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NZ’s Most Controversial Chef - Tony Astle on Banning Kim Dotcom, Helen Clarke & Partying with Elton

December 22, 202401:32:29
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kiwi's Love at
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First like Finn we're making
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waves generate switch online
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today Tony es welcome to my podcast hey
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neat to be here it's great to have you
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here let the meet tribe the story of Ann
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this is your this is your book how um
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how was it was it a cathartic experience
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did it feel uh like toe curling at times
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well it took it took nearly 10 years
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actually when we we first started it and
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Geraldine Johns who the co-writer and
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they were the ghost writer she and I
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were well she was a food critic and
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apparently so it says in the book that I
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banned her from the restaurant but I
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can't quite remember doing that but I
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probably did because I banned so many
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people but she and I did so going back
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10 years we did I think do you call it
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when little recording machines we did 30
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about 36 hours of just chatting into a
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mic into a little cassette and um then
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we did that for for quite a while but
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then we sort of broke away from it and
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uh she wasn't well so we suddenly
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stopped and
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then well probably about 18 months or
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two years ago she I rang here and said
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do you think we should start this again
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and she said well I've lost all the
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tapes but when she moved house she found
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this box of all the tape so cuz I
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thought I'm not going through all that
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crap again so anyway we she found them
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all and we started um seeing each other
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once a week and then it became every
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second day and used to come to the
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restaurant and just record and record
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and um then we just really got into it
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in the last last year and it's uh it it
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was supposed to be a recipe books not
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one Dam recipe in it which is quite
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interesting but uh couple of recipes for
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disaster yeah well I think a few of
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those yeah you're right um but anyway
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suddenly we got it done and of course
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when I saw it in print I thought good
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God I mean I'm sick of looking at my
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face on there now but I quite like the
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cover with the knife it sort of makes it
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interesting but um anyway it just
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happened and I've people say have you
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read That's only about 30 times but you
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forget what you've actually done and
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then suddenly when you read it you think
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oh God that I really do that it's quite
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interesting but it's I'm very happy with
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it I think it's done quite well and it
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seems to be doing quite well so yeah so
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for anyone that doesn't know anan's an
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incredibly um popular fine dining
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restaurant establishment in the Oakland
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suburb of Parell which um you you
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started at at the age of 22 which is
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crazy young um and you only shut the
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doors um recently so it was open for
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half a century um I'm try I'm not sure
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if I I think I may have gone there but
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I'm not entirely sure but um I've Loved
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reading about you and um apparently your
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temper you did mention before you there
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was a big long band list you were very
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trigger happy with the bands but you and
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I have um before doing this podcast you
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arrived early we sat down we were
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yarning away for 15 or 20 minutes you
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didn't swear once have you mellowed with
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age well yes it's not so dramatic
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anymore but I think just in kitchens it
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just happens that way I mean I used to
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say that uh Gordon Ramsey was a bit of a
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fairy really compared to me because he
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didn't stab people like I did but I mean
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I you know that that was an accident but
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I did stab
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somebody but but in that you probably go
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to jail now if you treated your staff
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the way we did but it was I mean when I
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was 15 I worked in Normandy and you know
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there was there was corporal punishment
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you know if you did something wrong you
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got to smack and but that came from
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school too because there was corporal
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punishment at school so it was just
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quite normal but I think it's the
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tempers really come from when you you
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know you under huge pressure you know
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you've got 50 60 people out there
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wanting food you're running around and
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you actually just scream out you look
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you're attacking yourself more than
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you're attacking anyone else but if
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someone else unfortunately does
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something wrong they get it
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and you know I used to swear quite a lot
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it was actually mean you know foul mouth
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I mean there was definitely my father
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used to say that mouth of yours will get
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you into trouble one day probably has
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many times but I quite enjoy getting
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into trouble yeah have you mellowed with
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mellowed with age yeah I think I have I
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mean I tolerate things now which I would
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never tolerate before I mean I had a
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short fuse there was no doubt about that
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but I you just had high standards was
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that what it was you and of course I
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mean if you speak to anyone that worked
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for me anyone that worked for a long
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time with me they would realize that I
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mean I just did not allow them to drop
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their guard once they had to do things
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properly because people were paying a
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lot of money
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and plus they were our customers that
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have been coming mean over 50 years you
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end up with customers that have been you
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end up with their grandchild so the
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standard had to stay there and I I mean
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we were very high-end Silver Service and
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Beth my late wife was she was probably
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Al she was a kind person rather than she
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didn't swear at anybody but you know she
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had very long fingernails and if you
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doing something wrong you'd get this
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little pinch behind the ear or or just a
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little you know in the arm you knew damn
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well you'd done something wrong so but
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our standards were very high and I just
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couldn't let them slip yeah the way the
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way you ran your business over the years
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you you couldn't get away with that now
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either there'd be employment lawyers on
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the on the doorstep there'd be you need
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to go undergo sensitivity training
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whatever that is like um the PC training
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that wouldn't work with me at all I
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might tell you but um and health and
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safety and things I mean I had an you
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can't throw meat at people anymore can
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you oh well I quite like that I probably
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still would you know good hunk of meat
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flying through the restaurant W never
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Hur Simon Gul got that I think he
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although I think he probably exaggerated
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that one but never mind but you know you
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I mean I remember once there was this
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boy um and I I've actually felt terrible
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for it for the last 40 years but he was
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just not doing the job and I was so
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angry you know I'm chopping away there
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and I just had this huge passley knife
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and I just said oh [ __ ] sake and just
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threw it on the floor and didn't even
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realiz that went straight through his
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foot now he didn't say anything cuz he
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was too scared to say anything but you
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know about an hour later Beth said to me
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he was suddenly sitting on an ice SP on
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a a chili bin and she said to me is
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Stuart all right and I said he's just
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hopeless you know so you're not allowed
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to call people hopeless anymore either
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but anyway about half an hour later I
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looked him I thought actually he's not
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all right something wrong with him he
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was very pale anyway under his shoe and
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there was blood just pumping out
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everywhere so of course I just rang an
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ambulance and sent him on his way I mean
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didn't go with him just anyway roll on
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20 years and the doorbell rang at
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Antoine and I opened opened the door and
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there was this big boy and two very
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large boy standing beside him and I said
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oh Stuart he said chef chef and I said
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oh and these two boys said is that the
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guy that stabbed your dad now he had
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gone to England and he got a job he was
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running a huge catering company in
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Britain so he did very well and he said
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he showed me the um the scar it wasn't
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good it a bit like you know Herman
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moner's
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little anyway but he was he he became an
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amazing a different type of chef but
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huge and he said oh that discipline
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taught me a lot I thought yeah I hope it
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taught you never to do it to anybody
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else yeah well I suppose through his
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career even if he um if he lost his
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ragot staff he could be like look it's
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not like I stabbed you in the foot it
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was well exactly and he never he never
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snitched on you to his parents or he
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didn't even tell his parents un
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unbelievable you know like he was in
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hospital for the whole night I actually
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almost forgot that he was there but
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anyway in the morning I said oh God I
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better see how stew it was anyway I rang
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the hosal I said we just released him
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and he came back to work the next day
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and we never disc well we didn't really
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discuss it again so but he didn't tell
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his parents I mean that would have been
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a in court day I
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think what decade was that oh that would
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have been in the ' 80s oh yeah I feel
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like that would have been except you
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know everyone was doing all sorts of
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things in the ' 80s probably didn't feel
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the pain yeah yeah yeah yeah you you
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talk about that in your in your um in
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your book there was um an issue in an on
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in the ' 80s with um these little salt
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spoons you had oh which I've still got
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i' actually I think I told a few lies
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there because I found a whole box of
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them but we used to have little salt
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spoons on the table they were silver
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ones and they were very interesting and
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we used to find them in the in the
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toilets and but people used every night
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every day we'd have to replace them but
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anyway in the end
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as soon as they had finished their main
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course those salt spoons went but to to
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yeah look it was like a perfect little
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shovel for cocaine it was perfect
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unbelievable anyway I mean that was the
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80s I mean used to find I used to love
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finding the $100 notes for B did when
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she was cleaning the men's toilets
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because the girls used to take over the
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men's toilet they had nice grouting in
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the in the men's toilets and the ladies
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was too low so the girls would take over
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and make the men go to the woman's
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toilet and in the morning
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would find these $100 notes just rolled
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up just thrown on the floor so but let's
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roll on to the to '90s and 20s um she
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said I don't know what's happened but
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it's only $5 notes now in the toilet so
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we went from um sir Ernest riford down
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to serid exactly oh serid yeah he was a
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he was a client yes he was he was a
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delightful man man there is um God yeah
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you're running the successful business
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for such a long time there is um so much
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to discuss here and um I'm fizzing to
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get into it so thanks for being here
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today there was a quote I saw um to this
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day I still go out of my way to annoy
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people how old are you now what are you
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17 74 uh nearly 75 do yeah you you still
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stand by that you still go out of your
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way too oh yeah I can't help myself you
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know what I really love doing because
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you know it's the US elections very
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shortly and um I remember when Donald
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Trump became the president the first
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time I had all these people down in the
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bay window and they were all business
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people and um I was listening to the
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election and of course I he won and so I
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started put all American music on and
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when I was pumping around the restaurant
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these people they got up and left they
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couldn't quite cope with it but anyway
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now if I go up dinner parties and I
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don't really want to be there I just
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bring up Donald Trump and everyone you
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go home quickly it's quite good so yes I
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still enjoy yeah um yeah yeah that quite
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there I still go out of my way to annoy
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people there's something in the book
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that I found quite amusing so um um the
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2 am. prank calls oh that that was so
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much fun I mean I mean people people
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don't realize in restaurants you know
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like if you're a small restaurant we
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only set 50 people so if you're a small
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restaurant and you've got a table of 10
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or eight that doesn't turn up and they
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you know and then I mean that's a lot of
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Reven you gone and you've got the staff
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to do it and that happened quite a lot
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so but people just didn't arrive so of
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course I would you know after work you'd
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have a few drinks and then at 2:00 in
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the morning you think I might just you
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get a bit cocky you start rigging the
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people so oh Mr so and so anan's here
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um you're booking do you know what time
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it is yes I do I've still got all the
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staff sitting here you know it be quite
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nice if you would actually turn up and
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they'd Slamm down but I didn't stop
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there i' just ring them three or four
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times until anyway we did that quite a
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lot yeah cuz this is um yeah it's not
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like a today where you have your phone
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in flight mode when you go to sleep or
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whatever this is landlines that rang
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very very loudly that's um that's so
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petty though so passive aggressive and I
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love it I'm here for it I mean I just
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couldn't help myself but I mean that was
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just quite mild I just did I did all
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sorts of terrible things that I probably
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am a little bit oh I'm not ashamed of
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them it was fun at the time and I mean
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we worked so damn hard I mean the whole
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staff did I mean I used to start work at
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UH about 8:00 in the morning and go
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through till 4: and then go home and
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have a sleep and then go back at 5 and
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then work until 1: in the morning and we
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did that 6 days a week so or 5 days and
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and then probably 10 hours on a Saturday
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but you know you and if you you know it
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is a business and you've got staff I
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mean at one stage we probably had about
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15 staff in a small restaurant like that
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so the the outgoings were quite high so
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you and if you're full you can't get
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anyone suddenly you can't people didn't
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walk into an because you couldn't you
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had to push the doorbell and we looked
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at you before we let you in anyway we
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didn't like you you weren't getting in
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anyway
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but we you know but you could so you
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could never do that you're begging
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people to come in but no one ever came
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and knocked on the door they always had
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a booking
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so you know so when people just don't
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turn up but some of these people you
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know they didn't care about it so you
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know if you go out to a restaurant now
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you should expect if you make a booking
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they take your credit card number
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because you know it's suddenly you know
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that could be $600 or $700 that they're
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not getting it's a lot of money to
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actually lose you know that's the rent
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for a for a small business absolutely
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yeah so um yes so an was at 333 panel
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Road um and you were there for 48 years
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um and so every day it was open you were
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there oh yes well only once I went away
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I had to go to a funeral and I went away
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and I let Megan poock who's actually in
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the book she came she came along and ran
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the restaurant for me tonight probably
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hate to think what happened there but
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anyway everything was given away but if
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I if we weren't if if I wasn't there we
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closed like we closed is quite a lot
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actually because in the in the winter
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every every June we closed for five four
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or five weeks and Beth and I would go to
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Europe and then at Christmas time we
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closed for
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the because there's no there's no
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business in Oakland from Christmas Day
00:14:15
we opened and that was a monster day and
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then we closed until probably the 13th
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or 14th of January so we did close quite
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you know twice a year Well in in a place
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like pone goes to their house up in
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Omaha or power
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throw a rock down the street you won't
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even hit anybody it's quite interesting
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really that's um that's an incredible
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work ethic though way it's that's
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phenomenal really like why um why didn't
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you give yourself more time off was it
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like a control freak thing your
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perfectionism what was it no it was
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probably a bit of a I didn't like I
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didn't think anyone could do my job that
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was the thing there's no doubt about
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that however it was it was just my way
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of life I mean I didn't have any other
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Hobbies you know my whole life was the
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restaurant and minute I you know I'd be
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I'd be away on holiday in the two weeks
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time B and say are you all right said no
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I've got to get back to where I can't
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stand this you know what a waste of time
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walking around going to all these places
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but you know how many churches can you
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look at for God's sake you know but um
00:15:15
ABC another bloody Church yeah exactly
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so it just became it was an obsession
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with me I mean I love that place so much
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that it was my whole life I was never
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home my whole you know and many times
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you know Beth would wake me up in the
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you know in the morning under the table
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you know I just thought it was easy to
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get a pile of tablecloths and go to
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sleep for her and get up early in the
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morning so it was I mean Anne's was my
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whole life in this not and it was also
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be so you know we that was us and I mean
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it but we had amazing people working for
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us you know some of the people some
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worked for 10 years you know like quite
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a lot and and you probably reading the
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book where I was always accused of never
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employing women well that was lad of
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crap because
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Beth was definitely a woman and we had
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many many girls running the front of the
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front of house so you know but I quite
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like the idea of yeah we only employ men
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you know I quite like that sort of stuff
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oh yeah well so yeah um your be your
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your your wife who um you unfortunately
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lost a couple of years ago um yeah it
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it's an actually an incredibly sad like
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it's it's it's a wonderful book but it's
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incredibly sad at the same time because
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it's like um you had these two huge
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loves of your life one being the
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restaurant and one being um your wife
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Beth and you you lost them well yeah you
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lost one of them and then you gave up
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the other one at very very similar times
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so um the the backstory with Beth if
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I've got this right um by way this
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incredible opening up of fine dining
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restaurant at 22 but you open up a Dair
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in Christ Church at 17 yeah that was
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that was an interesting time I quite
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enjoyed my Dairy but I'm glad I don't
00:16:50
have one now but why that's an
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incredibly what sort of capital Did you
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have how do you open the dairy at 17
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well my grandfather left lent us £800 so
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and my brother John and I opened we
00:17:01
decided to call EST 7day mini M was in
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north New Brighton because that's where
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we where we were born and raised and
00:17:09
everyone knew us so we thought oh we'll
00:17:11
open a open a dairy so we opened the
00:17:13
dairy he he had I'd just been sacked
00:17:16
once again I got sacked a few times from
00:17:19
The Coachman de prison said I know don't
00:17:22
want you any cuz I thought I owned The
00:17:23
Coachman to him I was only 16 17 I
00:17:26
thought nah he can't coook I can't you
00:17:29
know I was always quite like that but so
00:17:31
anyway I end up going back there many
00:17:33
times but he did this one time he sacked
00:17:35
me I thought no we I'll stay in Christ
00:17:37
Church so we opened the dairy and it was
00:17:40
hugely successful funly enough and we
00:17:42
opened it at 6:00 in the morning and
00:17:44
closed it at 2: in the morning so it was
00:17:45
right down by the beach so it had um
00:17:48
very interesting trading hours and we
00:17:49
sold some very interesting things I
00:17:51
might tell you yeah you yeah you sold um
00:17:53
like individual condoms was it was it
00:17:55
legal at the time oh no well it wasn't
00:17:57
because you you would were not allowed
00:17:59
to sell anything after 5:00 that other
00:18:01
shops like chemist shops um grocery
00:18:04
shops so you had to have blinds that you
00:18:07
pulled down over the stuff well of
00:18:08
course we didn't do we pulled the blinds
00:18:10
down but we sold every damn thing that
00:18:12
was under them but there was the beach
00:18:14
and all the surfies were they were very
00:18:17
good customers that came in for their
00:18:18
alcoholic milkshakes and their ice
00:18:20
creams on the way down for their bonking
00:18:22
down at the beach I would imagine so we
00:18:24
thought we'd do the right thing cuz my
00:18:26
sister happened to be a surfy and we
00:18:27
thought we're not getting her pregant so
00:18:29
we the local hamburger bar he closed at
00:18:32
9:00 so he used to give us a sell us a
00:18:36
box of condoms and we people come and um
00:18:39
well on on the way to the beach so
00:18:41
they're by three or four and off they go
00:18:43
it's quite and we charged a lot lot for
00:18:45
them it was quite a good profit in them
00:18:47
I might say but we kept the population
00:18:49
down I think yeah so this is where this
00:18:52
da this is where you met Beth so similar
00:18:54
age and she came in to make ice creams
00:18:56
yeah well my brother his wife
00:18:59
um and and Beth worked in the same
00:19:03
hairdressing salon and Beth was the
00:19:05
senior and so Lee had married John or no
00:19:09
was engaged to John a very young age and
00:19:12
of course I had another job I had other
00:19:14
jobs in Christ Church like I'd run the
00:19:17
shop from 6:00
00:19:20
until until about 6 o' in the morning
00:19:23
till about 5:00 at night and then John
00:19:25
would come home from his he was a
00:19:26
painter and paper hanger and he would
00:19:28
come home and he would take over the
00:19:31
shop he and Lee would so and then on the
00:19:33
weekends Beth decided she wanted to she
00:19:37
get on her bike from St Orbin and bike
00:19:39
over to New Brighton and she and Lee
00:19:41
would run the shop on Saturday so they
00:19:44
started they were rolling ice creams and
00:19:46
selling Best Bets or whatever we did you
00:19:48
know Raffles and anything that was
00:19:50
illegal at the time we were selling so
00:19:53
cuz they don't they don't prosecute 16
00:19:55
year olds when they're Dair da own 17 so
00:19:58
so anyway that's how I met her and then
00:20:01
um I went back we sold the dairy after a
00:20:04
couple of years and well I left before
00:20:06
then I went back to The Coachman again
00:20:09
and then Beth came up to to be with me
00:20:12
and she she was working in a
00:20:14
hairdressing cell on Wellington then we
00:20:16
got married and then went to England and
00:20:19
then came back and went to ockland and
00:20:22
uh had we had partners and we opened the
00:20:25
restaurant and after about 18 w a year
00:20:28
or so after that we took over the
00:20:31
restaurant yeah what are your what are
00:20:32
your Recollections of um your first
00:20:34
meeting Beth was it was it was she into
00:20:36
you were you into her from day one was
00:20:38
it a slow bur or I think don't I don't
00:20:41
quite know what really happened there
00:20:43
because she she would come and then all
00:20:44
of a sudden we suddenly realized what we
00:20:45
were working together and I thought so
00:20:48
of course there were um we happened to
00:20:50
have bedrooms at the back of the we
00:20:52
lived at my brother and I lived in the
00:20:54
dairy which much to my father and
00:20:56
mother's horror but it was quite an
00:20:58
interesting little place in the back
00:21:00
there so that's how it all sort of it
00:21:02
just sort of fell into place if you know
00:21:03
what I mean yeah yeah which is um was a
00:21:07
wonderful part at the beginning of the
00:21:08
book um you dedicated it to Beth um this
00:21:12
book is the story of two people who had
00:21:13
a vision one of them was Beth who I was
00:21:15
so blessed to find um she God I'm
00:21:18
getting I'm almost getting emotional
00:21:19
reading this she managed to turn a dream
00:21:22
into a magnificent reality with Just a
00:21:24
Little Help from me um Beth sits on my
00:21:27
shoulder every single day God me
00:21:29
hopefully in the right direction I love
00:21:31
her I miss her I thank her with all my
00:21:33
heart yeah and you lost her on um the
00:21:36
30th of March
00:21:37
2021 yeah she got the just incurable
00:21:40
cancer and it was just the the worst
00:21:42
thing that ever happened to me really
00:21:44
because and that's really what Simon
00:21:46
wooly came and said you're you're
00:21:47
closing this restaurant down because
00:21:49
Simon woly worked for me for many many
00:21:50
years he owns antipodes water and he
00:21:53
worked and he and I went into business
00:21:55
opening another restaurant down the road
00:21:58
um and he and Megan Pollock are very
00:22:00
very close friends because Megan Megan's
00:22:03
father lent me the money to buy Antoine
00:22:05
so from my partners so they came along
00:22:07
and said you've got to get out you've
00:22:09
got to look after Beth so we didn't tell
00:22:11
anybody we decided on the 18th of
00:22:15
December that would be the last day we
00:22:17
did we staff knew but no one else did
00:22:20
and on that Wednesday or Thursday night
00:22:22
we shut the door and by Sunday the whole
00:22:24
place was empty s had got the movers in
00:22:27
we the whole Place had gone so no one we
00:22:30
didn't tell anyone we were closing of
00:22:32
course people said oh they've gone broke
00:22:33
you know however I didn't know anybody
00:22:36
one damn s but it was the end of our
00:22:39
life really and so then I luckily
00:22:41
because um Beth passed in the May or the
00:22:45
march of the following year and so I was
00:22:47
able to be with her for the whole time
00:22:49
so and that was very important to
00:22:52
me I just can't imagine how tough that
00:22:54
period was for you well it was awful and
00:22:56
I
00:22:58
I I don't quite know how you know how
00:23:00
you you don't know how you're going to
00:23:03
react and I I mean it just it clicks in
00:23:06
and you just do it you know and it was I
00:23:09
just my mind was blank to everything I
00:23:11
just had to keep her as comfortable as
00:23:13
possible and look after her
00:23:15
and and it was just it was really about
00:23:18
a month after she passed that I suddenly
00:23:20
realized I didn't have a restaurant
00:23:21
anymore I felt as though it was just on
00:23:24
holiday you know we closed the place for
00:23:26
a we while and so then I forced myself
00:23:28
to go back to the restaurant and I cuz I
00:23:31
still had all the keys cuz the
00:23:32
restaurant was never used again for was
00:23:35
only just open now as something else but
00:23:39
and I then used to go on there every
00:23:41
morning and just sit in the empty thing
00:23:44
and sometimes cry you know just the my
00:23:47
whole life came back to me and
00:23:50
I thought what am I going to do now you
00:23:53
know suddenly you realize you by
00:23:54
yourself cuz we don't have ch didn't
00:23:56
have children but we suddenly
00:23:59
you know you're all on totally on your
00:24:01
own so but I had so many good friends
00:24:03
around me that really did pick me up and
00:24:06
forc me to do things otherwise I don't
00:24:08
know what I would have done really I you
00:24:10
know you just get into a depressed state
00:24:11
and I was very depressed and but I had
00:24:14
these wonderful people that just gave me
00:24:16
a kick in the bum really and made me get
00:24:18
up and do stuff and I haven't stopped
00:24:20
since I just N I think that's the way of
00:24:24
it's how you cope you just think find
00:24:26
new things to do like I've opened a new
00:24:28
started a new company I'm going to do
00:24:30
food production from Antoine stuff um
00:24:33
but I've got amazing customers who you
00:24:35
know like some some of these people were
00:24:38
with me for you know like the Pollock
00:24:42
family they were there right from the
00:24:44
beginning in
00:24:45
1973 and it to this day I mean the
00:24:50
daughters of the Pollocks are just great
00:24:52
friends but they and their children
00:24:54
became Antoine's customers so and these
00:24:57
people are still around and they look
00:24:59
after me very well and but every now and
00:25:01
then someone say oh we haven't had anine
00:25:03
stuck an orange for a while we're having
00:25:05
a dinner party so I go and cook their
00:25:07
dinner party for them but and I get so
00:25:09
many people wanting me to do it I try
00:25:10
not to do too much but there's certain
00:25:13
people that I just love dearly and I
00:25:15
will you know they've just been so good
00:25:17
I mean over Co there was a couple of
00:25:19
people that we were very lucky because
00:25:21
we had three separate rooms in the
00:25:24
restaurant and so we could separate
00:25:26
people you know you didn't have to be
00:25:28
together and over the co time I mean
00:25:31
these people couldn't they couldn't go
00:25:33
to Europe which they normally do over
00:25:35
winter so they would come in and they
00:25:38
would just give the waiters huge amounts
00:25:40
of money just to keep them happy and
00:25:42
then they would you know there were no
00:25:44
bills they'd just put money into the
00:25:45
bank account just to keep anwin going
00:25:47
which is you know it's very important
00:25:50
not many restaurants can say they have
00:25:52
customers like that and we became their
00:25:55
family and they be they became ours and
00:25:57
that's exactly what happened so it's a
00:25:59
tremendous am tremendous amount of
00:26:00
Goodwill isn't it
00:26:02
yeah
00:26:05
yeah it just seems um yeah do you think
00:26:08
um had it not been for Beth getting sick
00:26:10
that the restaurant would still be going
00:26:12
now or what was the plan you must I I I
00:26:16
feel I feel um reading the book last
00:26:18
night I just felt an incredible amount
00:26:20
of sadness because it's like you know
00:26:21
you had these these fantastic years
00:26:22
ahead of you you guys love traveling and
00:26:24
you you put like five weeks aside in the
00:26:26
middle of each year shut the restaurant
00:26:28
down traveled and you went on these
00:26:29
wonderful adventures together and yeah
00:26:30
this should be like the decade that year
00:26:32
you know you get to do more of that
00:26:33
together well we though I actually quite
00:26:37
frankly I thought I wouldn't actually
00:26:39
the lifestyle we were having in the
00:26:40
early days I was surprised I got past 50
00:26:42
quite
00:26:44
frankly like Beth was actually the good
00:26:46
person she you know I was actually the
00:26:48
bad boy how does that work yeah you L
00:26:50
loved your di I just me I used to I
00:26:53
didn't start smoking till I was 38 I
00:26:56
wouldn't even employ anyone that smoked
00:26:58
but then Beth went away she she went
00:27:00
away to England with her mother for 3
00:27:03
weeks two months later she haden't come
00:27:05
back I have a funny feeling she may have
00:27:06
left me I'm not quite sure we we didn't
00:27:09
ever discuss it but anyway so in the end
00:27:12
I said um and while she was away I was
00:27:14
really bad so of course I suddenly
00:27:17
thought well you better come home so I
00:27:19
said well no more credit so no more
00:27:21
credit card you so she did come home and
00:27:23
it was the funniest thing as I was out
00:27:25
at the airport to pick her up and there
00:27:27
I was and i' never she smoked early days
00:27:31
and I refused to buy her cigarettes I
00:27:33
would you know she never smoked in front
00:27:34
of me or she'd go outside whatever and
00:27:38
there she came through the airpod and me
00:27:39
standing there with a cigarette I've
00:27:41
never seen a look on anyone's face ever
00:27:43
again you know I thought
00:27:45
oops but anyway so that was that was our
00:27:49
little separation for a couple of months
00:27:51
but the only time we were actually ever
00:27:52
separated but um and I don't think it
00:27:54
was a separation it was just I think
00:27:56
she' had she' had enough and want to go
00:27:58
away but um so she came back and uh oh I
00:28:03
don't know the restaurant just kept
00:28:05
going and going but when she when we
00:28:08
finally
00:28:10
did probably look we were may have only
00:28:13
stayed another couple of years because
00:28:14
we really did want to go traveling again
00:28:18
and we just love traveling so much and
00:28:20
we've got so many good friends overseas
00:28:21
that we like to travel and see and go
00:28:23
around with
00:28:26
but so we I think probably we probably
00:28:30
Co was very kind to us because you know
00:28:33
we we Clos I we Clos the restaurant and
00:28:37
um you know I just I think if we had
00:28:40
have kept going it would have been a
00:28:41
nightmare because the restaurants are
00:28:42
really struggling at the moment and you
00:28:44
know in the country's financially not
00:28:47
great so I think probably it all worked
00:28:50
out for the best but the only thing that
00:28:52
didn't work out for the best that we
00:28:54
couldn't travel together and that's
00:28:56
that's an end of our life
00:28:59
yeah and that's the um yeah that's the
00:29:01
cost of great love isn't it great loss
00:29:03
yeah what would um what would she say
00:29:04
your best and best and worst qualities
00:29:06
where what would she say yeah well she I
00:29:10
don't know whe should say had good
00:29:13
qualities no I I think possibly she
00:29:16
would I mean I was quite a good
00:29:19
husband for the most part and I did love
00:29:21
her dearly but I think what she loved
00:29:23
about cuz Beth couldn't cook I think she
00:29:25
cooked me once I said I'll bug her off
00:29:26
I'm having that crap so
00:29:28
um she loved me cooking for her and of
00:29:31
course if she wasn't working in the
00:29:32
evening of course I would make sure I
00:29:34
would cook for her every day and so I
00:29:36
think she she liked that side of it and
00:29:39
um but my my worst things was I just
00:29:42
never I was never home and uh and the
00:29:45
interesting thing is that we didn't
00:29:48
fight but I'm I've got a I've got a very
00:29:53
terrible habit of if I decide I don't I
00:29:57
want to have a fight I just don't talk
00:29:58
to you and which is mental cruelty I
00:30:01
might tell you because I I can go two
00:30:02
weeks and not even say one word now that
00:30:05
it's a form of torture that is a
00:30:06
terrible thing and that is one that's a
00:30:08
really bad thing that I are very good at
00:30:10
doing I mean I just think I'm not going
00:30:12
to argue I'm just not going to talk to
00:30:14
you and then it would you know sooner or
00:30:17
later you had to sort of one had to give
00:30:19
up it was usually me that said okay I'll
00:30:20
give up you know all that sort of stuff
00:30:22
because I think she probably did the
00:30:23
same thing but I would just I didn't he
00:30:28
if she really was angry with me
00:30:29
especially if we were if I was doing a
00:30:31
speech or something and and I got went
00:30:34
off on a little tangent I'd see her
00:30:36
sitting there
00:30:37
going like Zip It zip it or it's time or
00:30:43
if she she never she never called me
00:30:45
Tony she called me Chef the whole of my
00:30:47
life it was chef chef chef and I knew
00:30:51
damn well i' overstep the life at the
00:30:53
line of suddenly she would say Tony
00:30:57
whoops a day see something really gone
00:30:59
wrong here I mean I mean she just had a
00:31:03
she was just so gentle that you know
00:31:06
mind you you you knew if no one ever
00:31:08
argued with Beth because she's usually
00:31:09
always right anyway but and she would
00:31:12
always pull people up on their English
00:31:14
and all sorts of stuff you know like you
00:31:17
can but you may not all that sort of
00:31:18
stuff like the staff they all adored her
00:31:21
because they she treated them like their
00:31:23
she was their mother but we always had
00:31:25
very young stuff anyway a couple of
00:31:27
times we had had older ones that didn't
00:31:28
work so and uh we had very young stuff
00:31:33
that just end end up being our children
00:31:36
really which is quite interesting and to
00:31:38
this day I mean I've so many of them
00:31:40
ring me once a week just to see if I'm
00:31:42
okay or I ring them or we get together I
00:31:44
mean it's quite nice really yeah are you
00:31:46
okay yeah I'm fine yeah I mean I don't
00:31:49
yeah I think I am I I
00:31:53
sometimes you know cuz I'm now I've got
00:31:55
my new apartment and I moving out of
00:31:58
that house after 40 42 years and excuse
00:32:02
me we now that we I don't have dogs now
00:32:05
we always had dogs and that it was just
00:32:06
a you know different life and to move
00:32:10
out of that house was very very hard and
00:32:13
to move into an apartment but Simon and
00:32:16
Megan made sure everything if you walk I
00:32:19
walk in that door it's like going to a
00:32:20
hotel now but if I walk into that door
00:32:22
everything is exactly how it was in that
00:32:25
in that um house so you walk in you feel
00:32:27
like your home
00:32:29
yeah so it seems like she was the
00:32:32
sensible one in the
00:32:33
relationship what what did she make um I
00:32:36
I did this this this was not on my radio
00:32:38
at all until I Googled you knowing you
00:32:40
were coming in for this podcast um but
00:32:42
there was a controversial hero article
00:32:44
in 2010 where I think it's where you
00:32:46
said um about you don't hire a woman or
00:32:48
whatever it was clearly a joke yeah um
00:32:51
and you don't like fat people in the the
00:32:52
kitchen because they sweat sweat
00:32:54
everywhere or you talked about most of
00:32:56
the chefs being on meth which that's
00:32:58
kind of factual um what did she make of
00:33:00
that like little controversies like that
00:33:02
she said can't you just stop all this
00:33:05
why do you do I I just can't help myself
00:33:07
I mean every now and then I get bored so
00:33:09
I just have to I mean I think it was
00:33:11
Michelle hson that actually interviewed
00:33:12
me on that one and she played it up like
00:33:14
there no tomorrow of course I just
00:33:15
happen to say oh I don't employ women
00:33:17
you know why would you employ women I
00:33:19
mean that sort of thing I mean that's me
00:33:20
you're [ __ ] steering well I couldn't
00:33:22
help myself but of course people take
00:33:23
you you know you said it so you deserve
00:33:26
everything you get back but I mean fat
00:33:29
people well our kitchen was so small I
00:33:31
mean I put on weight now but I used to
00:33:33
be in anorexic so it was quite I just
00:33:36
could did not there was no room for
00:33:39
people to be big you know every time we
00:33:40
got a big person you had to squeeze in
00:33:42
and squeeze out but I mean that was that
00:33:45
was nothing to do with their weight it
00:33:46
was just that it was just the kitchen
00:33:49
didn't quite work and some of you know
00:33:51
so of course you say stupid things like
00:33:53
that but you know anyway I just couldn't
00:33:55
help myself did you did you get in
00:33:56
trouble for that like anyone like
00:33:58
boycotting the restaurant or no no just
00:34:00
water off a duck B well most people say
00:34:02
that's him that's what he said you know
00:34:05
he says worse things about other people
00:34:07
so yeah um yeah so so anine so um yeah
00:34:11
open in 1973 rent was 22 bucks a week
00:34:14
what was it you you never owned the
00:34:15
property he no we tried so hard to buy
00:34:18
to buy the property and in fact at one
00:34:20
stage Gordon Pollock who L me the money
00:34:22
to buy the to buy the business um he
00:34:26
said let's buy the building so I said
00:34:29
okay let's try so we offered the the
00:34:32
landlord a certain amount of money and
00:34:35
we didn't hear for about 3 months we
00:34:37
said oh God we've got this we've got
00:34:38
this building next thing we get a letter
00:34:40
from his lawyer saying if you can afford
00:34:41
that that amount of money to buy the
00:34:43
restaurant you can afford an increase in
00:34:45
rent so I took it to arbitration and we
00:34:47
bloody well lost so in the end I look
00:34:50
there's no point in and we could have
00:34:52
moved and opened it but Antoine's that
00:34:54
was me and it was our home and it was a
00:34:57
beautiful little restaurant it was
00:34:58
secluded no one knew it was there it was
00:35:00
quite you had to know it was there and
00:35:02
we had so many good people that I just
00:35:04
didn't want to go and open a new
00:35:05
business anyway and it would have been
00:35:06
too hard but in the end it was um yeah
00:35:10
we didn't own it at all and which is
00:35:13
mind you even now you wouldn't get a
00:35:14
huge amount of money because the
00:35:15
maintenance on that building was huge
00:35:17
cuz it's an old it's 100 over 100 years
00:35:19
old now I mean it was a was a piece of
00:35:22
old crap really when I think about it
00:35:23
what was um you say from 22 bucks a week
00:35:26
in the ' 70s what what was the 1 a half
00:35:28
thousand a
00:35:29
week mind you our main courses in 1973
00:35:33
were
00:35:34
$4.95 and when we close our $59 plus GST
00:35:38
I just couldn't help myself with GST so
00:35:40
yeah inflation works all the way around
00:35:42
doesn't it um okay let's talk about end
00:35:44
ones so there was a doorbell outside
00:35:46
that you had to Ring to get in yeah
00:35:48
let's yeah some of the rules so first of
00:35:50
all why the
00:35:51
doorbell why was that was it a security
00:35:53
thing was it just to manage who was who
00:35:56
was going to enter the restaurant well
00:35:57
it was actually part of the Silver
00:35:59
Service thing you know like if um we had
00:36:01
been to many three star Michelin
00:36:04
restaurants in Europe and of course you
00:36:06
have to you don't just walk in you have
00:36:08
to be let in and I just thought there
00:36:10
was nothing else nothing else in New
00:36:13
Zealand like it I mean people you know
00:36:15
just walked in initially we had a a pad
00:36:18
inside the door and people got in but
00:36:20
people if that didn't work you have
00:36:22
people sitting out you know because it
00:36:24
was a fo and then we thought why don't
00:36:26
we just the door make the doorbell and
00:36:29
of course that was the thing and you had
00:36:30
to wait outside and then of course it
00:36:32
was just quite intimidating opening
00:36:35
there
00:36:37
n yeah and what is um you had like a
00:36:39
dress code there or you wouldn't let
00:36:41
people in that were inappropriately
00:36:42
dressed what what is um an appropriate
00:36:44
addess well initially you wore a jacket
00:36:47
and tie mind you we weren't like the
00:36:48
Intercontinental or the northern club or
00:36:51
Orland Oran Club where they have a
00:36:54
jacket for you to put on I mean you know
00:36:56
which is to me even stupid even now to
00:36:59
actually go and have to put some crappy
00:37:00
old jacket on oh that was like me last
00:37:03
time I went to the chist church Casino
00:37:04
actually oh they someone else's old
00:37:07
jacket yeah know what's in the
00:37:10
sleeve
00:37:12
but it was like it was suit and tie but
00:37:15
then we relaxed that because the waiters
00:37:17
were dressed up I mean we had aprons on
00:37:19
them we had they had bow ties or in the
00:37:21
end we didn't like bow ties but we had
00:37:23
ties they were all in a uniform um
00:37:28
and it just didn't seem right for people
00:37:30
to come well we just jeans people didn't
00:37:33
wear jeans in those days unless they
00:37:34
were youngish people but I mean older
00:37:36
people didn't wear them I mean I
00:37:38
wouldn't be allowed in my restaurant now
00:37:40
looking like this so I mean all I
00:37:42
probably would but um shorts jandal no
00:37:46
no no no singlets definitely not I think
00:37:49
the best thing I tell you it seems
00:37:50
reasonable the the worst day was always
00:37:53
Valentine's Day you'd go open the door
00:37:55
and there were these young young people
00:37:58
but the girl look absolutely beautiful
00:38:00
dress up and they the boy in a piece of
00:38:02
crap you know like and sometimes just a
00:38:05
t-shirt so Beth would say sorry you know
00:38:08
what they always had a shirt out in the
00:38:09
car it was quite interesting so they' go
00:38:11
back but no look you can't have someone
00:38:15
dressed up in a dinner suit and someone
00:38:17
sitting next to them in jeans and
00:38:18
t-shirt it just didn't work I mean mind
00:38:20
you no I suppose people don't mind do
00:38:22
they I mean I've been just we go to a
00:38:25
lot of three star Michelin and and
00:38:27
France and Germany and places people
00:38:29
still dress up to go to those it's quite
00:38:32
nice though um okay some of the other
00:38:33
rules why no EOS why were you anti e PA
00:38:36
oh that was just me I couldn't help
00:38:39
myself was it last day till the last day
00:38:43
we still had the zipzap machine because
00:38:46
and then in February of the year we the
00:38:48
year after well two months after we
00:38:50
close end of checks end of all that sort
00:38:53
of stuff you had to have fos machines
00:38:55
well you couldn't do business but they
00:38:59
yes so for anyone that doesn't know what
00:39:00
you're talking about um the the zip
00:39:02
machine so you you put the credit card
00:39:04
in there was like a transfer paper thing
00:39:06
that went across um and then wow you had
00:39:09
that right till right up until 19 or
00:39:12
2022 21 wa what was it a was it a
00:39:16
principal thing or you didn't want to
00:39:17
pay the Wind Cave money for the
00:39:19
technology how to work
00:39:22
it and I didn't I mean still can't do
00:39:25
computers I mean I love my phone I do
00:39:26
everything with one thing I at
00:39:28
restaurant was used with one finger get
00:39:30
in front of the computer I can't take
00:39:31
with that but it became it seems so
00:39:33
inconvenient but it became a thing
00:39:35
because and of course then you'd post
00:39:37
them away and it took a few days to get
00:39:40
it back or even a week to get it back so
00:39:42
but we also had still had signing rights
00:39:44
like people signed for their dinner that
00:39:46
that's how many regular customers we had
00:39:48
and that was a third of our customers so
00:39:50
we sent accounts to them but anyone else
00:39:53
they'd come up and they'd just look at
00:39:54
especially younger they go what a that
00:39:56
thing you know but then PE Americans
00:39:58
were the worst they would come in and go
00:40:00
they'd get all that paper and they'd
00:40:02
make it take it all back and rip it all
00:40:03
up in case we're stealing their credit
00:40:05
card it was quite interesting but but
00:40:08
also I mean government people used to
00:40:11
come and say you've got to have this and
00:40:12
why do what law is it makes me have to
00:40:15
do that I mean I wrote checks until the
00:40:17
last week we closed I mean I sort like
00:40:19
to write checks I don't understand this
00:40:22
this stuff but it must what about people
00:40:24
that wanted to in the last couple years
00:40:26
people that wanted to use their f using
00:40:27
Apple pay oh God
00:40:31
no oh God no that didn't work but I
00:40:34
think the funniest one which I really
00:40:36
did do and I was in trouble for it for
00:40:38
quite a lot was we were plus GST and of
00:40:41
course so every page I'd write GST
00:40:44
exclusive was all printed because it's
00:40:46
illegal if you don't you can't do it so
00:40:49
so many people tried to go to the
00:40:51
Communist commission say these people
00:40:52
are ripping the C you know ripping us
00:40:54
off but and even John ke he said you
00:40:57
know um this this GST I thought it's not
00:41:00
my tax it's yours you know it's not my
00:41:03
fault we why why didn't wouldn't you
00:41:05
include GST in the prices oh because it
00:41:07
would have looked too high right no one
00:41:10
noticed it was put on afterwards right
00:41:12
and and um no Wi-fi a there was no Wi-Fi
00:41:15
in the restaurant no in the end we did
00:41:17
oh you did you caved well I needed it
00:41:19
for my
00:41:20
phone we used to tell people no I think
00:41:22
one night one night we had a group of
00:41:25
young Asian people and they were
00:41:27
beautiful young people and they're all
00:41:29
sitting around and they asked to see me
00:41:32
because they they said uh do you have
00:41:34
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi Wi-Fi I said no we've got
00:41:37
philp State we've got chicken we've got
00:41:40
this but sorry no Wi-fi they got up and
00:41:42
left so they couldn't cope without you
00:41:46
know um yes so who was on the who's on
00:41:49
the band list so Helen Clark was on the
00:41:51
she was banned I mean look she used to
00:41:53
before did she ever go there yes she was
00:41:55
there quite a lot I mean why did you ban
00:41:56
her oh I just don't like the labor party
00:41:58
much I wasn't here as a custom well no
00:42:02
it was she didn't she didn't do any she
00:42:04
didn't do anything to annoy me but I
00:42:05
just didn't like the way she was running
00:42:07
in the country but she was there quite a
00:42:09
lot way before she was prime minister
00:42:10
cuz you must remember when we opened the
00:42:12
restaurant it was Norman Kirk so the
00:42:14
labor party have been part of Antoine
00:42:17
for quite some time and um I can assure
00:42:19
you the McAn whenever that was and [ __ ]
00:42:23
and all those people they knew how to
00:42:26
spend the country's money coming into an
00:42:28
because they had been out of government
00:42:29
for so long suddenly they
00:42:31
little like little candy shop wasn't it
00:42:34
so um anyway so Helen did used to come
00:42:36
and Roger Douglas was a huge customer
00:42:38
but at least he went to the right side
00:42:40
in the end
00:42:42
but so so so you you had the spig list
00:42:45
but some of these people didn't
00:42:45
necessarily even know they were banned
00:42:47
no well I don't think Helen probably did
00:42:50
and she probably she probably wouldn't
00:42:51
want to go there anyway because she she
00:42:53
wouldn't like um she I mean she wouldn't
00:42:55
like my politics at all but I'm quite
00:42:57
bit boast about them I mean even the
00:42:59
National Party think I'm too too far
00:43:02
jingus Khan for them then I said are
00:43:04
they not right enough for you anymore no
00:43:06
God no I said to David Seymour you know
00:43:08
that when you get up to 20% you you'll
00:43:10
need some new MPS he said even we're not
00:43:12
ready for
00:43:13
you so who um kim.com he he was banned
00:43:17
was he just totally banned yeah right oh
00:43:20
because he was a castom he did what did
00:43:21
you have to do to get banned well he
00:43:23
came he came into an one and anyway he
00:43:26
said on two seats or three seats and you
00:43:29
that was fine I didn't have a problem
00:43:30
with that however the next time he came
00:43:33
in his um his wife I think Mona at the
00:43:36
time I'm not quite sure what her name
00:43:37
was but she rang and said he doesn't
00:43:39
like your seats he wants to bring his
00:43:41
own couch I he not bringing his own
00:43:42
couch and and I said we just he just
00:43:45
can't come in here we're not letting him
00:43:47
come so no sorry you're not coming she
00:43:49
said this is a democracy you have to him
00:43:52
I said is a democracy and I have my own
00:43:54
rules and he's not coming anyway she
00:43:56
rang the newsp I did not ring the
00:43:58
newspaper so of course it was a great
00:43:59
story so of course I said well he's he's
00:44:02
just not coming here ever again so that
00:44:04
was it so he was banned but um yeah he
00:44:07
definitely and kiss like threw them out
00:44:09
well didn't throw them out they had to
00:44:11
pay their bill but they were B oh the
00:44:12
banned um yeah Jean so Jean Simmons yeah
00:44:15
and he's actually quite still around I
00:44:17
mean and he's quite um they still do
00:44:19
stadium shows and quite political too in
00:44:21
in America or wherever he is but well he
00:44:24
came in of course he one of the waiters
00:44:26
dbbl some water on us apparently very
00:44:29
expensive shoes so he said well we're
00:44:31
not paying the bill so I thought oh yes
00:44:33
you are so I came out and those theyes
00:44:36
wear red trousers and very expensive red
00:44:39
shoes I just couldn't help myself didn't
00:44:41
like to look like a chef much and uh he
00:44:44
went I went out and he said well who are
00:44:45
you and I said I own the restaurant and
00:44:47
um my shoes are just so expensive of
00:44:49
yours and so I'm not it's only water is
00:44:51
not going to hurt you and he said well
00:44:53
we're not going to we're going to go and
00:44:55
I said no you're not so I said said the
00:44:57
door's locked and you can't get out and
00:44:58
that's all to it so I rang Lloyd Brown
00:45:01
who was the lawyer for oh I think at one
00:45:05
stage Elton John and John Reed they had
00:45:08
smashed someone in the face or John Reed
00:45:10
had and Lloyd Brown had actually stop
00:45:13
their show so I said well Lloyd could
00:45:15
you talk to these people so he spoke to
00:45:18
them or to the manager whoever it was
00:45:20
and said you know the police will be
00:45:22
coming and you will be arrested so you
00:45:24
won't be able to do the show for the
00:45:25
next two days so they paid and went that
00:45:27
wasn't anyway so we won that one you
00:45:31
love a Das don't you who any other um
00:45:35
people of um you wellknown people that
00:45:37
were that were banned or what what sort
00:45:39
of things did you have to do to get
00:45:40
banned there must have been all blacks
00:45:41
over the years that got in trouble in
00:45:42
you oh I quite like their
00:45:46
trouble no no they didn't get banned um
00:45:50
uh I'm just trying to think
00:45:53
who people knew if they were banned I
00:45:55
mean like someone one time I won't
00:45:58
mention this person's name because he
00:46:00
probably he's quite a nice man these
00:46:01
days but he used to sneak his own wine
00:46:04
and and put it under the table I mean
00:46:06
we're
00:46:07
talking you know wine Worth about5 or
00:46:10
$20,000 and of course you know we we
00:46:12
sold wine at that price and he decided
00:46:14
we're a ripoff he could bring his own I
00:46:16
thought whatever but he used to sneak it
00:46:18
in he' buy a bottle cheaper and then of
00:46:20
course start pouring his own so Beth
00:46:22
went down to the table and said I'm
00:46:23
sorry you can't do that he said and
00:46:26
anyway he called her a scrubber or
00:46:27
something and she she came and told me
00:46:29
so I went down and said so I picked up
00:46:31
the wine just poured into the ice it was
00:46:33
hugely expensive I just poured it all
00:46:35
into the ice bucket and said out and
00:46:37
never come back well about 15 years
00:46:40
later a very good customer came in for
00:46:42
lunch and said I'm bringing so and so I
00:46:45
said no you're not he's not coming here
00:46:47
he's got to apologize how many he 1520
00:46:50
probably 15 years he didn't come in at
00:46:52
that time oh well I knew look I knew and
00:46:54
I knew his brother and all these people
00:46:55
they were great customers but was never
00:46:57
allowed in again so anyway so he was at
00:47:01
the door and I said to the other person
00:47:02
well you can't come in either you can
00:47:04
have lunch by yourself but he's not
00:47:05
coming in so anyway the next day he rang
00:47:08
and asked Beth could be there and he
00:47:10
came and apologized so he's allowed back
00:47:11
but that was 15 years who who is it like
00:47:15
a politician or the next book the next
00:47:17
book oh my God that's an amazing story a
00:47:19
very well-known New Zealander it's
00:47:21
amazing that you um banned someone for
00:47:22
20 years for for a boo crime and it was
00:47:25
it was pretty stupid though because
00:47:26
spending a lot of money in the
00:47:27
restaurant I just cut my nose to spite
00:47:29
my face there was another one that they
00:47:31
had a bottle of a cam and he's one of my
00:47:33
best friends now and he bought a bottle
00:47:35
of a Kim that probably about3 or $4,000
00:47:37
a bottle in those days and uh he was
00:47:40
with some wine merchants and people and
00:47:42
wasn't they weren't the importers so of
00:47:44
course I knew they were going to say oh
00:47:46
this is no good or whatever so anyway
00:47:48
they drank half of it and then said um
00:47:50
oh this one's it's got no fruit it's no
00:47:53
good anymore and I said well sorry you
00:47:56
drunk car foot so they said well I'll
00:47:58
tell you what we'll pay you the
00:48:00
wholesale cost I said no you can't you
00:48:03
just got to go I don't want you here
00:48:05
anymore they said we'll never come back
00:48:07
oh I care it doesn't matter we're always
00:48:08
false it doesn't really matter well they
00:48:10
didn't come back God I've done something
00:48:12
terrible here but I took that bottle and
00:48:14
went down to the um Broadway Diner and
00:48:16
drank it with a hamburger so we we
00:48:18
enjoyed it but anyway the person now is
00:48:22
a very good friend of mine he said I
00:48:25
said Well why'd you come back so I just
00:48:26
couldn't not come back I mean we missed
00:48:28
your food we missed it all he said and
00:48:31
uh you're still wrong I said yeah but I
00:48:33
won didn't I you came back but that was
00:48:35
two years later talking many many
00:48:37
thousands of dollars over missed out on
00:48:39
yeah so a a A5 or $20,000 bottle of wine
00:48:44
um does it like who's who's buying it is
00:48:47
it like a like a a showing off um
00:48:50
situation or does it does it does it
00:48:52
actually taste amazing does it taste any
00:48:54
better one of them was um you know they
00:48:57
had 12 bottles of Shadow Margo for their
00:48:59
wedding and I'm not going to say how it
00:49:00
is because that's I don't know whether
00:49:02
it is in the book maybe it is I can't
00:49:03
remember but um they were having their
00:49:06
wedding they were an international
00:49:08
people and day 12 and we're
00:49:11
talking I don't know how much was about
00:49:13
probably about $8,000 so it's $96,000 so
00:49:17
it's um for their
00:49:19
wedding so no the people overseas people
00:49:22
paid but a couple of new zealanders and
00:49:24
I think that was a little bit
00:49:25
pretentious possibly but but you you
00:49:27
you've tasted it does it
00:49:28
taste I used to save that sort of oh it
00:49:31
tastes great but it taste that much
00:49:33
better though than say a $50 bottle of
00:49:35
rock burn or well in your own mind it
00:49:39
does of course it tastes better but you
00:49:41
know like someone like Michael
00:49:43
brackovich I mean he's the master of
00:49:44
wine and got and he's got the most
00:49:46
amazing pallet he would he would know
00:49:50
the difference between good bad and
00:49:52
otherwise you know but the average
00:49:54
person wouldn't as I mean if you
00:49:56
suddenly one lotto and you see at Anne
00:49:58
you can buy a $155,000 bottle of wine
00:50:01
you'd probably oh this is good but you
00:50:03
would have no idea about of all tomorrow
00:50:05
would probably be the same yeah what was
00:50:07
the um as someone that's been been
00:50:09
through everything and Sen it all what
00:50:10
was the best decade in business do you
00:50:12
think oh 80s really oh unbelievable I
00:50:15
was so I was a like a school kid in
00:50:17
palis north in the 80s and my parents
00:50:19
like every other New Zealander at the
00:50:20
time um got into the the sheer market so
00:50:22
they had sheares and um you know Telecom
00:50:26
Chase bry's just all the big companies
00:50:29
and then the the stock market crash
00:50:30
happened in ' 87 so and that was then it
00:50:33
turned to it was actually fine until 89
00:50:36
and then
00:50:37
90 the interesting thing is we used to I
00:50:40
used to laugh well didn't because I lost
00:50:42
a lot of money in the stock stock market
00:50:44
but our customers were all those people
00:50:46
you know like it was all paper money and
00:50:48
they were our customers and we're
00:50:49
talking the people that own the
00:50:51
businesses but then all of a sudden you
00:50:54
know you came in fact Beth and I were
00:50:55
staying at the Supreme in Venice at the
00:50:58
time and uh just being pretentious as I
00:51:02
was at the time and so we're sitting
00:51:03
there and the waiter came down said oh
00:51:06
you might like to read the English
00:51:07
newspaper and World stock crash and I
00:51:09
said go we've got to go home we've got
00:51:11
to go home they said why that won't
00:51:13
affect us I said oh really you know how
00:51:16
many shares have we just lost
00:51:17
unbelievable anyway so it was fine for
00:51:20
898 8889 then 1990 we used to look out
00:51:24
the window in the early days you saw
00:51:26
rolls-royces and Ferraris and
00:51:29
Porsches and then suddenly in
00:51:31
1990 they were all little Toyotas and Al
00:51:35
you know suddenly they' all lost their
00:51:36
money and Ann went from a huge turnover
00:51:40
down to about $8,000 a week which is a
00:51:43
and we that's when we I I think that was
00:51:45
when I finally learned how to run a
00:51:47
business because we had probably about
00:51:50
12 staff and we had to go right down to
00:51:52
about four and that's you know and we
00:51:55
just we surv but we were Treading Water
00:51:57
the whole time but it was it was a huge
00:52:00
let down because up until then I mean
00:52:02
you've never seen like I the good
00:52:05
stories I love is you know you get
00:52:06
people in and they'd see what the other
00:52:08
people were drinking and so we'll have
00:52:09
something better than them I mean we can
00:52:11
you imagine we just went mad on that
00:52:13
sort of stuff you know what's he
00:52:15
drinking over there and I he's having ss
00:52:18
oh can we have something better of
00:52:19
course we just happen to have plenty of
00:52:21
that
00:52:22
here that's amazing isn't it so um yeah
00:52:26
cuz you you went through you went
00:52:27
through so much stuff so there was there
00:52:28
was that the global financial crisis the
00:52:30
co time but yeah the ' 80s was the ' 80s
00:52:33
was the I had actually also opened
00:52:36
another restaurant in the in the '90s
00:52:37
and that was um that was down in the
00:52:40
city with other partners and it was
00:52:44
turning over suddenly it things started
00:52:46
coming right again but and antoan was up
00:52:49
and running again but I couldn't be in
00:52:51
two play that was the worst thing I've
00:52:53
ever done was go and open that
00:52:54
restaurant because um it was turning
00:52:57
over so much money but there were so
00:52:58
many staff and I and the owners weren't
00:53:01
there and you can imagine you know
00:53:03
people run rif and we went into
00:53:06
Liquidation in that restaurant but we I
00:53:08
did pay all the bills but it took me
00:53:11
probably took me five years to pay my
00:53:13
share of it but our suppliers were all
00:53:15
antoin and that little restaurant up in
00:53:17
Parell paid for all of that over five
00:53:19
years but they gave us time to do it
00:53:22
so you know that's why an was such and
00:53:25
it was just a a phenomenal little little
00:53:28
business you know it's but it's a oneoff
00:53:30
people just it will never happen again
00:53:32
no it won't happen again so in the most
00:53:36
um hedonistic uh years of the 80s um
00:53:39
like did you turn a like a blind eye to
00:53:41
cocaine use and things like that oh yeah
00:53:43
I definitely didn't do that I could I it
00:53:45
was there I mean it was happening in the
00:53:47
restaurant all the time of course I
00:53:49
didn't care they just drank more and
00:53:50
eight more didn't really worry me that
00:53:52
much and they left their $100 notes on
00:53:54
the
00:53:55
toilet however it's
00:53:57
very it's very easy I can see how people
00:54:00
really got into that and that's one
00:54:01
thing I did not do I mean obviously
00:54:03
things happen but um I did not get
00:54:07
because I'm look I would have been into
00:54:08
it like there was no tomorrow if I had a
00:54:10
started or you just got an addictive
00:54:12
personality can't help it you know like
00:54:14
I do love drinking but I have managed to
00:54:17
keep I don't haven't put my hand up you
00:54:18
and say hi my name's Tony but so many of
00:54:21
my staff have and friends have and um so
00:54:24
I'm very lucky on that aspect I think
00:54:26
let's talk about some of the um
00:54:28
celebrity uh clientele so I mentioned
00:54:30
before Suman Hillary uh yeah was he like
00:54:33
a did he communication was he wasn't a
00:54:36
regular but he lived in rera but and he
00:54:39
in June used to come in um because that
00:54:42
was she was Mrs mgre too beforehand she
00:54:44
was a wonderful customer but he they
00:54:47
would just come in for family family
00:54:49
dinners and um but not hugely but every
00:54:53
now and then someone would bring him in
00:54:55
as a as a cele
00:54:56
and um he was just such a downt earth
00:54:59
lovely man we had so many of those
00:55:01
people but his wife was June she I think
00:55:04
she's just passed recently she was
00:55:05
unbelievable and she and Beth got on
00:55:07
like a house on fire Rod Stewart oh I
00:55:10
Lov rod rod he's and Rachel of course
00:55:13
they were in the early days they used to
00:55:15
yeah and and the book you call her like
00:55:16
the ice cream girl or something the I
00:55:18
know she was on the trumpet all I can
00:55:20
remember her looking ice
00:55:22
cream so you yeah when did so did you
00:55:25
metet him through various decades like
00:55:26
in the 70s ' 80s 90s like Elton John was
00:55:30
a very early customer and of course he
00:55:32
then bought Rod stewarton but then when
00:55:34
Rod married Rachel they came to New
00:55:36
Zealand more and they were very good
00:55:39
customers I mean think Rachel his sister
00:55:41
and her mother used to come on so it was
00:55:43
a family sort of thing but um
00:55:46
afterwards I think it was quite funny
00:55:47
because I mean Rachel was quite amazing
00:55:51
and then when Penny Lancaster it's roll
00:55:53
on a few more years when Penny Lancaster
00:55:55
came across Rod went up to about her
00:55:57
armpit and he came to the RO he
00:55:59
pretended he'd never been there it was
00:56:01
very interesting which do you think
00:56:03
maybe he just didn't remember like if
00:56:04
you're going to a couple hundred
00:56:06
restaurants a year maybe you just don't
00:56:08
yeah but I thought he came in there so
00:56:10
often I mean we got up to a bit of
00:56:12
Mischief you know with with him and I
00:56:14
think with Rod Stewart um Elton John and
00:56:17
George Benson on one night I mean that
00:56:19
was so they yeah he knew that but anyway
00:56:22
look maybe he he's old maybe he just
00:56:24
forgot you maybe yeah that's right there
00:56:27
was there one night where you ended up
00:56:29
having doing an all ID with those guys
00:56:31
so it was you George Benson rod and and
00:56:34
Al and then of course if you're doing
00:56:36
enough this Jeff maybe it's possible you
00:56:38
don't remember the next day yeah maybe
00:56:40
but it was 6:00 in the morning and of
00:56:41
course Beth arrived to she vacuumed and
00:56:43
did all the silver and cleaned every she
00:56:45
set up the whole restaurant every
00:56:46
morning so she arrived and she said oh
00:56:48
finally I'm going to catch him he's not
00:56:50
he's not coming home but he's up to some
00:56:51
mischief and of course she walked out
00:56:53
there and there's us four sitting out in
00:56:55
the courtyard she just turned around
00:56:56
went home but Cliff Richard was both he
00:56:59
was in town at the same time and they
00:57:00
were trying to ring him they called him
00:57:02
the bionic Christian of course so he
00:57:04
didn't want to be anywhere near them but
00:57:05
the next day and of course Beth was she
00:57:09
was so in love with Cliff Richards she
00:57:10
thought he was amazing and she had been
00:57:12
to his concert that night and so um the
00:57:15
next day the doorbell rang and there was
00:57:17
Cliff Richard so she was a a pig in the
00:57:19
proverbial I might say but those I mean
00:57:21
we they used to come in look they they
00:57:24
would come in after their shows and of
00:57:26
course I'd just get rid of the customers
00:57:28
and if anyone thought I'd just get the F
00:57:31
the fire hose out and just wash them all
00:57:32
down outside tell them to go away but
00:57:35
what do you mean you get rid of the
00:57:36
customers so say they they coming in
00:57:38
after a show so say 11:00 at night so oh
00:57:40
you got the we just made sure that the
00:57:42
people that were there wouldn't be in
00:57:44
you know not cuz I never allowed people
00:57:46
to have photographs taken with these
00:57:48
people so and they could come in and
00:57:50
they would just not be bothered you know
00:57:52
that yeah and so many that's why people
00:57:54
came because they could come in and no
00:57:55
one would a deer go and ask them for a
00:57:58
you know they just went they just didn't
00:58:01
and but sometimes people would hear you
00:58:03
know um you know who's up at Ann's so I
00:58:06
had this huge fire hose so of course
00:58:08
they used to if they were out there ping
00:58:11
and through the fence i' just go out and
00:58:12
wash them all down they all went
00:58:14
so oh like media like pepperazzi and
00:58:17
stuff oh yeah yeah you wouldn't have
00:58:18
been lowed I would have I would I would
00:58:21
have given you a good drink of water um
00:58:23
yeah Alton so yeah you you almost had
00:58:26
like a like a romance with him like a
00:58:28
friendship so he yeah you met him um
00:58:31
when he was heterosexual yeah well
00:58:33
apparently when he married well after he
00:58:36
was when he married rata actually he he
00:58:39
had a second wedding at Ann's after he
00:58:42
had the one in Australia but um he used
00:58:44
he came in there way before that with
00:58:46
Hudson and Hall it were they were um
00:58:49
well I think everyone knows who Hudson
00:58:50
or Halls were they were the TV Cooks in
00:58:52
New Zealand and they G like gay shs I
00:58:55
remember them briefly as as a as a kid
00:58:57
and this was when homosexuality was so
00:58:59
God this is hilarious because um they
00:59:03
used to anyway they knew ton from
00:59:05
England because they were from they' had
00:59:06
been in England and so they he used to
00:59:09
stay with them around in Brighton Road
00:59:11
which where they had a house and then
00:59:13
they would come in for dinner and so
00:59:15
they in they introduced Elton to
00:59:17
Antoine's and then he started coming
00:59:19
back every time he came to New Zealand
00:59:21
that was the first place he came to so
00:59:23
me we and I mean he was this so much
00:59:27
in fact you know he was he just but he
00:59:31
also some interesting things I mean I
00:59:33
think in the book alen cars mentioned
00:59:36
they and a couple of our wait one of our
00:59:38
waiters went off off to um America and
00:59:41
then he was shipped off to England to
00:59:43
Alton and then they they dumped him in
00:59:48
Venezuela I mean he was but Alton was
00:59:52
just such a neat person was he yeah I
00:59:54
mean but he came what just fun to be
00:59:56
around you you him you had him in his
00:59:59
party years though like he's he's so I
01:00:02
reckon now he would say oh I don't
01:00:03
remember Ann you know he doesn't want to
01:00:05
know now that he's married to David of
01:00:07
course he would say oh no that never
01:00:09
happened all that sort of stuff but I
01:00:11
mean he was in party mode in those days
01:00:13
I mean like they all were and they used
01:00:15
to all come to anons and it was but it
01:00:17
was it was just their place I mean Phil
01:00:21
space Phil Collins was actually probably
01:00:23
the he was the kindest nicest person
01:00:26
ever came there and he you know they
01:00:29
just wanted to be by themselves they
01:00:31
didn't want people around them you know
01:00:33
cuz they every time they go out they
01:00:35
just SW swamp with people I mean and
01:00:38
that was the other thing you had to ring
01:00:39
the doorbell to get in so you just
01:00:41
couldn't just walk in if you saw people
01:00:43
there so and they and we had three rooms
01:00:45
we could hide them you know like K [ __ ]
01:00:48
you I mean Dar all C she was a great
01:00:51
anwin person when she was governor
01:00:52
general she used to ring me and say chef
01:00:56
can I come and cuz she would just get
01:00:57
the driver and she would walk up the
01:01:00
alleyway and go and sit by herself and
01:01:01
have lunch just to be away from people
01:01:03
you know it's it was just that sort of
01:01:06
place yeah geez if those walls could
01:01:09
talk eh yeah I should have actually I
01:01:12
saw something once you know had
01:01:13
microphones under the table that's I
01:01:14
could have been very
01:01:16
wealthy um what about um you dismissive
01:01:19
celebrities any celebrities that came in
01:01:21
and you were instructed not to interact
01:01:23
with them at all or they didn't want
01:01:24
anything to the staff or just anyone
01:01:26
that was just sort of underwhelming like
01:01:28
they were famous but they just sort of
01:01:29
laed Charisma or no not anyway I most
01:01:34
people that were we knew they were
01:01:36
coming and they knew where they were
01:01:38
going but I mean we weren't that sort of
01:01:40
restaurant I mean I don't can't think of
01:01:42
anyone apart from kiss that I just
01:01:44
thought were awful didn't like their
01:01:46
music either so it didn't really matter
01:01:49
but I I think I'll tell I'll tell you
01:01:51
who um well I want to keep calling him
01:01:54
Steve Austin you know the B mcmah what
01:01:56
he came in and he was with as they all
01:01:59
do with this very young they're now new
01:02:02
young people and um he came and he sat
01:02:06
there and I was the only one that knew
01:02:07
who he was and I thought I can't really
01:02:09
say it so I went and said hi and he goes
01:02:10
how do you know that I said I think I'm
01:02:12
the age that watched the biionic man but
01:02:15
the the um the staff said Who the hell's
01:02:18
that never seen anything like that but I
01:02:20
sat with him and just talked and he was
01:02:22
just so pleased that someone recognized
01:02:24
it's quite interesting you know because
01:02:26
no one kidss wouldn't I mean he's he's
01:02:29
old yeah and Freddy Mercury oh now he
01:02:32
was a
01:02:33
dream was it why so oh he was just so so
01:02:36
much fun and once again of course um I
01:02:39
think he quite liked the
01:02:40
waiters because we had very goodlooking
01:02:43
waiters in there yeah but he he was just
01:02:46
an easy person to serve I mean once
01:02:49
again you know they change when they
01:02:50
come into that situation they're not on
01:02:53
stage M oh what about um did you ever
01:02:57
know poking horn was he a customer M
01:03:00
yeah yeah apparently he's banned from
01:03:02
places now he if if the methew was um as
01:03:06
it's reported he wouldn't have had much
01:03:08
of an appetite I wouldn't imagine no he
01:03:11
I don't think he was doing anything like
01:03:12
that I mean he was a casual customer he
01:03:15
wasn't but it'd be quite interesting um
01:03:17
I don't know I have to think whether i'
01:03:19
ban him he's been exonerated sort of
01:03:21
mind he still got a case coming up yeah
01:03:24
um and some some politicians David longy
01:03:27
he used to no he was no David long you
01:03:29
know people say you know I don't like
01:03:31
labor or don't like anything like that
01:03:32
but David longy was in the early days
01:03:34
was a very very good customer and then
01:03:38
he in fact yeah he was he was actually a
01:03:41
great but he used to eat a lot as you
01:03:44
can imagine then suddenly he didn't so
01:03:46
oh CU he got the um the gas sleeve thing
01:03:49
yeah and um he but he never came well
01:03:54
yes he used to come on with his wife and
01:03:55
then I think he had a new wife didn't he
01:03:57
I mean yes I think he then married
01:03:58
someone else speech some Naomi Naomi was
01:04:02
his wife
01:04:05
somebody anyway but he didn't he then
01:04:07
did not come as a customer I mean but in
01:04:10
the early days he was there quite a lot
01:04:13
and um moldon was here a cust oh yeah
01:04:15
they all dear all beggy I loved them
01:04:17
yeah I I by the way I love mentioning
01:04:19
these names because it just um it just
01:04:21
highlights I think just how long you in
01:04:23
business it's incredible well mold was
01:04:25
um in in fact I Beth and I got on very
01:04:27
well with he and theia and or Dame theia
01:04:30
and we used to travel down to gizman to
01:04:33
in in the planes to actually launch the
01:04:36
blue boats with with the people so but
01:04:39
he was a huge customer but but he was a
01:04:41
customer in Wellington when I was in
01:04:43
there at The Coachman he was a big orini
01:04:46
customer at the time and that's when he
01:04:47
was playing games with all sorts of
01:04:49
people but then he came to Antoine and I
01:04:52
used to have you know the little piggy
01:04:54
money box I used to have it sitting up
01:04:56
on a mirror and even I could not believe
01:04:58
people throw things at him because he
01:05:00
wasn't the most popular prime minister I
01:05:02
might say however he felt comfortable in
01:05:04
Land once yeah um what about um Winston
01:05:07
was do you know Winston Peters was he a
01:05:09
cast yeah in the very early days I mean
01:05:12
he
01:05:12
was everyone was in love with Winston
01:05:15
you know that's when he was married to I
01:05:16
forgot which I think his first marriage
01:05:20
and he was at Antoine's a lot and he was
01:05:23
everyone was in love with him you
01:05:25
everyone thought he was going to be the
01:05:27
biggest prime minister we've ever seen
01:05:28
in our life and so he and we're talking
01:05:31
right at the beginning so and then right
01:05:33
up
01:05:35
until till he sided with labor he was
01:05:39
also a customer um or did you ban him
01:05:42
did you I probably it could have been
01:05:44
next especially when he he went with the
01:05:46
other side I mean really I couldn't I
01:05:48
couldn't he didn't come back then so I
01:05:50
don't think I would have let him in
01:05:53
anyway I reckon you talk a big game I
01:05:56
reckon um yeah I don't know I I feel
01:05:59
like you would L A lot of these people I
01:06:01
feel a lot of it tongue and cheek I mean
01:06:03
I mean look I liked it when they thought
01:06:05
they' being banned because then I but it
01:06:08
wasn't me it was actually the media that
01:06:09
does all this has nothing to do with me
01:06:11
I just look people just knew they
01:06:12
weren't welcome yeah I mean I mean I was
01:06:15
standing in that Chef's bar and there
01:06:16
was all the people I mean I'd just
01:06:20
go they knew damn well I didn't want
01:06:22
them anywhere near me but I mean they
01:06:24
were all customers but
01:06:26
towards the end I let you let anyone
01:06:29
because you want the money but but I
01:06:32
think no I don't know who I would be now
01:06:35
I mean really it's it was just fun yeah
01:06:38
yeah yeah yeah that's the impression I
01:06:41
get it's kind of like sticking away yeah
01:06:43
well what about luxon was he is he um
01:06:44
you know luxon yes I do
01:06:46
yeah he wouldn't be a great customer he
01:06:48
doesn't drink drink any alcohol does he
01:06:51
seem like Mr Trump came once to an
01:06:53
because you know when he was trying to
01:06:54
buy the casino the railway station he
01:06:56
was out here and of course he didn't get
01:06:57
it but he came into the restaurant and
01:07:00
um he didn't drink I said oh God no
01:07:02
can't have him he not going to make any
01:07:04
money he drinks Coca-Cola for God's sake
01:07:06
he's he's never drunk in his life I
01:07:08
believe no he doesn't I think I saw an
01:07:10
interview with him his brother was an
01:07:11
alcoholic a really bad one yeah he's got
01:07:13
a bad
01:07:15
diet well I can't remember what he ate
01:07:17
but he ate um he likes drinking
01:07:18
Coca-Cola and eating pies cheeseburgers
01:07:21
cheeseburgers and Fri well he couldn't
01:07:23
have got there once but he
01:07:27
um yeah well you I would never ban him
01:07:30
of course because he's so controversial
01:07:32
I love people like that but um oh
01:07:34
Christopher luxon he's a good man I I
01:07:36
had him at home for dinner and it was a
01:07:39
someone paid $20,000 to have dinner at
01:07:43
my house with Christopher luxon I said
01:07:44
well looks like you're coming to my
01:07:45
house for dinner whether he wanted to or
01:07:47
not he had to put his hand up I mean
01:07:48
$20,000 is a lot of money and we had him
01:07:52
for had him home for dinner and the
01:07:55
mayor of foram was also the person that
01:07:57
paid the 20,000 was allowed to invite a
01:07:59
couple of people and I thought oh this
01:08:01
will be interesting anyway it was a
01:08:03
great night and Christ lexon doesn't
01:08:05
drink so he doesn't drink alcohol but he
01:08:06
does like eating which is good and uh
01:08:10
anyway he's he's a he's a nice man I
01:08:12
wouldn't ban
01:08:14
him but my favorite of course is Erica
01:08:17
Stanford now she is the best who's that
01:08:19
Erica Stanford she's the minister of
01:08:21
immigration and and um education now she
01:08:24
is a sta is she why oh she's just so
01:08:28
bright and so out there and you know she
01:08:31
she lives and breathes politics she will
01:08:33
be prime minister one day you wait and
01:08:35
see um couple of other bits and pieces
01:08:37
so in 2012 you were um you made on the
01:08:40
The Queen's birthday on yeah for the the
01:08:43
o o nzm um yeah what are your
01:08:46
Recollections of that time well it was
01:08:49
incredibly humbling yeah it was actually
01:08:51
but
01:08:52
because you know a little old a little
01:08:55
old cook from from north New Brighton
01:08:58
coming to ockland and then getting an
01:09:01
ozm which is a very high honor and for
01:09:04
cooking
01:09:06
which yeah was I got a lot of criticism
01:09:08
for accepting that because you know you
01:09:10
know all sorts of reasons you know why
01:09:12
would they give it to you I mean there
01:09:13
always there's always people that hate
01:09:15
you for doing things but um that was
01:09:17
great for the industry and it was you
01:09:19
know and it was Jerry I call him Jerry
01:09:22
Jerry was a good customer oh the
01:09:24
governor general and it was actually
01:09:25
neat having him give it to me so that
01:09:27
was fantastic anyway that's um it was a
01:09:32
great honor and uh I'm very proud to get
01:09:35
that and it was very humbling I thought
01:09:37
oh maybe I should pull my head in a bit
01:09:40
that's what be said said do you think
01:09:42
it's now time you might be nice to
01:09:43
people yeah whatever yeah it's and and
01:09:46
reflection with um you what's happened
01:09:48
since then you know in particular with
01:09:50
Beth like it must um mean even more now
01:09:52
that you know she was around and she was
01:09:54
healthy to you to this EOL yeah and
01:09:57
we've got some we've got some good um I
01:09:59
mean I'm at the a lot with aut now and
01:10:02
i' I'm an H Mentor there and I do all
01:10:05
sorts of things with the kids and raise
01:10:06
money for the aut now and um I just love
01:10:09
going there with all those kids because
01:10:11
it's they are the future and we've
01:10:14
really got to get that up and running
01:10:16
again you know cuz we need people in the
01:10:19
industry because the hospitality
01:10:20
industry is in it's in Freefall at the
01:10:23
moment and it really does need a big
01:10:25
boost so we've got to get into schools
01:10:27
and tell you know get parents CU
01:10:30
hospitality's had a very bad rep if bad
01:10:32
wages bad you know it's it's not a great
01:10:36
industry to be in but it's it's been
01:10:37
changed so much now you don't have to do
01:10:40
20 hours a day you know you can do a
01:10:42
normal day work now and if you're I mean
01:10:47
I just I just love doing I mean I was
01:10:49
just so lucky that I had you know 65
01:10:53
years of doing a job I absolutely loved
01:10:56
I mean must be nothing worse than doing
01:10:58
a job you hate and going to work every
01:11:00
day hating it you know where I didn't
01:11:02
ever have that feeling I just loved
01:11:04
every minute of
01:11:05
it yeah as I said earlier it's like one
01:11:08
of your one of your two big loves in
01:11:09
life yeah yeah um there's one thing you
01:11:12
talk about in the book and um yeah the
01:11:15
eating disorder during your 30s um yeah
01:11:18
why did why did you decide to conclude
01:11:19
that in the book was that was that one
01:11:21
of those things that you had an internal
01:11:22
battle with with you whether you're
01:11:23
going to share that or not or was that
01:11:25
the eating yeah the eating disorder yeah
01:11:27
so during during your 30s
01:11:29
um yeah sounds like it was a very odd
01:11:32
eating disorder you like you just you
01:11:33
just eat raw meat chew it up and chew
01:11:36
bacon chew raw steak chew not I never
01:11:38
chewed raw chicken I couldn't quite
01:11:40
bring myself to do but I would cook it
01:11:41
and then Che but just spit it out so I
01:11:44
just lived on the juices of those meats
01:11:46
it's like a diet you created for your
01:11:48
almost like the vampire diet well it was
01:11:50
something like no it wasn't like that it
01:11:51
was actually I had read in you know
01:11:53
anorexia was huge at the time and I had
01:11:56
read how
01:11:57
someone um was so it would become a
01:12:01
disease and they used to tape up their
01:12:03
doorways so the the calories couldn't
01:12:06
get through to them and I thought that
01:12:07
couldn't happen so I decided I'd see
01:12:10
whether does happen so I just stopped
01:12:13
eating didn't drink alcohol I for a long
01:12:16
long time and then just drank water and
01:12:19
chewed chewed raw meat and things and I
01:12:22
lost so much weight I got down to
01:12:24
probably
01:12:26
50 kilos or something I mean I was like
01:12:28
a toothpick and I but I looked in the
01:12:31
mirror every day and thought I was
01:12:32
fat and Beth just one day she said to me
01:12:36
I got out of bed and she's off for God's
01:12:39
sake and I said what she said you know
01:12:42
those bells and people and all that you
01:12:44
just look like that all you can see was
01:12:45
my bones and rub and I had thought I was
01:12:47
fat so I'd actually totally Gone Lulu I
01:12:52
was buying I was going to helstein to
01:12:54
buy a kids clothes
01:12:55
because I just thought I was fat all the
01:12:57
time so it was a I start it started off
01:13:00
me just thinking whether it could happen
01:13:02
but it came became an obsession and I
01:13:05
just got I was just talked out of it by
01:13:08
everybody
01:13:09
and as you can see I'm definitely not
01:13:11
anorexic now it was no no but you I'd
01:13:15
say you're you're spelt now like you're
01:13:17
in you're in you're in good shape but
01:13:18
you obviously maybe still have some sort
01:13:20
of like Body Issue images like you yeah
01:13:23
totally why didn't you why why didn't
01:13:25
you get any canceling is it just yeah I
01:13:28
mean you were in your 30s at the time so
01:13:30
this was like what 40 40 years ago I
01:13:32
suppose this was in the 80s was it just
01:13:33
not a thing or well you just didn't talk
01:13:35
about thing you definitely didn't talk
01:13:36
to people about it I mean look everyone
01:13:38
talks about things like that now you've
01:13:40
got to talk to people but I didn't I
01:13:42
just became obsessed with the whole
01:13:44
thing and um and I but even now I mean I
01:13:49
think probably I really do think I've
01:13:52
got to start maybe I should go running
01:13:55
you think but I said I wasn't going to
01:13:57
say that but I don't know I sometimes I
01:13:59
wonder if I'm running away from
01:14:01
something you can over analyze
01:14:03
everything can't you but it was just
01:14:06
yeah I just still think I mean I am I'm
01:14:09
pretty vain I mean I like to look good I
01:14:12
like to dress buy good clothes and stuff
01:14:15
and but I think it's quite good when you
01:14:17
get to geriatric old age isn't it isn't
01:14:19
it quite good to sort of still take an
01:14:21
interest in yourself 100% 100% yeah I
01:14:24
think it's a good thing to pride in your
01:14:25
appearance but why um yeah so there
01:14:28
wasn't like an intervention or anything
01:14:29
yeah because Yeah you mentioned um like
01:14:31
Beth even you made some remark one day
01:14:34
about you looking like you're from you
01:14:35
one of the World War II concentration
01:14:37
camps so was there no sort of
01:14:39
intervention from family or friends or I
01:14:41
don't have family up here there only
01:14:43
Beth but but customers started asking
01:14:46
Beth and so Beth actually talk me out of
01:14:48
it she just said you got to stop this
01:14:50
and anyway it took it took a long time
01:14:53
but then I started eating I was being
01:14:54
sick
01:14:55
because you weren't used to eating but
01:14:58
then I'm I can assure you I do eat lots
01:15:00
now was that a a tough decision for you
01:15:03
to include that in the book or yeah I
01:15:05
didn't want to but I I thought well it's
01:15:07
quite it was part of me so yeah I didn't
01:15:10
really want to put that in there but
01:15:12
Geraldine actually she's done a very
01:15:14
good job she she's actually written at
01:15:16
how I talk and that's a good ghost
01:15:19
writer yeah and she's I mean I've known
01:15:22
her for so many years I mean she I mean
01:15:25
go she's a communist compared to me I
01:15:27
might tell you and she will even admit
01:15:29
that and she said I just can't believe
01:15:30
that I'm writing this book for someone
01:15:32
that I loathe everything he thinks in
01:15:34
politics but we became very good friends
01:15:36
and she became part of me and she she
01:15:40
did a good job of that I'm very happy
01:15:42
for what she's done I I think that's um
01:15:45
a healthy relationship if you can have
01:15:46
different um strongly different
01:15:48
political views with someone but still
01:15:50
you know find some some common ground or
01:15:51
even have a healthy debate about
01:15:52
politics but I feel like that's lost a
01:15:54
lot like there's a lot of people that
01:15:56
say well if we're not on the same page
01:15:57
politically then we just cannot oh it's
01:15:59
quite amazing I mean I mean I've got
01:16:01
divide's huge I've got a couple of
01:16:02
people that just we just do not discuss
01:16:05
Politics As We punch each other in the
01:16:07
face I mean it's that well I find it
01:16:09
quite funny really but I must admit I am
01:16:12
probably a little bit weird when it
01:16:13
comes to my political views and um how
01:16:17
like how are you at the moment are you
01:16:19
good are you in a good place yeah yeah y
01:16:21
I'm actually I've
01:16:23
come I must admit I get very lonely
01:16:26
sometimes you know you especially if
01:16:28
you're by yourself and um there's no one
01:16:31
around um I find when I fly back from
01:16:34
Europe by myself I you've got a lot of
01:16:36
time to
01:16:37
think and then you think oh really but
01:16:41
then I just get into work again and just
01:16:43
get it because I I just have to do work
01:16:45
I mean I don't think I'm a good person
01:16:47
just to sit around doing nothing and I
01:16:50
really do I mean I'm just so excited
01:16:52
about all this food food production and
01:16:54
stuff we can do because that's just that
01:16:56
means I go to work every day again you
01:16:57
know all that sort of stuff so I think I
01:16:59
probably do need that um because as I
01:17:02
said I don't have a lot of hobbies I I
01:17:04
love collecting wine and doing stuff
01:17:06
like that but that's not constructive
01:17:08
you end up drinking it I think you're
01:17:10
doing all the right all the right things
01:17:11
like keeping yourself busy I think
01:17:13
that's um that's key isn't it and also
01:17:15
having things to look forward to but
01:17:17
yeah I
01:17:18
amum I know you don't you don't want or
01:17:21
care for anyone's like um Petty or
01:17:22
sympathy but I felt sad for you reading
01:17:24
the book especially you know so you shut
01:17:26
the restaurant and then you go to the
01:17:27
Middle East and it's your first Tri trip
01:17:29
without be so you've got this um this um
01:17:32
you know this two huge lifelong loves um
01:17:35
and you and Beth had this remarkable
01:17:37
travel adventures together you went on
01:17:39
the Concord you went on the orang orang
01:17:40
express you went on QE to and suddenly
01:17:43
here you are in this um you the the yeah
01:17:47
what should be the the best and most
01:17:48
enjoyable decade of your life you know
01:17:50
in your' 70s and you've you've done all
01:17:51
this hard work and you've you've got
01:17:53
enough money to do these things and
01:17:54
suddenly you have to do it on your own
01:17:55
and it it sucks and that's a hard one
01:17:58
but I have very very I've got Beth and I
01:18:00
traveled with a couple anyway but we've
01:18:03
done forever and um and I I still travel
01:18:07
with them
01:18:08
so I wouldn't do it by myself I just
01:18:11
would find that too I've got to be with
01:18:13
people because I I mean after Beth
01:18:16
passed um these people took me to all
01:18:18
the places that Beth and I used to go to
01:18:20
like the or um to Venice to um all the
01:18:24
all the great restaurants and great
01:18:26
hotels that we always wanted to be at
01:18:29
they took me on without me knowing they
01:18:30
took me on to all those places which was
01:18:32
quite hard because Beth wasn't there and
01:18:34
we were staying in the same places but I
01:18:36
think that was good therapy that was
01:18:38
actually yeah made me realize you are by
01:18:41
yourself now but these are they great
01:18:43
memories and I just I mean that was a
01:18:44
very hard eight weeks I think it was but
01:18:48
but since see and I'm we go away now and
01:18:51
we just go to different places and it's
01:18:52
just a different thing but I it's still
01:18:55
by yourself and it's very hard
01:18:58
to I just
01:19:01
can't can't get my head around being
01:19:03
with someone else if you know what I
01:19:04
mean because it's just which I suppose
01:19:06
one day it might but I really but I
01:19:10
quite like my own
01:19:12
company that's no that's great that's a
01:19:15
really great thing yeah I wanted
01:19:17
to I was going to ask that but I wasn't
01:19:19
I wasn't sure if it was an inappropriate
01:19:21
question or not but about yeah like
01:19:22
finding love again because it's yeah
01:19:24
like I'm trying I'm probably projecting
01:19:26
here but if I was in your position maybe
01:19:27
I'd feel a little bit of guilt or
01:19:28
whatever even though you shouldn't well
01:19:30
I would yeah but it's what Beth would
01:19:32
probably want wouldn't she she well I
01:19:34
think she'd want me to go out and do
01:19:36
something else but or get someone else
01:19:37
but it's still only nearly it's it's
01:19:41
only still short time and I'm she's
01:19:43
still with me and I mean I've tried to
01:19:48
get um take photos not have so many
01:19:51
photos but I can't they've got to be
01:19:54
there because she and every time I do
01:19:57
something I fig maybe I should not be
01:19:59
doing it's you know okay okay okay okay
01:20:03
you
01:20:03
know I'm getting it in the air again so
01:20:06
I mean and as long as that happens I'm
01:20:09
not going to go with anyone else anyway
01:20:10
so but I mean see well to me that is
01:20:12
you're like you're not you're not ready
01:20:13
to like she's still you know holding
01:20:16
such a big space in um you know in your
01:20:18
heart well you know I'm decorating the
01:20:19
apartment at the moment and she think
01:20:21
what and I I can't get this why'd you
01:20:24
buy that
01:20:25
that's not right you know and I'm
01:20:26
thinking so I just talked to her I said
01:20:28
well excuse me that's what's going up
01:20:29
and that's all there is to it but um do
01:20:31
you you actually you actually talk to
01:20:33
her yeah and I know that's probably a
01:20:35
bit weird but I do no know I mean I
01:20:38
sometimes sit there and I'm trying to do
01:20:41
something or I've got to go and do a
01:20:42
speech or something and I I ask her what
01:20:45
do you reckon and then I I sort of know
01:20:48
she's saying don't talk crap you know
01:20:51
you know it's not true don't tell it you
01:20:52
know or something so yeah so I think it
01:20:55
probably is still too raw I mean
01:20:57
obviously she's not there but when
01:20:59
you've been with someone since you're in
01:21:00
your God like teens or whatever it was
01:21:02
and you're with them for 50 years and
01:21:04
you you you're in the process of growing
01:21:06
old with them like you know what her
01:21:07
answer is going to be to totally any
01:21:09
situation how how long but thanks for
01:21:11
being so open about this today um I'm
01:21:14
sure it's not how how long was it that
01:21:15
you could talk about this stuff without
01:21:17
without getting emotional I'm getting
01:21:18
emotional stuff sometimes I someone
01:21:21
asked me something the other day and I
01:21:23
just had to walk away because just every
01:21:25
now it's like a a wind you know it comes
01:21:27
to you and you think oh God I can't do
01:21:29
this um but I think the good thing with
01:21:34
her being there is saying get on with it
01:21:36
you know that's what she used to just
01:21:37
get on with it like i' she'd seen me
01:21:39
practicing a speech in front of a mirror
01:21:42
and she'd say oh for God's sake stop
01:21:43
looking at yourself you know that sort
01:21:45
of thing you know just do it you know
01:21:47
you can do it you know so that's all
01:21:49
that positivity is very good for me so
01:21:51
who who sitting on your shoulder as you
01:21:53
mentioned in the beginning of the book
01:21:54
that's um in in some way what's keeping
01:21:56
you from just being in this moping State
01:21:58
and just carrying on it's what she
01:22:00
literally what she would want well it's
01:22:02
making me get out of bed in the morning
01:22:03
and also go and look I mean with this
01:22:06
new company I mean I'm getting quite
01:22:07
excited about it because suddenly people
01:22:09
are coming to you and say you know would
01:22:10
you endorse this or would you that gives
01:22:12
me something to get my teeth into and um
01:22:15
but the food production thing I really
01:22:17
want to get that going because and
01:22:19
that'll be sort of like a Paul Newman
01:22:20
type thing it'll go to charity
01:22:22
afterwards and all that sort of stuff so
01:22:23
it's you know it just gives me something
01:22:25
to do and I think that's what I have to
01:22:26
do you've got to give back yeah yeah so
01:22:29
you you've done well out of the business
01:22:31
you've done all right y oh don't want
01:22:33
for anything no I'm very very lucky what
01:22:35
you know how we you know it's well you
01:22:37
say luck it's a lot of hard work though
01:22:39
yeah but did pay off you know like um I
01:22:42
didn't I mean I'm a great I can't help
01:22:44
myself spending but Beth was actually
01:22:46
the tuck away one so thank you B for
01:22:51
that yeah you like me winning a lot on
01:22:54
blowing damn lot but I and I no no I've
01:22:57
been fortunate that it's worked out very
01:23:00
very well for me yeah are you proud of
01:23:02
yourself yeah sometimes I think you know
01:23:05
you shouldn't be but it's a kiwi thing
01:23:07
he it's it's quite interesting sitting
01:23:09
here talking to you because I'm I'm 51
01:23:10
now so you know I'm I'm like a
01:23:12
generation behind you but I still grew
01:23:14
up in that generation where you know me
01:23:16
mental mental unwellness wasn't a thing
01:23:19
and you couldn't as a guy you couldn't
01:23:20
show any sort of emotion you couldn't
01:23:22
talk about these things but you're from
01:23:23
like the generation before me which was
01:23:25
even worse it was terrible yeah yeah and
01:23:28
I yeah you're right because
01:23:30
it's I sort of think you know you're not
01:23:33
you can't you can't blow your own
01:23:35
trumpet that's exactly what comes into
01:23:37
your mind you know so you were lucky
01:23:38
that's why you're doing all right but
01:23:40
you can't say to yourself well I can't
01:23:42
say to myself well you know you actually
01:23:44
deserve that you know because I think no
01:23:47
you probably deserve a smack around the
01:23:48
L for being such a prick for the last 25
01:23:51
years but I'm quite easy to dismiss that
01:23:53
one I might tell you yeah yeah yeah and
01:23:55
any regrets part for stabbing that kid
01:23:58
in the foot that that's actually that
01:23:59
comes back to haunt me sometimes because
01:24:02
this St I mean he was said
01:24:04
he it was
01:24:06
just just one of those things but I'm
01:24:08
really pleased that he really did well
01:24:10
for himself and every now and then I
01:24:12
think probably did him a favor really
01:24:14
shocked him into going and doing
01:24:15
something which it's a very cruel way of
01:24:18
making someone do something but
01:24:21
regrets see I wanted to be a school
01:24:23
teacher and they very early days and
01:24:24
then I
01:24:25
thought no I don't I don't regret not
01:24:28
being that I just think I I mean got at
01:24:31
15 through gra care I got you know out
01:24:34
of a situation where boys did not cook
01:24:38
into one of the best jobs you could ever
01:24:40
have in the world you know and it was
01:24:42
you know like cheffing was a a sexy
01:24:45
thing to do in the end but in the
01:24:47
beginning you know you you know you
01:24:49
didn't talk about it or your family
01:24:50
didn't talk about because you know boys
01:24:52
just didn't do that sort of thing and
01:24:54
I mean there's a whole generation of
01:24:56
people coming up now that I don't
01:24:58
understand other people don't understand
01:25:00
but you've got to include them you know
01:25:02
they are that's a new that's what life's
01:25:04
about and so I hope we've actually
01:25:06
learned something from our parents or
01:25:09
our grandparents cuz they were just but
01:25:12
they were in a different world you know
01:25:14
there were Wars or all sorts of things
01:25:16
and there was nothing you know nothing
01:25:18
to do but have children
01:25:21
yeah yeah cuz you that's something we we
01:25:24
didn't even didn't haven't even touched
01:25:25
upon but um yeah you and your dad didn't
01:25:27
speak for many years cuz he didn't
01:25:28
approve of you um being a being a chef I
01:25:31
suppose it was considered more like a
01:25:33
female thing being in the kitchen yeah
01:25:35
well in those days you know there had
01:25:36
Christ Church there was United Services
01:25:38
and I forgotten what the other Hotel was
01:25:42
and when I decided I might like to cook
01:25:45
I went along to see them and they would
01:25:47
have been 14 at the time and they so my
01:25:50
mother took me when we had dinner at
01:25:52
this hotel and had these SA AES and
01:25:55
Dreadful stuff whatever it was and and
01:25:57
they told me there'll be a seven-year
01:25:58
apprenticeship and I thought I can cook
01:26:01
better sausages and I'm only 14 why
01:26:03
would I want to wait seven years and
01:26:05
seven years later I own my own
01:26:07
restaurant so I mean it was one of those
01:26:09
things so but I mean it was a bloke
01:26:13
thing you know like my father was a I
01:26:16
mean he was a great cricketer he was a a
01:26:18
fantastic father look I'm not knocking
01:26:20
him for that at all but he was he just
01:26:23
didn't understand what I wanted to do
01:26:25
and his friends would have you know they
01:26:29
were just as bad they were just BLS that
01:26:31
didn't like so I just left home so 15 I
01:26:36
mean I look at 15 year olds now I think
01:26:38
God I was actually I was up in
01:26:39
Wellington working when I was that age
01:26:42
and these kids you know they're like
01:26:45
children still so I suppose I was a
01:26:47
child you know yeah yeah and it's worth
01:26:49
pointing out like you in a different
01:26:51
Island and um yeah North Island or South
01:26:52
Island back then it was like you might
01:26:53
as well have been in a a different
01:26:54
country um yeah there were no phones you
01:26:57
couldn't just me message home to get
01:26:59
them to transfer some money or they send
01:27:01
a telegram that's what what we sort of
01:27:03
talked about before like you setting up
01:27:04
that Dairy when you were 17 setting up
01:27:06
this business in panel which became your
01:27:07
lifelong passion at the age of 22 it's
01:27:10
um it's incredible um yeah uh what about
01:27:14
Legacy what's what do you hope your
01:27:16
legacy will be as a like a and in the
01:27:18
New Zealand calary scene well i' would
01:27:20
like to think you know there's a lot of
01:27:22
people think I'm this oldfashioned fat
01:27:24
you know but this grumpy old bastard
01:27:26
grumpy old
01:27:27
bastard you know you know I don't know
01:27:30
what I think someone called me actually
01:27:32
I was at the aut and a girl came into a
01:27:34
meeting and um I looked at her I thought
01:27:36
i' would never employ you in my whole
01:27:37
life and she called me a misogynist and
01:27:40
I thought oh I probably am I mean really
01:27:42
I said what does that mean anyway and
01:27:45
and I said you know I wouldn't I
01:27:46
wouldn't employ you in a million years
01:27:48
looking like that so of course everyone
01:27:49
around the table's go oh God you can't
01:27:51
say that you can't say that and I
01:27:53
thought no I wouldn't and I still
01:27:55
wouldn't but I would I just think kids I
01:27:59
mean I've I'm going to be part of the
01:28:02
you know even when I'm gone I'll be part
01:28:03
of the aut and I've got culinary people
01:28:06
that will all come from industry that
01:28:08
will manage the funds that go in there
01:28:10
and it's got to be for kids and it's got
01:28:12
to be for the cooking side of things so
01:28:14
I'd just quite like to think that in 50
01:28:16
years time there because they they just
01:28:18
they opened a theater under BS and my
01:28:20
name uh in at the aut and i' just like
01:28:24
in 50 years time to think that it's
01:28:26
still going because you've got to know
01:28:28
the basics Before You Can Be Clever you
01:28:30
know and that's what we really do are
01:28:33
teaching and that's why I just love the
01:28:35
aut because there some very good tuts
01:28:37
there and they they just want these kids
01:28:40
to do well and it's I mean some amazing
01:28:43
young kids when when I did the food
01:28:45
production there these I don't think
01:28:47
they'd ever met anyone like me because
01:28:48
that's oh Chef it's time for a break
01:28:50
you're not having a break excuse me you
01:28:51
don't have breakes you know you're going
01:28:54
to go for the whole eight oh got no no
01:28:56
you're not having one you know if you
01:28:58
want to just go and don't come back but
01:29:00
you know what they were amazing they
01:29:01
just wanted to do it and they were so
01:29:03
excited you know and without bashing
01:29:05
them up I mean like you know I try and
01:29:09
say to people you know when you're in a
01:29:10
restaurant situation you can't suddenly
01:29:13
say oh I've done four hours I've got to
01:29:14
go and have a break I mean you're in the
01:29:16
middle of cooking you don't just ask
01:29:17
hold on customers I'll be back in 20
01:29:19
minutes after I've had my [ __ ] or my
01:29:21
coffee I mean it just doesn't work that
01:29:23
way but it's I would just like the kids
01:29:26
to look at and look and see what I have
01:29:29
done and that it's possible for anybody
01:29:31
to do it and it is there's no doubt
01:29:33
about
01:29:34
that I love that that's a great answer
01:29:37
this has been way less swearer than what
01:29:39
I was say you know I can I have got a fa
01:29:41
mouth if you push that
01:29:43
button is it is it just after you've had
01:29:45
like a couple of roses or no it's after
01:29:47
I've had seven shots of coffee instead
01:29:49
of just three okay um oh one like one to
01:29:52
finish with we'll finish with the the
01:29:54
old classic dinner party one if you
01:29:55
could invite say five people to a dinner
01:29:57
party alive or dead who would they be
01:29:59
well they' definitely be Elton John M um
01:30:02
Phil
01:30:04
Collins um John Key probably Christopher
01:30:09
lexon he he still has to prove himself a
01:30:11
little bit but I think he's on the right
01:30:13
track Erica Stanford definitely and then
01:30:16
how many is that are you have as many as
01:30:18
you want anyway we can make the table I
01:30:20
might bring kiss over Just for kicks
01:30:24
just so you put some water on Jan
01:30:26
Simon's shoes again but I I'll tell you
01:30:28
there someone that um which I haven't
01:30:30
mentioned actually s black all those
01:30:31
years ago she used to live at when she
01:30:33
was in New Zealand she used to live at
01:30:34
the White heren Lodge around the corner
01:30:36
and I used to cook for her every she'd
01:30:38
either come in and cook she was was the
01:30:40
most amazing downto earth person you I
01:30:43
think she influenced me quite a lot cuz
01:30:45
she's just a you know nobody that did it
01:30:48
fantastically I mean you couldn't
01:30:50
understand the word she was saying when
01:30:51
she was talking but you know my family
01:30:53
probably came from the same area as her
01:30:54
so you know she was just an amazing
01:30:57
person that you know just wanted to talk
01:31:00
to you and um yeah so I'd have to invite
01:31:03
her and definitely invite Donald Trump
01:31:06
he would have to be at my dinner party
01:31:07
because you know we could get rid of the
01:31:09
people early just no um no red caps oh I
01:31:12
quite like I see you got a bit of red
01:31:14
there no but I mean um would you let
01:31:16
them through the uh you know the the
01:31:19
door with a with a cap on oh totally but
01:31:21
I know he have to take his hat off once
01:31:23
he got in but I'd like like everyone to
01:31:24
see him walking up with the head someone
01:31:26
just came came back from from America
01:31:29
and they bought they I'm sorry it's such
01:31:31
a silly little present but it's a block
01:31:33
of chocolates with Don Donald Trump he
01:31:37
said I just bought it for your Lolly
01:31:38
Jazz just to piss everybody off it's the
01:31:41
best chocolate people tell me it's the
01:31:42
best chocolate I I quite like watching
01:31:45
like comedians do impressions of a m
01:31:46
it's very easy to imp personate he's the
01:31:48
easiest person in the whole world you
01:31:50
China China I just love all that stuff
01:31:52
when of my friends said to me it's the
01:31:53
best chocolate I've ever had I don't
01:31:55
know is as well it's the
01:31:58
hand hey um Tony EST thank you so much
01:32:01
for your time today mate I've really
01:32:02
enjoyed it and um yeah congratulations
01:32:04
on an epic career and life and and
01:32:06
business hey thank you for having me
01:32:08
let's hope it keep keeps going on H oh
01:32:11
100% I'm sure it will cheers man great

Podspun Insights

In this episode, listeners are treated to a candid conversation with Tony Est, the legendary chef behind the iconic restaurant Antoine's. With a career spanning over five decades, Tony shares the ups and downs of his culinary journey, starting from his teenage years running a dairy to opening his fine dining establishment at just 22 years old. The discussion dives deep into the emotional and often chaotic world of restaurant life, revealing the pressures of maintaining high standards and the unique relationships formed with staff and customers alike.

As Tony reflects on his past, he recounts humorous anecdotes, including the infamous "band list" of customers and the wild antics that took place behind the scenes. He opens up about the loss of his beloved wife, Beth, and how her memory continues to inspire him. The conversation touches on themes of love, loss, and the relentless pursuit of excellence in the kitchen, all while maintaining a light-hearted tone that keeps listeners engaged.

Listeners will find themselves laughing at Tony's mischief and the absurdities of restaurant life, while also feeling the weight of his heartfelt memories. This episode is a delightful blend of humor, nostalgia, and poignant moments that remind us of the power of food, love, and the stories that shape our lives.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 95
    Most heartwarming
  • 90
    Most emotional
  • 90
    Best overall
  • 85
    Most inspiring

Episode Highlights

  • Mellowing with Age
    Reflecting on his temper and how it has changed over the years.
    “I think I have mellowed with age.”
    @ 04m 35s
    December 22, 2024
  • Prank Calls at 2 AM
    He would prank call no-shows to vent frustration after long shifts.
    “I just ring them three or four times until...”
    @ 11m 48s
    December 22, 2024
  • A Love Story
    This book is the story of two people who had a vision, one of them was Beth.
    “I was so blessed to find her.”
    @ 21m 15s
    December 22, 2024
  • The Closure of Antoine's
    The restaurant closure marked a significant turning point in his life.
    “It was the end of our life really.”
    @ 22m 39s
    December 22, 2024
  • Valentine's Day Dilemma
    The worst day for dress code clashes at the restaurant, with beautifully dressed girls and casual boys.
    “The girl looked absolutely beautiful, but the boy in a piece of crap.”
    @ 37m 59s
    December 22, 2024
  • Banning Celebrities
    The restaurant had a list of banned customers, including politicians and celebrities.
    “Helen Clark was banned because I just don’t like the labor party much.”
    @ 41m 51s
    December 22, 2024
  • The 80s Boom
    Reflecting on the vibrant and hedonistic business environment of the 1980s.
    “The 80s was unbelievable; it was a phenomenal little business.”
    @ 50m 12s
    December 22, 2024
  • A Humbling Honor
    Receiving an OZM was incredibly humbling and a proud moment for the chef.
    “It was a great honor and I’m very proud to get that.”
    @ 01h 09m 35s
    December 22, 2024
  • The Vampire Diet
    The chef shares his unusual eating disorder experience during his 30s.
    “I just lived on the juices of those meats.”
    @ 01h 11m 48s
    December 22, 2024
  • Reflections on Aging
    Discussing the importance of taking care of oneself as one ages.
    “I think it’s quite good to sort of still take an interest in yourself.”
    @ 01h 14m 19s
    December 22, 2024
  • Navigating Loneliness
    Opening up about feelings of loneliness after losing a partner.
    “I just can’t get my head around being with someone else.”
    @ 01h 19m 01s
    December 22, 2024
  • Legacy and Impact
    A chef reflects on his legacy and hopes to inspire future generations.
    “I’d just quite like to think that in 50 years time it’s still going.”
    @ 01h 28m 16s
    December 22, 2024

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Beach Memories18:22
  • Technology Struggles39:26
  • Celebrity Encounters56:40
  • Reflecting on the Past1:09:46
  • Obsession1:13:42
  • Loneliness1:19:01
  • Legacy1:28:16
  • Dinner Party1:31:03

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown