1 00:00:01,440 --> 00:00:05,280 Speaker 1: And Amanda jam Nation. I saw this thing. Let me, 2 00:00:05,360 --> 00:00:09,160 Speaker 1: I'm outraged. Here's this is this young guy? Let me 3 00:00:09,200 --> 00:00:12,680 Speaker 1: get my phone ready. There's this young guy and he's 4 00:00:12,760 --> 00:00:15,440 Speaker 1: a young, attractive, kind of hipster kind of looking guy, 5 00:00:16,200 --> 00:00:19,720 Speaker 1: and he's put up this reel that just says to 6 00:00:19,840 --> 00:00:23,320 Speaker 1: my future wife, who can tolerate my grandpa of rock music? 7 00:00:23,360 --> 00:00:25,959 Speaker 1: So he's saying, hey, girls, I'm into old stuff, but 8 00:00:26,000 --> 00:00:28,800 Speaker 1: I'm so interesting. So he says, who can tolerate my 9 00:00:28,840 --> 00:00:32,080 Speaker 1: grandpa rock music? This is the song he is put 10 00:00:32,159 --> 00:00:38,400 Speaker 1: underneath that Red Hot Chili Peppers scar tissue. So this 11 00:00:38,479 --> 00:00:40,920 Speaker 1: guy trying to be hip and cool, saying, my grandpa Rock, 12 00:00:41,280 --> 00:00:44,720 Speaker 1: good on you. Grandpa Rock is not red Hot Chili Peppers, 13 00:00:44,920 --> 00:00:46,040 Speaker 1: Grandpa Rock. 14 00:00:46,159 --> 00:00:52,720 Speaker 2: Grandpa Rock's this hacker bilk, that's Grandpa Rock. My mom 15 00:00:52,760 --> 00:00:53,560 Speaker 2: and dad used to listen to. 16 00:00:53,680 --> 00:00:58,080 Speaker 1: You got me. Valdunik said, this is quite nice. 17 00:01:00,040 --> 00:01:04,920 Speaker 2: It doesn't like this, so I think it's clarinet. 18 00:01:05,160 --> 00:01:08,800 Speaker 1: Okay, well, this is interesting. He will call that Grandpa Rock. 19 00:01:09,360 --> 00:01:14,920 Speaker 1: The dovetails into a survey, I said, I saw. They 20 00:01:15,000 --> 00:01:18,280 Speaker 1: interviewed two thousand adults and asked a variety of questions 21 00:01:18,280 --> 00:01:22,080 Speaker 1: from the different generations. To what they thought. According to 22 00:01:22,120 --> 00:01:24,679 Speaker 1: these results, people under the age of twenty seven, So 23 00:01:24,680 --> 00:01:28,880 Speaker 1: that's jen Z used to one of those Ryan under 24 00:01:28,880 --> 00:01:30,840 Speaker 1: the age of twenty seven, they're under the impression that 25 00:01:30,920 --> 00:01:35,520 Speaker 1: old age truly sets in in the late fifties, and 26 00:01:35,840 --> 00:01:39,880 Speaker 1: twenty percent believe that retirement in your late fifties includes 27 00:01:39,920 --> 00:01:43,200 Speaker 1: spending your days in an armchair, and sixteen percent say 28 00:01:43,240 --> 00:01:48,080 Speaker 1: it means you just potter around. Interestingly, the opposite is 29 00:01:48,120 --> 00:01:55,080 Speaker 1: true because apparently boomers are. The data indicates boomers are 30 00:01:55,080 --> 00:01:58,800 Speaker 1: the most active of all the generations. They spend on 31 00:01:58,840 --> 00:02:02,240 Speaker 1: average four hours more outdoors beyond workhouse as opposed to 32 00:02:02,280 --> 00:02:05,400 Speaker 1: the young adult millennial counterparts. Fifty six percent of the 33 00:02:05,440 --> 00:02:08,960 Speaker 1: boomers said that they spend time exercising. Only thirty nine 34 00:02:09,000 --> 00:02:11,280 Speaker 1: percent of those between ages of eighteen and twenty seven 35 00:02:11,320 --> 00:02:14,840 Speaker 1: said the same. So while jen Z thinks that in 36 00:02:14,880 --> 00:02:19,359 Speaker 1: your late fifties your retirement, you're retiring and you spend 37 00:02:19,360 --> 00:02:23,040 Speaker 1: time sitting in a chair and puttering around, we're actually 38 00:02:23,080 --> 00:02:24,399 Speaker 1: more active than they are. 39 00:02:25,680 --> 00:02:27,920 Speaker 2: Well, way to go, Way to go us. We're rocking 40 00:02:27,960 --> 00:02:31,800 Speaker 2: out with acabilk on the clarinet. 41 00:02:33,040 --> 00:02:36,880 Speaker 1: This is very soothing. Got hear it on smooth. 42 00:02:40,400 --> 00:02:42,400 Speaker 2: Well, maybe we could start working on the smooth show. 43 00:02:42,480 --> 00:02:45,160 Speaker 1: Working on the smooth show, not with language like that, 44 00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:46,800 Speaker 1: and working on the smooth show, I. 45 00:02:46,840 --> 00:02:49,680 Speaker 3: Have to be like, Okay, that's acerbilk. 46 00:02:50,280 --> 00:02:53,600 Speaker 1: On this beautiful Sydney morning, we shouldn't mock because I 47 00:02:53,639 --> 00:02:54,480 Speaker 1: want to do that one day. 48 00:02:54,480 --> 00:02:56,560 Speaker 3: I think it'd be easy. That would be so easy. 49 00:02:56,560 --> 00:02:58,440 Speaker 3: You just get out of there. Oh it's a beautiful 50 00:02:58,440 --> 00:03:00,600 Speaker 3: looking day, and look at the harbor. And I'm going 51 00:03:00,639 --> 00:03:02,560 Speaker 3: to get a coffee and then I'm going to eat 52 00:03:02,560 --> 00:03:03,520 Speaker 3: a fruit smoothie. 53 00:03:03,639 --> 00:03:05,560 Speaker 1: Tell me more. I want to know more. I'm going 54 00:03:05,600 --> 00:03:08,040 Speaker 1: to eat a fruit smoothie. It'd be hopeless of that. 55 00:03:09,200 --> 00:03:12,280 Speaker 2: I've still got cemit, I've still got my teeth. So 56 00:03:12,400 --> 00:03:15,800 Speaker 2: I'm going to chew, regardless of my fruit smoothie, chewing 57 00:03:15,840 --> 00:03:16,839 Speaker 2: the scenery right now