Over the weekend, the Dubbo show took place, but there were issues with the fireworks. A 111-year-old woman in the UK shared her secret to a long life, which includes smoking 20 cigarettes a day and drinking sherry for breakfast. A nightclub in Tasmania found a way to bypass a court order by installing a toilet in the middle of the dance floor. A portal has been set up between Dublin and New York, allowing people to see each other through a large TV screen. A French pub was fined $10,000 for allowing patrons to return their glasses to the bar. Arj Barker will be performing at the Dubbo RSL.
Oh what a big weekend it was the Dubbo show went ahead it's now over all wrapped up. If you're at the fireworks you may know that they didn't work properly and that may be because of me. We'll brush past that for now and address that later. Coming up this morning as well having a chat with Arj Barker ahead of his show at the Dubbo RSL this Friday. Coming up in a couple of minutes however if you ever thought age wasn't grace a hundred and eleven-year-old they've given their tips on how to have a long and prosperous life and it's probably not what you think they're gonna say.
Keith Urban first and Pink one too many. Monday morning here on your home of Dubbo's best music from the 80s to now it's Keegan with you. Cheers for your company lovely day ahead. Shumba Wumba Tub something 20 minutes past 6 for your home of Dubbo's best music from the 80s to now it's Zero Fam Top of 21 in Wellington today currently eight gonna be studying right through the week it's Keegan with you this morning. A hundred and eleven-year-old has come out and revealed to the world her secret to living a long enjoyable and fulfilling life or as far as it's quoted as being.
The lady from the UK remembers the time the Titanic sank and went through two bombing raids during the Second World War. So I'd call that a fulfilling life follows her. She's done a tell-all with a couple of newspapers and explains that her secret recipe for living as long as possible is and I quote here this is from the lady herself. 20 cigarettes a day and a pint of sherry for breakfast. Apparently that'll get you to 111 according to this lady.
She also said here I used to drink regularly throughout the day in the morning I had half a pint of sherry for lunch a gin and tonic and around 7 p.m. a small ginger ale with a bit of whiskey. These days I just have a sherry now and again. So she's obviously toned things down a bit. My word that's like clockwork it's a schedule. She ticks the boxes every time she completes one of them. She also finishes it here saying although while I've quit smoking I'm tempted to have a rollie at Christmas or on New Year's.
I mean I'm not a doctor but I'm still convinced that smoking it's terrible for you given the even though this 111 year old lady she used to be inhaling them like oxygen in a scuba suit but I'm still convinced it's probably terrible for you. It's definitely terrible for you probably not the right word for it but maybe the key to a long life is going through health New South Wales's guidelines and doing everything it tells you not to do.
That's obviously a joke don't go and start drinking mercury from a thermometer. Don't you see what it is for your Monday morning brand new week. Oh it's a long weekend wasn't it. Fireworks were nice though. Zou FM. Send a 7 Elton John and Joel Eber on your home. It's one of those best music from the 80s to now top of 21 in Shanghai today currently ten and a half degrees. Well nightclubs they may be you know evolving with the times into a hybrid of a pub and a club or entirely just shutting down as the years go by.
A nightclub in Australia has filled the bowl of progress in a whole other way. The Ladies Lounge in Tasmania is a woman-only club within a museum. It mocks the historical trend of male-only venues in the past around the country. The thing is back at the start of April the club received a notice from a court to either shut down or open up to everyone and you know things seemed pretty bleak. The whole idea of the venue was about to become pointless or just non-existent and that's when someone had a brainwave.
A single toilet is now to be installed in the middle of the nightclub in order to bend the laws and classify the whole establishment as a ladies bathroom. Because you know most bathrooms being gender-specific it allows them to continue operating as a restroom rather than a licensed venue. It's a restroom with a bar. They can even use the cistern as an ice bucket. I reckon for some toilets they're big enough you could stick a couple of ice cubes in it put the bottle of wine in, chill.
I'm genuinely curious as to whether someone will actually try to use the newly minted toilet in the middle of the dance floor. You know just to see if it's installed correctly. Surely there's plumbing. It wouldn't actually be counted as a restroom if the only toilet within the building was actually plumbed in. If it wasn't plumbed in. More like it. There's nothing like a you know a boogie on the bog. Never use that phrase again. Morgan Wallen.
Thinking about me. It's Keegan with you for your Monday morning. Brand new week ahead. Gonna be lovely and sunny right up to Friday after the downpour we had across the weekend. Showing the Dubbo's best music from the 80s to now. It's breakfast on Better Music 927 Zoo. Still to come before 8 o'clock. Arj Barker on the show to have a chat about his show that he's bringing to the Dubbo RSL this Friday. Also your chance to score $50 in fuel just by listening out for a 70s track.
You ring 6884 8499. Give me the song name and the artist and you score yourself 50 bucks right there and then. Easy as that. Coming up in a couple of minutes. A portal has been opened and it's sending people absolutely bonkers having a look through it to the other side of the world. What am I talking about? I'll tell you just a couple of minutes away. Tate McRae first. Greedy. It's Zoo FM Monday morning. The Zephyr Song quarter past 7 Monday morning.
Zoo FM breakfast. Number 21 today in Dunedin. Currently about 5.5 degrees. You might have seen this online recently. What is it's being dubbed a portal. It's opened up in both the main square of Dublin and also New York in the last couple of days. It does. It looks like a portal. It is. All it really is is a large round television with a 24-7 video link between the cities on practically the other sides of the planet to each other.
It has like a metal frame around it. It's quite a large size television screen. It functions practically like a jumbo FaceTime. So it's nothing new. We're not. It's no groundbreaking technology being used here. It's taken off with people living there. Hundreds of people that live there gathering each day to get a look into the lives of the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. I'm sure nothing about it surprising. But anyway they're standing there staring at each other through a screen.
But humans of course being humans there was already an arrest in front of it before it struck the 24-hour mark of it even being put up in the place. A lady on the Dublin side she stumbled out of a nearby pub and proceeded to take all of her clothes off in front of the video link portal in full view of the people watching from the other side of New York. Completely stripped off. Why not? Just had a couple of pints at the pub.
Time to go take my clothes off. Probably what went through her head. But I mean the Americans out of all of that they certainly got a speed run on what someone from Ireland really looks like. Zubrecki. Taylor Swift on your home at Davos. Best music from the 80s to now for your Monday morning. It's Keegan with your top 21 in narrow mind today. Currently seven degrees gonna be sunny today and right through the week. I think it's time to give away some fuel.
Something just sounded out of place on Zubrecki. Did you catch the odd one out? How you going this morning Sue? I'm alright. Could you do with some fuel? I'd love some fuel. How much of a difference would $50 make in your tank right now? Where's the needle? It's on one-eighth of a tank. Oh right okay. I think yes you'd absolutely love $50 worth of fuel. All you got to do is name me the song that just previously played a couple of minutes ago, the name of the artist of the song and the song title.
Okey dokey. Well I think it's September and I think it was by Earth, Wind and Fire. Sorry what was that Sue? Currently it appears that you're dialing another number. I'm not too sure what's going on. Can you say the name again for me? September and the band was Earth, Wind and Fire. 100% Sue, spot-on. You're spot-on. Do you know what year it was released? Oh in the 70s sometime. Yeah I'll give you that as well because I have no idea myself.
Congratulations. Thank you, that's terrific. The $50 is yours, just hold the line I'll grab your details. Thank you. Hear a 70s song, identify the song and artist when you call Keegan on 688-484-9999. To win, you're on Sue's Breakfast. Ed Sheeran, quarter to eight on your home of Dubbo's best music from the 80s to now, on top of 21 in Gilgandra today. Currently about eight degrees gonna be sunny today and right through the week. If you've ever been to a pub and you've thought that you return an empty glass to the bar and you think, oh I'm being kind, you're being courteous, you may have actually cost them $10,000 in that very short and swift act.
A French pub has been fined $10,000 by a court for allowing punters to return their glasses to the bar as supposedly it counted as undeclared labour. Undeclared. The court cited that because patrons are performing a duty of the bar staff member, they need to be covered under the WH&S laws, which of course a patron isn't. I mean I personally, I didn't realise there was a possibility of receiving permanent back injury or the requirement of a hard hat while carrying a headmaster back to the counter.
But it may make you think twice about bringing your glass back to the counter next time. Maybe being courteous, maybe being kind, but you could cost them a lot of money. Although I don't think you or me are planning a $4,000 trip to France any time soon. So we should be fine. Check out Zoo FM on Facebook for more. Kid Leroy, 8 minutes to 8, Zoo FM Breakfast, your home of Davo's best music from the 80s to now, on top of 21 in Wellington today.
Currently 8 degrees, gonna be sunny this morning. Ahead of his upcoming show at the Davo RSL, Arj Barker joins us on the show this morning. Cheers for coming on. Yeah, absolute pleasure. You've done a bit of a hectic tour across the big barren land of Australia recently before you hit Davo. How's it all going? Actually, it's going really well. You know, there was an incident a few weeks ago. I don't know if you heard about it.
Yeah, maybe. It's just a little thing of the baby and it was unfortunate and I just want us to go on the record. I have no ill will towards anyone else involved in this thing. But it was definitely a rocky, rocky seas for a couple days. But since then, I have to be honest, the shows have kind of gone up a level in terms of people seem more excited to be there and very extra supportive. And in fact, the ticket sales have gone up.
It's just odd. But, you know, we call it the baby bump. But I'm not saying I'm glad it happened. But in the big picture, maybe it hasn't been the worst thing. Pretty sure the Davo RSL offers childcare, so you shouldn't need to worry about that again. Well, that's nice. Yeah, well, it's a terrific venue and happy to be coming back to perform there. My show has got a lot of really cool information in it about what we know about reality and what we don't know, which is the really interesting stuff.
To me, there's a lot of mysteries left in our knowledge of how things work, primarily how consciousness works. They know a lot about how it works, operates, but they don't know how it exists. And I think that's a very important point. Every little thing you experience is still a mystery in terms of science being able to explain how you have that experience. So I love talking about that. Of course, I always make it about the jokes.
It's always leading to punchlines and jokes and laughs because people come to the show not to learn necessarily, but to laugh and definitely. Right. And so I always made that my mission, my mission. If I want to talk about something in the show, whether it's UFOs, a couple of tours ago, or in this case, the mysteries of consciousness. Well, I bloody well better have some punchlines coming up and keep it fun. Well, man, I just want to change the course slightly.
The Nut Farm, which is currently in cinemas, it's starring Deez Nuts, which is probably the most reputable nut producer in Australia. What's the movie all about? There's one character called Farmer Dee and his operation is called Deez Nuts, a very funny character played by Guyton Grantley, who's a terrific Aussie actor. People will recognize him. But The Nut Farm is a film my friends and I wrote a few years back and we got it made. It's a low budget, family friendly comedy, which should be on streaming soonish.
So keep an eye out for it. And it's basically I'm a cryptocurrency trader and I'm the lead role in the film. I play Brendan. Brandon is a cryptocurrency trader who goes broke trading crypto but simultaneously inherits a macadamia farm on the east coast of Australia. And so I come out and I thought I'll just sell the farm. But then the will says my eccentric uncle who wrote the will said I have to successfully farm 20 tons of macadamias before I can rightfully own the farm.
So that sets up the challenge of my character. And there's a love interest played by Madeleine West and Tyrael Mora, who played the lawyer in the castle is in the film. No lawyer again. He was terrific. It's a it's definitely an odd film, but it's fun. I think people laugh, laugh out loud a few times when they watch it. The movie actually makes a reference to Australian beer. And I mean, I'm going to ask you personally, what was your initial reactions in the very beginning to what we actually have on offer? When I first came here, there wasn't all the micro breweries.
Of course, taken off. And the random, you know, names of the beer. And I think that's what you're referring to in the film. They have one called Kelly's piss. The fat fat is real. Is it? Is it real? Or is that in the film? Now I'm getting confused. They're blurring the lines between them. Well, cheers for coming in for chat this morning. I was 100 percent keen to see your show coming up at the RSL here in Dublin.
Yeah, it's going to be a lot of fun. And I promise, folks, if you come out, it's just going to leave you with a smile on your face, feeling good. And that's really the goal of my shows. We're going to have a great time. Brilliant. Cheers, mate. Much appreciated. Thanks a lot. Thanks for having me. You're on Zoo's Breakfast. Ava Max on your home of Dubbo's best music from the 80s to now for your Monday morning.
Twenty one degrees the top today in Wellington, about 11 at the moment. Going to be sunny today and sunny right through to Friday. Mayor Mac Dickerson has managed to come in this morning. Good morning, mate. How are you going? Yeah, good. Good to see you. Good to see you as well. I hear you managed to check out the Dubbo show yesterday. Ducked down there yesterday. It was looking pretty good for all the rain we had actually.
The ground was in too bad a condition. There was a little bit of water, a little bit of a few tracks on the ground. But still, even on a Sunday afternoon, the crowds were good. And I remember when my kids were young enough that they used to go to the show. They didn't go to the show this year. They're a bit old and not in Dubbo at the moment, but a bit old to go to the show.
I say you're never too old to go to the show. But I know we used to try and go down there on the Sunday because that was when the crowds weren't as busy. Yeah, I think towards the end of the time, we used to take our kids to the show. Everyone had the same idea. So we used to go down on Sunday and go, it's just as busy as it was on the Saturday and the Friday.
What are we doing this for? But it was still good. And I spoke to the show society. They didn't have any foreign numbers, but certainly their gut feel was that it was a good show. Lots of people going through, lots of good numbers. They, of course, use 123ticks for their ticketing now. So they've got to wait for the reports to come through for 123ticks. It was the old days. They could count the money at the end of each day and know how many people were there.
Yeah, the exact amount. Yeah, but I'm sure we'll get a report from them this week in terms of the numbers. But again, it looked good. Lots of different activities there, lots of different stands, lots of different buses and different companies there. So it is a great event. And you're only new to Dubbo, but it has been a tradition for as long as I can remember from growing up. I'm sure it has, I don't doubt that. Well, no, no.
The tradition is that it rains. Oh, right. Well, I don't doubt that either. That's what I experienced over the weekend. We were almost washed out on Saturday morning. Yeah. So I think, to be fair to them, there's probably only ever been once in the living memory of the committee members where they've actually had to claim insurance for rain. But it's just one of those little things that's like, oh, it's the Dubbo show, it's always raining. You can guess the weather based off whether the Dubbo show's in town that weekend.
Well, during a drought, some people say just put on a Dubbo show and they'll solve the drought problem. It's equivalent to a rain dance. It works just as well. Speaking of another sort of festival that's been going on for I think it's not too sure of how long so far, but the Dream Festival, it's been in the news a lot recently. What's been going on with that? Yeah, so that's been going on about 2011. That started out around that era, so it's been going since then.
Now, there has been some discussion because council were asked to run it. The committee got to the stage where it's gotten too big for the committee to keep running it. So council was asked to run it, which we did do last year. And then there's been some discussion with councillors, with staff and with the community around continuing on under council's management or running that or whether the community should run that. So we actually did an EOI process and the results of that came back to our committee meetings last Thursday night.
And as a result of that, there was one organisation that said, we'll put in an EOI, we don't want to run it, but we'll help someone else run it. So we're happy to support another organisation. And then there was another organisation that said that they would run it. They're a great organisation and they're in the business papers anyway, so they're a great organisation. And they talk about lots of background that they have in running those type of events.
They didn't give a lot of detail about what they would actually do to deliver on the dream of the dream. Excuse the very bad pun there. They certainly talked about the idea of them running the dream. In the end, councillors at the committee meeting last week said that they voted to put it into abeyance, so basically not run the dream, not give it to any organisation this year. The $40,000 that was allocated to dream will be then allocated half to events assistance and half to SPARC funding.
And so effectively, it was still going to the community for events. But that's not the final decision. The final decision is not made until the council meeting on Thursday week. So that's a committee meeting. Committee meetings don't make council resolutions, they make recommendations. The final decision isn't made until the council meeting. So I'm sure there'll be some further discussions with Oriscon and just with the community in general over the next week and a half, as it is now, to the council meeting before the final decision is made at the council meeting.
But at this stage, the recommendation after the committee meeting was to put the dream into abeyance. The recommendation, right. So it's not set in stone. We could hear some more news on it. Well, you will hear some more news on it because it has to be a final decision made still. What normally happens at committee meetings is normally you'll find that the recommendations from the committee meetings go to council and normally they're the same decision from council.
But the beauty of that two week gap from the committees to council is there's more time for some community consultation. It's more time for the community to see what council is thinking about something to then give some more feedback saying, oh, I didn't realise you were going that way. Oh, no, you definitely should be going this way. So you've got that great opportunity for some additional feedback. And then the final decision will be made on Thursday week.
Another thing that I saw that I'm sure involved a lot of discussion and a lot of committees and a lot of people with opinions was actually the eight year anniversary of the amalgamation. Is that today or was that yesterday? Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. 12th of May 2016, 12.10pm to be exact on that day. Right. The proclamation was made by the governor on the advice, of course, of the Minister for Local Government. It was Paul Toole at the time.
And so that was a big event. Thirty seven different councils around the state were amalgamated. Sometimes there were two councils made into one, as happened here. Sometimes there were three. I can't think of anyone there. There were four councils, but there were threes and twos turned into one. And that was pretty disappointing at the time. There was a lot of discussion by the Wellington community, the Dubbo community. We had some polls, we had two separate polls we ran on that.
One had 83 percent against, the other one had 78 percent against. We had a unanimous council decision against that. We had all of our councillors individually talking out against that. We had a local member at the time, the deputy premier of the state. So fantastic. What a great person to have in our electorate to be arguing on behalf of what we wanted. Of course. And then there were some public meetings. And so those public meetings, the majority, I won't say all, because some speakers that spoke in favour, but it might have been in the 90 percent range of people that spoke against the amalgamation after those.
So after all that, the amalgamation went ahead, of course. Yeah, of course. Just as things were. That's right. Not a very popular decision at the time. And I suppose my point now is that that was eight years and one day ago. You play the hand that you're dealt. We've got the amalgamation. I didn't stand in the twenty seven election because I felt a bit disingenuous. If I had stood for election then, I've argued against this amalgamation.
I don't believe in amalgamation. And then you would take part in it. And then suddenly, OK, now please elect me to be a part of this newly amalgamated council. So I didn't stand. I'd already done a number of years on council, a number of years as mayor. And I thought it's probably time to move on and let someone else have a go, if you like. And then now we are eight years later. I suppose the main thing, the main message I have now is we're one local government area.
We're seven thousand five hundred and thirty six square kilometres. Well, we're not old Wellington Shire Council, old Dubbo City Council. We're not. Let's keep a division there and keep those two separate. Back in the old days. And sometimes you do that. Sometimes you slip into that. It's just human nature. But the focus certainly for me and the focus for certainly the majority of our councillors is really to say we're one council area. How do we make this work better? How do we make it work together? And I think we're doing that in the main.
And certainly there are opportunities there because we are an amalgamated council. So I think of the Renewable Energy Zone, Dubbo would not have been a part of the Renewable Energy Zone as the old boundaries existed. I would just be Wellington. Dubbo is now part of that. So we're getting advantages out of that. And I think the fact that we're a larger council, we can probably take better advantage of some of those particular opportunities that we're getting as far as the rest.
But that's just one example there. But I think overall, I think we're a better council now because of it. And we've got to make sure we make it work again. We're not going to unamalgamate, deamalgamate, we're not going to demerger. We're going forward with what we've got. Let's make it work as well as we possibly can. And reading through, I think, the post that you put on Facebook, it was actually quite a fascinating bit of history to see the timeline of how it occurred.
Well, considering I've only moved to the area, I wasn't even aware it was so such a I mean, eight years in some people's minds would be a long amount of time. But I wasn't aware it was only such a short while ago that the councils were merged. I thought it'd been around for ages. Well, that's probably a good thing. If you think it's been around for ages, it means it's settling in and people have moved on.
That's right. And people have moved on. And look, I still have some people who tell me that the amalgamation is terrible and we should revert back. And oh, you fought against it, Matthew. And I did. I fought against it as the mayor of Dubbo City Council. The mayor of Wellington was Ann Jones. She fought against it as well. But you have your fight. When the decision's made, you move on to the next thing. So you can only argue with the umpire for so long before you finally say, right, he kept the decision.
Let's play the ball. So, again, that's right. Now we've got the amalgamation. Let's make this work as well as we possibly can. And I think, again, the majority of our councillors and certainly councillors absolutely doing that. Hundred percent, mate. We'll choose for coming in this morning. We'll have a chat in a couple of weeks again. Sounds good. Thanks, Kagan. Thanks, mate. Thanks, Ding and Marshmallow. And you're home at Dubbo's Best Music from the 80s to now.
Why, Landra Street and the alleged Ford Bridge intersection getting busy this morning, along with Cobra Street. Top of 21 degrees today in Narramine, about 12.5 at the moment. Going to be sunny. We've had the phone light up during Pink's Ding and Marshmallow there. We're tripping for our odd one out. You've just got to hear a 70s track on the air and you'll win yourself $50 in fuel by ringing 688-484-9999. Morning, Rob. What's going on? We're just listening to about waiting for the song from Ted and I just only caught half of the phone number.
So I was just checking to make sure that I had the right number. Yes, mate. Don't worry. Yes, your phone's working and you've got the right number this morning. I'm thinking it's going to be I Think We're Alone Now by Tiffy. What year was that released? Oh, jeez. I think 83. Well, the thing is, it's got to be a 70s track. Oh, fantastic. I'll have to do some research in the 70s. All right. Sounds good. Cheers, mate.
Here's another. Oh, thanks, Rob. Yes, a 70s track. $50 in fuel. Just got to ring a number, tell me the name of the song, name of the artist, simple as that. If you ever doubted the physical ability of someone well into their later years, I've got a story here that'll set your mind right. A couple of 80 year old ladies have been spotted in the UK smuggling both a hammer and a chisel into a museum in order to smash the glass encasing the Magna Carta.
It's not exactly a normal day out for them, I'd imagine. The determined old ducks are seen on the footage shuffling into the display room containing the glass case, lunging towards the case before unsheathing their tools of choice with remarkable speed. One of the 80 year old ladies appears to hold the chisel in place while the other goes to town on absolutely hammering it through the glass. It's like it's like an Olympics level display you'd expect to see during woodchop or something.
They managed to crack the glass before, of course, being escorted out of the building by police officers. I can safely say that this pair of old ladies would put a couple of stonemasons out of business with their tool technique. Dubbo's Best Music. John Farnham on your home web, Dubbo's Best Music from the 80s to now, top of 21 degrees today in Wellington, 12.5 at the moment, going to be sunny. The sort of central part of Fitzroy Street here in Dubbo getting absolutely chockers this morning.
Speaking of cars, time to give away some fuel. Something just sounded out of place on Zubricki. Did you catch the odd one out? Hello, who's this? Hey, it's Rob again. Rob, you managed to get back through. Wow, OK. How are you going this morning, mate? Yeah, I'm doing pretty well. What are you up to? I'm just doing a bit of housework at the moment. It's my first day off in about six days, so I've got a bit to do.
Right, well, I'd better say I'm jealous of you, but I'd rather not spend my day off doing housework. I kind of feel bad. Nah, it's not fun. All right. So the song's from the 70s. What's the name of it? Stain Alive by the Bee Gees. 100 percent, mate. Do you know what year it was released? No. No? Oh, it's all right. Neither do I. So we're both on the same page. Do you need some fuel at the moment? I do indeed.
Where do you reckon that your fuel gauge is currently sitting? I've got, it says 86 from the left in the tank. Right. I'm pretty sure you're actually within the margin where it might actually be guessing at this point, and the tank could be empty at a moment's notice. Yeah, that's right. All right. The $50 of fuel, it's yours, mate. Congratulations. Thanks, buddy. Appreciate it. By sheer chance, Rob manages to get through again. Congratulations to him. I literally lean over and press a random button on the phone.
And lo and behold, Rob appears. I only spoke to him a couple of minutes ago. Here are 70 songs. Identify the song and artist when you call Keegan. On 688-484-9999 to win. Jessica Mooreboy, Jason Derulo, wrapping up ZOEFM Breakfast for your Monday morning start of a brand new week. Top of 21 in Dubbo today. Also 21 in Cobar. Going to be sunny right through the week. Your full weather is just a couple of minutes away after the local and national news.
If you were at the Dubbo show over the weekend, especially on a Saturday night, you might have noticed that with the fireworks, there was a slight deviation from normal practice. I pushed the lever down myself and there was a small puff of smoke and nothing, nothing at all. And then we tried again and then it went off. If you want to know what actually happened with the fireworks, we put another video later this afternoon on the ZOEFM socials, ZOEFM on Facebook, 92.7 ZOEFM on Instagram about what actually took place down on the ground in the ring when I went to press the firework plunger and absolutely almost nothing happened whatsoever.
If you want to check that out on our social media and if you want to catch up on any moment of the show this morning, our podcast is there to stick ZOEFM into Spotify or Google Podcasts. The logo will come up. It should be there. We normally post a podcast unless something's broken. And if it's not there, then you know it was. The ladies are at work is next. You're on ZOEFM.