- 6/4/2025
Original Broadcast Date: June 15th 2012
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00No.
00:01Come on, Sean, it's 8 o'clock.
00:02No, no, no, I'm not coming on unless you pay me $5,000.
00:07Alright, can we pay you in cab charges?
00:09Absolutely.
00:11Tonight.
00:13Light at end of tunnel looks bright for Labor.
00:16Racist violence at Euro 2012 marred by soccer matches.
00:20And man held by police over fire.
00:24I'm Sean McAuliffe and I'm as mad as hell.
00:30I'm Sean McAuliffe.
01:00Thank you very much.
01:11Goodness me.
01:21What's all the wooing there?
01:22What, are you out of your minds?
01:26Sounded very American, you know.
01:27I don't like that.
01:29Craziest start of the show.
01:30Completely uncalled for reaction in my view.
01:33Who told you to do that?
01:36And I'm sorry about starting the show in this way.
01:40Guns down, the gun's down.
01:42Security about to get up out of the chair over there.
01:44I'm sorry.
01:45I've never pulled a gun on an audience before in my life.
01:48I'm just, I'm, I'll be honest with you.
01:50I'm very angry this week.
01:51And I'm not sure why.
01:54I mean, I feel a certain way about something, but when I actually think about it, I get
01:59just as angry, but for a completely different reason.
02:01And that makes me mad.
02:02So my anger this week is unfocused and double what it would be normally.
02:09So when we, when how we feel and what we think are on the same road, but traveling in opposite
02:14directions, you're on a collision course with blind fury.
02:18I don't like blind fury.
02:21It makes me furious.
02:23That's right.
02:23I'm talking about Nick Darcy and Kenrick Monk.
02:28But really, I'm talking about all our sports heroes.
02:31And because Olympic sports heroes represent us nationally, I guess I'm talking about you
02:35and me.
02:36Now, here's what happened.
02:38We, in the form of Nick and Kenrick, are in California, home of the American West, warming
02:43up for the Olympics.
02:44On our afternoon off, we go to a rifle range.
02:47We have this picture taken and we post it on Facebook.
02:50Now the AOC says we can't hang around after the events in London, presumably because we
02:54might visit one of those trendy Carnaby Street rifle ranges they have.
02:57Now, worse still, Swimming Australia says we can't use social media for the next month
03:03and a half.
03:04I heard that, I was like, oh my God.
03:09Month and a half, that's five episodes of being Lara Bingle.
03:13How am I going to tweet my smiley face?
03:15Or that one with the eye closed and the tongue hanging out?
03:23That doesn't work.
03:25Now, I feel like a lot of newspaper sub-editors that the picture taken with the guns is outrageous
03:30and Nick and Kenrick should be banned from not only swimming, but from ever immersing
03:34themselves in water again.
03:36But when I think about it, when I actually think about it, it doesn't seem that serious.
03:41Because if you're going to ban Nick and Kenrick for posting a picture of themselves with guns,
03:45then why not ban gold medal winning clay target shooter Russell Mark?
03:49I mean, his Facebook page is full of this sort of stuff.
03:52And have a look at what Herb Elliott uses as his Twitter avatar.
03:59ABC Sports, Maggie Bathysphere, what should our attitude be to all of this?
04:03Oh, it's just youthful hijinks, Sean.
04:05Nothing more.
04:06You've got to remember that these guys spend 45% of their lives underwater.
04:11They're not used to life on land.
04:13Oxygen is, it's like love.
04:15You know, you get too much and you get too high.
04:18Sweet.
04:19I think people are confusing how they felt about Nick's 2008 assault charges in Kenrick's
04:24false police report last year.
04:25I mean, who of us hasn't fallen off a skateboard, broken our elbow and blamed a non-existent hit-and-run
04:31driver?
04:32Sure, sure.
04:32I mean, I lie to the police all the time.
04:34And I know I've lost count of the number of times I've broken someone's nose, jaw, cheekbone
04:38and eye socket and then been declared bankrupt before I paid any damages.
04:41Sure, sure.
04:43I mean, it's the same with Grant Hackett, isn't it?
04:44Trashing his own house, yeah.
04:46Ah, yeah, well that's a bit different because Grant's not a current gold medal chance, so...
04:51Obviously, yeah, yeah, yeah, completely different.
04:52Yeah, thanks very much, Maggie.
04:54But there are.
04:55But there are sports champions that we can live through who never let us down.
04:59Why can't Nick and Kenrick be more like Black Caviar?
05:03A great role model for you kids out there.
05:05She ticks all the boxes.
05:07I mean, the only thing Nick and Kenrick have in common with Black Caviar is that they have
05:10four legs.
05:12So, Punky Voltaran joins us from Royal Ascot, where in a little under two weeks, Black Caviar
05:17will be racing for Aussie glory.
05:19Can she go all the way, Punky?
05:22Oh, I think she can get round the track, Sean.
05:24The question is, will she win?
05:26I think she can.
05:27Yeah.
05:28You've got a lot riding on her, haven't you?
05:30No, just the jockey, Sean.
05:32They're pretty small, usually.
05:34Yeah.
05:34Now, 21 races, 21 wins so far, though.
05:37You think she could be the next far lap?
05:40A disembowed museum attraction, you mean?
05:43Um, well, no, no, more Aussie hero.
05:45Oh, no question, Sean.
05:46No bloody question.
05:48Bonzer.
05:48Now, Punky, she's also Victorian, a Victorian horse, so most of her races have been anti-clockwise.
05:54How's she going to go at Ascot running in the opposite direction?
05:57No, she'll be running forwards, Sean.
05:59I've never trained a horse to run backwards in me life.
06:03Yeah, sure, but clockwise instead of anti-clockwise.
06:05Oh, different hemispheres, Sean.
06:07No, the Coriolis effect will kick in, she'll go round the track the other way, no worries.
06:12Sure, thanks a lot, Punky, thanks a lot.
06:14I do worry about sport on an international level, though.
06:17Pitting one country against another does raise national pride to the level of nationalism.
06:22And the trouble with nationalism is that if people take it too seriously, it turns into
06:26national socialism.
06:27And then it's no longer about including various countries in a race, it's about excluding
06:32various races from a country.
06:33Euro 2012, Maggie, pretty ugly stuff, yeah.
06:37Yeah, racism, it just has no place in sport, Sean.
06:40I mean, I for one am glad Australia has nothing to do with Europe, it's a stupid continent.
06:45Yeah.
06:46I mean, we have national pride, but that's very different from some of those Ukrainian supporters.
06:50Oh, no question.
06:51And now let's remove the human element and have a look at the latest in sports technology
07:04with Denzel Akabuki.
07:06Tashon.
07:08Tazayuni researchers say they've developed a new way of generating clean, inexpensive energy,
07:13simply by harnessing the power of us Aussies' love of cricket.
07:17I popped down south of the Apple Isle to get the good isle on a Bonza fuel alternative.
07:22Tasmania, the birthplace of the greens.
07:25And it's here on this tiny island that a revolution in alternative energy is occurring
07:31that might well make other cricketing nations green with ivy.
07:36Cricket power.
07:38Cricket power is the brainchild of acting professor Jasper Pong.
07:42Well, I was watching the test cricket on the television a few years ago.
07:45I think it was Australia versus Sri Lanka.
07:49And it occurred to me at the time how much limbering up the players were doing and stretching
07:53and swinging their arms and so forth.
07:56And I thought, well, maybe there's something in this.
07:59Otherwise, it's a waste of energy.
08:01And time.
08:02Plus, it's boring.
08:04Cricketers from all over Tasmania quickly volunteered to limber up in this field outside of Bichonot,
08:10their rotating arms cleverly mimicking the blades of a small wind turbine.
08:14With the kinetic energy transferred to a number of underground generators,
08:19the cumulative effect has enormous energy potential.
08:22Feels good to be doing my bit for the environment, yeah.
08:25I spend most weekends out here on the midnight to dawn shift.
08:28Usually pull a day shift as well.
08:31It means I've had to give up cricket over Saturday, but that's a sacrifice I'm prepared to make.
08:35Last week, we had over 250 cricketers in continuous operation,
08:40and we managed to generate enough current to operate the Tamar Valley Power Station's toilet hand dryer for a full minute.
08:46Really?
08:47I tested myself on my dog.
08:49Sport is a vital part of Aussie life.
08:52Some say too vital.
08:53If acting Professor Pong is right, though, it's about to become even a lot more too vital-er thanks to these cricket fans.
09:01Denzella Kabuki, mad as hell.
09:05Well, it's exactly about three weeks till the carbon tax celebrations begin,
09:10and Tony Abbott has been doing his best to find just the right tortured metaphor to frighten voters.
09:15Listen to this.
09:16It's going to be a python squeeze rather than a cobra strike, but it is going to hurt from day one.
09:25Scary stuff, but does it hold up zoologically, Dr Damien Scranton?
09:31Sean, snakes certainly inspire fear in many of us, but Mr Abbott needs to do some homework,
09:37or hire Bindi Irwin as a consultant.
09:40There are no cobras in Australia, nor has there been a single recorded death by python strangulation in this country,
09:46unless you're a small bat or a bird or a lizard.
09:49Well, I'm not any of those things.
09:51I will say one thing.
09:53Tony Abbott is right on one count.
09:54He's a right what?
10:00Tony Abbott is right on one count.
10:02I beg your pardon.
10:02If you were being slowly suffocated by a python, it would hurt from day one.
10:07Yes.
10:07Or rather, not so much from as on.
10:10During days two, three and four, as it was slowly working your unconscious body down its gullet,
10:15it would be significantly less painful.
10:18And if Mr Abbott is trying to say that, then I think he's using the wrong metaphor.
10:21And I have no doubt that Bindi would back me up.
10:24All right.
10:25OK.
10:25What about Mr Abbott's earlier metaphor, the wrecking ball carbon tax metaphor?
10:30In fact, I quote from Hansard on this,
10:32that that wrecking ball is about to swing right through the Australian economy from the 1st of July.
10:37What do you think about that one?
10:38Well, I think it's confused.
10:41Is the python on the wrecking ball?
10:44Is the cobra operating the machine?
10:46Because if so, then you have to have a snake with hands like a lizard,
10:49and then you lose the squeeze metaphor.
10:53Does this clarify things?
10:54I'd give Bindi a ring if I were you.
11:06Thank you very much.
11:08Coming up after the break...
11:10Disney's ban on junk food ads has knock-on effect in terms of its animation budgets.
11:16Fairfax Sunday paper lift out a hit with readers.
11:19And Tony Abbott's bodyguards revealed as Nexus 6 replicants.
11:23By land, by air, by sea, under the sea,
11:38whether we're shooting at them or training them,
11:42pulling out or staying put to replace those who are pulling out,
11:45the Australian Defence Force, defending our shores via Afghanistan.
11:53Thank you very much.
11:59Now, I just want to say I disapprove of censorship.
12:03I don't think people should even be allowed to say the word.
12:06But it's been a bit of a bugbear for me this week, censorship.
12:09OK, so we talked a little about National Socialism in sport, while with Euro 2012.
12:16But it's also on the rise across Europe politically.
12:22In Greece, most recently, and also in France,
12:24as a reaction to the austerity of the Eurozone's fiscal treaty.
12:28I know most of you have been thinking that.
12:29So I was a little worried when I read in the papers this,
12:35that Bavaria is going to republish Hitler's autobiography.
12:38But don't worry, there are content warnings throughout,
12:42and footnotes pointing out Hitler's errors.
12:44There's a special edition for schools,
12:46and they're going to include Hitler's speeches at Nazi rallies,
12:49highlighting how he recycled his ideas.
12:52Which is great, because I think it's high time someone dealt with Hitler's greatest crime,
12:56self-plagiarism.
12:58Now, as I say, I'm all for free speech.
13:01When Andrew Bolt says he has a perfect right to say that some Aboriginals
13:04don't have the right to say they're Aboriginals,
13:06he's summing up what free speech is all about.
13:08Now, if Bavaria wants to flood the market with an annotated version of Mein Kampf,
13:12then that's entirely...
13:14Sorry, that's the wrong word.
13:15The wrong word.
13:16Sorry.
13:18Beg your pardon.
13:20With an annotated version of Mein Kampf,
13:22warning people off National Socialism,
13:24I say that's their right.
13:25I would suggest, though,
13:26just to make sure the book doesn't get too popular and take off,
13:29they also consider re-releasing the original audio book,
13:32narrated by Mel Gibson.
13:36You can get that at the ABC shop, by the way.
13:40That's my opinion, but what do you think?
13:42Let's have a look at the top-of-the-box pops.
13:44No, I don't think it's a good idea.
13:59It's better that we support our local citrus growers.
14:03I think the real question should be,
14:05why aren't all these battery hens we see running on solar panels?
14:10Glass confessionals?
14:14Well, the trouble with the glass confessional
14:16is that it gets very fogged up in there when you take your clothes off.
14:24To finance now, here's Mick Piaf.
14:26Thanks, Sean.
14:27Well, the market's closed down today.
14:29You're joking!
14:32They closed down?
14:35After governments all over the world pumped all that money into them?
14:38It's ridiculous!
14:39I cannot believe it!
14:41Thanks, Mick.
14:42Sorry to waste your time.
14:43Well, Secretary of the AW, Paul Howes,
14:52says that manufacturing in this country is in big, big trouble.
14:55The Toyota, CMI, the hasty group.
14:59Oh, come on, that's not Paul Howes.
15:02I've told you about it before.
15:03It's not funny.
15:04It doesn't look anything like that.
15:06It's a League of Gentlemen guy.
15:07You should change it.
15:09What?
15:10Oh, you did change it.
15:11All right, no, that's fine.
15:12That's fine.
15:13Anyway, our economy at the moment
15:15is not so much riding on the sheep's back,
15:17but in a giant truck belonging to this woman.
15:21Mrs Conroy is in the maddest helicopter.
15:25We may not be making anything in our factories,
15:27but here's something our country made earlier.
15:30And while coal and uranium
15:32and other non-renewable mineral exports
15:34are masking how bad things are in our manufacturing sector,
15:37a slowdown in the Chinese economy...
15:40Oh, that's better.
15:41A slowdown in the Chinese economy
15:44means we soon won't be selling as much coal and iron and uranium
15:48to help China make their cheap, impossible-to-compete-with retail products
15:53because no-one in the Eurozone can afford to buy them anymore.
15:56Which means our resource boom goes bust
15:59and we can't prop up our manufacturing industry.
16:02Which means we rely more on imports from China.
16:05Which means they need more coal and iron and uranium to make them again.
16:11Which makes us more beholden to China
16:13and therefore less likely to complain about their continued support for the Assad regime.
16:18And anyway, China needs our uranium to make their radioactive milk.
16:24And where else are they going to get the lead to put in the paint on our children's toys?
16:29I have to say, because it's on my order queue,
16:31that I'm a little concerned about the age of some of the migrant labour being employed in our mines.
16:36I mean, I appreciate...
16:37I appreciate that they have to work in confined spaces, but really, really...
16:43Helmet's off to our Prime Minister, though.
16:45She's been meeting with children again to explain government policy
16:48and a whole raft of issues.
16:50Presumably the children then go home and tell their parents what's happening.
16:53It's a good system. I think it works well.
16:55Here she is explaining that the toys they're playing with aren't theirs.
16:58They're not hers. They belong to all Australians.
17:01And I get why this sort of footage is important to the Labour image makers.
17:05Because children represent the future. I get that.
17:08There's really no point talking to old people.
17:12No, it's not.
17:13And it's a general observation.
17:15Now, I don't know about the morality of using children as mules for government propaganda.
17:21Although, if it's good enough for North Korea's Supreme Leader,
17:24then I suppose it's good enough for ours.
17:26I don't know. She's enjoying it.
17:30But I'm not being paid to sit here and criticise the government.
17:34I'm being paid to sit here and distract you from how ineffective they are.
17:38You are the masses. I am the opiate.
17:41That's how it works.
17:42But you can't argue with those growth figures, can you?
17:45A staggering 1.3% for the first quarter of the year.
17:48Double the rate expected.
17:50Senior economic forecaster Tureen Chip from Canberra.
17:52You obviously didn't see this coming.
17:54Well, it was a big surprise, Sean. I tell you that.
17:56And why was that? Incompetence on your part?
17:59Well, I don't think anyone could have anticipated those figures.
18:02I know. It was double what you predicted twice as much.
18:06It was 100% more.
18:07Yes, I do know what double means.
18:09Well, pardon me for checking, but when the numbers come out and they double what you predicted,
18:13you can understand how some people might wonder about your basic grasp of arithmetic.
18:17Well, if you would understand that I...
18:18I mean, if the Bureau of Meteorology told us it was going to be 38 degrees tomorrow,
18:22and it turned out to be 76, we'd go and burn the place down.
18:26Actually, you probably wouldn't have to.
18:27It would just spontaneously combust because of the temperature.
18:30And fair enough, too.
18:31Well, I...
18:31I mean, if you're going to hold yourself out as some sort of expert,
18:34then you have to have some firm understanding of numbers,
18:36what they are, what they mean, like our shadow treasurer.
18:39The numbers are the numbers.
18:40I totally accept that. The numbers are the numbers.
18:43See?
18:45Can't argue with that.
18:46I mean, he didn't go into a lot of detail.
18:49But at least he didn't say the numbers are half the numbers.
18:52Mr Hockey's policy advisor, Organza Quiz, is with Mad As Hell's Nice One Johnson.
18:58Organza Quiz, a sensational growth figure,
19:00Mr Hockey must be spewing.
19:04Not at all. He's very pleased for the Australian economy.
19:06He's shattered, isn't he?
19:08No, no.
19:09How could they pull this off, these hopeless numbnuts?
19:12Absolutely not. He's wrapped for the country.
19:15He's feeding.
19:17He's shut off big time.
19:19How have they done it?
19:20I don't f***ing know.
19:21They just all always land on their feet, this mob.
19:24They get this massive bloody mining boom
19:25just when the GFC should have gutted the economy,
19:27and then they get these ludicrous growth figures.
19:29Mm, so I guess it's back to tainted votes
19:31and compromised speakers for you lot.
19:34Yeah, I guess so.
19:37Thanks, nice one.
19:38Wayne Swan has accused the media of overly negative reporting in this area,
19:42but that's typical Labour whinging, isn't it?
19:45And if there's one thing I hate, it's negativity.
19:47So let's be positive, all right?
19:51One of the fastest economic growth rates in the developed world.
19:54That's how analysts are describing Australia's quarterly rate.
19:57Now, we've talked to the experts.
19:59We've talked to the opposition.
20:00So let's now talk to the inexpert anti-opposition
20:02about a result that surprised everybody, including Treasury.
20:06Chief Advisor to the Treasurer, Pino Rouge.
20:08Is the growth rate finished,
20:10or can the government stimulate it even more?
20:12Maybe with tax cuts.
20:19As long as the roots are not severed,
20:24all is well,
20:26and all will be well,
20:28in the garden.
20:30In the garden.
20:36Yes.
20:39In a garden,
20:40growth has its season.
20:44First, we have spring and summer.
20:48But then comes fall and winter.
20:53And then we have spring and summer again.
21:00Right, so you're saying that we welcome
21:03the inevitable seasons of nature,
21:06but we're upset during the seasons of the economy.
21:10Yes, Sean, that is correct.
21:12All right, well, now, I'm going to ask you a question now.
21:14It might be a difficult question to answer,
21:16but do you consider, in your own words,
21:18that we have a good gardener in office at the moment?
21:21Oh, yes, Sean, a very good gardener.
21:24Very good at digging things up.
21:27Well, I must admit that that is one of the most refreshing
21:38and optimistic statements I've heard in a very, very long time.
21:41Do you know Raphael?
21:43No, no, I don't know Raphael.
21:45A small black man gave me a message for him.
21:49It's rather long,
21:50but I think I can remember it.
21:54Now, get this honky.
21:57You go tell Raphael
21:59that I ain't taken no jive
22:02from no Western Union messenger.
22:06You tell that asshole
22:08that if he got something to say to me,
22:12he'd get his ass down here himself.
22:15Then he said,
22:18I should get my white ass out of there
22:21or he would cut it.
22:27Well, I'll be sure and pass that on.
22:30I've already been on television, Sean.
22:32Yes, thank you, thank you, Verity.
22:34Australia might not be the manufacturing innovator
22:38it once was,
22:39but it certainly used to be.
22:41Time now to cup our ears
22:43and drink from the wisdom of the elders.
22:58Bill, in terms of what we eat,
23:01Vegemite is simply part of the furniture,
23:03but 89 years ago,
23:05it was a very different kettle of fish, wasn't it?
23:06Well, yes, yes, yes.
23:08Well, Vegemite didn't exist back then.
23:09In fact, this week is the 89th anniversary
23:12of it coming onto the market.
23:14I know.
23:15Yes.
23:16These days, of course,
23:16you've got many different versions.
23:18You've got the kosher version,
23:19the halal version,
23:20which is wonderful
23:21because I think that the difficulties
23:22experienced by these two religions
23:24might be sorted out by both sides
23:27coming together and breaking bread,
23:29smearing it with Vegemite
23:30and, of course, eating it.
23:32Although it's not to everyone's taste.
23:34Took a while to catch on,
23:35even with the Christians.
23:3789 years.
23:38Heh, didn't exist back then.
23:40No, no, not in those days,
23:42before it was invented.
23:43No, sorry, Bob.
23:44No, things were very different
23:46before they became similar.
23:48What are your memories?
23:50Well, they are things
23:51that I remember from the past.
23:54Yes, but what about Vegemite?
23:5789 years ago.
23:58Well, it didn't exist.
23:59It didn't exist back then.
24:00It hadn't been invented.
24:01Yes, but when it had...
24:02But back in those days, of course,
24:04when it hadn't been invented,
24:05we had to use dripping
24:06or lard or coffer
24:08or ghee
24:09as a condiment
24:11for our breads.
24:12During the war, of course,
24:13it was even worse
24:14as the animal fat
24:15had to be collected
24:15so we could use it
24:16to grease our Lee Enfield.
24:18There was a mutiny, of course,
24:19by the sepoys,
24:20mainly from Lee
24:22who didn't enjoy it.
24:23I think it would wear thin,
24:24wouldn't it,
24:25having fat rubbed on you?
24:27You worked for the company
24:29that invented Vegemite,
24:30I understand.
24:30I did.
24:31I did work for them, yes.
24:33They invented Vegemite,
24:34you know.
24:35Yes.
24:3589 years ago.
24:36Yes, sir.
24:37I think.
24:37To this week or two,
24:39I think.
24:40Yes, they did, yes.
24:41Yes.
24:42And you were there
24:43the day that Vegemite
24:45was invented?
24:45No, I was off sick that day.
24:47Oh, dear.
24:48But I was instrumental
24:49in writing the lyrics
24:50for the famous
24:52Vegemite jingle.
24:53Really?
24:54I didn't know that.
24:55Yes, oh, yes.
24:56I mean, they didn't use them.
24:57That's why it was an instrument.
24:58But the owner's wife,
25:00she did a version of it
25:01with lyrics and...
25:02I...
25:02I don't think it captured
25:04the true spirit of Vegemite
25:06as mine had done.
25:07The Happy Little Vegemite song?
25:09No.
25:09No, I didn't like it.
25:11No, it puts a rose
25:12in every cheek.
25:14Every cheek.
25:15I mean, we've only got two.
25:17Unless you're referring
25:17to your buttocks as well.
25:19And I'm not sure
25:20a sandwich spread
25:20that promotes
25:21the fact that
25:22it will make
25:22your bottom flush
25:23is a bit of translated
25:24to sales.
25:25Would you like
25:26to hear mine?
25:28Your bottom?
25:29Come here, sir.
25:32Put it on your shopping list,
25:34put it on your bread,
25:34put it on your test
25:35before you go to bed.
25:36It's brown, it's shiny,
25:37it tastes all right,
25:38it's made of yeast,
25:39it's made of mine.
25:40I listened to
25:41William Duffy sing
25:42and felt privileged
25:43to spend time
25:44with a man
25:44who helped create
25:45one of the most indelible icons
25:47Australia has ever eaten.
25:49A product of
25:50the wisdom
25:51of the elders.
25:55Well, not coming up
25:57because we've run out of time.
25:59More refugees arrive
26:00off Ashmore Reef,
26:02media frenzy,
26:03nightmare for pollies,
26:04and tough economic times
26:06hit the Tour de Spain.
26:10And so ends a week
26:11in which Rolf Harris
26:12received an order of Australia,
26:13and this despite the fact
26:14he's lived in the UK
26:15for the last 50 years.
26:17Now, while some may say
26:18his absence has in itself
26:20been a service to this country,
26:22I think it's time
26:22that Rolf came home.
26:24I'm sure our government
26:24could negotiate something.
26:26Perhaps in return for Rolf,
26:27we could release Leo Sayer.
26:29Here's tomorrow's talkback.
26:31You know,
26:32I'm paying these athletes
26:33and they want $5,000
26:35to lift 250 kilos.
26:37I can get a forklift
26:38for $130 a week
26:39and that lifts up to 1,500 kilos.
26:41Where's the sense in that, Sean?
26:43Hi?
26:44Yes, hello.
26:45What I want to know is
26:45if the government are going to start
26:46digging up dirt on the opposition,
26:48I hope they're not flying
26:49in overseas Labor.
26:51Yeah, about Gina Reinhardt's
26:52stake in Fairfax,
26:5315% is not enough.
26:55She needs to hammer it
26:56all the way in
26:57if she really wants to kill it.
26:59Giant baby.
27:07Let me read your story.
27:10Jeanette and I met
27:11in a frenzy of darting tongues.
27:13I met her in a frenzy of the
27:15I met her in a frenzy of the
27:16I met her in a frenzy of the
27:16I met her in a frenzy of the
27:17I met her in a frenzy of the
27:18I met her in a frenzy of the
27:18I met her in a frenzy of the
27:19I met her in a frenzy of the
27:19I met her in a frenzy of the
27:20I met her in a frenzy of the
27:20I met her in a frenzy of the
27:21I met her in a frenzy of the
27:22I met her in a frenzy of the
27:23I met her in a frenzy of the
27:23I met her in a frenzy of the
27:24I met her in a frenzy of the
27:24I met her in a frenzy of the
27:25I met her in a frenzy of the
27:26I met her in a frenzy of the
27:27I met her in a frenzy of the
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