24: neutral as they possibly can. Obviously there's tailing stems, which 1324 01:09:33,320 --> 01:09:37,400 Speaker 24: is the biggest concern that people have, but the manner 1325 01:09:37,400 --> 01:09:39,960 Speaker 24: in which they construct them and look after them is 1326 01:09:40,000 --> 01:09:42,000 Speaker 24: second to none. It's probably some of the best in 1327 01:09:42,040 --> 01:09:42,360 Speaker 24: the world. 1328 01:09:43,520 --> 01:09:44,519 Speaker 3: Appreciate your time, Toby. 1329 01:09:44,560 --> 01:09:44,760 Speaker 11: Thank you. 1330 01:09:44,840 --> 01:09:47,720 Speaker 3: Toby Adams, who's the Hurdoki district mayor talking about the 1331 01:09:48,360 --> 01:09:51,400 Speaker 3: great news, Well, I mean, unless you're Catherine Della Hunty, 1332 01:09:51,439 --> 01:09:53,160 Speaker 3: I don't mean she's going to be stoked about this, 1333 01:09:53,640 --> 01:09:55,720 Speaker 3: but everyone else I imagine and why he will be 1334 01:09:55,760 --> 01:09:57,599 Speaker 3: pretty happy with it. It is ten up to six 1335 01:09:58,000 --> 01:10:00,360 Speaker 3: Ryan Bridge, by the way, the amount of the crown 1336 01:10:00,439 --> 01:10:03,120 Speaker 3: will get from this crown revenue. And this includes your 1337 01:10:03,200 --> 01:10:07,960 Speaker 3: tax take, includes your paye from your workers, includes your royalties. 1338 01:10:08,680 --> 01:10:11,479 Speaker 3: A net present value is how they determine it. Four 1339 01:10:11,560 --> 01:10:13,720 Speaker 3: hundred and twenty two million dollars over the life of 1340 01:10:13,760 --> 01:10:17,519 Speaker 3: the mine. Now, I promise you I'll tell you about BP. 1341 01:10:18,000 --> 01:10:20,639 Speaker 3: And BP's interesting because it's a little bit like Ford. 1342 01:10:20,760 --> 01:10:22,680 Speaker 3: The other day we spoke about Ford and they did 1343 01:10:22,760 --> 01:10:26,759 Speaker 3: the big write down on their EV punt twenty billion dollars. 1344 01:10:26,760 --> 01:10:29,960 Speaker 3: I think it was the biggest write down of any 1345 01:10:30,400 --> 01:10:34,920 Speaker 3: American business ever. Anyway, BP has been in a spot 1346 01:10:34,960 --> 01:10:38,680 Speaker 3: of trouble of its own. This is over the renewables 1347 01:10:38,760 --> 01:10:40,680 Speaker 3: punt that they took, where they said, we're not going 1348 01:10:40,720 --> 01:10:44,559 Speaker 3: to be like those other big, bad, evil oil companies, 1349 01:10:44,560 --> 01:10:47,240 Speaker 3: even though they are a big bad oil company. We're 1350 01:10:47,280 --> 01:10:51,519 Speaker 3: going to get into renewables. And it's cost them profits down, 1351 01:10:52,040 --> 01:10:55,439 Speaker 3: you know, debt up, all the bad things. And they 1352 01:10:55,520 --> 01:11:00,200 Speaker 3: are cycling through their third chief executive now and think 1353 01:11:00,200 --> 01:11:03,240 Speaker 3: about seven years, all the past five to seven years, 1354 01:11:03,920 --> 01:11:06,720 Speaker 3: and they've got a bunch of activist investors on board, 1355 01:11:06,760 --> 01:11:09,919 Speaker 3: so they're having to do something and they are changing CEOs. 1356 01:11:09,960 --> 01:11:13,439 Speaker 3: Eld CEO is going you know. Stick to your knitting. 1357 01:11:13,520 --> 01:11:17,200 Speaker 3: That is the clear message to BP International, stick to 1358 01:11:17,360 --> 01:11:20,280 Speaker 3: your knitting. Been on the hunt for a new CEO, 1359 01:11:20,520 --> 01:11:24,040 Speaker 3: and usually all of the previous ones have been picked 1360 01:11:24,040 --> 01:11:27,920 Speaker 3: from within BP's own ranks. The current guy was there 1361 01:11:28,000 --> 01:11:31,680 Speaker 3: for twenty five years and ended as CEO, so that's 1362 01:11:31,760 --> 01:11:34,000 Speaker 3: the kind of company that they are, that's the kind 1363 01:11:34,040 --> 01:11:36,040 Speaker 3: of company that they keep. This time, they've gone for 1364 01:11:36,120 --> 01:11:38,560 Speaker 3: a woman by the name of Meg O'Neill will be 1365 01:11:38,680 --> 01:11:42,400 Speaker 3: the new head of BP. She's an outsider, so he 1366 01:11:42,479 --> 01:11:47,520 Speaker 3: hasn't worked there before. She's currently heads Woodside Energy. She's American. 1367 01:11:47,680 --> 01:11:52,640 Speaker 3: This is a member London based, but their qualification for 1368 01:11:52,840 --> 01:11:55,759 Speaker 3: her is that she's spent twenty years at x on Mobile. 1369 01:11:56,280 --> 01:11:58,880 Speaker 3: So if you want any indication about the direction in 1370 01:11:58,920 --> 01:12:03,000 Speaker 3: which BP is now going to suddenly reverse itself, take 1371 01:12:03,160 --> 01:12:05,799 Speaker 3: look no further than the CV of the new CEO. 1372 01:12:06,360 --> 01:12:06,920 Speaker 3: Six twelve. 1373 01:12:07,840 --> 01:12:08,679 Speaker 1: It's the Heather. 1374 01:12:08,600 --> 01:12:13,040 Speaker 2: Dupascy Allen Drive Full Show podcast on iHeartRadio powered by 1375 01:12:13,120 --> 01:12:15,720 Speaker 2: Newstalk ZBB News Talk ZB. 1376 01:12:15,960 --> 01:12:18,840 Speaker 3: It is quarter past six. Alan Jackson is the name 1377 01:12:18,920 --> 01:12:21,000 Speaker 3: of the lawyer who is going to be representing the 1378 01:12:21,160 --> 01:12:24,760 Speaker 3: Sun who was accused of killing his parents. This is 1379 01:12:24,920 --> 01:12:28,320 Speaker 3: the Ryan is over in Hollywood. The director, famous director 1380 01:12:28,560 --> 01:12:32,160 Speaker 3: found dead in their mansion in Brentwood in La So 1381 01:12:32,720 --> 01:12:34,360 Speaker 3: get used to that name, because we'll be hearing a 1382 01:12:34,400 --> 01:12:36,320 Speaker 3: lot from him, and a lot of him, and a 1383 01:12:36,360 --> 01:12:37,800 Speaker 3: lot about him. And I'll tell you a little bit 1384 01:12:37,840 --> 01:12:39,439 Speaker 3: more in just a second. It's quarter past six. 1385 01:12:41,600 --> 01:12:44,760 Speaker 1: The Rural Report on Heather Dupassy Allen Drive. 1386 01:12:44,960 --> 01:12:47,320 Speaker 3: Jamie mckaye is with us from the country. Jamie, good evening, 1387 01:12:48,200 --> 01:12:52,680 Speaker 3: geta Ryan. Now we've got the Fonterra, you know, downgrading, 1388 01:12:52,840 --> 01:12:55,760 Speaker 3: lowering the fore cast farm gate milk price for the 1389 01:12:55,840 --> 01:12:56,920 Speaker 3: second time this season. 1390 01:12:57,920 --> 01:13:01,439 Speaker 8: Yeah, yeah, like, well, to take you back a wee 1391 01:13:01,479 --> 01:13:04,200 Speaker 8: bit in time, they started the season off with the 1392 01:13:04,280 --> 01:13:08,439 Speaker 8: forecast range of eight to eleven dollars. Strangely, I mean, 1393 01:13:08,800 --> 01:13:11,400 Speaker 8: logic would suggest the midpoints nine fifty, but they went 1394 01:13:11,439 --> 01:13:15,679 Speaker 8: with a ten dollar midpoint. They've had to subsequently reduce 1395 01:13:15,760 --> 01:13:19,560 Speaker 8: that to nine fifty, and today they've changed that midpoint 1396 01:13:19,680 --> 01:13:23,600 Speaker 8: from nine fifty to nine dollars, so that range is 1397 01:13:23,720 --> 01:13:26,479 Speaker 8: now eight point fifty to nine fifty. There's quite a 1398 01:13:26,479 --> 01:13:28,639 Speaker 8: bit of talk in the industry about maybe the milk 1399 01:13:28,720 --> 01:13:32,040 Speaker 8: price starting with an eight, which wouldn't be so flash, 1400 01:13:32,120 --> 01:13:35,120 Speaker 8: but it's not a surprise. This follows yesterday's and we 1401 01:13:35,200 --> 01:13:38,320 Speaker 8: talked about this one on Tuesday evening Ryan. It follows 1402 01:13:38,400 --> 01:13:41,559 Speaker 8: yesterday's four point four percent drop on the GDT auction 1403 01:13:42,600 --> 01:13:45,920 Speaker 8: down a whole milk powder down five point seven percent, 1404 01:13:46,360 --> 01:13:49,160 Speaker 8: the ninth drop in a row since mid August. The 1405 01:13:49,240 --> 01:13:52,280 Speaker 8: record is ten. It looks like we could well beat 1406 01:13:52,360 --> 01:13:55,839 Speaker 8: that when the first auction comes back in early January. 1407 01:13:56,400 --> 01:13:59,920 Speaker 8: Chief executive Miles Hurrell said, strong milk flows and both 1408 01:14:00,120 --> 01:14:03,160 Speaker 8: New Zealand and globally, particularly out of the United States 1409 01:14:03,240 --> 01:14:07,599 Speaker 8: and Europe, continues to put downward pressure on global commodity prices. 1410 01:14:07,680 --> 01:14:10,600 Speaker 8: And the other factor that's slightly coming into play is 1411 01:14:10,760 --> 01:14:14,200 Speaker 8: the stronger New Zealand dollar. It's now training at fifty 1412 01:14:14,240 --> 01:14:17,519 Speaker 8: eight or US fifty eight cents. It was at fifty 1413 01:14:17,600 --> 01:14:21,120 Speaker 8: six or fifty seven. But I'm imagining the hedging department 1414 01:14:21,800 --> 01:14:25,120 Speaker 8: at Fonterra Ryan has probably got a lock a lot 1415 01:14:25,200 --> 01:14:27,840 Speaker 8: of their currency locked in for this season, so that 1416 01:14:28,000 --> 01:14:31,720 Speaker 8: may even be a next season story. So Bucklin, I 1417 01:14:31,800 --> 01:14:34,200 Speaker 8: don't think we're over the drops yet. But the good 1418 01:14:34,240 --> 01:14:36,120 Speaker 8: news is because it was Christmas, and I don't want 1419 01:14:36,120 --> 01:14:36,679 Speaker 8: to be a grinch. 1420 01:14:36,960 --> 01:14:38,040 Speaker 11: The good news, Ryan is. 1421 01:14:38,360 --> 01:14:41,280 Speaker 8: As we look out further, we are expecting this thing 1422 01:14:41,560 --> 01:14:45,439 Speaker 8: to come back and still very good future for protein. 1423 01:14:46,200 --> 01:14:49,360 Speaker 3: And you know everyone talks about the break even price, Jamie, 1424 01:14:49,479 --> 01:14:52,799 Speaker 3: eight dollars fifty. Is that I think the average for farmers, 1425 01:14:52,840 --> 01:14:56,040 Speaker 3: for dairy farmers, that sounds like it's getting quite close. 1426 01:14:56,640 --> 01:14:59,040 Speaker 3: Is you know that must be worrying or is there 1427 01:14:59,120 --> 01:14:59,640 Speaker 3: more to that? 1428 01:15:01,080 --> 01:15:02,120 Speaker 11: No, I think it's worrying. 1429 01:15:02,600 --> 01:15:05,480 Speaker 8: It's interesting the eight that's the from the e contractor 1430 01:15:05,800 --> 01:15:08,760 Speaker 8: tracker at dairy en Z a eight fifty. I know 1431 01:15:08,840 --> 01:15:11,160 Speaker 8: a lot of dairy farmers, and I know a lot 1432 01:15:11,240 --> 01:15:14,880 Speaker 8: of them whose cost of production is considerably below eight 1433 01:15:14,960 --> 01:15:17,920 Speaker 8: dollars fifty. Maybe it's a few of the big players 1434 01:15:18,000 --> 01:15:20,280 Speaker 8: with high debt that is dragging that average up. But 1435 01:15:20,320 --> 01:15:23,200 Speaker 8: you're dead right, Like, at a cost of eight to 1436 01:15:23,280 --> 01:15:25,839 Speaker 8: fifty a ten dollars payout, it is a good business 1437 01:15:25,920 --> 01:15:28,760 Speaker 8: to be If that payout is beginning with an eight 1438 01:15:28,840 --> 01:15:32,920 Speaker 8: and the cost of production is eight fifty, not so flash. 1439 01:15:33,680 --> 01:15:36,479 Speaker 8: But there are things that are mitigating this. I mean, 1440 01:15:36,560 --> 01:15:39,360 Speaker 8: lower interest rates are really going to help farmers in 1441 01:15:39,479 --> 01:15:42,880 Speaker 8: the coming season or the rest of this season. That 1442 01:15:42,960 --> 01:15:45,120 Speaker 8: has of course been factored into the eight to fifty. 1443 01:15:46,040 --> 01:15:48,759 Speaker 8: But yeah, watch this space a bit of the shine 1444 01:15:48,800 --> 01:15:49,960 Speaker 8: coming off dairy prices. 1445 01:15:50,160 --> 01:15:50,519 Speaker 11: I see. 1446 01:15:50,600 --> 01:15:52,479 Speaker 3: Nathan garn has got a new role for himself. 1447 01:15:53,520 --> 01:15:57,400 Speaker 8: Yes, he has the former Minister of Primary Industries under 1448 01:15:57,439 --> 01:15:59,439 Speaker 8: the well he was under the key and I think 1449 01:15:59,479 --> 01:16:01,760 Speaker 8: the English government. I'll have to check my do my 1450 01:16:01,840 --> 01:16:04,880 Speaker 8: homework on that one. Yeah, he is named as the 1451 01:16:05,240 --> 01:16:09,320 Speaker 8: new Special Agricultural Trade Envoy. We've had some good ones 1452 01:16:09,479 --> 01:16:12,599 Speaker 8: of these over the years. Mike Petterson for instance, comes 1453 01:16:12,640 --> 01:16:16,960 Speaker 8: to mind. Nathan guy replaces hamishmah a mid Canterbury arable 1454 01:16:17,040 --> 01:16:20,160 Speaker 8: farmer who's held the role since twenty twenty three. Nathan 1455 01:16:20,240 --> 01:16:23,080 Speaker 8: will take over on the first of January, which is 1456 01:16:23,479 --> 01:16:26,040 Speaker 8: only a couple of weeks ago. Look, he's going to 1457 01:16:26,200 --> 01:16:30,920 Speaker 8: with his background not only in politics treading the corridors 1458 01:16:30,960 --> 01:16:34,000 Speaker 8: of power, but also in farming. He's a practicing farmer, 1459 01:16:34,080 --> 01:16:37,320 Speaker 8: he's a horrifanu, a dairy farmer. He's an agribusiness leader. 1460 01:16:38,960 --> 01:16:41,800 Speaker 8: He's the chairman of the Meat Industry Association at the moment. 1461 01:16:41,840 --> 01:16:45,120 Speaker 8: He's also the independent chair for Appiculture New Zealand. He's 1462 01:16:45,160 --> 01:16:47,080 Speaker 8: got a finger in a lot of pies. He's very 1463 01:16:47,120 --> 01:16:50,120 Speaker 8: well connected and he will do a very good job. 1464 01:16:50,240 --> 01:16:55,160 Speaker 8: Now Minister Maclay has said he wants Nathan to concentrate 1465 01:16:55,360 --> 01:16:58,560 Speaker 8: with a particular focus on India. Obviously they're looking for 1466 01:16:58,680 --> 01:17:03,000 Speaker 8: the FTA there and the GCC markets. Now. I don't 1467 01:17:03,000 --> 01:17:05,280 Speaker 8: know about you, Ryan, but I know what a GC is. 1468 01:17:05,320 --> 01:17:08,160 Speaker 8: I don't know what a GCC market is, but whatever 1469 01:17:08,240 --> 01:17:10,120 Speaker 8: it is, Nathan's concentrating on it. 1470 01:17:13,080 --> 01:17:17,040 Speaker 3: You're driving with the GC. Yes, no, quite right. Well 1471 01:17:17,080 --> 01:17:19,840 Speaker 3: he's he's he's quite adept. He used to. I've been 1472 01:17:19,920 --> 01:17:22,280 Speaker 3: on a few trade missions with Nathan guy in the 1473 01:17:22,760 --> 01:17:25,160 Speaker 3: years gone by, Like we went to Brazil, we went 1474 01:17:25,160 --> 01:17:28,760 Speaker 3: to Argentina, I remember going to Mexico. I mean he 1475 01:17:28,840 --> 01:17:31,479 Speaker 3: knows his stuff. He'll be out there pushing the business, 1476 01:17:31,560 --> 01:17:33,360 Speaker 3: doing the good thing for New Zealand. So that's great. 1477 01:17:33,479 --> 01:17:35,639 Speaker 3: Jamie appreciate it. Jamie mcaughy, host of the Country. Tonight, 1478 01:17:35,680 --> 01:17:39,440 Speaker 3: it is twenty after six on Newstalk, said b show Business. 1479 01:17:40,400 --> 01:17:42,639 Speaker 1: Crouching the numbers and getting the results. 1480 01:17:43,200 --> 01:17:46,679 Speaker 2: It's Wayne Bridge on the Business Hour with MAS Motor 1481 01:17:46,760 --> 01:17:47,599 Speaker 2: Vehicle Insurance. 1482 01:17:47,840 --> 01:17:50,840 Speaker 1: Your futures in good hands. News Talk z'd be. 1483 01:17:51,360 --> 01:17:54,840 Speaker 3: Six twenty three. The Rhyana murders over in Hollywood, the 1484 01:17:55,040 --> 01:17:58,200 Speaker 3: son who is accused of stabbing his parents. You would 1485 01:17:58,200 --> 01:18:00,519 Speaker 3: have seen this in the news. He's the father was 1486 01:18:00,520 --> 01:18:03,760 Speaker 3: a Hollywood director, very well known, in fact, directed a 1487 01:18:03,800 --> 01:18:06,600 Speaker 3: few Good Men, which happens to be you know, the 1488 01:18:06,800 --> 01:18:10,320 Speaker 3: legal happens to be one of the no the favorite 1489 01:18:10,400 --> 01:18:14,519 Speaker 3: movie and inspiration for the lawyer who is now going 1490 01:18:14,560 --> 01:18:18,200 Speaker 3: to represent the Sun. And the lawyer's name is Alan Jackson. 1491 01:18:18,240 --> 01:18:19,599 Speaker 3: And you'll see a lot of them on the news 1492 01:18:19,640 --> 01:18:20,840 Speaker 3: and then the because it's going to be one of 1493 01:18:20,880 --> 01:18:23,479 Speaker 3: those cases, isn't it like an OJ case where it's 1494 01:18:23,640 --> 01:18:26,560 Speaker 3: very well known, it's going to be very well publicized. 1495 01:18:27,080 --> 01:18:30,400 Speaker 3: So that a lawyer's name is Alan Jackson, and he 1496 01:18:30,479 --> 01:18:33,519 Speaker 3: wears a sharp suit, and he's sixty years old, and 1497 01:18:33,600 --> 01:18:37,120 Speaker 3: he's very well put together. His specialty, it was reading 1498 01:18:37,120 --> 01:18:40,280 Speaker 3: about him today fascinating. His specialty is cross examinations. And 1499 01:18:40,360 --> 01:18:44,559 Speaker 3: he says every single question that he asks is highly 1500 01:18:44,720 --> 01:18:48,280 Speaker 3: scripted because it's he talks about it like he's building 1501 01:18:48,360 --> 01:18:52,800 Speaker 3: into a symphony, building into something like a symphony. So 1502 01:18:52,960 --> 01:18:55,800 Speaker 3: he's going to be very good under with cross examinations 1503 01:18:55,840 --> 01:18:58,200 Speaker 3: in the courtroom. Now, he represented a whole bunch of 1504 01:18:58,280 --> 01:19:02,880 Speaker 3: famous people, including rv. Weinstein that obviously didn't go real well, 1505 01:19:03,840 --> 01:19:06,400 Speaker 3: but also Kevin Spacey, and he managed to get Kevin 1506 01:19:06,479 --> 01:19:09,960 Speaker 3: Spacey off one of the cases that he faced. But 1507 01:19:10,120 --> 01:19:12,360 Speaker 3: also a woman by the name of Karen Reid, and 1508 01:19:12,760 --> 01:19:14,800 Speaker 3: this was recent, this was in June. You might have 1509 01:19:14,840 --> 01:19:18,400 Speaker 3: heard about this case. Not a famous person, but was acquitted, 1510 01:19:19,000 --> 01:19:23,280 Speaker 3: importantly acquitted in June over a case where she was 1511 01:19:23,280 --> 01:19:25,920 Speaker 3: accused of killing her boyfriend who was also a cop. So, 1512 01:19:26,400 --> 01:19:27,960 Speaker 3: I mean, get your popcorn out. It's going to be 1513 01:19:28,000 --> 01:19:29,400 Speaker 3: one of those cases from the US. 1514 01:19:30,400 --> 01:19:33,160 Speaker 1: There's no business like show business. 1515 01:19:33,960 --> 01:19:38,160 Speaker 14: The Oscar goes too, and the Oscar goes to, and 1516 01:19:38,320 --> 01:19:42,920 Speaker 14: the asker goes to, and the Oscar goes to the asker. 1517 01:19:42,680 --> 01:19:46,600 Speaker 3: Goes to, and the asker goes to YouTube. Yes, the 1518 01:19:46,680 --> 01:19:49,600 Speaker 3: Oscars are fighting for survival. It's official and in a 1519 01:19:49,640 --> 01:19:52,280 Speaker 3: bid to stay relevant and go where the audiences are, 1520 01:19:52,400 --> 01:19:56,040 Speaker 3: the Oscar Ceremony is going to move online to YouTube. 1521 01:19:56,600 --> 01:19:59,759 Speaker 3: It ends a decades long agreement with the American ABC. 1522 01:20:00,320 --> 01:20:03,920 Speaker 3: They have shown the Oscars since nineteen seventy six, and 1523 01:20:04,000 --> 01:20:06,360 Speaker 3: the Academy says this is a five year deal with 1524 01:20:06,520 --> 01:20:09,360 Speaker 3: YouTube doesn't actually start till twenty twenty nine, so they're 1525 01:20:09,360 --> 01:20:12,240 Speaker 3: obviously not in any rush. Chief executive of the Academy 1526 01:20:12,240 --> 01:20:15,760 Speaker 3: says they're hoping to reach the largest worldwide audience this way. 1527 01:20:16,280 --> 01:20:18,639 Speaker 3: We don't know how much the deal with YouTube is worth, 1528 01:20:18,800 --> 01:20:22,200 Speaker 3: but ABC has been paying one hundred million dollars a year. 1529 01:20:23,240 --> 01:20:26,960 Speaker 3: What no one watches it anymore? I don't think because 1530 01:20:28,040 --> 01:20:31,240 Speaker 3: of where it is. Just because it's crap, isn't it. 1531 01:20:31,360 --> 01:20:32,680 Speaker 3: It goes on and on and on, and it's not 1532 01:20:32,760 --> 01:20:35,559 Speaker 3: that funny anyway. The network has generated roughly one hundred 1533 01:20:35,560 --> 01:20:38,240 Speaker 3: and forty million dollars annually from ad sales, a portion 1534 01:20:38,400 --> 01:20:41,000 Speaker 3: of which is shared with the Academy, so they get 1535 01:20:41,040 --> 01:20:43,439 Speaker 3: a cut in it too. Apparently the Academy wanted more 1536 01:20:43,520 --> 01:20:46,000 Speaker 3: money for the new contract, which ABC declined, given the 1537 01:20:46,080 --> 01:20:48,640 Speaker 3: number of people watching has been declining. Viewership peaked in 1538 01:20:48,800 --> 01:20:52,840 Speaker 3: nineteen ninety eight fifty seven million people tuned in. Then 1539 01:20:52,960 --> 01:20:57,960 Speaker 3: this year, nineteen point seven million people watched the Oscars 1540 01:20:59,040 --> 01:21:01,720 Speaker 3: twenty six minutes after six on News Talks Big We'll 1541 01:21:01,760 --> 01:21:03,720 Speaker 3: talk to Sam Dickie and look back at the year 1542 01:21:03,840 --> 01:21:10,840 Speaker 3: in the markets. Afternoons, Big Shock con be the man me. 1543 01:21:11,520 --> 01:21:15,640 Speaker 13: Tell me you got something to get I want you 1544 01:21:15,760 --> 01:21:19,840 Speaker 13: kind of like it when you call me on never 1545 01:21:19,960 --> 01:21:21,920 Speaker 13: the time of talk it just stop. 1546 01:21:22,200 --> 01:21:29,760 Speaker 25: Mon I got anoument. This may talk to me, talk 1547 01:21:29,880 --> 01:21:36,120 Speaker 25: to me, talk to me, so to me, tell me 1548 01:21:36,400 --> 01:21:40,880 Speaker 25: to me been then he tell me tot to me 1549 01:21:41,360 --> 01:21:46,080 Speaker 25: been then reading to me, total me been then a 1550 01:21:46,400 --> 01:21:49,800 Speaker 25: reading talk to me. It tolling me been me. 1551 01:22:08,479 --> 01:22:12,280 Speaker 2: Whether it's macro, micro or just plain economics. It's all 1552 01:22:12,520 --> 01:22:16,400 Speaker 2: on the business hours with Ryan Bridge and Mass Motor 1553 01:22:16,479 --> 01:22:20,719 Speaker 2: Vehicle Insurance. Your futures in good hands. News Talks EBB. 1554 01:22:25,360 --> 01:22:29,280 Speaker 3: Business twenty five away from seven on news Talks. Be 1555 01:22:29,479 --> 01:22:31,519 Speaker 3: great to have your company tonight. I wish I had 1556 01:22:31,600 --> 01:22:34,719 Speaker 3: seen this story last week because it happened over the weekend. 1557 01:22:34,840 --> 01:22:38,680 Speaker 3: This is the great Honda City road trip. He was 1558 01:22:38,880 --> 01:22:42,559 Speaker 3: driven or seen a Honda City before. Tiny little It's 1559 01:22:42,600 --> 01:22:45,200 Speaker 3: like a shopping trolley. And my brother used to have 1560 01:22:45,240 --> 01:22:46,800 Speaker 3: one of these when we were growing up as kids, 1561 01:22:46,840 --> 01:22:48,880 Speaker 3: and him and his mates would literally use it as 1562 01:22:48,880 --> 01:22:51,280 Speaker 3: a shopping trolley. And I can remember seeing them make 1563 01:22:51,360 --> 01:22:54,640 Speaker 3: it fly one time and they'd drive it. There was 1564 01:22:54,760 --> 01:22:57,800 Speaker 3: a stretch of road where you could go up and 1565 01:22:57,920 --> 01:22:59,639 Speaker 3: there was a bit of a bank and they were 1566 01:22:59,720 --> 01:23:02,200 Speaker 3: just woon over this thing in the little Honda City 1567 01:23:02,240 --> 01:23:05,800 Speaker 3: and it would literally get wings and fly, And they 1568 01:23:05,920 --> 01:23:08,680 Speaker 3: do lots of fun stuff with hond of Cities at 1569 01:23:08,720 --> 01:23:11,760 Speaker 3: the Great hond of City road Trip, including driving them 1570 01:23:11,800 --> 01:23:13,920 Speaker 3: through rivers. If you've seen one of these cars, you 1571 01:23:14,000 --> 01:23:17,000 Speaker 3: know how tiny they are. One of those cars that 1572 01:23:17,080 --> 01:23:19,639 Speaker 3: makes you if you are just even a regular sized person, 1573 01:23:20,200 --> 01:23:22,720 Speaker 3: it makes you look like you're a giant just by 1574 01:23:22,800 --> 01:23:25,640 Speaker 3: getting in it, like an adult riding a little kid's tricycle. 1575 01:23:25,920 --> 01:23:27,839 Speaker 3: That's what you look like in a Honda City. Anyway, 1576 01:23:28,040 --> 01:23:31,280 Speaker 3: they had this event every year and apparently went very well. 1577 01:23:31,360 --> 01:23:35,400 Speaker 3: People had lots of fun and interestingly, even though they're 1578 01:23:35,439 --> 01:23:38,920 Speaker 3: a tiny kind of ugby car, when people drive past 1579 01:23:39,040 --> 01:23:41,559 Speaker 3: in a convoy of hond of Cities they reckon they 1580 01:23:41,680 --> 01:23:45,760 Speaker 3: take photos quite cool or away from seven. So it's 1581 01:23:45,800 --> 01:23:47,920 Speaker 3: been a wild ride for global equity markets this year. 1582 01:23:48,080 --> 01:23:50,559 Speaker 3: We all know that here Donald Trump wasn't even president 1583 01:23:50,760 --> 01:23:53,960 Speaker 3: on the first of January. Can you believe that despite 1584 01:23:53,960 --> 01:23:56,320 Speaker 3: all the volatility, we're not a whisker off all time 1585 01:23:56,439 --> 01:23:59,600 Speaker 3: highs now as we end the year, Sam Dickie is 1586 01:23:59,720 --> 01:24:02,240 Speaker 3: with your funds and is with me tonight, Sam, good evening, 1587 01:24:02,800 --> 01:24:05,439 Speaker 3: Good evening, Ryan, What are the key lessons do you 1588 01:24:05,520 --> 01:24:08,840 Speaker 3: reckon that we should take away from this year? Yeah, 1589 01:24:08,960 --> 01:24:09,519 Speaker 3: roller coaster. 1590 01:24:09,640 --> 01:24:12,800 Speaker 26: So in the three things, we were reminded again, when 1591 01:24:13,280 --> 01:24:16,080 Speaker 26: everyone in the market has the same view, it's on 1592 01:24:16,120 --> 01:24:18,200 Speaker 26: the front page of all the newspapers, it often pays 1593 01:24:18,240 --> 01:24:19,679 Speaker 26: to disagree and take the other side. 1594 01:24:19,800 --> 01:24:21,160 Speaker 3: So you mentioned it. 1595 01:24:21,280 --> 01:24:24,400 Speaker 26: On April eighth, a few days after President Trump's Liberation Day, 1596 01:24:24,840 --> 01:24:27,679 Speaker 26: economists were very, very vireous, saying the risk of recession 1597 01:24:27,800 --> 01:24:31,080 Speaker 26: was spiking, and if you read the newspaper, you would 1598 01:24:31,120 --> 01:24:33,599 Speaker 26: have sold everything that put in time. Headlines were comparing 1599 01:24:33,640 --> 01:24:37,200 Speaker 26: the looming trade war TOI remember the Smoot Hawley Act 1600 01:24:37,280 --> 01:24:39,760 Speaker 26: in nineteen thirty, which raised duties on twenty thousand goods 1601 01:24:39,800 --> 01:24:42,880 Speaker 26: and arguably turned a recession into the Great Depression. As 1602 01:24:42,960 --> 01:24:45,240 Speaker 26: it turned out, Trump's bark was worse than his by, 1603 01:24:45,360 --> 01:24:48,320 Speaker 26: and global equity markets are up forty percent eight months 1604 01:24:48,400 --> 01:24:51,000 Speaker 26: since then, which is actually one of the fastest rallies 1605 01:24:51,040 --> 01:24:54,560 Speaker 26: on record in two hundred years. Second thing is we 1606 01:24:54,640 --> 01:24:56,960 Speaker 26: were reminded that there are other places to make money 1607 01:24:57,000 --> 01:25:01,200 Speaker 26: outside of the US, so ring disaster in the next 1608 01:25:01,240 --> 01:25:03,679 Speaker 26: few days. It's only the third time in fifteen years 1609 01:25:04,240 --> 01:25:07,080 Speaker 26: that non U S equities outperform US equities, So Japan 1610 01:25:07,240 --> 01:25:10,240 Speaker 26: is up almost twenty five percent as the stock exchange 1611 01:25:10,320 --> 01:25:13,040 Speaker 26: is forcing investors to be more shareholder friendly, pay more dividends. 1612 01:25:13,439 --> 01:25:15,920 Speaker 26: Countries like China and the UK have just gotten too 1613 01:25:16,040 --> 01:25:18,840 Speaker 26: cheap and are up significantly more than the US. And 1614 01:25:18,960 --> 01:25:22,960 Speaker 26: the final thing is we've learned again that the equity 1615 01:25:23,040 --> 01:25:26,640 Speaker 26: market is now extremely concentrated in the US. So the 1616 01:25:26,760 --> 01:25:29,880 Speaker 26: top ten stocks in the SMP five hundred, the five 1617 01:25:29,960 --> 01:25:33,000 Speaker 26: hundred stock index, make up forty percent of the index. 1618 01:25:33,040 --> 01:25:34,920 Speaker 26: So it's ten stocks out of five hundred making up 1619 01:25:34,960 --> 01:25:38,200 Speaker 26: forty percent. That is the most concentrated ever and has 1620 01:25:38,320 --> 01:25:43,320 Speaker 26: really interesting future implications for you know, those those fund 1621 01:25:43,360 --> 01:25:46,360 Speaker 26: managers that are passive investors or index huggers. 1622 01:25:47,400 --> 01:25:49,320 Speaker 3: Sam, can you give us a sneak peek into twenty 1623 01:25:49,400 --> 01:25:49,920 Speaker 3: twenty six? 1624 01:25:51,840 --> 01:25:55,160 Speaker 26: So we talked you and I ran and you and 1625 01:25:55,280 --> 01:25:57,120 Speaker 26: Heather and I back in October about the risks of 1626 01:25:57,160 --> 01:25:59,439 Speaker 26: the AI bubble popping. Now they're really good news is 1627 01:26:00,120 --> 01:26:02,760 Speaker 26: we've had a really healthy correction and some of those 1628 01:26:03,640 --> 01:26:06,760 Speaker 26: perceived AI winners, especially at the risky a end of town, 1629 01:26:06,880 --> 01:26:10,000 Speaker 26: so companies that were using tons of debt to fund 1630 01:26:10,120 --> 01:26:13,040 Speaker 26: this AI cap ex bonanza are down to lots of 1631 01:26:13,120 --> 01:26:16,479 Speaker 26: oracles down fifty percent, core weaves down sixty five percent. 1632 01:26:17,000 --> 01:26:19,120 Speaker 26: So the point there is it's good news that investors 1633 01:26:19,160 --> 01:26:23,040 Speaker 26: are becoming more discerning. So with that in mind, as 1634 01:26:23,080 --> 01:26:26,120 Speaker 26: we sort of peak into twenty twenty six, the market 1635 01:26:26,200 --> 01:26:28,840 Speaker 26: is shifted from buy AI at any price to show 1636 01:26:28,920 --> 01:26:31,160 Speaker 26: me the return, show me the return on the massive 1637 01:26:31,360 --> 01:26:34,080 Speaker 26: amounts of capital you're investing. So it's going to be 1638 01:26:34,160 --> 01:26:37,760 Speaker 26: fascinating to watch whether those huge spenders like Google have 1639 01:26:37,880 --> 01:26:41,000 Speaker 26: gotten that message yet from the market. Now, if we 1640 01:26:41,080 --> 01:26:44,840 Speaker 26: take a step back, the headline price to earnings ratio, 1641 01:26:44,960 --> 01:26:47,880 Speaker 26: that the bluntest sort of valuation ratio for the market 1642 01:26:48,360 --> 01:26:51,920 Speaker 26: and the US is really really high, extremely high historically. 1643 01:26:52,360 --> 01:26:54,680 Speaker 26: So equity markets look expensive on the face of it, 1644 01:26:54,840 --> 01:26:57,800 Speaker 26: but that's really reflective of what we talked about four rhine. 1645 01:26:58,360 --> 01:27:01,799 Speaker 26: Some of those top ten companies, these are really fully valued. 1646 01:27:01,880 --> 01:27:05,080 Speaker 26: So companies like Tesla on two hundred and fifty times 1647 01:27:05,120 --> 01:27:08,120 Speaker 26: price to earnings look pretty ritzy. So the good news 1648 01:27:08,280 --> 01:27:11,720 Speaker 26: is that blue chip companies, quality companies are the most 1649 01:27:11,760 --> 01:27:13,800 Speaker 26: out of favor in thirty years, and that's boats really 1650 01:27:13,840 --> 01:27:17,240 Speaker 26: well for focused investors and spells risk for passive index 1651 01:27:17,320 --> 01:27:19,800 Speaker 26: hugging investors, so lots to look forward to. 1652 01:27:20,080 --> 01:27:22,640 Speaker 3: Absolutely, Sam appreciate that update. Thank you, Sam Dicky from 1653 01:27:22,680 --> 01:27:25,160 Speaker 3: Fisher Funds. You're on News Talks B. It is twenty 1654 01:27:25,240 --> 01:27:27,920 Speaker 3: to seven. We'll go to Indebrady out of the UK next. 1655 01:27:28,920 --> 01:27:32,840 Speaker 2: Everything from SMEs to the big corporates, the business hours 1656 01:27:33,120 --> 01:27:36,360 Speaker 2: with Ryan Bridge and Mass Motor Vehicle Insurance. 1657 01:27:36,680 --> 01:27:39,639 Speaker 1: Your futures in good hands. News talks 'B. 1658 01:27:40,800 --> 01:27:43,000 Speaker 3: On News TALKSB will break down the foreign buyer band 1659 01:27:43,040 --> 01:27:44,759 Speaker 3: in just a second, while the one that's been lifted, 1660 01:27:44,840 --> 01:27:47,640 Speaker 3: that's not only been partially lifted. But I tell you 1661 01:27:47,720 --> 01:27:49,560 Speaker 3: what I can't wait for because I was looking this 1662 01:27:49,680 --> 01:27:51,920 Speaker 3: week to go to a movie on Tuesday night, because 1663 01:27:51,920 --> 01:27:55,559 Speaker 3: that's your cheap night. You see nothing on and well, 1664 01:27:55,560 --> 01:27:57,640 Speaker 3: I suppose I've got Avatar that's come out now. But 1665 01:27:57,800 --> 01:28:00,240 Speaker 3: what you will be waiting for, and I know how 1666 01:28:00,320 --> 01:28:03,479 Speaker 3: excited you'll be about this is a movie about Millennia 1667 01:28:03,520 --> 01:28:07,960 Speaker 3: Trump a documentary about Millennia. First trailer dropped this morning. 1668 01:28:08,000 --> 01:28:11,200 Speaker 3: It's all dramatic music and high heels follows her in 1669 01:28:11,280 --> 01:28:13,800 Speaker 3: the twenty days and the lead up to the inauguration 1670 01:28:13,960 --> 01:28:15,559 Speaker 3: This year, and the best bit is at the very 1671 01:28:15,720 --> 01:28:19,960 Speaker 3: end of the trailers. It's all dramatic and quick cutting shots, 1672 01:28:20,040 --> 01:28:23,960 Speaker 3: and then it's Trump on the phone to Millania. She's 1673 01:28:24,040 --> 01:28:24,600 Speaker 3: answering the. 1674 01:28:24,640 --> 01:28:28,479 Speaker 21: Call, Hi, mister President, Congratulations. 1675 01:28:28,720 --> 01:28:29,400 Speaker 6: Did you watch it? 1676 01:28:29,680 --> 01:28:30,120 Speaker 1: I did not. 1677 01:28:30,400 --> 01:28:31,719 Speaker 21: Yeah, I will see it on the news. 1678 01:28:34,000 --> 01:28:35,200 Speaker 3: Did you watch my speech? 1679 01:28:35,439 --> 01:28:35,479 Speaker 18: No? 1680 01:28:35,680 --> 01:28:38,320 Speaker 3: I know I was busy, but I was busy filming. 1681 01:28:38,400 --> 01:28:38,559 Speaker 11: Mate. 1682 01:28:38,600 --> 01:28:49,000 Speaker 3: I will see it on the news later. She's just 1683 01:28:49,040 --> 01:28:51,479 Speaker 3: gone sixteen minutes away from seven, and we're going to 1684 01:28:51,600 --> 01:28:54,840 Speaker 3: end Brady in the UK and a very special day 1685 01:28:54,960 --> 01:28:59,840 Speaker 3: for Enda and the happy birthday. I understand it's your fiftieth. 1686 01:28:59,400 --> 01:29:02,200 Speaker 10: Today, Hey, Ryan, thank you so much. 1687 01:29:02,320 --> 01:29:02,720 Speaker 11: Yeah it is. 1688 01:29:02,920 --> 01:29:03,160 Speaker 18: It is. 1689 01:29:03,840 --> 01:29:06,760 Speaker 10: Don't feel any different yesterday, to be honest. But look, 1690 01:29:06,800 --> 01:29:09,600 Speaker 10: I've had gray hair since I was seventeen, so I 1691 01:29:09,680 --> 01:29:10,840 Speaker 10: think it kind of suits me now. 1692 01:29:11,080 --> 01:29:14,120 Speaker 3: Really seventeen. Is it a genetic thing? 1693 01:29:15,360 --> 01:29:16,280 Speaker 11: Yeah, yeah, exactly. 1694 01:29:16,360 --> 01:29:19,280 Speaker 10: My mother and my father both went gray early. But no, 1695 01:29:19,600 --> 01:29:21,680 Speaker 10: I just feel really blessed and happy in life. My 1696 01:29:21,800 --> 01:29:25,080 Speaker 10: daughter's home from university in France, and hopefully we're going 1697 01:29:25,160 --> 01:29:26,559 Speaker 10: to have a good day when I get back from work. 1698 01:29:26,920 --> 01:29:29,800 Speaker 3: Do you celebrate because Lord told me you're a marathon runner, 1699 01:29:29,920 --> 01:29:32,960 Speaker 3: you celebrate by doing an extremely long orgonizing run. 1700 01:29:34,439 --> 01:29:37,160 Speaker 10: I've been out already. Yeah, I went out with five am. 1701 01:29:37,720 --> 01:29:40,240 Speaker 10: I didn't go very far. Look, it's just beautiful to 1702 01:29:40,320 --> 01:29:42,360 Speaker 10: be able to do these things and there was a 1703 01:29:42,439 --> 01:29:43,800 Speaker 10: time when I couldn't and now I can. 1704 01:29:43,960 --> 01:29:47,439 Speaker 3: So I love it. Brilliant. Now let's go to the news. 1705 01:29:47,600 --> 01:29:50,080 Speaker 3: Boys aged as young as a live and could be 1706 01:29:50,160 --> 01:29:53,719 Speaker 3: sent to anti misogyny courses in schools. What's this about? 1707 01:29:54,800 --> 01:29:59,839 Speaker 10: Big announcement from government later today. There's a serious issue. 1708 01:30:00,080 --> 01:30:02,320 Speaker 10: I don't know if it's the same in New Zealand, 1709 01:30:02,400 --> 01:30:06,439 Speaker 10: but young boys in particular are very heavily influenced by 1710 01:30:06,520 --> 01:30:12,879 Speaker 10: this man called Andrew Tait, this online influencer, and people feel, adults, teachers, 1711 01:30:12,960 --> 01:30:15,400 Speaker 10: government feel that he is not in any way a 1712 01:30:15,479 --> 01:30:18,760 Speaker 10: positive influence or role model on young men. We're seeing 1713 01:30:18,840 --> 01:30:21,439 Speaker 10: incidents in school, We're seeing a lot of misogyny, We're 1714 01:30:21,479 --> 01:30:25,000 Speaker 10: seeing a lot of violence against girls and women, and 1715 01:30:25,280 --> 01:30:27,960 Speaker 10: while nobody is saying it's directly connected to anyone in 1716 01:30:28,040 --> 01:30:31,760 Speaker 10: the online sphere, the government is very very concerned about it. 1717 01:30:32,000 --> 01:30:32,120 Speaker 11: Now. 1718 01:30:32,160 --> 01:30:34,840 Speaker 10: Earlier this year, one of the most shocking films of 1719 01:30:34,880 --> 01:30:37,880 Speaker 10: the year came out here adolescence and focused on a 1720 01:30:38,040 --> 01:30:42,040 Speaker 10: very young boy accused and convicted of a grotesque crime 1721 01:30:42,200 --> 01:30:44,600 Speaker 10: against a classmate of female classmate. 1722 01:30:45,600 --> 01:30:46,519 Speaker 3: That shocked people. 1723 01:30:46,720 --> 01:30:50,679 Speaker 10: I think it really started a conversation in with parents, 1724 01:30:50,760 --> 01:30:53,960 Speaker 10: in schools, in government about just the kind of stuff 1725 01:30:54,000 --> 01:30:56,439 Speaker 10: young people are being exposed to online. So what the 1726 01:30:56,479 --> 01:30:58,760 Speaker 10: government is going to do? Any boy, even as young 1727 01:30:58,800 --> 01:31:02,439 Speaker 10: as eleven, who just any signs of misogyny in school 1728 01:31:02,640 --> 01:31:06,680 Speaker 10: or behavioral issues towards girls will be forced to go 1729 01:31:06,840 --> 01:31:09,120 Speaker 10: to these classes. Now what may well be with a 1730 01:31:09,200 --> 01:31:12,800 Speaker 10: teacher or an external provider, but it's coming next year. 1731 01:31:13,160 --> 01:31:13,400 Speaker 3: Wow. 1732 01:31:13,560 --> 01:31:16,840 Speaker 10: I wonder what parents will think that. Well, do you 1733 01:31:16,920 --> 01:31:19,040 Speaker 10: know what, that's a very very good question, right. I 1734 01:31:19,080 --> 01:31:23,240 Speaker 10: think all right minded parents will agree, and I think 1735 01:31:23,360 --> 01:31:25,519 Speaker 10: what we will see is, and I guarantee you the 1736 01:31:25,680 --> 01:31:28,439 Speaker 10: main culprits will be very aggressive women down at the 1737 01:31:28,479 --> 01:31:31,360 Speaker 10: school gates saying how dare you accuse my little Johnny 1738 01:31:31,400 --> 01:31:34,200 Speaker 10: of being a misogynist? He's lovely at home and that's 1739 01:31:34,240 --> 01:31:35,160 Speaker 10: where the problem lies. 1740 01:31:37,880 --> 01:31:39,679 Speaker 3: Right. The UK police are going to make a major 1741 01:31:39,720 --> 01:31:42,879 Speaker 3: policy change. This is after the bondaye Tira attacks. 1742 01:31:44,040 --> 01:31:46,720 Speaker 10: Yes, so every other weekend in London we have pro 1743 01:31:46,880 --> 01:31:51,799 Speaker 10: Palestine marches, and they are well attended and overwhelmingly peaceful. However, 1744 01:31:52,160 --> 01:31:57,000 Speaker 10: in recent weeks a phrase has been chanted, globalize the Intifada. 1745 01:31:57,400 --> 01:31:59,920 Speaker 10: That phrase has been used. Now the Jewish community are 1746 01:32:00,120 --> 01:32:03,560 Speaker 10: deeply upset and hurting off the back of Bandai, and 1747 01:32:03,720 --> 01:32:07,320 Speaker 10: they feel that that phrase is effectively a threat, a 1748 01:32:07,439 --> 01:32:11,400 Speaker 10: call to violence against Jewish people around the globe, and 1749 01:32:11,520 --> 01:32:15,040 Speaker 10: they're deeply, deeply worried about it. So the Metropolitan Police 1750 01:32:15,040 --> 01:32:18,519 Speaker 10: have come out today and said that anyone now chanting 1751 01:32:18,600 --> 01:32:23,680 Speaker 10: that phrase or saying it at these globalize the Interfather, 1752 01:32:23,880 --> 01:32:26,439 Speaker 10: say it and you'll end up on the polisa Wow. 1753 01:32:26,560 --> 01:32:30,880 Speaker 3: Okay, what about Stama and his message to Russian Olga, 1754 01:32:31,000 --> 01:32:32,000 Speaker 3: well to one in particular. 1755 01:32:33,400 --> 01:32:33,599 Speaker 11: Yes. 1756 01:32:33,640 --> 01:32:35,519 Speaker 10: So this is the guy who used to own Chelsea 1757 01:32:35,640 --> 01:32:38,080 Speaker 10: Football Club in the English Premier League. In the soccer 1758 01:32:38,280 --> 01:32:41,280 Speaker 10: Roman Abramovich is his name. He's no longer in the UK. 1759 01:32:41,960 --> 01:32:45,320 Speaker 10: He was one of the wealthiest people we've ever seen here. 1760 01:32:45,400 --> 01:32:48,200 Speaker 10: He steamrolled into England about twenty years ago bought the 1761 01:32:48,280 --> 01:32:51,439 Speaker 10: soccer club. They hadn't won anything for years Chelsea. He 1762 01:32:51,600 --> 01:32:54,559 Speaker 10: pumped in crazy money. They went on a spending spree 1763 01:32:54,640 --> 01:32:57,080 Speaker 10: for players and they ended up winning the English Premier 1764 01:32:57,120 --> 01:33:01,040 Speaker 10: League several times. Jossein Mourinho's the manager and Chelsea could 1765 01:33:01,080 --> 01:33:04,799 Speaker 10: not be stopped. Now then the war in Ukraine happened 1766 01:33:04,920 --> 01:33:07,479 Speaker 10: almost four years ago, and at that point then the 1767 01:33:07,520 --> 01:33:11,760 Speaker 10: government forced the sale of Chelsea Football Club because Abramovitch 1768 01:33:11,960 --> 01:33:14,360 Speaker 10: was linked to the Kremlin, so he left the UK 1769 01:33:15,320 --> 01:33:18,280 Speaker 10: Five billion dollars was the proceeds of the sale of 1770 01:33:18,320 --> 01:33:22,160 Speaker 10: that soccer club, which he promised after pressure from government, 1771 01:33:22,200 --> 01:33:24,320 Speaker 10: would be split between what he wanted to be the 1772 01:33:24,479 --> 01:33:26,720 Speaker 10: victims of the war in Ukraine, meaning that some of 1773 01:33:26,760 --> 01:33:29,120 Speaker 10: it would go to Russians as well. So the government 1774 01:33:29,280 --> 01:33:32,200 Speaker 10: has had enough, the money's frozen, big legal battle and 1775 01:33:32,320 --> 01:33:35,200 Speaker 10: Keir Starmer has come out and said times up have 1776 01:33:35,320 --> 01:33:38,000 Speaker 10: had enough, handover the money we wanted now and it's 1777 01:33:38,120 --> 01:33:40,680 Speaker 10: all going to Ukraine in that. 1778 01:33:40,840 --> 01:33:43,160 Speaker 3: Heavy birthday again and thanks for being with us tonight. 1779 01:33:43,200 --> 01:33:45,439 Speaker 3: In the Brady a UK correspondent, it is eleven minutes 1780 01:33:45,439 --> 01:33:49,400 Speaker 3: away from seven. IK is having a couple of problems. 1781 01:33:49,439 --> 01:33:53,560 Speaker 3: Apparently this is after victim of its own success, so 1782 01:33:53,920 --> 01:33:58,120 Speaker 3: it's shutting down its customer support center from tomorrow for 1783 01:33:58,200 --> 01:33:59,760 Speaker 3: the rest of the Whigs. So I presumably that means 1784 01:33:59,840 --> 01:34:01,200 Speaker 3: they have been open on the weekend. They're not going 1785 01:34:01,280 --> 01:34:04,880 Speaker 3: to be open on the weekend because they have outstanding orders, 1786 01:34:04,960 --> 01:34:08,639 Speaker 3: they've got delays, and there's apparently some payment issues as well. 1787 01:34:08,840 --> 01:34:12,040 Speaker 3: This is from rn Z this afternoon, so they had 1788 01:34:12,080 --> 01:34:15,439 Speaker 3: twenty nine pickup points nationwide, so naturally everyone wants to 1789 01:34:15,560 --> 01:34:17,599 Speaker 3: order on there and go and pick up their stuff 1790 01:34:17,640 --> 01:34:20,800 Speaker 3: and do it all online. There's a guy apparently going 1791 01:34:20,880 --> 01:34:23,720 Speaker 3: to wait six weeks for a desk. That's how long 1792 01:34:23,840 --> 01:34:26,320 Speaker 3: the delays are. This is stuff that's in country. They 1793 01:34:26,439 --> 01:34:28,040 Speaker 3: just haven't figured out how to get it out there, 1794 01:34:28,160 --> 01:34:32,280 Speaker 3: so that will probably cause further delays. I would imagine 1795 01:34:32,320 --> 01:34:34,719 Speaker 3: if they're shutting the disk down to deal with the backlog. 1796 01:34:34,840 --> 01:34:37,559 Speaker 3: It's eleven away from seven News Talk ZIBB. 1797 01:34:38,800 --> 01:34:41,360 Speaker 2: It's the Heather too for see Allen Drive Full Show 1798 01:34:41,479 --> 01:34:45,160 Speaker 2: podcast on iHeartRadio powered by News Talk ZBB. 1799 01:34:46,040 --> 01:34:49,040 Speaker 3: News Talk zib It is eight minutes away from seven. 1800 01:34:49,760 --> 01:34:49,960 Speaker 11: Yeah. 1801 01:34:50,000 --> 01:34:52,519 Speaker 3: Loads of people texting in about Inde Brady's piece there 1802 01:34:52,680 --> 01:34:57,840 Speaker 3: on Adolescence, the TV show which is on Netflix about 1803 01:34:57,880 --> 01:35:01,640 Speaker 3: the Young Boy, and now in the UK they are 1804 01:35:01,960 --> 01:35:05,400 Speaker 3: instituting these misogyny classes if your kid comes into class, 1805 01:35:05,479 --> 01:35:07,200 Speaker 3: even if you're an eleven year old. Your kid comes 1806 01:35:07,240 --> 01:35:09,240 Speaker 3: in and says something about a girl or a woman 1807 01:35:09,320 --> 01:35:12,160 Speaker 3: that might be considered sexist by a teacher, they can 1808 01:35:12,240 --> 01:35:17,479 Speaker 3: send them to a compulsory misogyny class. I mean, what 1809 01:35:17,640 --> 01:35:19,880 Speaker 3: happened to just telling them off? 1810 01:35:20,479 --> 01:35:21,600 Speaker 11: You know, I don't know. 1811 01:35:21,680 --> 01:35:23,639 Speaker 3: Maybe the problem is bigger than that it's not working. 1812 01:35:23,720 --> 01:35:26,920 Speaker 3: But the text, the tenor of the texts is that 1813 01:35:27,200 --> 01:35:30,920 Speaker 3: this was fictional, this program adolescence, it wasn't you know. 1814 01:35:32,320 --> 01:35:37,479 Speaker 3: But then you know, aren't imitating life and life maybe 1815 01:35:37,520 --> 01:35:41,280 Speaker 3: being a little bit more misogynistic in the classroom. Yeah, anyway, 1816 01:35:41,560 --> 01:35:43,080 Speaker 3: it is seven, but they're not doing it here. They're 1817 01:35:43,080 --> 01:35:45,280 Speaker 3: doing it in the UK seven minutes away from seven 1818 01:35:45,320 --> 01:35:49,200 Speaker 3: o'clock now. And just before we go, we spoke last 1819 01:35:49,280 --> 01:35:54,479 Speaker 3: week about the foreign buyer ban being lifted, and well, 1820 01:35:54,840 --> 01:35:58,120 Speaker 3: it's not. It's only you will get a be able 1821 01:35:58,160 --> 01:36:00,639 Speaker 3: to buy a house if you're really rich New Zealand, 1822 01:36:00,840 --> 01:36:05,679 Speaker 3: if you have the Golden visa. And what's interesting about 1823 01:36:05,720 --> 01:36:09,000 Speaker 3: the Golden visa is that it's and your ability to 1824 01:36:09,280 --> 01:36:12,200 Speaker 3: use that visa to buy house that won't come into 1825 01:36:12,280 --> 01:36:16,920 Speaker 3: effect until probably early maybe mid next year, So you're 1826 01:36:16,920 --> 01:36:18,640 Speaker 3: still waiting on a little there's still a bit of 1827 01:36:18,800 --> 01:36:20,479 Speaker 3: water to go under the bridge. Yet it's still going 1828 01:36:20,520 --> 01:36:23,280 Speaker 3: to get the royal assent this bill. But people are 1829 01:36:23,360 --> 01:36:28,160 Speaker 3: already putting offers in with clauses, so subject to me 1830 01:36:28,400 --> 01:36:33,439 Speaker 3: getting the visa, conditional offers on really expensive fancy houses 1831 01:36:33,479 --> 01:36:36,600 Speaker 3: worth more than five million dollars are already deals are 1832 01:36:36,640 --> 01:36:39,880 Speaker 3: already being done on condition of this actually becoming law. 1833 01:36:39,960 --> 01:36:41,439 Speaker 3: And so the real estay agents are saying, well, the 1834 01:36:41,479 --> 01:36:43,120 Speaker 3: whole thing should have been done a whole lot quicker. 1835 01:36:43,640 --> 01:36:46,759 Speaker 3: But that's just I mean, this is past last Friday, 1836 01:36:47,120 --> 01:36:49,320 Speaker 3: and that's just how long laws take to pass in 1837 01:36:49,400 --> 01:36:50,800 Speaker 3: New Zealand, isn't it. You've got to go to the 1838 01:36:50,840 --> 01:36:54,160 Speaker 3: Governor General. Now it is Thursday, and I know that 1839 01:36:54,280 --> 01:36:56,040 Speaker 3: it's a little early to be finishing the week, but 1840 01:36:56,160 --> 01:36:58,479 Speaker 3: I am finishing my week and finishing my year, and 1841 01:36:58,600 --> 01:37:00,400 Speaker 3: I just wanted to say thank you very much for 1842 01:37:00,520 --> 01:37:05,080 Speaker 3: having me Heather. We'll be on Breakfast tomorrow Andrew will 1843 01:37:05,120 --> 01:37:08,240 Speaker 3: be with you here on Drive tomorrow afternoon. I wish 1844 01:37:08,320 --> 01:37:11,200 Speaker 3: you all a very merry Christmas, a happy new Year. 1845 01:37:11,560 --> 01:37:14,639 Speaker 3: Thank you to Laura and to Antser for being such 1846 01:37:14,840 --> 01:37:18,200 Speaker 3: great stewards of this program. While I've been here and 1847 01:37:18,280 --> 01:37:20,320 Speaker 3: had the privilege of being with you in the afternoon. 1848 01:37:20,439 --> 01:37:25,360 Speaker 3: Really appreciate it. I'll be back from January. Who even 1849 01:37:25,439 --> 01:37:28,920 Speaker 3: cares sometime next year. Enjoy your Christmas, enjoy your New 1850 01:37:29,000 --> 01:37:30,160 Speaker 3: Year's everyone. What are we going out to? 1851 01:37:30,280 --> 01:37:30,400 Speaker 11: Right? 1852 01:37:30,600 --> 01:37:33,000 Speaker 17: Very nice, Ryan, thank you. Always a pleasure. Never ature 1853 01:37:33,680 --> 01:37:37,200 Speaker 17: wolves by Marsh Mellow and Selena Gomez to play us 1854 01:37:37,240 --> 01:37:39,720 Speaker 17: out tonight because Selena Gomess is in the news, not 1855 01:37:39,800 --> 01:37:42,559 Speaker 17: Marsh Mellow. So she's been doing one of those live 1856 01:37:42,640 --> 01:37:45,639 Speaker 17: streams where she just jumps on the Instagram and people 1857 01:37:45,800 --> 01:37:47,920 Speaker 17: kind of just ask questions and she answers them, you know, 1858 01:37:48,040 --> 01:37:50,160 Speaker 17: like the former Prime Minister Jacinda Radun used to do 1859 01:37:50,280 --> 01:37:53,080 Speaker 17: quite often back in the day. But yeah, so she 1860 01:37:53,200 --> 01:37:55,200 Speaker 17: got some interesting questions that she was happy to front 1861 01:37:55,240 --> 01:37:57,880 Speaker 17: up about. One about her mustache. Soone asks, how do 1862 01:37:57,960 --> 01:38:01,479 Speaker 17: you shave your mustache? She says, well, I've got malasma, 1863 01:38:01,680 --> 01:38:04,400 Speaker 17: you guys. Actually it's from the sun apparently, so you 1864 01:38:04,560 --> 01:38:07,639 Speaker 17: have to obviously, she says, you have to wear sunscreen 1865 01:38:07,680 --> 01:38:09,519 Speaker 17: and be be careful. But it's not a mustache. It's 1866 01:38:09,560 --> 01:38:12,400 Speaker 17: my malasma. I take care of and treat it. But yeah, 1867 01:38:12,400 --> 01:38:15,080 Speaker 17: it's there. That's me so I guess we have to slip, 1868 01:38:15,160 --> 01:38:16,880 Speaker 17: slop and slap, or else you might get something that 1869 01:38:17,000 --> 01:38:18,519 Speaker 17: sort of makes you look like you've got a mustache. 1870 01:38:18,560 --> 01:38:19,599 Speaker 17: That's what we can learn from that one. 1871 01:38:19,880 --> 01:38:22,920 Speaker 3: And who wants one of those? All right, that's a 1872 01:38:23,000 --> 01:38:24,040 Speaker 3: weird answer, isn't it? 1873 01:38:24,120 --> 01:38:24,439 Speaker 11: From here? 1874 01:38:24,960 --> 01:38:26,960 Speaker 3: Well, to be fair the truth. 1875 01:38:27,200 --> 01:38:28,960 Speaker 17: Often the former Prime Minister when she did those life 1876 01:38:29,320 --> 01:38:31,120 Speaker 17: was accused by people in the media, some of them 1877 01:38:31,160 --> 01:38:34,040 Speaker 17: at the station of avoiding difficult questions. You can't say 1878 01:38:34,080 --> 01:38:37,160 Speaker 17: that about Selena taking the difficult questions head on in 1879 01:38:37,240 --> 01:38:37,519 Speaker 17: that one. 1880 01:38:37,960 --> 01:38:42,960 Speaker 3: Good Thank you everybody. Great to be with you, Enjoy 1881 01:38:43,040 --> 01:39:01,240 Speaker 3: your holidays and see you next year. Talk to take 1882 01:39:02,479 --> 01:39:04,840 Speaker 3: I'm not my love and be sad to just talk 1883 01:39:04,920 --> 01:39:07,080 Speaker 3: to ballacies. He hain't got up with you. 1884 01:39:08,240 --> 01:39:10,800 Speaker 1: Yeah, I've been. 1885 01:39:10,840 --> 01:39:13,680 Speaker 3: Ready to throw the jungle loved they crying with the 1886 01:39:13,760 --> 01:39:14,559 Speaker 3: wall turget to. 1887 01:39:14,760 --> 01:39:16,479 Speaker 1: You, sook it to. 1888 01:39:18,080 --> 01:39:34,840 Speaker 6: Get funny, brought the. 1889 01:39:34,920 --> 01:39:39,200 Speaker 16: Jungle lobby running with the wolves, get too cue, talk 1890 01:39:39,280 --> 01:39:39,760 Speaker 16: it to you. 1891 01:39:41,120 --> 01:39:43,439 Speaker 25: I'll be it down. The dark is allis of the 1892 01:39:43,560 --> 01:39:46,640 Speaker 25: duck side up the mon t get too ch so 1893 01:39:46,960 --> 01:39:50,479 Speaker 25: be too. I'm not my love and be ready to 1894 01:39:50,720 --> 01:39:51,920 Speaker 25: talk to abcies. 1895 01:39:52,040 --> 01:39:55,080 Speaker 12: He ain got up with you. Yeah see you. 1896 01:39:56,479 --> 01:39:59,200 Speaker 13: I'll be ready to do the jungle, love me crying 1897 01:39:59,320 --> 01:39:59,960 Speaker 13: with the whole. 1898 01:40:00,000 --> 01:40:04,479 Speaker 25: So get to Joe, do, Get to Joe to get you. 1899 01:40:07,320 --> 01:40:10,439 Speaker 2: For more from Hither Duplessy Allen Drive, listen live to 1900 01:40:10,560 --> 01:40:13,599 Speaker 2: news Talks it'd be from four pm weekdays, or follow 1901 01:40:13,640 --> 01:40:15,400 Speaker 2: the podcast on iHeartRadio.