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Bryce Casey on Miscarriage, Mental Health & What Fatherhood Taught Him

August 24, 202502:16:28
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>> Top tier.
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>> Nice. This is our generate room. In
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helping Kiwis maximize their Kiwi Saver
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Maximize. Generate. Putting performance
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first.
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>> Bryce Casey, welcome to my podcast.
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>> Dom Harvey, nice to be here. It's weird.
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I listen to your podcast and watch your
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podcast more than any other podcast. So,
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it's weird to be sitting in this chair
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that I've sort of looked at and listened
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to.
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>> Yeah, you're a sauna listener.
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>> I'm a sauna listener. I listen to you
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nude, which I think is what I said to
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you when I saw you uh a couple of months
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ago. And then I realized that's a weird
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way to open a a conversation. Uh yeah.
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No, I I have a I got a little infrared
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sauna in our garage and uh I sort of
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have I listen to you in little 20 minute
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bursts nude. Enjoy it.
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>> I'm pleased it's a home sauna. Like if
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if you told me it was like, "Yeah, you
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were a racket club. I'm nude."
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>> I want to be that guy.
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>> No, I enjoy it. So it's nice to be here.
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>> Oh, thanks. It's great to be here. And
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you haven't um uh as far as I'm aware
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done a lot of these. I found one that
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you've done with um Brody Kane 5 years
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ago on her Kiwi Yards podcast. Is that
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the only sort of longish form podcast
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you've done?
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>> I reckon that and maybe Yeah. And maybe
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one with Sharon with Nadine and Dan uh
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Nadine Higgins and her husband went, but
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that was purely based on the fertility
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when they were trying to um
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>> have a baby,
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>> right?
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>> So they were sort of asking us questions
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about how our journey went. But yeah,
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no, nothing on myself specifically. So
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this may be your quickest yet.
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>> Oh, it definitely won't be. There's a
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lot to talk about. Did does it sit
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comfortably with you? Are you like okay
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talking about yourself?
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>> Every radio announcer likes to talk
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about themselves.
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>> I'm not going to lie. I'm not going to
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try and be [ __ ] humble or anything
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else,
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>> but I don't know what you're going to
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ask me. So, we'll see what gets asked as
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to how comfortable I am.
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>> Um, you've you've done some [ __ ] Uh,
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this year it's your 25th year
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anniversary on the rock. 15 of those on
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breakfast.
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>> Yeah, close to. Yeah. I think I started
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Bricky in 2008, 2009. So yeah, around
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>> even longer than that, right?
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>> Yeah, I think maybe Yeah, like 17, 18
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years or something on Bricky now.
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>> It's too It's crazy longevity at one
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station.
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>> Yeah, I remember when we early on, maybe
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five, six, seven years into it. I
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remember other people had said John O'
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Prior actually was one of them. He's
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like, you don't want to get typ cast
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into one station. And which was funny
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for him to say at the time cuz he was
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typ cast into the he obviously since not
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a good friend of mine. But um and I
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remember being concerned with that,
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thinking, "Yeah, I do need to be able to
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do other stations." But 25 years on, I
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don't think so at all. Like I think I
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could work on other stations, but The
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Rocks provided me with everything so
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far. So,
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>> and I still bloody enjoy it.
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>> I mean, if it's a if it's a station that
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you could retire on, that wouldn't be
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the Look, I remember having um like
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Christian Cullen on the podcast last
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year and loved that.
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>> He he he didn't want to go to Ireland to
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play for Monster. Like, he wanted to
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finish in Wellington. He [ __ ] loved
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Wellington. I don't think there's
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anything bad if you have your whole
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career at one outfit.
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>> No, I don't think so at all. And
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especially if um it's given you the
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things that you wanted it to, you know,
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in terms of whatever those personal
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goals are or you know, like for me um
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The Rock sort of provided everything. We
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we've been lucky though. We've been I
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mean used to work obviously at the
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company, but The Rocks are super stable
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station. Uh like I've had the same boss
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the entire time that I've been there.
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Rod, who's my main co-host on the show,
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has been like a constant mainstay the
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whole time. Even the other people on the
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show have been there a lot, like whether
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it be Andrew Mulligan or or whatever,
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and Dunk who works at the station. So,
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all of that, it's like a family. So,
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yeah, that makes it a lot easier to stay
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there as well when it's people that you
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actually like.
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>> Yeah, it's funny that you say it's like
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like a family and there's so many family
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members that have been there that entire
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time. Um, the difference between when
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you started and now, like they're two
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completely different stations in a way,
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aren't they? It's like a station that's
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growing up.
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>> Wildly different.
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>> Yeah. And I think you're you are a lot
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to do with that as well.
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>> Like the heart of the station.
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>> Uh yeah. Well, no. Yeah. Hard to answer
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that.
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>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But we we'll get to
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that later. But the charity stuff you've
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done, you've sort of been the driver of
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that. I'd say
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>> you're you're correct to say The Rock is
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a very different station in 2025 to what
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it was when I started in 2000.
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>> So, um Yes. So, how old were you when
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you started? Like 20. 20
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>> 20
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>> didn't know what I wanted to do. Um all
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my well my dad was quite successful in
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work. Um he was like near pretty much
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CEO at B&Z when I was growing up. So my
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dad was always always away with work did
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well with work stuff. My sister's real
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sharp. She had a degree and um I'm the
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youngest of three. Got an older brother
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and he was doing well as well out of
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school and all my mates were off to uni
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and so there was good pressure to be
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like what are you going to do? And I
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didn't do that well academically at
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school. Like I loved school, loved oning
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college, but I more loved hanging out
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with my mates and that side of it. And
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then didn't really know what I wanted to
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do.
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Went to go and study down in Dunners cuz
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my girlfriend was moving down there.
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Then we broke up. Um and then I was
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like, [ __ ] what am I going to do here?
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And cuz I didn't have bery, I had to
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just live in Deneden for 6 months until
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I turned 20. And then that didn't end
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well cuz didn't achieve much in that 6
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months. And then I remember, yeah, I
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went to Melbourne where my mom and dad
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were at the time and I was I remember
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the moment I was sitting out on the
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deck, uh, and the radio was on and it
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was just this really [ __ ] voice break.
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And I remember thinking, man, they all
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everyone's at me to work out what I'm
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going to do. That guy's playing music
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and talking rubbish, which I've always
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been the dude who loved playing music,
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you know, whether it be in the car or DJ
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at parties or whatever. And talking [ __ ]
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was what I got in trouble for my whole
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life in school. I was like, there's my
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job angle. like there it is. Perfect.
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And then I went back and did like that
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six month diploma in radio uh in
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Wellington and then yeah, just sort of
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started from the from the bottom at the
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rock. Oh,
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>> so it wasn't like a lifelong dream or
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anything?
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>> Not at all.
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>> I'd never once considered it.
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>> What did you want to do when you were at
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school?
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>> Didn't know. My dad loves telling a
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story that we got a big family. My dad's
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one of 10. Uh so got like 100 cousins or
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something stupid. And I I don't know. I
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always loved little kids. like when I
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was the cousin that would always play
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with the little toddlers and stuff like
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that. And anyway, I in your um beautiful
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uh you know how you're naive when you're
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little, you don't know. But I found out
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that a doctor for kids was a
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gynecologist. And so dad would dad would
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wheel me out at parties and uh and say,
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"Bryce,
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tell Steve what you want to be when you
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grow up." And I I'm going to be a
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gynecologist. And they'd all laugh and
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I'd be like, "Fuck are these guys
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laughing at?" And then obviously I
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didn't realize that. So yeah, I wanted
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to be a gynecologist.
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>> They ended up on radio.
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>> Pediatrician, right? Pediatrician.
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>> Yeah. Someone someone sent me down the
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wrong river.
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>> Then I learned what a gyne did. Did
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>> you Did you Was there part of you then
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that thought, "Oh, these are these
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people are laughing. It feels kind of
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good."
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>> I always loved a reaction.
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>> Yeah. I reckon any school teacher or my
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mom and dad would say that same thing.
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But
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>> my dad's he's quite quick and funny with
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a quip. So I think I maybe you know
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you're all products of your environment
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and things like that. So I think I I
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definitely remember learning early on
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but it was always that fine balance
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which I'm now having with my own boys.
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There's a difference between funny and
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cheeky and you got to get it right. Like
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it's that you know that fine line to
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walk but no I always loved getting a
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reaction and yeah but it's funny how it
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came about. I certainly never thought
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about it at school.
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>> So were you what did you listen to? Did
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radio play a part in your life growing
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up? If you're in Wellington at the time,
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I suppose you Pauly and Grant were
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massive.
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>> Massive. Nick Tanley out on the streets,
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those sorts of things.
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>> I uh I do remember listening to Sunday
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nights Bomber was on channel Z.
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>> Oh yeah. He used to swear.
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>> Yep. And he also talked to you our age
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when I was 15, 16. Like he re it really
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felt like he was talking to us. But the
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main guy that I ever was most inspired
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by in radio was a guy James Coleman who
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did the drive show on channel Z back in
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the day. um rest in peace to that
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station. But yeah, he was I found him
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super entertaining and I remember I'd
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listen through the songs to listen to
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what he did on the show um and things
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like that. So he he was my favorite um
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when I was younger, but yeah, I listened
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to the radio heaps. I was that classic
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with tape songs um you know that would
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play on your tape and make your own
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mixtapz and
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>> um yeah, no, I always enjoyed it. I
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remember listening to radio lots when I
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was a kid. always loved music. Like I,
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you know, bought as many tapes and CDs
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and stuff as I could when I was a kid
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because and went to concerts right from
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early age and
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>> always loved music.
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>> So So you did the six-month radio course
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and then you you what you get like an
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internship at the rock or something?
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>> Nah, just a full bottom of the barrel.
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Uh John O' Prior, who I mentioned
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before, he had already taken all jobs
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possible um because he had done the
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diploma 6 months before me and so there
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was a lot of work at the start. So then
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I went and I'd labor in Whickeyi for uh
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40 hours a week from sort of Monday to
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Thursday and then I'd come over and
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right at the very start I'd record um
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fake shows. So I'd practice shows. Boss
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wouldn't even listen to them. Brad
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wouldn't even listen. And I just had to
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keep working away to the point where I
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annoyed our boss so much and he finally
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let me start doing Midnight Till Dawns
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>> on the weekends. And so that's
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>> it's crazy to think because yeah, as you
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said, like Brad Brad King is still there
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now. So when when you were doing these
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audition shows, he was a kid at the same
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time.
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>> 100%. He's only a few years older than
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me. Yeah, I know. It's wild.
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>> Crazy.
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>> Yeah. It's been so long.
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>> Would that have been your preferred
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station to work at?
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>> Yes.
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>> Yeah, at the time for sure.
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>> Yeah. Yeah.
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>> What's the oldest recording you've got
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of yourself on the air?
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>> I I don't want to know.
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>> No. I I
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>> have you got like old cassettes or
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anything?
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>> There were there were some that were
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played when it was my 25th anniversary
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um a couple of months ago and they were
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horrific but they weren't super early. I
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wouldn't want to I wouldn't even even
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you know to time stamp this Oussie
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Osborne has just died and some
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interviews played today that we had when
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we had Aussie on the show and they were
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even from 2012 and I sounded horrific. I
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used to have this weird voice rod use
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great dictation and you know like I was
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like what the [ __ ] was I doing? It's
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horrible to hear yourself.
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>> You must have um there must have been
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someone you were sort of modeling
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yourself on at the time even if it's
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>> two announcers. Yep. Green man. He used
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to do the night show on the rock back in
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the day. He was a real legend to me when
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I was first starting. He was super cool,
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super helpful. Really made me feel like
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I could do the job. Um, and then I was
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also probably trying to model Jonno cuz
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he was having great success with the do
00:11:04
stuff to Jono stuff in the morning and
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all of that and and he was a good buddy.
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So, and cuz he was doing well, I was
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like, "Oh, well, if he's doing well, I
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should probably sound like he does." So,
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they'd be two people that I um
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>> were inspired and impressed by. I guess
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>> I think everyone in radio has that.
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There's like a senior announcer or
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another announcer at the generally at
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the same station that you sort of like
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base yourself on. Even if you even if
00:11:26
you don't know you're doing it, you sort
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of do it. Um yeah, but that timestamps
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this interview um nicely. Yeah, this is
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the day that Aussie Osborne died.
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>> Um and on my walk here to the studio
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this morning, I looked on your podcast
00:11:38
feed to see what you guys had and um you
00:11:40
know, an hour after I heard about Oussie
00:11:42
Osborne died, like on your podcast feed,
00:11:44
there was an interview that you guys
00:11:45
did, the one you're talking about like
00:11:46
12 or 13 years ago. It was a real quick
00:11:47
turnaround.
00:11:48
>> It's almost like you had that one
00:11:49
waiting in the chamber.
00:11:50
>> Yeah. Like the queen waiting for him.
00:11:53
>> Yeah.
00:11:53
>> Yeah. But I didn't notice anything. I
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mean, Ro, your co-host, he sounds
00:11:56
exactly the same.
00:11:57
>> Like he's going to die
00:11:59
>> or what?
00:12:00
>> No, in terms of his voice then and now.
00:12:02
And I I didn't notice anything different
00:12:03
about you. I think you're just being
00:12:04
maybe a bit
00:12:06
>> Yeah, maybe. I don't know. Maybe you
00:12:07
hear it yourself, but I can hear it. I
00:12:09
can hear that. I thought I sounded
00:12:10
different.
00:12:11
>> I didn't feel like I spoke as normally
00:12:13
as I speak
00:12:14
>> now. You know, like I don't think
00:12:15
there's a huge difference between how I
00:12:17
speak to you now or any of my friends or
00:12:20
whatever then when I'm on the radio.
00:12:22
>> It's funny. I I think on radio some of
00:12:24
>> whereas I think I did back in the day.
00:12:26
>> Yeah.
00:12:27
>> Yeah.
00:12:28
>> Yeah. I think it takes a while to become
00:12:29
like at the time you would have thought
00:12:31
you being fully authentic but but it
00:12:33
actually come maybe it's like experience
00:12:35
and hours on the air and maybe it's just
00:12:37
age and growing into yourself but it
00:12:38
does take a while to become
00:12:40
>> like completely authentic.
00:12:42
>> Totally. Yeah.
00:12:43
>> Yeah. Um but it's a great show you guys
00:12:45
are doing and um yesterday on my run I
00:12:47
listened to your your whole show podcast
00:12:48
and um you had Joseph Parker on like a
00:12:52
good friend of the show.
00:12:53
>> There was another and just explaining
00:12:55
it's going to sound like a real shitty
00:12:57
piece but it was like the three worst
00:12:58
foods in the world or whatever but you
00:13:00
guys you guys just managed to get
00:13:02
anything and turned into something good.
00:13:04
>> And I think that's the power of like
00:13:06
having like a good a good dynamic.
00:13:08
>> Yep. We have that. We're lucky. You'd
00:13:09
know from any radio show that you did
00:13:11
previously like um I hate the word
00:13:15
overused, but culture and what's the
00:13:17
other word I'm thinking of when um
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>> you know, you have that vibe that's in a
00:13:21
studio. Chemistry. That's the word I'm
00:13:22
looking for. We're lucky. We have a
00:13:24
really good chemistry. We also know each
00:13:25
other so well that we've got better at
00:13:28
it, but we can use that communication of
00:13:30
looking at each other to know when if
00:13:32
I'm going to take an L, I I'm better
00:13:34
now. We all are at sitting there and
00:13:36
just taking it. Whereas back in the day,
00:13:38
I might have fought over the top of
00:13:40
whatever was being said to come back
00:13:41
with a quicker burn, but it's funnier if
00:13:43
[ __ ] gets piled on me. And then in the
00:13:45
next break, we might pile [ __ ] on Miles
00:13:47
or Roj or whoever it is. And so, yeah,
00:13:50
the chemistry works well, which makes us
00:13:52
be able to turn very average content
00:13:54
like Worst Foods into some form of
00:13:57
entertainment.
00:13:58
>> Yeah. Something that's going to give
00:13:59
people like a laugh or a bit of escapism
00:14:01
on the way work. So, yes. So, it's
00:14:02
yourself,
00:14:03
>> Roger Fairley, Andrew Mulligan, and Mel
00:14:06
Abbott. And it's been the four review
00:14:08
for how long now?
00:14:09
>> That show probably
00:14:12
I'd say at least
00:14:15
six six years I'd say that exact
00:14:18
formation.
00:14:19
>> Yeah. But Maus's he was with us from
00:14:21
about 2011. He was there for a couple of
00:14:23
years then he went to radio sport
00:14:25
murdered radio sport and then came back
00:14:26
to the rock after that.
00:14:28
>> Yeah. Was it him that murdered all the
00:14:30
pandemic? It's up in the air.
00:14:31
>> No. Solely him.
00:14:32
>> Yeah. Him and Richardson.
00:14:33
>> He's a great He's a great broadcaster.
00:14:35
E.
00:14:35
>> Yeah. great broadcaster.
00:14:36
>> Okay. Best thing best and worst thing
00:14:38
about each of those guys. Uh let's start
00:14:40
with Raj.
00:14:40
>> Oh gee wh was
00:14:43
>> best thing is it's his overwhelming
00:14:46
passion. The rock. I don't think anyone
00:14:49
cares more about the rock and its
00:14:51
success than Roger Farrell.
00:14:54
And it's probably his worst trait is
00:14:57
that he loves it so much that sometimes
00:14:59
I reckon we wish Roj had other passions
00:15:03
as well. So that and I mean that in the
00:15:05
in a nice way because
00:15:07
you want to have like a good balance of
00:15:09
everything and and he just went
00:15:12
traveling this year which I think was
00:15:13
awesome for him and I think he might get
00:15:14
into do more traveling and stuff but he
00:15:16
cares so much about it
00:15:19
>> and I think you can get better the more
00:15:20
you do it of realizing its place
00:15:24
>> of importance. It's important to me that
00:15:26
we do a good job and that I try and do a
00:15:28
good job on the radio and whatever that
00:15:30
may be. But far more important to me uh
00:15:34
is my family, you know, is my boys and
00:15:36
Sharon and stuff like that. And that's
00:15:39
>> not to say his family isn't my own
00:15:41
importance, but do you know what I mean?
00:15:43
>> Yeah, I know exactly what I mean.
00:15:44
>> You can care too you can care too much
00:15:46
about something as well.
00:15:49
>> So that's and it's funny that you should
00:15:51
say that cuz that's something that um
00:15:52
Sir Steve Hansen said as well that
00:15:54
someone's best quality is usually their
00:15:56
worst quality as well.
00:15:57
>> Maybe that's recency bias. I listened to
00:15:59
that interview recently.
00:16:00
>> Yeah. Yeah. But I but it's also genuine
00:16:03
and I don't think Roger would be
00:16:04
offended with me saying that. I think
00:16:05
he'd I imagine he'd agree.
00:16:07
>> No.
00:16:08
>> [ __ ] you. You you guys give him so much
00:16:10
[ __ ] on the air. E
00:16:11
>> Well, yeah,
00:16:13
>> he's low. It's low hanging fruit. Is Is
00:16:15
there any
00:16:16
>> He deserves more credit on that. Roj to
00:16:18
be honest. I think that's a
00:16:19
misconception with Raj. People think
00:16:21
just [ __ ] gets thrown at him the whole
00:16:23
time and like [ __ ] poor old Raj. But Raj
00:16:25
is a lot smarter than what people give
00:16:27
Roj credit for. like cuz obviously as
00:16:29
you know like a lot of planning goes
00:16:30
into shows. Obviously when you're on air
00:16:33
and you're bantering a lot of that will
00:16:34
come naturally but he he's an expert in
00:16:38
um serving himself up too. Like we'll
00:16:41
have those eye contact moments where he
00:16:43
knows exactly what he's doing um by
00:16:46
walking you into a such where you can do
00:16:48
it when you can slam at home with him or
00:16:51
or whatever. Um or whatever topic you're
00:16:53
doing or segment he will remind us
00:16:55
before we go on air. remember when I
00:16:57
[ __ ] [ __ ] up by doing this or
00:16:59
whatever. So, he he knows what he's
00:17:00
doing and as I say to the previous
00:17:02
point, all for the greater good of what
00:17:04
gets the best laugh and best
00:17:05
entertainment. So,
00:17:07
>> I he's not the
00:17:10
the laughing
00:17:12
that's all he does guy, which I think
00:17:14
some people might or might have had that
00:17:17
um preconception. He's he's a lot better
00:17:19
than what a lot smarter than what some
00:17:22
people may give him credit for. I know
00:17:23
lots of people give him credit. So,
00:17:25
>> is um is there anything that's off
00:17:27
limits? Do you guys have your offlimit
00:17:29
things?
00:17:30
>> Just areas that you're just not allowed
00:17:31
to go with each other.
00:17:32
>> You must do. You probably can't talk
00:17:34
about them here.
00:17:34
>> No, no, no. Uh
00:17:36
>> oh. I mean, anything deeply personal
00:17:38
probably as you'd know. Um,
00:17:43
yeah. I think we all pretty good now at
00:17:46
We also don't want anything to be
00:17:47
awkward,
00:17:48
>> you know? Like, [ __ ] there's nothing
00:17:49
worse than I mean, there's good awkward
00:17:52
and then there's like, how are we going
00:17:53
to continue our show awkward? And we've
00:17:56
>> Yeah.
00:17:57
>> So, has there has
00:17:59
>> there's respect more than off limits? I
00:18:01
reckon that's a good thing that we have
00:18:02
on the show. We'll we'll know.
00:18:04
>> And I think also you get really good at
00:18:08
reading body language. I think that's I
00:18:10
reckon if I have a good skill set
00:18:13
>> uh pump my own tires, but I think I'm
00:18:15
good at reading body language in the
00:18:17
studio.
00:18:18
>> I think Miles would he would say the
00:18:20
same thing for me. Raj may be as well,
00:18:22
Mel. But I sort of and they might do the
00:18:24
same for me, but I'll on any given day I
00:18:27
think I'm pretty good at reading the
00:18:28
room straight away as to how each person
00:18:30
is. And sometimes I'll micromanage like
00:18:33
I'll send group messages to three out of
00:18:36
the four or two out of the four and I
00:18:39
might go um I reckon this is what's
00:18:41
happening today. So
00:18:44
>> Oh, like you might text say M and
00:18:46
they'll say hey Roger's a little off
00:18:47
today this.
00:18:48
>> Oh yeah. Or he might be upset about this
00:18:50
or you know M something happened to M's
00:18:53
life
00:18:54
>> so if he's quiet it's because of this or
00:18:57
and vice versa. You know
00:18:58
>> that's a good EQ. Have you always had
00:18:59
that?
00:19:00
>> No. No,
00:19:00
>> definitely not.
00:19:01
>> Has that come since being a dad or
00:19:05
>> just getting older? What is that?
00:19:08
>> I think everything comes with getting
00:19:09
older and getting better, you know, like
00:19:11
you you like
00:19:13
Absolutely. And you like to think you
00:19:14
learn more as you do it. Um
00:19:16
>> I don't know, maybe the
00:19:19
>> I'd say a few things have got me to to
00:19:22
to that point. Yeah, being a parent
00:19:25
would be a part of it. I also think
00:19:29
um if some formations of shows have
00:19:32
worked better than others and you learn
00:19:33
from experiences
00:19:36
>> I don't know maybe it's maybe it's my
00:19:39
dad stuff of leadership where not saying
00:19:42
I'm a leader but do you know what I mean
00:19:43
like you can try and work out how to
00:19:46
steer the ship. Well, my boss Brad, he
00:19:49
says in terms of my role on the show,
00:19:51
like a and a long time ago that if you
00:19:54
were to liken it to rugby, people have
00:19:56
positions, you know, like Roger's the uh
00:19:58
the skipper of of the show and then I'm
00:20:02
referred to, I guess, as like the first
00:20:03
five where you're running the ship. So,
00:20:05
I guess it just becomes part of that.
00:20:07
Like, if you're in charge of steering
00:20:09
how the show is going, then
00:20:11
>> it's it's on you if you can to realize
00:20:14
how you're going to best steer the ship
00:20:16
that day. M
00:20:18
>> if you can do anything to help it.
00:20:20
>> Yeah. And
00:20:21
>> oh, sorry. And those chats aren't all
00:20:22
the time.
00:20:23
>> They'll just be on certain occasions
00:20:24
that you might just
00:20:25
>> when and if
00:20:26
>> not. I don't have group chats every I
00:20:28
don't have separate chats every morning.
00:20:30
>> See you sitting on his phone. It's like
00:20:32
my phone didn't ping. I must have
00:20:34
trouble after this. I Every time I'm on
00:20:37
my phone in the studio now, people are
00:20:38
going to be like, "Who the [ __ ] he
00:20:39
texting?"
00:20:40
>> Well, the other the other phone's
00:20:42
pinged, but not mine. Okay, this is
00:20:44
interesting. Have there been any um
00:20:46
storm outs over the years or or like
00:20:48
periods of silence where like Yeah.
00:20:52
>> Oh yeah.
00:20:53
>> [ __ ] it makes it difficult. Eh
00:20:54
>> oh yeah as what
00:20:56
>> uh love her and we get on great now me
00:20:58
and Leia Parniper used to clash
00:21:01
>> hard out but when I first came Lera one
00:21:04
of New Zealand's great broadcasters like
00:21:06
an incredible career over everything
00:21:07
whether it be radio live or radio hodaki
00:21:09
back in the day or the rock you know etc
00:21:11
etc. But um when I was first brought
00:21:15
into the show, I was Simon D had left
00:21:17
and I came into breakfast and I was put
00:21:19
in there as the young, wasn't married at
00:21:20
the time, didn't have kids, and so and
00:21:22
they wanted like a younger person in the
00:21:23
show to, you know, for the younger
00:21:25
audience and to freshen it up or
00:21:27
whatever it was. Uh and they pay me
00:21:30
less. Um, and so like I came in there
00:21:33
and um, Brad, our boss, would encourage
00:21:38
everyone to have different opinions cuz
00:21:40
obviously, you know, that's how radio
00:21:41
works.
00:21:42
>> And I was less wise at that point. And
00:21:45
so I would really go with Le and she
00:21:47
would come straight back. And so we had
00:21:50
some good clashes. Um, that lingered off
00:21:53
air like usually, you know, the mics
00:21:54
will go off and everyone can laugh and
00:21:56
go, "Oh, that was good for that radio."
00:21:58
But but yeah, it wasn't. They weren't
00:22:00
that good at all. Once we were talking
00:22:02
about we had to shave her hair off for
00:22:04
some someone had deared us. It was for
00:22:08
some wacky radio thing that caused a
00:22:11
storm out. She left the studio that day.
00:22:14
Uh
00:22:15
>> Ro tried to fight me um one morning on
00:22:18
air like physically.
00:22:19
>> Yeah. Well, cuz he'd never had a
00:22:21
Charlie. Remember the old classic knee
00:22:23
Charlie's where you kne someone on the
00:22:24
side of the leg? Yeah, talking about
00:22:25
those and anyway it come about he should
00:22:28
try a Charlie and then when he got
00:22:31
Charlie they didn't enjoy it.
00:22:34
Not many people tend to enjoy a Charlie
00:22:36
and then he tried to fight me. Uh and so
00:22:39
yeah there's been there's been a couple
00:22:41
of little blowups but also how could
00:22:43
there not be because you it's a weird
00:22:46
situation a radio show like it's a
00:22:47
marriage. I spend more time with those
00:22:49
people and have more chats looking eye
00:22:52
to eye with them than you than I do with
00:22:54
Sharon, my wife, you know, like just in
00:22:56
terms of how ours work out like and so
00:22:59
you've got to manage those marriages and
00:23:02
like any marriage,
00:23:04
>> they have really tough times and they
00:23:05
don't always last and all of that sort
00:23:07
of stuff. So
00:23:08
>> yeah, it would be weird if we didn't
00:23:10
have fights.
00:23:11
>> I think we've got better now though
00:23:14
>> at preventing big fights. And again that
00:23:16
just comes with all the experience and
00:23:18
stuff like I might see us or Roger or M
00:23:21
or whatever or us Brad have got better
00:23:23
at
00:23:24
>> if you can see something starting to
00:23:26
become aggravating you get better at
00:23:28
going [ __ ] let's let's prevent this then
00:23:32
let's change this before it becomes
00:23:33
something these these are such good
00:23:35
insights. Also, it's um you're in this
00:23:37
this
00:23:37
>> I don't regret anything I've said.
00:23:39
>> You're in this fairly small room
00:23:40
together and you're having
00:23:42
conversations. Like most people go to
00:23:43
work and the three or four people you
00:23:45
work closest to, you can have a little
00:23:46
bit of small talk with them through the
00:23:47
day, but largely you can ignore each
00:23:49
other. Um and breakfast radio is the
00:23:51
complete opposite of that. You got to
00:23:52
have a you've got to manufacture a good
00:23:54
time together.
00:23:54
>> 100%. Some days you don't feel like
00:23:56
doing that. Um some days you do some and
00:23:59
some days people are in different moods
00:24:00
than others for various reasons of
00:24:02
anything that's going on in their life.
00:24:03
Um, yeah, it's hard. Like, it's one of
00:24:06
the greatest privileges of all time to
00:24:08
have that job and it's not lost on me
00:24:09
and I I'm deeply uh appreciate the fact
00:24:14
I've been able to do this and still get
00:24:15
to do it touchwood for a little a while
00:24:18
longer yet. But that is the hard part is
00:24:21
um every day coming up with
00:24:24
>> well every day trying to be good as well
00:24:27
>> because if you've set a certain level
00:24:28
obviously you want to continue it. Um,
00:24:30
and as you know with Breakfast Radio,
00:24:32
there's a lot of chat. Afternoon time
00:24:34
drive, they talk half the amount we
00:24:36
would around about, you know, cuz they
00:24:38
obviously play more songs. So, yeah,
00:24:40
it's a lot of [ __ ] to talk. So, it's a
00:24:42
lot of
00:24:43
>> a lot of chat with three people that
00:24:45
you're supposed to be different to.
00:24:48
>> If you had three people that were just
00:24:50
your best mates, that's [ __ ] great cuz
00:24:52
you just all agree with each other the
00:24:53
whole time. But we're supposed to not
00:24:54
agree cuz
00:24:56
>> you provide different opinions and stuff
00:24:57
for people listening, obviously. And
00:24:59
sometimes with no one would want four
00:25:00
bryes. What a punishing show.
00:25:04
Sometimes with your friends you're like,
00:25:04
"Oh yeah, I don't I don't really have an
00:25:06
opinion on that. I don't really give a
00:25:07
[ __ ] either way." But you can't that
00:25:08
doesn't work on radio. You need an
00:25:10
opinion
00:25:11
>> 100%.
00:25:11
>> Um, what do you think the key has been
00:25:13
to your longevity and in in radio and in
00:25:16
particular on breakfast radio?
00:25:17
>> Um, well, like Raj, I care I care a lot
00:25:22
about how we do. I care about doing good
00:25:24
show. Uh, I care about the rock and all
00:25:27
of that. So, I think that's first and
00:25:29
foremost like I want to do a good job.
00:25:31
Um, and I'm proud of trying to do a good
00:25:33
job.
00:25:35
Um,
00:25:37
I think I've done a good job.
00:25:40
>> Uh, not always, but I think in certain
00:25:43
times I've done a good job. Um,
00:25:47
I think in terms of that having an
00:25:49
opinion, I've always had a strong
00:25:50
opinion. So, but it's good to have a
00:25:52
strong opinion, not just because that's
00:25:54
radio, but also because people either
00:25:56
love or people either agree or disagree
00:25:59
with your opinion, which I think is
00:26:00
important for people in radio. So, maybe
00:26:03
that's helped me.
00:26:04
>> Um, the fact that people are like, "Fuck
00:26:05
that guy or I agree with that guy."
00:26:07
That's been helpful. And obviously I
00:26:09
think in the last
00:26:11
eight or seven or six seven years I
00:26:15
think obviously the change in which
00:26:16
we've gone about with um the mental
00:26:19
health angle I would say has
00:26:22
>> helped all of us.
00:26:24
>> Yeah that I mean [ __ ] when when you
00:26:27
eventually finish that's going to be
00:26:28
your legacy right that like the the 5%
00:26:31
stuff really.
00:26:32
>> Yeah probably. Yeah. Well I mean totally
00:26:35
because
00:26:36
>> Yeah. I mean, it's still some of those
00:26:38
moments that we've had in some of those
00:26:39
days and shows or or fundraisers or
00:26:41
whatever that we've done. Um, they are
00:26:43
still the things that always get bought
00:26:46
up to me
00:26:47
>> um and mentioned and
00:26:50
>> well, it's made like a tangible impact
00:26:51
to people's life. Not to say that your
00:26:53
day-to-day stuff doesn't, you know, cuz
00:26:55
it does make a difference, but this is
00:26:56
like a more,
00:26:57
>> I suppose, noticeable difference to
00:26:59
people's life. And we'll we'll get into
00:27:00
all of that. Um,
00:27:01
>> yeah, just a couple more on the radio
00:27:03
thing. So, your wife Sharon, we'll get
00:27:04
into the dynamic of that relationship. I
00:27:06
know she's the boss, but
00:27:08
>> So, she's having a break from radio. She
00:27:10
retired at the end of last year
00:27:12
>> or semi. It's I feel like it's going to
00:27:14
be a Jordan Jay-Z retirement. She's
00:27:16
going to come back.
00:27:17
>> I Yeah, I mean, maybe, maybe not. And I
00:27:19
don't think she'd mind me saying this at
00:27:21
all, but um I don't know. I mean, like
00:27:23
we said before, like radio is pretty
00:27:26
tough and can be quite punishing in
00:27:28
terms of I don't know if we did say
00:27:29
this, maybe this is before we started,
00:27:30
but radio is tough in terms of um always
00:27:33
having to mine your life for content.
00:27:35
And she's been really strong on saying
00:27:37
that. Like it became really
00:27:40
>> tough work to continually be like out
00:27:42
with a friend and be like, "Oh, how can
00:27:43
I steal your little bit of private
00:27:46
information to make it into radio
00:27:48
content or whatever?" And so I think she
00:27:50
genuinely really is quite enjoying
00:27:52
spending time with the boys and not
00:27:54
having to think of content every day. So
00:27:56
I don't I don't know. I think she misses
00:27:58
the paycheck.
00:27:59
>> Yeah. Oh, 100%. I [ __ ] I Yeah, I was a
00:28:03
real pig with that stuff. Like I I
00:28:04
wouldn't say to someone, "Oh, hey, do
00:28:05
you mind if I um use this on the radio
00:28:08
tomorrow morning?" Cuz at the end they
00:28:09
might say no.
00:28:10
>> It was It was said about you behind your
00:28:11
back.
00:28:14
>> I just do it change some names and
00:28:15
apologize for it afterwards. There's so
00:28:17
many so much content you have to come up
00:28:19
with. It's a thirsty beast.
00:28:20
>> Yeah. And Yeah. And a lot of it long
00:28:23
stretches like a long bow.
00:28:25
>> Have you ever have you ever had a like a
00:28:28
period where you've thought about, you
00:28:29
know, quitting like Sharon did?
00:28:31
>> No.
00:28:31
>> No.
00:28:32
>> No. No. I really haven't. Like some days
00:28:35
I've found tougher and some shows I've
00:28:37
found tougher in terms of whether I've
00:28:39
got on with some people better than
00:28:40
others or whatever it may be or um
00:28:44
>> No, man. I I love it. If someone had
00:28:48
told me in school days that I'd be home
00:28:50
by midday,
00:28:52
Monday to Friday, and have the weekends
00:28:54
off, like, yeah, I cannot overstate
00:28:57
with all genuiness. Yeah, I it's a it's
00:29:00
a great privilege. I have a lot of mates
00:29:02
who work real hard, do real important
00:29:04
stuff.
00:29:05
um you know whether that be doctors or
00:29:07
uh all sorts of different all sorts of
00:29:09
different fields and they do proper work
00:29:11
and I'm like oh man I literally
00:29:14
>> I'm getting paid to do this. It's uh I'm
00:29:16
very lucky.
00:29:17
>> Yeah, I think that's a good space to
00:29:19
play that gratitude sort of space. Yeah,
00:29:21
it's really cool.
00:29:21
>> It's genuine too. Don't. And and that's
00:29:23
also coupled with, don't get me wrong,
00:29:25
some days are far more enjoyable than
00:29:27
others or periods, but
00:29:29
>> uh for the most part, I have never I've
00:29:31
never thought about leaving
00:29:33
>> the job.
00:29:37
>> I've got a card here called
00:29:38
miscellaneous that's got a few bits and
00:29:39
pieces on and then we'll um we'll dig
00:29:41
deep into some other more important
00:29:42
serious stuff. Um so May 8th this year,
00:29:44
you got a hole in one.
00:29:46
>> Yeah.
00:29:46
>> How long how long you been golfing?
00:29:48
>> Played heaps with my dad when I was 13
00:29:51
or 14. My dad was a good golfer, my
00:29:53
granddad was a good golfer, all of that.
00:29:55
Um, my mom's dad. So, it's always been
00:29:57
there. And then, yeah, when I was like
00:29:59
13 or 14, we were living in Wellington
00:30:00
at that point. Um, and my dad
00:30:04
uh took me out to be a member at Paumu
00:30:06
Golf Course. Um, and it's a brutally
00:30:09
tough golf course before all these flash
00:30:11
golf courses like TR and that were in
00:30:13
New Zealand. That was like New Zealand's
00:30:15
number one course and it's still ranked
00:30:16
at the world 100. So, it's a really
00:30:17
tough course, especially to learn golf
00:30:19
on. that would [ __ ] traumatize me
00:30:21
every weekend u playing with dad there.
00:30:23
So that's my earliest memories of golf.
00:30:24
But I also was playing
00:30:27
with a mate once, two of my mates, Alice
00:30:30
Dunson and dude Richard Page and we were
00:30:31
like 14 and my mate Rich Page got a hole
00:30:34
in one uh on the 14th here which is a
00:30:36
par three. Uh and so to see that as a
00:30:39
kid was like wow. And so I've stood over
00:30:41
every path three my entire life going
00:30:43
even with the terrible talk with mates
00:30:45
or randoms that you're playing with
00:30:47
today's the day stand there and then it
00:30:49
would never happen and so yeah it
00:30:50
finally happened but I played for a
00:30:51
couple of years to answer your question
00:30:53
when I was 13 14 then I'd play sort of
00:30:55
once a year on the piss with mates until
00:30:58
about 3 years ago coming up three years
00:31:00
ago I got a random text at work one
00:31:02
morning and it was the guy who was the
00:31:03
GM at um Tarangi Golf Course which is
00:31:06
like Oakland's best course and he was
00:31:09
like, "Hey man, this will sound random.
00:31:11
I'm the GM at uh at the golf course.
00:31:14
Kings of Leon are playing today. Do you
00:31:16
want to come out and make up the four?"
00:31:18
Um, obviously the group of four. I was
00:31:20
like, "Fuck, that's so specific. It's
00:31:21
got to be real." Rangum was legit went
00:31:24
out there and played that day. And, uh,
00:31:27
that guy, uh, Richard, who's a good man,
00:31:29
who took me out for the round with them,
00:31:31
um, he used to, long story short, he
00:31:34
used to make some docos, uh, about
00:31:37
suicide back in the And so he'd been a
00:31:39
listener and he had heard some of the
00:31:40
stuff that we were doing and that's why
00:31:42
he thought to ask me and then became a
00:31:44
member and I've been a member there. So
00:31:46
I've been playing heaps in the last two
00:31:47
to three years. Love it.
00:31:50
>> Wait, playing golf with Kings of Leon.
00:31:51
How was that?
00:31:52
>> Awesome.
00:31:53
>> Yeah.
00:31:53
>> Yeah. Um so it was supposed to be all of
00:31:55
them and then uh and then not all of
00:31:58
them came. But Nathan, who's sort of the
00:32:01
boss of the band, who's the drummer,
00:32:02
he's the oldest brother, he's like a
00:32:04
golf nut, like loves it. And so it was
00:32:08
me uh and him and then this dude Richard
00:32:12
who's the boss and Nathan. Yeah. Follow
00:32:15
couldn't have been cooler. Like you'd
00:32:17
know usually the rule of thumb with
00:32:19
anyone with the bigger the rockstar they
00:32:21
are the cooler they are. But this guy
00:32:23
was like next level. Like he made me
00:32:25
feel like I was his mate for the whole
00:32:26
round. Uh yeah he was rad and that
00:32:29
reignited my love for it and then
00:32:31
started playing again after that.
00:32:34
>> He was cool.
00:32:34
>> Yeah. Generally the the more famous
00:32:36
someone is, the less they have something
00:32:37
to prove and the nicer they are.
00:32:39
>> I don't know. Just as like a broad rule
00:32:41
of thumb. Yeah. I Oh, so who else are
00:32:43
you sort of um pie with? Like Dave Gro
00:32:46
>> you've met him on a number of occasions.
00:32:48
>> Yeah. Yep. Yep. We've got a good
00:32:49
relationship with Dave.
00:32:50
>> There's an iconic photo that you've
00:32:51
shared on Instagram numerous times of
00:32:52
him like pouring a bottle of tequil
00:32:57
deserves to be shared more.
00:32:58
>> Y
00:32:58
>> Yep. That was at a bar in like 2018 in
00:33:01
Sydney. him and Taylor Hawkins had this
00:33:03
listening party for their album um
00:33:05
Concrete and Gold I think the album is.
00:33:07
And yeah, we went to it, they played it,
00:33:09
and then they just mingled around with
00:33:10
us and we're just pouring booed down
00:33:12
everyone's throat. And he's super cool.
00:33:14
I've interviewed him a bunch of times.
00:33:17
No interviews in the last two or three
00:33:19
years. Ever since Taylor passed, he
00:33:22
hasn't done any. And then obviously he's
00:33:24
had his own
00:33:24
>> infidelity thing,
00:33:25
>> his own situation going on. So
00:33:27
>> he used to do interviews when he didn't
00:33:29
need to. I don't think now you'll I I
00:33:32
doubt I'll ever get another Dave Gro
00:33:33
interview. Like why would he ever do
00:33:36
press? It's all people are going to ask
00:33:37
him about is
00:33:39
>> either Taylor or infidelity.
00:33:42
>> As as a fan of his, how did how did you
00:33:44
feel about that?
00:33:45
>> The infidelity.
00:33:46
>> Yeah. Um he's human, right?
00:33:47
>> Totally. No one's perfect.
00:33:49
>> I think you can do way worse way worse
00:33:52
things. He's done a lot of good for a
00:33:53
lot of people. That's not excusing
00:33:57
infidelity, right, at all. because
00:33:59
obviously his wife deserved better and
00:34:01
>> etc. But yeah, in terms of like the
00:34:04
worst things in the world to happen,
00:34:05
>> but the problem is
00:34:06
>> rockstar acts like a rockstar.
00:34:08
>> Yeah, I'll tell you he's not enjoying
00:34:09
Coldplay concerts.
00:34:10
>> Yeah.
00:34:11
>> At all. Um Yeah. I mean, I think
00:34:15
everybody everybody probably felt a I
00:34:17
don't know. People would have felt a
00:34:18
little bit disappointed. Ah, not angry
00:34:20
Dave. I'm disappointed.
00:34:22
>> Yeah.
00:34:22
>> But also, [ __ ] what have they all done?
00:34:24
There's plenty of people casting
00:34:28
or, you know, throwing a bit of [ __ ] at
00:34:29
Dave Gro, but I can guarantee if you
00:34:31
went through their search histories or
00:34:33
their whatever they did, like no one's
00:34:34
perfect.
00:34:35
>> Yeah, absolutely. It's part of the human
00:34:36
experience. So, if he walked into the
00:34:39
room now, like would he would do you
00:34:40
think would he know your name?
00:34:41
>> Probably not, but he would act
00:34:44
>> I don't know. He always has every time
00:34:46
we've done interviews. And I don't know
00:34:48
whether that's superb work by the record
00:34:49
label Sony that have always made it feel
00:34:51
like he knows me, but he will act like
00:34:53
he knows me. We've met him on enough
00:34:55
occasions. Yeah. Where he will uh Yeah.
00:34:58
It appears
00:35:00
like he does, but maybe he's just very
00:35:02
good at his job.
00:35:03
>> Class act.
00:35:03
>> Class act.
00:35:04
>> Yeah.
00:35:05
>> Yeah.
00:35:05
>> Good lying.
00:35:06
>> Who else? Who else? Who Who are your
00:35:08
favorites to If you see an interview
00:35:10
coming up, who are your favorites? Who
00:35:11
Who do you sort of grown at?
00:35:12
>> Dave Gro for sure. He He's been He's
00:35:14
been great. Uh, we had Oussie Osborne.
00:35:17
He was awesome. Um, Tom Mel is superb uh
00:35:20
from Rage Against the Machine, but he's
00:35:22
just super intelligent, but also super
00:35:24
lovely. Um, yeah, he's he is a standout
00:35:27
over the years.
00:35:28
>> Um, in terms of musicians, the worst
00:35:31
that we two two stand out usually.
00:35:33
They're all really good. Oh, three
00:35:35
worst. the trifecta of of trifecta of
00:35:38
turds were um
00:35:41
uh uh John Fusante from the Red Hot
00:35:44
Chili Peppers, but I don't know if he
00:35:45
was that well at the time and he just
00:35:46
didn't want to talk to me. He he was
00:35:48
terrible in person at Spark Arena. Like
00:35:50
one of the worst experiences I've ever
00:35:52
had. He was he came into the room, he
00:35:54
didn't want to do it, and I was like,
00:35:54
"Hey man, I'm Bryce." And uh he looked
00:35:57
away from me and he goes, "A real
00:35:59
pleasure to meet you." Like looking
00:36:01
away, I was like, "Oh no, it's going to
00:36:02
be one of those days. Oh god, this is
00:36:03
going to be the longest 8 minutes of my
00:36:05
life.
00:36:05
>> But I wish if I'd have done that now, I
00:36:07
would have turned it on him cuz you
00:36:09
know, you learn those things and it
00:36:10
would have made for a far better
00:36:11
interview if you'd have been like,
00:36:12
"Mate, what's your problem?" Like
00:36:14
>> that would have got a good reaction. But
00:36:15
I was so young and I was like, "Just
00:36:17
took it."
00:36:18
>> He was no good.
00:36:19
>> Uh, Alien Ant Farm, dreadful
00:36:23
as you'd expect. And um, and the guy
00:36:25
from Disturbed, David Draymond, I mean,
00:36:29
yeah, terrible.
00:36:30
>> It's funny. I sort of found off in the
00:36:32
bad ones. They're just not memorable at
00:36:33
all. They're just like nothing. It's
00:36:35
just a nothing moment.
00:36:36
>> It's hard. I Yeah, I mean, you think if
00:36:39
if you're in that position, you'd switch
00:36:40
it on for the time you're there, which
00:36:41
is something that I suppose separates a
00:36:43
Dave Gro from the rest of them.
00:36:45
>> Um, but maybe it's easier said than done
00:36:46
cuz we're all human.
00:36:47
>> And also, some people
00:36:50
uh some people are really charismatic
00:36:53
and some people aren't. But some people,
00:36:56
no, some people are really talented
00:36:58
musicians and charismatic, whereas some
00:37:00
people are just really talented
00:37:01
musicians.
00:37:02
>> They don't have to have the charisma as
00:37:04
part of it. Like you see it heaps the
00:37:06
people on stage there are these
00:37:07
electrifying, unbelievable front woman
00:37:10
or frontmen and then offstage they're
00:37:12
completely insular, you know, like it's
00:37:14
it's common. So I don't I don't begrudge
00:37:17
people if they're not great, but yeah,
00:37:18
we've been lucky to have some absolute
00:37:20
rippers.
00:37:20
>> Yeah. How good. Um, oh, you're one of
00:37:23
your regular golf buddies. Going back to
00:37:24
that um D Henwood, you've seen to play
00:37:26
with him quite a bit.
00:37:27
>> Yeah. What's What's that like? Is is
00:37:29
that um like for him, do you talk about
00:37:32
anything but his illness?
00:37:33
>> No, that comes up.
00:37:34
>> Yeah.
00:37:35
>> Yeah, for sure. I'm on like a group
00:37:36
chat. Me and Shannon are on a group chat
00:37:38
that we've been lucky enough
00:37:41
that Dy has this sort of inner circle of
00:37:44
his close friends where he started this
00:37:47
WhatsApp group chat um before the news
00:37:50
was public. um about his
00:37:53
cancer. Um
00:37:54
>> oh yeah, I think he addressed this is
00:37:56
part of his book um little little D with
00:37:58
the big C.
00:37:59
>> Little D with the big C.
00:38:00
>> Yeah, that's the name of the chat.
00:38:01
>> And so that group chat's been going for
00:38:02
years now.
00:38:04
>> And so everyone sort of uses that. He
00:38:06
he'll let people know what the sitch is
00:38:08
or how the treatment is going that day.
00:38:11
And um and then everybody or randomly
00:38:14
someone will come in with something out
00:38:16
of nowhere to just try and ask him how
00:38:18
he is. And um yeah, give him a boost and
00:38:22
uh but yeah, it'll come up when we're
00:38:24
playing golf. And then also as with Dye,
00:38:27
absolutely anything else will come up
00:38:29
cuz see I've known Dy since he won't
00:38:31
remember me, but I've known Dice since
00:38:33
school days. He was at the same school
00:38:34
at Wellington College.
00:38:36
>> He was like two years above me at
00:38:37
Wellington College and I I'll never
00:38:39
forget Dy cuz one day we were in
00:38:40
assembly and they were running for um
00:38:43
school council. You know how kids would
00:38:44
get up and go, "Yeah, vote for me. Oh,
00:38:47
uh, I'm the best for school council. You
00:38:49
like, yeah, [ __ ] whatever, man. No
00:38:50
one's voting for you, Bo. And then he
00:38:52
came up and, uh, he came up and Dy was
00:38:55
the same height and size he is now, same
00:38:57
amount of facial hair. And um, he he
00:38:59
came up and he came jumping onto stage
00:39:01
as he did, kicking his legs out, exactly
00:39:03
the same guy, you know, now. And he's
00:39:05
like, "What up, losers?" Like
00:39:06
essentially, and everyone starts
00:39:08
laughing straight away. And he's like,
00:39:10
he's like, "Um, third formers, I know
00:39:12
what you want. You want pubes. I'm going
00:39:14
to get you all pubes." and the whole the
00:39:16
whole [ __ ] all these boys start
00:39:17
banging the tables and loving it and
00:39:19
then he's like poor formers I know what
00:39:21
you want you still want pubes he's like
00:39:23
I'm getting you ps and proceed to go
00:39:25
through the forms uh of of what he
00:39:27
promised everybody and so
00:39:29
>> I always remember that of him um
00:39:31
>> have you told him that
00:39:32
>> oh yeah's great
00:39:35
>> absolutely asked to go back and speak at
00:39:37
college at some point uh to to the
00:39:39
students which is hilarious that I would
00:39:41
be asked to go back and speak there
00:39:43
>> given I wasn't that much of a role model
00:39:45
student. But I I love D. I find that
00:39:48
friendship um super special. He he means
00:39:51
heaps to so many people. He means a
00:39:53
whole bunch to uh to to Sharon and
00:39:55
myself. Sharon loves him. How kind he
00:39:57
was during Dancing with the Stars and um
00:40:00
to her when with when when things
00:40:02
weren't going well for her with some
00:40:03
miscarriage stuff and he's just a
00:40:06
beautiful person, beautiful family. Um
00:40:09
>> yeah, like [ __ ] it. It sucks, man. The D
00:40:13
situation. Mhm.
00:40:14
>> Yeah.
00:40:15
>> He's so shown um you so much courage and
00:40:17
bravery and dignity and
00:40:20
>> Yeah.
00:40:21
>> resilience.
00:40:22
>> Yeah. To use that situation
00:40:26
to help other people, which is what he's
00:40:29
done.
00:40:30
>> Uh man, it's there's so much about him.
00:40:33
>> And also, yeah, he's he's just a yeah,
00:40:36
he's a great human rule. Lucky to have
00:40:37
die in our lives. So yeah, I I love
00:40:40
getting messages messages from him and
00:40:42
and talking to him whenever we can. But
00:40:44
>> he's special man.
00:40:46
>> Yeah, he really is. Um boxing you you've
00:40:49
done some How many boxing fights have
00:40:50
you done?
00:40:51
>> Two two boxing fights.
00:40:52
>> Yeah.
00:40:53
>> So one of them was against um Nixon Nick
00:40:56
Steven Nixon Clark from my FM. Who was
00:40:58
the other one against?
00:40:58
>> Uh guy called Puker who um used to be
00:41:01
like a
00:41:01
>> Oh Craig Lynn builder. Yeah. He used to
00:41:03
be like did a little bit of
00:41:05
>> he was like he was pre coxy. uh build a
00:41:08
guy on TV. Um and yeah, he he used to be
00:41:13
a boxing promoter. This guy Pooker, a
00:41:15
good man. Uh he used to be a boxing
00:41:17
promoter and he'd put on these boxing
00:41:18
fights and then he obviously thought he
00:41:20
saw an easy uh easy victory, easy victim
00:41:22
in me and said and knew he could use the
00:41:24
smart man knew he could use the leverage
00:41:26
of if he got me to fight that we would
00:41:28
be therefore promoting his fight. And
00:41:30
that was in like 2010. And so yeah, I
00:41:32
agreed to do that as a challenge because
00:41:34
I'd been doing it as fitness at Boxing
00:41:36
Alley and I was like, "Yeah, I'll give
00:41:37
I'll give that a go." Um, so that was
00:41:39
2010 and then the fight with Nixon was
00:41:42
to 2013 on the Joseph Parker undercard.
00:41:46
>> Why did you want to do that? I I can't
00:41:48
think of many things more terrifying.
00:41:50
And I think there's the the fight
00:41:51
itself, which is terrifying, but then
00:41:53
the 12, 16, however many weeks
00:41:55
beforehand where you're going to
00:41:56
training,
00:41:57
>> you're getting smacked on the head, and
00:41:59
then the anxiety's building. is
00:42:01
horrible. It so that whole 12week camp,
00:42:03
it never leaves your brain. Like it
00:42:06
always is there. Um it's like fights
00:42:08
coming. How's it going to go? Don't want
00:42:10
to get knocked out in front of your
00:42:11
friends. This is going to be on TV. Oh,
00:42:15
rock audience won't like this if you
00:42:16
lose.
00:42:17
>> And Mulligan Andrew Mulligan's words
00:42:20
were like, you don't need to do it. Like
00:42:22
then you gain nothing from this. And
00:42:24
that would always ring in my ears. The
00:42:26
anxiety of walking out is horrific. I
00:42:28
nearly started crying on both occasions.
00:42:29
Uh because it's so overwhelming the want
00:42:32
to do well in front of your friends and
00:42:34
family. Um why did I want to do it? I
00:42:38
love boxing first and foremost. It's my
00:42:40
favorite sport. Uh
00:42:42
uh I don't know. I guess I every loved a
00:42:46
little bit of
00:42:48
I wouldn't say I loved fighting when I
00:42:50
was at school by any stretch, but you
00:42:52
know what I mean? like I also wasn't
00:42:55
a full stranger to having maybe a little
00:42:58
bit of niggle or scrap as well. So I
00:43:00
always sort of enjoyed that side of um
00:43:02
the physicality or whatever of it. I
00:43:04
loved doing boxing first and foremost.
00:43:06
So it was a hell of a way to test
00:43:08
yourself in that.
00:43:10
>> When when does that that anxiety where
00:43:12
you're almost bursting into tears when
00:43:13
you're walking out? When does that go?
00:43:15
Immediately. As soon as the fight
00:43:16
starts. Yeah, cuz the weird thing is as
00:43:18
soon as the fight starts and the bell
00:43:19
rings and then you punch or whatever, it
00:43:23
automatically then and you don't realize
00:43:24
it until you've done it, which makes
00:43:26
great boxers, they don't have any of
00:43:27
that cuz they're so used to it. But as
00:43:29
soon as it starts, it just feels eerily
00:43:32
similar to all of the training that
00:43:34
you've done. You're like, "Oh, that's
00:43:35
right. We're doing this now." And then
00:43:37
you just sort of respond to or attempt
00:43:39
to respond to whatever is happening in
00:43:41
front of you. But yeah, so it goes as
00:43:42
soon as the bell rings. Just like you're
00:43:44
nervous before if you've got a speech to
00:43:47
do at a wedding or you know MCing or
00:43:50
doing some sort of chat at work, you're
00:43:52
super nervous and anxious, but often the
00:43:54
case is once you start talking that all
00:43:56
goes,
00:43:57
>> but it's the leadup.
00:44:00
>> Yeah. I I heard Jimmy car on a podcast
00:44:02
and he said he said it's very
00:44:03
>> he was a great interview to your earlier
00:44:05
question.
00:44:06
>> Yeah.
00:44:06
>> He's the man.
00:44:07
>> Yeah. Oh
00:44:08
>> yeah. We've had him a few times and he's
00:44:09
amazing.
00:44:11
>> Yeah. I've seen some clips that you guys
00:44:12
have done on Instagram. it just comes
00:44:13
roast you guys and then
00:44:16
>> so it's a very simplified thing he said
00:44:18
but he said depression is um thinking
00:44:19
about something that's happened anxiety
00:44:21
is thinking about something that's in
00:44:22
the future so the best thing is to be in
00:44:24
the present and I suppose when you're
00:44:25
boxing that's like one of those prime
00:44:26
examples like you've got no option but
00:44:28
to be in the moment
00:44:29
>> I remember on the Parker undercard fight
00:44:31
when I fought Nixon um so that was a
00:44:33
full walk out live TV even a minute
00:44:35
before you're walking out the camera's
00:44:37
just right in front of you um waiting to
00:44:40
go and you can hear them all going 30
00:44:41
seconds and you're like [ __ ] Oh [ __ ]
00:44:43
man. Like there's enough tension without
00:44:45
a camera looking straight at you and
00:44:46
then you got to do that whole walk out.
00:44:48
But I remember that to answer to answer
00:44:50
your point of um you've never felt more
00:44:52
present than that. I remember being
00:44:54
midfight with Nixon and
00:44:58
seeing the big screens cuz it was in
00:45:00
that um Truss arena and so they had the
00:45:03
big screens for the full soldout crowd
00:45:05
that were in there because obviously
00:45:06
they were actually Joseph Parker. Um,
00:45:08
but I saw myself on the big screen and I
00:45:11
was in the ring. I looked up and I was
00:45:12
on the big screen and had enough time,
00:45:16
no discredit to Nixon, but I had enough
00:45:18
time to look at the big screen, look at
00:45:21
all of the crowd and be like, what the
00:45:24
[ __ ] are you doing? Like, what are you
00:45:27
doing in a boxing ring?
00:45:28
>> Out of body experience.
00:45:29
>> Yeah, it was a real out of body
00:45:30
experience. And that was like, oh [ __ ]
00:45:33
this is out of it.
00:45:34
>> I got to finish this guy off.
00:45:35
>> This is out of it. Yeah, it was just
00:45:37
what's going on.
00:45:38
>> Yeah. Never again.
00:45:40
>> What did you learn about yourself from
00:45:41
the fights?
00:45:44
>> Um,
00:45:45
>> if anything.
00:45:46
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, well, that I could
00:45:48
do it.
00:45:49
>> Um, which is a big thing cuz you don't
00:45:52
know if you can do something like that
00:45:53
until you've done it.
00:45:54
>> Yeah. I suppose it tells yourself you're
00:45:55
a person that can put your mind to doing
00:45:57
hard things and then follow through.
00:45:59
>> Yeah. And when you're really scared of
00:46:01
something and don't want to do it, the
00:46:03
elation often that you feel afterwards
00:46:07
shouldn't come as any surprise to you
00:46:09
because you know anxiety and nerves and
00:46:11
all that mean you care and that's all
00:46:13
that was heading into that fight. It's
00:46:15
only scared and nervous and all of that
00:46:17
because
00:46:18
>> of pride and that you want to do well
00:46:21
and then like anything if you've done
00:46:22
all of the work and all of that
00:46:24
beforehand and prepared then more often
00:46:26
than not like that'll take care of
00:46:28
itself. Yeah. Yeah, that's true. And
00:46:31
absolute worst case scenario, you get
00:46:32
knocked out early in the first round.
00:46:34
It's
00:46:34
>> you won't remember.
00:46:35
>> Oh, god.
00:46:38
My life would be very different if Nixon
00:46:40
had knocked me out in that first minute.
00:46:42
>> What? How? So,
00:46:43
>> oh man, I would have been I I honestly I
00:46:48
think that could have absolutely [ __ ]
00:46:50
me on the rock the more I think about it
00:46:52
now.
00:46:52
>> You have to move to Port McQuary or
00:46:54
somewhere
00:46:54
>> some change your name, live next door to
00:46:56
David Bane.
00:46:57
>> Yeah. Honestly, well, I've got the right
00:46:58
jersey on. Um Um Honestly, that would
00:47:02
have been bad for me. People didn't
00:47:04
really care that I won, but if I lost, I
00:47:07
reckon I would have coped it
00:47:10
>> bad.
00:47:11
>> That's terrible. E really,
00:47:13
>> I would have coped it bad. Just like
00:47:15
Nick Trot years ago, former breakfast
00:47:17
host. He
00:47:18
>> I remember that with Grant Kittyama.
00:47:19
>> He fought Grant Kittyama and it was the
00:47:21
same thing. Had he lost that fight, he
00:47:23
probably would have got a heap of [ __ ]
00:47:26
>> But he didn't. He was successful that
00:47:27
night.
00:47:28
>> And Monty Betham was my coach and Monty
00:47:30
Betham, everyone he's ever trained has
00:47:32
won. And so like there were all these
00:47:34
little added elements of pressure.
00:47:37
>> Yeah.
00:47:37
>> But enjoyable.
00:47:39
>> But you like even if you if you get if
00:47:42
you lose and you get humiliated, you're
00:47:43
still braver than than me and most other
00:47:46
people that would never do it, never
00:47:47
dream of doing it.
00:47:48
>> Yeah. But everybody does different
00:47:50
things that are brave, don't they? You
00:47:51
know, brave is a real
00:47:54
>> brave can be used in a lot of contexts.
00:47:57
like you know die Henwood to me is
00:48:00
brave.
00:48:02
>> Yeah.
00:48:02
>> Yeah. That's a situation he didn't
00:48:04
willingly put himself into. Yeah.
00:48:05
>> Whereas I suppose boxing you do.
00:48:07
>> Yeah. Mine was more took a risk.
00:48:10
>> Yeah.
00:48:11
>> Um one more thing on the miscellaneous
00:48:13
card, then we're going to move on to
00:48:14
some good stuff. But um yeah. Uh how do
00:48:17
you feel when you see this photo here?
00:48:22
>> I've always [ __ ] hated this pose that
00:48:24
I'm pulling. It looks like an album
00:48:26
artwork.
00:48:26
>> Oh, I just look like Yeah, I look like
00:48:29
the Arctic Monkeys cover. Uh oh, I just
00:48:32
look so [ __ ] I was over it at that
00:48:35
point. So, this is a picture. What I
00:48:37
also love in this picture is um the
00:48:40
rolled rolls of barb wire. Like, if you
00:48:43
if no one knew what this picture
00:48:45
represented, it'd be a great guessing
00:48:47
game.
00:48:48
>> You know, it would it would Yeah. For
00:48:49
anyone listening to this rather than
00:48:51
watching, what is what is the
00:48:52
>> So, this is a picture of
00:48:55
outside the Monaco District Court
00:48:58
and around about September 20ish in 2011
00:49:04
as it about 5:00 p.m. we'd been released
00:49:09
after a day
00:49:11
of being arrested and charged with civil
00:49:14
aviation um offenses. And it is Ben
00:49:17
Boyce talking to a media scrum. Uh a guy
00:49:20
called Andy behind him. Um and then
00:49:23
myself with my arms crossed looking like
00:49:26
I'm about to cry,
00:49:28
arms crossed, eyes closed, Ben strangely
00:49:32
smiling, nervously smiling.
00:49:34
>> We'd been arrested, obviously. That was
00:49:35
when I dressed up to be a pilot uh for
00:49:38
Ben Boyce's comedy show and it went
00:49:41
peer-shaped.
00:49:42
>> Yeah. So most people are probably
00:49:43
familiar with the TV show Jono on Ben,
00:49:45
but before Jono and Ben.
00:49:47
>> No. So this was before Jono and Ben, it
00:49:49
was in between Pulp Sport.
00:49:50
>> So there was the Jono project and then
00:49:52
there was another show called Wannab.
00:49:54
Correct. This was for the show Wannab.
00:49:55
>> Correct. I had a segment called Black
00:49:56
and Bryce uh like a 60-second segment
00:49:59
each week where I try and talk my way
00:50:00
into things for free. So it had been
00:50:02
like I had been uh dressed up as for
00:50:05
example dressed up as a Kiwi mascot and
00:50:08
walked into the New Zealand Rugby League
00:50:09
game because I'm here to be the mascot.
00:50:11
Talk my way. dress up as Buzz Lightyear
00:50:13
to get in to go watch Toy Story Free at
00:50:15
the movies because I was there as part
00:50:17
of the premiere, etc. Uh, I mean that it
00:50:20
is what it was. And this one was, can I
00:50:23
black my way into being a pilot and
00:50:26
getting past security at a domestic
00:50:28
airport? Seemed a good idea.
00:50:31
[ __ ] It [ __ ] wasn't. It wasn't a
00:50:34
good idea.
00:50:34
>> Part of the issue, right, was that it
00:50:35
was um rugby world cup year, right? That
00:50:37
was correct. That was a massive part of
00:50:39
the issue. It was like a week out from
00:50:41
the World Cup.
00:50:42
>> So you just get a pilot suit.
00:50:43
>> It was a week out from the World Cup and
00:50:45
a week after the 10 year anniversary of
00:50:47
September 11th.
00:50:49
>> So like it was not good timing to [ __ ]
00:50:51
around with a plane.
00:50:53
On CNN, you know how like whispers
00:50:56
stories change all of a sudden? Like
00:50:59
little bit of information gets left out
00:51:00
or added on CNN. It had that I um had
00:51:04
chased after the plane on the tarmac
00:51:06
trying to take control of the airplane.
00:51:07
It's like that is so not what happened.
00:51:10
The truth of what happened and what it
00:51:12
got made out to be are two totally
00:51:14
different things.
00:51:15
>> Yeah. So, so run us through the the the
00:51:18
day. We'll get to the Fallout stuff
00:51:19
after. But the So, it's just a suit from
00:51:21
first scene, which is the costume place.
00:51:23
>> First scene. Terrible costume.
00:51:25
>> Terrible. Doesn't look anything like a
00:51:27
pilot costume.
00:51:28
>> So terrible that my mustache fell off
00:51:30
several times when talking to the lady
00:51:32
at New Zealand. I go in there with my
00:51:34
briefcase, my mustache, my hat, my poor
00:51:37
costume. Everyone's already like, "Fuck,
00:51:39
what are you up to?" And then I jokingly
00:51:41
I'm being recorded. I've miked up.
00:51:43
There's secret people filming me. I go
00:51:45
up to I'm like, "Hello, ma'am. Um, here
00:51:47
for my flight." Because the whole point
00:51:49
of it was being if it didn't work, it
00:51:51
was stupid enough to be at least worthy
00:51:54
of it failed, you know, content. And we
00:51:56
just never expected it to work,
00:51:58
obviously. Um, and she starts laughing
00:52:01
at me as my mustache falls off my face.
00:52:03
I pick it up. I put it on. She
00:52:05
essentially laughed at me like,
00:52:07
"Fucking, what are you up to?" I didn't
00:52:09
try and press on with anything else. I
00:52:11
sort of looked back at the people that I
00:52:12
know are secretly filming. I'm like
00:52:13
shrugging my shoulder. I was like,
00:52:14
"Fuck, this is pretty [ __ ] It's not
00:52:16
working." Cuz we were going to film a
00:52:17
whole bunch that day. Didn't think
00:52:19
anything of it. We got into the van and
00:52:21
off we went. Went and filmed these other
00:52:23
ones. Thought no more of it. This was on
00:52:24
a Saturday morning.
00:52:26
Sunday night rolls around and I'm about
00:52:28
to be doing prep for the morning rumble
00:52:30
show the next morning and I go on to
00:52:32
stuff.co.nz and there it is. this
00:52:34
pixelated picture of myself um from the
00:52:38
airport security with a full do you know
00:52:41
this man um tattoos
00:52:45
the one thing that always irks me I was
00:52:47
like um when was that 20 2011 so that's
00:52:52
14 years ago I was in my 20s but it said
00:52:54
mid30s I [ __ ] I like [ __ ] do you know
00:52:57
this guy did mid-30s I was like actually
00:53:00
it's hurtful yeah all that haunted blah
00:53:04
blah and I was like [ __ ] cuz you know
00:53:06
you see yourself on the cover of that
00:53:07
like do you know this guy so I was
00:53:09
panically ringing uh Ben boy so I was
00:53:11
you know Sharon was like what are we
00:53:13
going to do and um anyway so that was a
00:53:16
hectic night I'm ringing the cops going
00:53:18
and no one would answer I'm like if
00:53:20
you're looking for him I'm ringing you
00:53:22
no one would answer I'm leaving messages
00:53:24
like let's get this sorted like oh this
00:53:26
is not what you think it is I didn't try
00:53:27
and breach well I did but I didn't try I
00:53:30
get to work that next morning Monday I'm
00:53:32
doing the show. Then all of a sudden
00:53:34
it's leading the news. John Keys on
00:53:36
Breakfast News. Um it's leading
00:53:39
everything. It's front page of the
00:53:40
Herald again. Oh, it's front page of the
00:53:42
Herald with that same pixelated picture.
00:53:45
Um then someone knows it's me cuz it
00:53:48
didn't take people would have known
00:53:49
because obviously the same industry. And
00:53:51
then all of a sudden outside our windows
00:53:52
at work all the cameras turn up. So all
00:53:55
the news there was all the cameras going
00:53:56
there he is. I'm like [ __ ] what are we
00:53:58
going to do here? Like I've tried to
00:54:00
ring the cops. this is hectic. Brad, our
00:54:02
boss doesn't know what to do at this
00:54:03
time. And then our big boss at that
00:54:04
time, Andrew Schustman, was like he's
00:54:07
like, "You need to escape down the back
00:54:08
stairs and get the [ __ ] out of here."
00:54:10
And uh I don't know if that was his
00:54:11
whole plan, but that's what I remember.
00:54:13
Just get the [ __ ] out of here. And um so
00:54:15
I go down the stairs. I'm like, "This is
00:54:17
super hectic." Get in my car and just
00:54:20
essentially drive past the cameras.
00:54:22
Sharon was out there like, "Fuck off."
00:54:24
to the cameras cuz they were trying to
00:54:25
get into the building. Um which I wish
00:54:28
they had released that footage. That'd
00:54:29
be great to see now. um who are
00:54:31
defending me. But I uh I so I'm driving
00:54:34
then finally the police ring me back and
00:54:36
they're like, "Good day, mate." And I'm
00:54:37
like, "Ah, good to talk to you." And
00:54:39
they're like, "Come on out to Monaco.
00:54:41
We'll get this sorted." And naive, I was
00:54:44
like, "Ah, thank Christ." Went there,
00:54:47
didn't have any representation, any
00:54:49
lawyers or anything like that. I go into
00:54:51
the room and then talk to these
00:54:53
detectives. They both played good cop.
00:54:55
None of them were bad cop. Like they
00:54:57
both played good cop. didn't know they
00:54:59
were recording me. Well, I didn't know
00:55:00
they probably did tell me they were
00:55:01
recording me the whole time. I thought
00:55:02
we got it all cleared up. Told them
00:55:03
absolutely everything. And then they go
00:55:05
out of the room for 10 minutes and I'm
00:55:06
literally there twiddling my thumbs
00:55:07
like, "Thank Christ this has all been
00:55:09
sorted." Then they come in and they're
00:55:11
like, "Bryce Casey, um, you're under
00:55:13
arrest. The civil aviation, you
00:55:17
face two years imprisonment and $10,000
00:55:21
fine. You'll now be taken to a holding
00:55:22
court um until we can process you in
00:55:24
court at around 400 p.m. this afternoon.
00:55:27
right from main silent blah blah blah
00:55:29
blah blah and I was just sitting there
00:55:30
like
00:55:32
well like everything went silent I was
00:55:33
like what what are you talking about I
00:55:35
was like no because we just sorted it
00:55:37
out bro I just told you everything and
00:55:38
he's like yeah everything you've told us
00:55:39
will be used in evidence and I was like
00:55:41
you [ __ ]
00:55:43
you got me you did me dirty you you got
00:55:45
me you got me dirty
00:55:48
oh no and then like then I get taken to
00:55:51
this holding cell and I'm still like oh
00:55:53
man what's going on and they put me in
00:55:54
this holding cell with this other dude
00:55:55
and Um he he I I think he might have
00:55:59
been there for something more serious
00:56:00
than I was. And uh then he just starts
00:56:03
punching the wall. He's just punching
00:56:06
this wall and he's like, "Fuckers."
00:56:08
And I'm sitting there like, "Oh my
00:56:09
goodness." Like what do I do if this I'm
00:56:11
thinking in my head combos in my head if
00:56:13
I need to defend myself like 112 or
00:56:16
something like that. Something that's
00:56:17
not going out. I was like this is all so
00:56:18
hectic. Then they moved me into a cell
00:56:20
with Ben and Andy who had also been
00:56:22
arrested that day. They also thought
00:56:24
they had come to be sorting out their
00:56:26
issue. They too had been arrested. So
00:56:28
the cops got us all on that day. And
00:56:30
then we're in this holding sale.
00:56:32
Oh, one of the things that happened at
00:56:33
the holding sale. It's still one of my
00:56:34
favorite stories as we are about to
00:56:37
we've been processed. Courts told us
00:56:39
that we'll come back at a certain amount
00:56:40
of time for um court and all that [ __ ]
00:56:45
And then they as before we got to
00:56:47
holding cell actually sorry there's two
00:56:48
parts of this. As we're going through,
00:56:49
they're processing you. So, I've never
00:56:51
had that before where they're rolling
00:56:52
like you see in the movies. They're
00:56:54
taking my belt off. They're taking my
00:56:55
shoelaces so for no self harm. They're
00:56:57
rolling your fingers and ink to get your
00:56:59
fingerprints. Now, as they're doing the
00:57:00
fingerprints, this the guy goes to me,
00:57:02
um, who's doing it? I'm I'm scared. I'm
00:57:05
[ __ ] myself like, "Fuck, man. This
00:57:06
is
00:57:07
>> Oh, man. This has got out of hand." I'm
00:57:09
rolling my finger over and he's got my
00:57:12
hand on my finger and he goes, "What's
00:57:14
Rod like?"
00:57:17
I was like, "Fuck, man. I do not want to
00:57:19
talk about [ __ ] Raj right now. Like
00:57:23
he's like [ __ ] he's crack up and he's
00:57:25
rolling my fingers and I'm like mate.
00:57:26
Anyway, so then they process us in
00:57:28
court. We're about to be led out where
00:57:30
we where are aware there's a full um
00:57:33
press a whole lot of press waiting and
00:57:36
uh so we get led out to them later.
00:57:39
before we got put into that holding
00:57:40
cell, this big security guy comes up and
00:57:44
uh he had big unit and that's me, Ben,
00:57:46
and Andy and real aggressively he goes,
00:57:49
"Who's first?"
00:57:51
And I was like, "Well, I don't know what
00:57:53
you're talking about." And I'm sort of
00:57:53
looking at the ground. I'm thinking, "If
00:57:54
anyone's first, Ben, it's you. This is
00:57:56
all your idea, so you've got to say
00:57:57
first." He's, "I'm not going to [ __ ]
00:57:59
ask again. Who's first?" I was like,
00:58:00
"Oh, no." Looking at Ben like, "You
00:58:02
better say it's you." And Ben was like,
00:58:03
"What for?" And he puts on a glove and I
00:58:05
was like, "Oh no." like [ __ ] what? This
00:58:08
day has grown from bad to worse. Now
00:58:10
someone's going to be in my anus. Like
00:58:13
what is this? And then uh and then and
00:58:16
then he goes, "No, I'm just [ __ ] with
00:58:17
you."
00:58:19
I was like, "Fuck."
00:58:21
And then we get led out. All the press
00:58:23
are there and that is the picture that
00:58:25
you have. So all of that had just
00:58:27
happened and that's why I'm arms crossed
00:58:29
cuz it's been a hell of a day. All the
00:58:32
press are there. Yeah. And then we drive
00:58:33
home. um leads the news that night and
00:58:36
and then it was bloody
00:58:39
a year and a half of court and
00:58:43
they wanted the the crown had said they
00:58:46
or our our lawyer
00:58:48
thought that when it came time to the
00:58:50
final day in court, the crown wouldn't
00:58:53
argue that they would accept um you know
00:58:55
if we were you know to be discharged
00:58:58
hopefully without conviction
00:59:00
um don't do that dumb [ __ ] again, pay a
00:59:02
fine, do community service was goal um
00:59:05
obviously and but we didn't think the
00:59:07
crown would argue that but then on the
00:59:09
day the crown did they were like let's
00:59:11
actually they they said I was standing
00:59:13
there in in the in the dock like it was
00:59:15
like watching your own TV program I was
00:59:16
in that dock like on a TV program and
00:59:19
the crown is like your honor who knows
00:59:22
what Bryce Casey would have done had he
00:59:24
grabbed control of the airplane and I'm
00:59:25
sitting there like oh [ __ ] come on man
00:59:27
and then our jud lawyer who is a smart
00:59:30
man he goes I think if any member of the
00:59:33
courtroom takes a look at Bryce Casey,
00:59:35
they can realize very quickly that he
00:59:37
would have no idea what to do if he was
00:59:38
in control of a plane. And then everyone
00:59:40
started laughing at me and I was like,
00:59:41
"Perfect." And anyway, yeah, we got led
00:59:44
off uh well, we got discharged without
00:59:46
conviction. We got a fine of a few
00:59:49
thousand each and we had to do a bunch
00:59:51
of community service. Um but it was bad
00:59:54
[ __ ] man. I didn't know whether I was
00:59:55
going to lose my job. It was a huge
00:59:58
impact financially on Ben Boyce. Uh, and
01:00:00
to his credit, Champion sort of looked
01:00:02
after us all um, in that regard. So,
01:00:05
credit to him for that. I think it sort
01:00:07
of would have obviously had a lasting
01:00:09
effect on Ben cuz it was such a big
01:00:11
thing to be happening.
01:00:13
>> We're lucky we're lucky that obviously
01:00:15
we're lucky that
01:00:16
>> in my opinion that the judge had common
01:00:18
sense obviously at the time cuz it we
01:00:20
weren't trying to get on the plane or do
01:00:22
any of that.
01:00:23
>> It was [ __ ] it was blown out of
01:00:24
proportion. We need I nearly lost my
01:00:26
house. me and Sharon were buying a house
01:00:27
at the time and it was literally to be
01:00:29
the day of exchange of the house or
01:00:32
whatever, you know, I can't think of the
01:00:33
right wording for that, but the
01:00:35
insurance were like going through all
01:00:38
those classic questions and they're
01:00:39
like, "Anyone um do you have a
01:00:40
conviction pending?" I was like,
01:00:41
"Technically,
01:00:43
I do, but I'm not going to be convicted
01:00:46
of it, I don't reckon." And that they
01:00:49
can't give you the mortgage with that.
01:00:50
And
01:00:51
>> yeah, so it was it was it was hectic on
01:00:54
many many fronts. There must have been
01:00:56
um yeah during that period when it was
01:00:58
all going on there must have been
01:01:00
moments of just severe worry where you
01:01:02
thought [ __ ] maybe they'll make an
01:01:03
example of us. Maybe maybe I'm going to
01:01:04
be incarcerated.
01:01:05
>> Huge worry.
01:01:06
>> And I can't imagine um how horrible it
01:01:08
is for people that love you, your
01:01:10
family, Sharon, everyone else in your
01:01:12
inner circle like having the prime
01:01:14
minister on TV [ __ ] talking about
01:01:16
you.
01:01:16
>> Yeah.
01:01:17
>> In a negative way.
01:01:18
>> Yeah. Who was a friend of uh the show at
01:01:20
the time too,
01:01:21
>> you know? Like he's come on, as you
01:01:22
know, like he'd come on to the show and
01:01:24
be your best mate, John Key. He was the
01:01:25
first of those prime ministers really.
01:01:28
>> Yeah.
01:01:28
>> Uh yeah, but you know like I thought I
01:01:31
was going to be in a heap of trouble
01:01:32
with my parents and that everyone would
01:01:33
be disappointed and it' be back to like
01:01:35
school days Bryce where um you know what
01:01:38
have you done here? But I remember I
01:01:40
rang dad and I was you know like it had
01:01:42
been a hell of a day and I was like and
01:01:44
now I was ringing dad on the motorway on
01:01:46
the way way home from after that long
01:01:47
day that I talked about before. I
01:01:50
thought oh [ __ ] here we go. like now
01:01:51
it's the last part of the day where
01:01:53
dad's going to ream me down the phone
01:01:55
and all of that sort of stuff which I
01:01:58
you know deserved and expected and all
01:01:59
of that sort of stuff as an adult and he
01:02:01
didn't he was the opposite like he was
01:02:04
really caring straight away and I don't
01:02:05
know why it surprised me but um
01:02:07
>> it's what you needed at that time
01:02:09
>> I definitely needed it yeah he was just
01:02:11
he wasn't angry or anything he was
01:02:14
>> real supportive and caring so I remember
01:02:16
that real clearly
01:02:18
>> that's so
01:02:18
>> one of those things you want to remember
01:02:19
to be able to do I guess as your
01:02:22
>> as a parent yourself, you know.
01:02:24
>> But yeah, it was a hectic time, man.
01:02:26
>> Hectic. Well, I I've worked with Ben
01:02:27
since then. Um and it like it it changed
01:02:30
him as a person. Like he he if anything
01:02:32
probably overthinks everything now and
01:02:35
thinks about every possible outcome um
01:02:38
that could be negative in any situation
01:02:40
he does,
01:02:40
>> which some would say he shouldn't,
01:02:42
right? And even I would say he
01:02:44
shouldn't. And I know I know Ben well,
01:02:46
but yeah, then how could he not? Yeah,
01:02:48
we me and you weren't the ones who had
01:02:49
to foot all that bill or face all that
01:02:52
uncertainty with work and all that sort
01:02:54
of stuff. So yeah, you can't really put
01:02:55
yourself in his shoes, I guess, unless
01:02:57
you
01:02:58
>> dead set walked in them
01:02:59
>> with um with
01:03:00
>> I don't know if it made me rethink
01:03:02
everything though.
01:03:03
>> I've done a bunch of dumb [ __ ]
01:03:05
>> How How long was it before that was uh
01:03:07
that was on the cards for like radio
01:03:09
entertainment? Like still is.
01:03:11
>> Yeah, I'm guessing for the first year,
01:03:13
two, three years. No, I had to do like a
01:03:15
I'm that next morning I was doing like
01:03:16
full [ __ ] apologies. So, I'm really
01:03:20
sorry for everybody that disappointed.
01:03:23
Sorry to media works. Sorry to everybody
01:03:25
like that. Sorry to bring the rock into
01:03:27
disrepute.
01:03:28
>> Um
01:03:29
>> but for you personally, when did it
01:03:30
start to become sort of funny?
01:03:33
>> Like you can look back now with the
01:03:35
benefit of 14 years and go, "Okay, that
01:03:36
was a hectic time, but it's kind of
01:03:38
funny."
01:03:38
>> Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um
01:03:40
>> must have taken a while to Yeah. I'd say
01:03:42
maybe three years. Three years.
01:03:43
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Two or three years.
01:03:45
But I reckon there would have been
01:03:46
laughs in between that as well. Yeah.
01:03:49
>> That's good. Oh, thanks for sharing that
01:03:50
stuff.
01:03:50
>> Yeah, it was a heck of time.
01:03:51
>> Well, it's part of your part of your
01:03:53
rich tapestry of life, right?
01:03:54
>> Yeah. Yeah. It's a moment.
01:03:56
>> It's a moment. All right. Yeah. I can't
01:03:57
imagine cuz I I was in the studio next
01:03:58
to you that morning when the Herald came
01:04:00
out and so they had um
01:04:02
>> this is when the newspaper was still a
01:04:03
big a big thing and it was like a big
01:04:05
photo on the front page outside the
01:04:07
dairies and the four squares. You were
01:04:09
the poster.
01:04:10
>> Yeah.
01:04:10
>> [ __ ] You must have been [ __ ]
01:04:11
yourself. I was. Yeah, I was.
01:04:15
>> Yeah, I was. I was really scared.
01:04:17
>> You're like a a fugitive. Like a wanted
01:04:19
man.
01:04:19
>> Yeah, but it was like the shittest movie
01:04:21
cuz I was like, I'm ringing you
01:04:22
[ __ ] Like answer the phone. Like
01:04:26
>> this is on you.
01:04:27
>> You can't say wanted and then not answer
01:04:29
the [ __ ] phone when I'm trying to
01:04:30
ring you. Like
01:04:32
>> uh it all common sense played out.
01:04:36
>> Ironic that we didn't show much common
01:04:38
sense in the first place of thinking
01:04:39
that was a good idea for a TV skit. M
01:04:41
>> uh but you know you live and you learn.
01:04:43
>> But it went through so many filters
01:04:44
though. No one flagged it. No one did
01:04:47
it. Did it go through heaps? I don't
01:04:48
know.
01:04:50
>> I think it maybe went through a few I
01:04:52
wouldn't say heap. But that's to my
01:04:54
earlier point of being to his credit
01:04:57
very creative mind and Andy and all
01:04:58
them. So there were stacks of skits and
01:05:01
that was considered so [ __ ] at the time
01:05:03
when we did it that we really didn't
01:05:04
think anything of it the rest of that
01:05:06
day. There wasn't one sense of ooh [ __ ]
01:05:09
like hope no one thinks anything like or
01:05:11
I hope no one says anything but I think
01:05:14
what had happened was originally on that
01:05:15
day that I think that person the lady
01:05:19
who was laughing at me I think how I
01:05:22
gather it is that she said in passing to
01:05:25
someone else like how's that [ __ ]
01:05:27
you know dress as the pilot with the
01:05:28
mustache falling off and then then that
01:05:32
got said to someone else and then all of
01:05:33
a sudden ones get said to a few people
01:05:34
like huh someone is addressed as a um
01:05:37
you know a pilot trying to get through
01:05:40
security like a week out from the World
01:05:42
Cup in this airport.
01:05:44
>> Yeah, maybe it's al-Qaeda.
01:05:46
>> Yeah. Quick look at the security footage
01:05:48
and then it sort of I think
01:05:49
>> escalated.
01:05:50
>> It escalated to a point it shouldn't
01:05:52
have.
01:05:53
>> But then yeah, as I say, we probably
01:05:54
shouldn't have done it.
01:05:55
>> Yeah. Or live and learn. Live and learn.
01:05:58
>> Um let's talk about your family life.
01:06:00
So, um Sharon, what's the meat cute
01:06:01
there?
01:06:02
>> What's the How did we meet
01:06:03
>> the meat cute? Yeah. What's the What's
01:06:05
the story there? So, you you you
01:06:07
mentioned earlier you after you left
01:06:09
school, you followed a girl down to
01:06:10
Denedan. That didn't work out.
01:06:12
>> Um, so you had a couple of relationships
01:06:13
and then
01:06:14
>> were you a ladies man?
01:06:16
>> No. No, I wouldn't. Well, no. No, I
01:06:19
wouldn't say that. I mean, obviously
01:06:20
different people enjoyed being single at
01:06:22
different times. I got to figure out how
01:06:24
to answer this.
01:06:25
>> Uh, but no, I liked relationships. Like
01:06:28
I had Yeah. I had one for a couple of
01:06:30
years uh at the end of school and then I
01:06:32
had another one for a couple of years uh
01:06:33
who I lived with. Um and then me and
01:06:36
Sharon had met at work but then at that
01:06:39
time we each had different
01:06:40
relationships. Um she was doing the
01:06:42
night show when I was doing the night
01:06:43
show uh for the rock and she was obvious
01:06:45
doing the night show at the edge. Um
01:06:47
we'd sort of see each other around and
01:06:49
then and then um we yeah a few mutual
01:06:53
friends and stuff like that and it
01:06:55
blossom from there. And then we were
01:06:56
together for a little while and then um
01:06:59
and then we had a little break and then
01:07:01
obviously Yeah. We've been together well
01:07:03
we've been married 13 years this year in
01:07:07
October and
01:07:08
>> I guess it 13 years. That was a great
01:07:10
wedding.
01:07:11
>> Yep. You were there.
01:07:12
>> Yeah.
01:07:12
>> Uh and yeah, together what 15 or so.
01:07:17
>> How is it what's the what's the good and
01:07:18
bad things about being part of a like
01:07:20
power couple?
01:07:21
>> Uh well see I don't that doesn't sit
01:07:23
comfortably. A power couple. I don't
01:07:25
really see us as a power couple. Um,
01:07:28
>> and that's not trying to be humble or
01:07:29
any of that [ __ ] It's just a weird
01:07:30
thing to
01:07:32
>> to think of in that way. Um, I think you
01:07:35
definitely notice it sometimes if you're
01:07:36
out and about. Like we I think we've got
01:07:39
to be more conscious of
01:07:41
>> not the way you behave outrageously, but
01:07:43
you're well maybe sometimes semi-aware
01:07:46
to
01:07:48
>> not do what some of your mates do or
01:07:49
whatever, you know, not to blow out. Um,
01:07:53
but it's great in the respect mainly
01:07:57
Sharon's like, as you know, Sharon has
01:08:01
heaps of unbelievable qualities, right?
01:08:03
But one of her greatest is is her heart
01:08:07
and how strongly she wears it on her
01:08:08
sleeve. And so, like,
01:08:10
>> I have no greater supporter uh on my
01:08:14
side than her. And so given that and
01:08:17
also given the fact of her experience
01:08:18
and the fact that she does the same job
01:08:20
that's been hugely beneficial I reckon
01:08:22
for me even to answer your earlier
01:08:23
question of longevity.
01:08:25
>> Sharon would have been a massive part of
01:08:26
that because she gets what I'm talking
01:08:29
about if I vent about this or that which
01:08:32
to anybody else would be like what are
01:08:33
you complaining about like you worked
01:08:35
till midday [ __ ] but she gets it
01:08:38
that relationship side of it because
01:08:40
>> she's done the same job. So, that's
01:08:42
number one that I can think of off the
01:08:44
top of my head. The biggest advantage
01:08:46
>> that she gets gets what we get what each
01:08:48
other's jobs are.
01:08:49
>> Well, you even you even said it before
01:08:51
when you were talking about the 2011
01:08:52
pilot incident and she was downstairs
01:08:54
telling the reporters to [ __ ] off. Like,
01:08:56
she's she is so um so loyal.
01:08:59
>> E so loyal, so fiercely protective of
01:09:02
people around her.
01:09:03
>> But I think I'm super loyal, too. And
01:09:05
so, combined,
01:09:07
>> yeah, it's a real definitely have each
01:09:09
other's backs.
01:09:10
>> Yeah. and not negotiable. What What are
01:09:12
your What are your respective fighting
01:09:14
styles like when you have an argument?
01:09:16
>> It's all go.
01:09:19
>> You know, you're on a hiding to nothing,
01:09:21
though.
01:09:21
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Uh just
01:09:23
>> But see, I mean, everyone has qualities
01:09:25
and faults and I I definitely have a
01:09:28
fault of um like I can
01:09:33
uh and I think I probably got better
01:09:35
over time. I don't know. She might say
01:09:36
that, but we both I reckon what we both
01:09:39
do is the radio in us or the fighter in
01:09:42
us cuz we both got fight in us. You have
01:09:45
to have the last word. And so like that
01:09:48
can we can each [ __ ] go to ridiculous
01:09:50
points of you'll think you finally got
01:09:52
the last word and then then you'll see
01:09:54
this
01:09:58
last word. And so um
01:10:01
yeah, we're both we both can be fiery,
01:10:03
but you know what? to be honest like
01:10:06
we don't fight heaps and heaps. I reckon
01:10:08
if we do fight like in a good
01:10:10
relationship you which you should fight.
01:10:12
I reckon if you never fought then I
01:10:14
think that's quite odd if you never
01:10:15
fight.
01:10:16
>> Um
01:10:18
>> yeah, but I think we've probably got
01:10:20
better. We definitely got better at not
01:10:22
fighting, but yeah, we're both we both
01:10:24
have fire in us for sure. Are you are
01:10:27
you good at um like bringing up those
01:10:29
tough conversations like you know like
01:10:30
at work if if one of your co-hosts is
01:10:32
doing something to [ __ ] you off you you
01:10:34
know you sort of Yeah.
01:10:36
>> It's hard though cuz it's easy in a
01:10:37
relationship just to go h I'm going to
01:10:40
postpone this. Yeah.
01:10:41
>> I need to have this conversation but I
01:10:42
can't do it right now.
01:10:43
>> Way better. I've got better at asking
01:10:45
other people whether I should and how I
01:10:46
should go about having those
01:10:48
conversations conversations as well. So
01:10:50
I do that. Sharon is the one who's
01:10:52
taught me a lot of that.
01:10:54
>> Yeah. She's really good at those
01:10:56
relationships. Like she even right from
01:10:58
early on would, you know, make me aware
01:11:01
of
01:11:03
and this sounds like she's telling me
01:11:04
what to do and not at all. But she, you
01:11:06
know, if we had a I don't know, a fight
01:11:08
or what, whatever it may be. Sharon's
01:11:10
really good at she's really emotionally
01:11:13
um
01:11:15
what's the word? Uh vulnerable and um
01:11:19
wise and things like that. So she's like
01:11:22
you, for example, she'll be like, you
01:11:23
can't block that out or you're not
01:11:25
addressing that or you, you know, this
01:11:27
needs to be communicated better or you
01:11:30
know, we do this right and wrong
01:11:31
relationship wise or whatever. So yeah,
01:11:34
she's she's real switched on. So I think
01:11:36
I've learned that from her, I reckon.
01:11:38
>> Yeah, cuz you know, usually, you know,
01:11:40
like if you're early in relationships,
01:11:41
you could have a fight or whatever and
01:11:43
then just be like, "I'm right." And the
01:11:44
other person be like, "Well, I'm right."
01:11:46
Yeah,
01:11:46
>> but it takes you obviously it's much
01:11:48
better if you're just like [ __ ] no one
01:11:52
wants to fight, you know, like it's way
01:11:54
better in any situation, whether it be
01:11:56
home life or work life if you if
01:11:57
everyone's actually getting on.
01:11:59
>> Yeah. As satisfying as what it is to
01:12:00
say, well, I'm sorry for whatever it is
01:12:02
you're upset about.
01:12:03
>> Yeah.
01:12:04
>> It's not helpful.
01:12:05
>> That Yeah, it's not helpful. Yeah. Yeah.
01:12:07
>> Um Oh, that's great. Have you guys had
01:12:09
like um couples counseling together?
01:12:11
Have you done any dual
01:12:13
>> Yeah.
01:12:13
>> relationship stuff? Yeah, I think we uh
01:12:16
should remember this exactly. Um
01:12:19
>> Sharon was the first one. Sharon's a big
01:12:21
believer in therapy. Like
01:12:23
>> as I say, like she uh even with all of
01:12:26
this mental health stuff that obviously
01:12:27
we've done on the station,
01:12:29
>> she's a good driver behind all of that
01:12:31
because she was the first one who really
01:12:33
it sunk in with me the benefits of
01:12:35
therapy and talking and all of that side
01:12:37
of it. So she's used quite a lot of it.
01:12:40
And then it was because of her that I
01:12:41
tried uh it for the first time as well.
01:12:44
Um
01:12:46
and that gives you a better place to
01:12:48
actually recommend it to you know our
01:12:49
audience when we talk about it. It's all
01:12:50
good to tell someone to go and do
01:12:51
something but if you've never done it
01:12:53
yourself then
01:12:54
>> you know obviously gives you a better
01:12:55
place of understanding. As for couples
01:12:57
um I think we could any relationship
01:13:00
could do well for having it regularly
01:13:03
>> but we don't. But it's funny cuz you
01:13:05
tell people to do all these things
01:13:07
>> and you know it's going to be
01:13:08
beneficial,
01:13:09
>> but you don't always do it yourself.
01:13:11
>> Yeah.
01:13:12
>> Yeah. Like even with mental health
01:13:13
stuff. Oh, I could be better with my own
01:13:15
mental health, I'm sure,
01:13:17
>> than what I am. Um sometimes it's
01:13:21
cathartic as well to I don't know to be
01:13:24
telling other people to do it.
01:13:26
>> It's hard. Funny one.
01:13:28
>> You therapy therapy is good. I I I put
01:13:30
off going for years and years and years.
01:13:31
I I don't know why. I just thought it'd
01:13:33
be weird sitting down with someone you
01:13:34
don't know and like where where do you
01:13:35
begin?
01:13:36
>> Yeah. And not all therapists the right
01:13:37
person for you and all of that sort of
01:13:38
thing.
01:13:39
>> Find the right fit.
01:13:40
>> Yeah.
01:13:40
>> Um yeah, you guys have been through like
01:13:43
a lot and a lot of stuff that could
01:13:44
either bring a couple closer together
01:13:46
which it has done for you guys or sort
01:13:48
of make you go on your own path in
01:13:50
different directions like um you got a
01:13:52
couple of kids now um Tyson and Ruben.
01:13:54
Yeah.
01:13:54
>> Couple of boys. Is that is that it? You
01:13:56
done or you?
01:13:56
>> Yeah, we're done. I'm snapped.
01:13:58
>> Have you? How was that?
01:13:59
>> Uh yeah. No good. I uh I got the one in
01:14:03
like one in 200 reaction. My testicle.
01:14:07
Uh so so obviously they you know you got
01:14:10
like these little noodles or whatever in
01:14:11
there. They look like little um
01:14:15
uh I don't know little udon noodles.
01:14:19
Two of them come out and they get like
01:14:22
they do different things and singe them
01:14:23
and cut them or whatever. Anyway, when
01:14:25
he had mine out, he was talking to me
01:14:27
about radio and about wine in Hawks Bay
01:14:30
and he dropped one of mine and so it
01:14:32
went back into the coin purse and I
01:14:34
could feel him rumaging around as he was
01:14:36
talking cuz obviously you can't feel it
01:14:38
feel it but I was like what's going on
01:14:39
down there and cuz you're laying on your
01:14:41
back sort of looking at him which is a
01:14:42
weird place to have a conversation with
01:14:44
someone in the first place. Uh anyways,
01:14:46
like I just dropped it. But all that
01:14:48
rumaging [ __ ] everything up. And I had
01:14:50
this um it worked, but I had like a
01:14:54
avocado colored and sized left testy for
01:14:58
like a week. Like it shocked Sharon like
01:15:01
when I got home and it I couldn't it was
01:15:04
really painful to walk. Anytime I moved
01:15:06
my stomach, it felt like a coil was sort
01:15:08
of being pulled from inside. Now don't
01:15:10
get me wrong, that's nothing on what
01:15:13
women and Sharon went through and all
01:15:14
that.
01:15:15
But I but I certainly I paid me own
01:15:18
little price.
01:15:19
>> Yeah. So yeah, we're done. But also
01:15:21
mainly it would be
01:15:24
>> I mean I'd love to have more and all
01:15:25
that stuff and I know Sharon would but I
01:15:28
wouldn't be able to you wouldn't want to
01:15:31
try with Sharon cuz we had it was so
01:15:33
touch and go even with Reuben our
01:15:35
youngest.
01:15:37
Um that I wouldn't a want to put Sharon
01:15:39
wouldn't want to go through that again
01:15:40
I'm sure. Um and couldn't bear to lose
01:15:44
another child,
01:15:45
>> you know, we lost three in the leadup.
01:15:47
>> Yeah. Yeah. You want to talk about that?
01:15:49
>> Yeah.
01:15:49
>> Three three miscarriages.
01:15:51
>> Yeah. Yeah.
01:15:53
>> Yeah. So, um yeah. 2013 you started
01:15:56
trying to conceive.
01:15:57
>> Yeah. Probably.
01:15:58
>> Yeah.
01:15:58
>> Yep.
01:15:58
>> So, you caught stuff out of the way.
01:16:00
You're like, "This is good." Yeah. Yeah.
01:16:03
>> I always wanted to be a dad. Like, I've
01:16:06
always wanted to be a dad. Going back to
01:16:07
my earlier gynecology chat.
01:16:09
>> Um
01:16:10
>> Yeah. I always wanted to be a dad, love
01:16:12
kids. Um, and we thought it would just
01:16:15
be that classic easy, you know, like
01:16:17
what almost you told when you were
01:16:18
young, you know, to wear protection cuz
01:16:21
[ __ ] you know, you'll do it once and
01:16:22
you'll be pregnant.
01:16:23
>> Um,
01:16:24
>> don't use that towel.
01:16:25
>> Yeah. Yeah. But it turns out it's
01:16:27
>> Yeah.
01:16:28
>> As many people will be able to tell. I
01:16:29
mean, you know, I know you you yourself
01:16:31
obviously um and you've al always been
01:16:35
super open with that chat as well. Like
01:16:37
it's hard for a lot of New Zealanders.
01:16:39
Um and so yeah, we we fell pregnant. Um
01:16:44
and then yeah, obviously we uh lost our
01:16:47
first one, which was uh brutal.
01:16:50
>> But how many weeks?
01:16:53
>> First one was was reasonably early on.
01:16:56
Uh, but then it's a weird answer that
01:16:59
cuz I think as soon as you're pregnant,
01:17:02
you know, like I I never I always find
01:17:05
that weird how you're like you're not
01:17:06
supposed to tell people till you're 12
01:17:07
weeks. Like
01:17:09
>> I personally don't agree with that cuz I
01:17:10
reckon it's such a joyous occasion when
01:17:12
you're trying for it. I feel like the
01:17:13
more people you have in your support
01:17:14
network
01:17:15
>> that you trust the better from 3, four,
01:17:18
five weeks, whenever you find out
01:17:20
onwards because
01:17:21
>> Yeah, man. And if it doesn't work for
01:17:23
whatever reason and you lose it, like
01:17:26
it's brutal and it's super it can be
01:17:28
super lonely where it's just you two and
01:17:29
nobody else knew.
01:17:31
>> Um I I agree with that wholeheartedly
01:17:34
cuz it's like you're supposed to keep it
01:17:35
a secret cuz that's the danger zone.
01:17:37
>> Um but then you lose it and it's
01:17:38
suddenly you got to tell people you were
01:17:40
pregnant and now you're not anymore.
01:17:42
>> Yeah. I don't like it.
01:17:44
>> Yeah. It's there must be a re there's
01:17:45
got to be a reason for it, but I don't
01:17:47
know what it is cuz if you've been on
01:17:48
the down side of it, it's not [ __ ]
01:17:50
fun.
01:17:50
>> No, not at all. Um yeah, it was it was
01:17:52
horrible. We
01:17:55
I remember and because we had talked
01:17:56
about it I think you know one two so one
01:18:00
we had lost and another occasion.
01:18:02
>> Is that is that the one uh you called
01:18:04
Sharky?
01:18:04
>> Yep.
01:18:05
>> Yeah.
01:18:05
>> Yep. Yep. Yep. Yep. There's Sharky.
01:18:06
There's Bunny. Bunny was first I think.
01:18:09
Bunny, there's Sharky. Um
01:18:12
>> yeah. There's one though I remember like
01:18:14
we one moment I remember I used to and
01:18:18
Sharon in particular cuz it's so much
01:18:20
harder for Sharon and woman because
01:18:24
you're the obviously the carrying the
01:18:26
baby and so I think she felt even more a
01:18:29
sense of um failure.
01:18:31
>> Yeah. Or guilt and all of those sorts of
01:18:33
things which obviously you shouldn't and
01:18:35
couldn't but you can't tell someone how
01:18:36
to feel. But then that's hard as a guy
01:18:39
too cuz you can't do anything cuz it's
01:18:40
you're not carrying it. But I remember
01:18:42
we used to dread going to the sonogram.
01:18:47
Is it sonogram?
01:18:49
>> Ultrasound. Sorry.
01:18:50
>> It's to dread going to those because you
01:18:52
didn't want to get the bad news that
01:18:53
you'd got previously. And I remember
01:18:54
there was a lady that did one in
01:18:56
particular, lovely lady. Uh
01:18:59
she knew of our loss before um as being
01:19:03
a listener and lovely lady. And so she
01:19:05
was she was loving when um Sharon was
01:19:09
pregnant again. and then was loving them
01:19:11
and then we had like a follow-up and so
01:19:12
we actually grew to you know be like oh
01:19:14
yeah this good place and then we went
01:19:16
back and then turned it on and and the
01:19:18
heartbeat had gone and stuff and I just
01:19:20
remember even seeing the disappointment
01:19:21
in in her face. Yeah, that's brutal,
01:19:24
man. Like I Yeah, we cried a lot. I was
01:19:28
Yeah, you cuz I mean you'd lost a child.
01:19:31
We still
01:19:33
um you know Tyson, our seven-year-old,
01:19:37
is smart little fella and even Ruben to
01:19:40
a little extent knows it. But they think
01:19:42
of themselves, you know, as being one of
01:19:45
five. Like they Tyson will often
01:19:48
reference um Sharky and Bunny and he'll
01:19:51
make little jokes like, "Man, it'd be a
01:19:53
loud car if there were all five of us
01:19:55
were in here, Dad." And um yeah, they
01:19:58
talk about them being up in the stars
01:19:59
with our dog Wussie that passed away
01:20:01
last year and um Warren G and
01:20:04
>> they yeah, they're well aware of it. But
01:20:07
yeah, it's it's brutal. Uh so when we
01:20:10
lost the third one
01:20:14
um Sham was having to get a DNC where if
01:20:19
it's far enough along
01:20:21
it for in real layman's terms you can't
01:20:24
pass it naturally or whatever they have
01:20:26
to do an operation or for a procedure
01:20:30
to uh help sort of you know uh pass you
01:20:35
know get take take little uh baby out
01:20:37
anyway. And uh so horrific to have to go
01:20:40
and do that. Obviously for any person or
01:20:42
couple that have been through that.
01:20:43
We're going to get that. And long story
01:20:46
short, yeah, there was a guy Amar who
01:20:47
was the obstitrician.
01:20:49
Um he is a private obstitrician but also
01:20:53
as part of their job they have to work I
01:20:54
think a couple of days at the public
01:20:56
hospital. We were there getting that. We
01:20:57
met him and we had met many people at
01:20:59
this point obviously. Yeah. And my story
01:21:02
remembers that he essentially was like,
01:21:04
"If you don't mind, I wouldn't mind
01:21:05
having a look at something else while
01:21:07
I'm here. I've got I think I know what
01:21:09
it might be." Yeah. And his suspicion
01:21:12
was that it was like a heart-shaped
01:21:14
uterus that Sharon had. And so a picture
01:21:18
of heart shaped uterus. And he was
01:21:20
correct. And so what he was able to do
01:21:22
and what he said he'd do is said he'd
01:21:24
come in and laser and snip that sort of
01:21:27
top of the heart part and make it one
01:21:29
big oven. again. He said what was
01:21:31
happening when it was a heart shape was
01:21:33
a bun would start growing on one side of
01:21:36
the oven and the other side of the oven
01:21:37
didn't know there was a bun in it and it
01:21:39
would cut off the heat and so it could
01:21:41
only get to a certain size. And that was
01:21:42
sort of how he described it in a super
01:21:44
simple way. He said once I snip that
01:21:46
it's going to be a full oven, your bun's
01:21:49
going to cook and you're going to have a
01:21:51
little boy. And he worded it to us
01:21:53
almost as simply as that. Um and at that
01:21:56
point we're like whatever, mate. Like
01:21:59
>> you try anything, right?
01:22:00
>> Yeah, you can try anything and sure
01:22:02
almost had you know super deflated and
01:22:05
uh crushed after three.
01:22:08
>> He did it. He snipped it. Tyson
01:22:12
and so
01:22:13
>> [ __ ]
01:22:14
>> Yeah. And he was the obstitrician for
01:22:15
that. Um obviously ceserian at 38 weeks
01:22:18
for Tyson. Um amazing. And then yeah,
01:22:22
Reuben was a different story. Um Reuben
01:22:24
is he's got his middle name. So he's
01:22:26
Reuben Amar Casey. He's named after the
01:22:28
obstatrician.
01:22:29
>> What a tribute.
01:22:30
>> Yeah, pretty cool.
01:22:31
>> Uh might have been gutted he wasn't Amar
01:22:33
Reuben, but um but he's Ruben Amar. And
01:22:35
uh
01:22:37
but that was that was a heap more
01:22:39
difficult pregnancy for Sharon cuz she
01:22:41
was in hospital from like 21 weeks. It
01:22:44
was co so we could only I could only
01:22:46
visit her for like an hour a day. Tyson
01:22:48
couldn't come visit her. Um she was in
01:22:51
hospital essentially from essentially
01:22:52
from 21 weeks until he was born at um 29
01:22:57
weeks or 28 weeks. 28 and four I think
01:22:59
he was
01:23:00
>> 28 weeks 4 days. Yeah. So then into the
01:23:03
Niku department and then that was co we
01:23:05
weren't allowed to see Reuben at the
01:23:06
same time together. Uh he was born not
01:23:09
breathing like you get all these
01:23:11
appreciations for things you knew
01:23:12
nothing about. And obviously Niku
01:23:14
department and Starship and that was
01:23:16
something I'd always heard about but you
01:23:18
don't know it until you're in there and
01:23:19
you meet these other families and
01:23:21
similar situations and coupled with co
01:23:25
it was yeah a wild time like that's why
01:23:28
Sharon can sleep through anything now
01:23:30
and she literally had to be in a
01:23:31
hospital for you know 23 hours a day by
01:23:33
herself wondering if she was going to
01:23:35
lose that baby you know like
01:23:38
>> that's pretty tough pretty tough in an
01:23:41
obvious sense but also tough resilience
01:23:45
>> to to get yourself through that amount
01:23:48
of time cuz I could just go about my day
01:23:49
normally like I was still working
01:23:51
>> cuz we could cuz of co we're still doing
01:23:54
radio. I still had to look after Tyson
01:23:56
and um everything else. So I was lucky
01:24:00
in that way that I could just keep
01:24:01
soldiering on where she was just there
01:24:03
having to be
01:24:04
>> living it,
01:24:05
>> laying on her back. Um, yeah, that must
01:24:08
have been a hell of a mask that you put
01:24:09
on at the time though, like uh to go
01:24:12
into work for four hours.
01:24:13
>> Yeah.
01:24:14
>> Cracking jokes with with this massive uh
01:24:17
turmoil going on.
01:24:18
>> It was, but it was also like a perfect
01:24:20
escape.
01:24:21
>> Okay. Yeah.
01:24:23
>> Yeah. It was quite a welcome escape.
01:24:25
>> [ __ ] It's a lot to go through. What uh
01:24:28
even though Amar came up with um that
01:24:30
solution? Yeah. Why did you guys keep
01:24:32
going after three?
01:24:35
Well, that's a good question. I don't
01:24:36
know. Maybe I don't know if we're going
01:24:38
to be one last attempt, one last crack.
01:24:40
>> Yeah, Sharon would answer that question
01:24:42
better. I've sort of
01:24:44
>> blocked it out.
01:24:45
>> Yeah, maybe a little bit. But I don't
01:24:47
know if we're going to keep trying. I I
01:24:48
I could actually imagine Sharon probably
01:24:50
was like, I can't do this again.
01:24:52
>> It was such a toll.
01:24:54
>> And then that's when he was like, just,
01:24:55
you know, let us try that. And then it
01:24:57
worked. But obviously it was so super
01:24:59
nerve-wracking that the whole pregnancy
01:25:01
with Tyson
01:25:02
>> right up until
01:25:04
>> Yeah. that night before at 38 weeks.
01:25:06
I've got a photo of it where, you know,
01:25:08
Sharon's sort of dancing around in the
01:25:10
room. Uh I got a great photo of it where
01:25:12
she's dancing in her um underwear and
01:25:16
Tyson's sort of, you know, popping out
01:25:17
at 38 weeks. And
01:25:19
>> yeah, we were off the next morning to
01:25:20
had to be at the hospital at 6:00 a.m.
01:25:22
for him to come out the sunroof. And so
01:25:24
it was like, wow, what's happening?
01:25:26
>> [ __ ] That whole pregnancy, you must
01:25:27
have just been holding your breath.
01:25:30
Yeah.
01:25:30
>> Four eggshells. Yeah.
01:25:32
>> [ __ ] I'm glad it's been success for you
01:25:34
guys.
01:25:34
>> I think I
01:25:35
>> Yeah, I think we went to Oh, thank you.
01:25:37
Yeah.
01:25:38
>> Yeah, I am too.
01:25:40
>> Yeah, it's the greatest thing we've ever
01:25:41
done.
01:25:42
>> Cuz you you've done a bit of TV work.
01:25:43
You've been on seven days a bunch of
01:25:44
times and you did stuff on the project
01:25:46
as well and uh it was closer to the time
01:25:49
of this happening, but you talked about
01:25:50
this on the project and yeah, you got
01:25:52
emotional. I remember that.
01:25:53
>> Yeah.
01:25:54
>> Yeah. Yep. Can't I can't control that
01:25:56
the emotion stuff. Uh
01:25:58
>> it's powerful TV. It's good to cry and
01:26:00
it normalizes it. I remember it
01:26:02
happening. I remember that exact moment
01:26:03
cuz with the project it was almost over
01:26:07
um
01:26:09
rehearsed and practiced which I'm not a
01:26:11
big fan of cuz
01:26:13
>> I get a read through but you know the
01:26:15
idea of doing read through to make sure
01:26:17
you don't [ __ ] the words up and all of
01:26:18
that stuff but then also you lose
01:26:21
>> those moments of you know spontaneity.
01:26:23
Anyway, but I remember with that one, I
01:26:26
sort of knew what I was going to do as
01:26:27
the lead into the story of whatever it
01:26:29
was, but then all of a sudden when it
01:26:31
was live and I remember as it was
01:26:33
starting and I could see the um cue on
01:26:36
the cameras that I was going to read and
01:26:38
I remember thinking, "Oh, no." Cuz you
01:26:40
know when you know you're going to cry,
01:26:42
you feel it.
01:26:43
>> Feel it in the nose.
01:26:44
>> Yeah. You've got that two or three
01:26:45
second warning where you're like, "Oh,
01:26:46
fuck."
01:26:47
>> And I was just like, "I can't fight it."
01:26:49
And then I remember thinking just feel
01:26:51
it when it's happening. Um, yeah, it's
01:26:54
out of it. You also think you're crying
01:26:56
way more than what you are
01:26:58
>> when you're doing it if you're talking
01:27:00
to someone or whatever. Cuz on replay or
01:27:04
whatever, I pictured in my head I was
01:27:06
this blubbering mess, but it was
01:27:08
actually sort of more just a
01:27:11
>> broken voice and you could hear the
01:27:13
emotion. you after something like that,
01:27:15
you must feel just like completely sort
01:27:17
of vulnerable,
01:27:19
>> you know, like it's hard to feel more
01:27:21
exposed than I guess you do.
01:27:23
>> Totally. But then we came off air and my
01:27:24
phone had blown up from friends and
01:27:26
family and all of that sort of stuff.
01:27:28
>> Um, so I knew it was a good thing.
01:27:30
>> Yeah.
01:27:30
>> But I think I'd learned before that as
01:27:32
well that, you know,
01:27:35
>> emotion and vulnerability, vulnerability
01:27:37
and all of that is is a, you know,
01:27:38
>> a superpower.
01:27:39
>> Obviously a great thing. We we we all
01:27:41
know that, but it's it's still, you
01:27:42
know, I don't know. It's hard. It's
01:27:45
[ __ ] hard.
01:27:45
>> Yeah.
01:27:46
>> Um Yeah. How are you like as a parent?
01:27:48
What's your what's your report card
01:27:50
like? You're pretty good. What are you
01:27:51
What are you do? What are you better at?
01:27:53
And you know, not as good as at at as
01:27:55
what you thought you might be.
01:27:57
>> I still I look at my phone too much.
01:27:59
>> Yeah. If I if I could do one thing less,
01:28:02
it would be
01:28:04
I I've considered lately going ditching
01:28:07
my iPhone and getting literally like a
01:28:11
flip phone. Like I've been putting
01:28:13
genuine thought into it, having a few
01:28:14
chats with a few people, but it's so
01:28:16
crucial for my job.
01:28:17
>> Like so much my job revolves around
01:28:20
little news things you find on
01:28:22
Instagram. Doom scrolling creates so
01:28:24
much of our jobs content.
01:28:27
>> Yeah, you can call it content hunting.
01:28:29
Yeah. And I justify that with but I but
01:28:32
the reality is I spend way too much time
01:28:36
looking at [ __ ] that doesn't matter. And
01:28:38
that'll be sometimes, you know, when
01:28:39
Tyson's trying to tell me a story cuz
01:28:41
little seven-year-olds and
01:28:42
three-year-olds talk so much that
01:28:44
sometimes that can become tiring.
01:28:47
>> But then you got to remember like it
01:28:49
goes so quick and everybody says that.
01:28:51
But it's so true. Like when I look at
01:28:53
Tyson now who's seven and then I see I
01:28:56
remember when he was Reuben's age of
01:28:58
three I'm like that doesn't feel like
01:29:01
that long ago. Um
01:29:03
>> so that's one thing I wish I could do
01:29:04
better is uh is not get distracted. But
01:29:07
I do think I do a good job you know like
01:29:10
um
01:29:11
>> like I go and play with Tyson heaps
01:29:13
outside. I try and spend heaps of time
01:29:15
with them each um whether it be together
01:29:17
or one-on-one. I'm super loving. I tell
01:29:21
them at nauseium how much I love them.
01:29:24
Um, like to the point where it's
01:29:25
punching. Like I'll say to Tyson, "Guess
01:29:27
what?" He'll be like, "I know you love
01:29:29
me." Like, you know, that's not
01:29:31
something I always heard from dad much.
01:29:32
Like I I can count I remember when dad
01:29:35
said that to me when we were on a we
01:29:36
went away on a father son golf trip when
01:29:38
I was like 13 or 14 and we were going to
01:29:41
sleep and it was just me and him away
01:29:42
and he was like, "Love you, mate." And I
01:29:43
remember being like, "Fuck, whoa." Like
01:29:45
out of it. And so like
01:29:49
I'm sure he did say it heaps more, but I
01:29:51
remember that.
01:29:53
>> Um but obviously people would Yeah. I
01:29:56
don't know. So I I reckon maybe um maybe
01:29:59
you try and do too much for your kids.
01:30:01
>> We're a generation I've talked about
01:30:02
this with other people too. There's such
01:30:04
a wild difference in parenting between
01:30:06
my parents and us as parents. Whether
01:30:08
that be through how you um
01:30:13
you know punish them or you know all of
01:30:16
those sorts of things. You know you'd go
01:30:17
out for 10 hours when we were kids
01:30:19
skating and biking and whatever with
01:30:20
mates and come back when it was dark and
01:30:22
now you'd be worried if they walked down
01:30:24
the street for for 10 minutes you'd be
01:30:26
like where's Dyson? Who's got him? You
01:30:28
know like so there's such a huge
01:30:30
difference but you got to let them
01:30:31
problem solve. I'm I'm trying to I'm
01:30:33
trying to I'm trying to learn.
01:30:36
>> Let go of that.
01:30:37
>> Yeah. It's hard though. It's real. It's
01:30:39
really hard cuz you want to give them
01:30:41
answers and you want
01:30:43
>> I want them to they're in this snapshot
01:30:45
at the moment. Like I want them to stay
01:30:47
how they are. Like it's such a beautiful
01:30:49
innocent ages seven and three where
01:30:52
no bad shit's happened to them. Like
01:30:54
everyone has to go through bad things,
01:30:55
but I I never want them to go through
01:30:58
bad things.
01:30:59
>> Like I just Yeah. I can gets me
01:31:02
emotional thinking about it, but like I
01:31:03
just I never I don't know. I just never
01:31:05
want anything bad to happen to them.
01:31:07
>> [ __ ] That's cool.
01:31:08
>> So, it's like Yeah. So, I sort of want
01:31:10
them to stay as they are.
01:31:11
>> That's cool. Well, I think like every
01:31:12
>> Well, it will. And that's life.
01:31:13
>> Yeah. I think every generation does like
01:31:15
the absolute best they can with the
01:31:17
tools and information they'veveve
01:31:18
they've got available at the time.
01:31:22
>> I don't I don't know if that over love
01:31:23
thing comes from how long it took to get
01:31:25
them or not or whether I imagine I would
01:31:27
have been exactly the same with
01:31:29
>> whoever was here.
01:31:30
>> But if that's the worst thing you do as
01:31:31
a parent, oh, dad just loved us so much.
01:31:33
Like I'm sure I do worse things.
01:31:36
>> Yeah. But that's
01:31:38
>> that's what springs to mind.
01:31:40
>> [ __ ] I can see you getting um like
01:31:42
emotional just like reflecting on the
01:31:44
boys and talking about the boys. That's
01:31:46
that's really cool. They might they
01:31:48
might stumble across this and watch this
01:31:49
one day and um I can't imagine how that
01:31:52
would make them feel.
01:31:53
>> Yeah. Well,
01:31:53
>> it's powerful stuff. Eh,
01:31:54
>> you'd hope so. Yeah. That's the one
01:31:57
thing that scares me the most, I reckon,
01:31:58
is uh or a something, you know,
01:32:01
obviously them not having everything
01:32:03
they want and all of that sort of stuff,
01:32:04
but um
01:32:06
yeah, I I've heard you ask it on
01:32:08
different podcasts and sorry if I'm
01:32:11
ruining your question for later, but I
01:32:12
remember you have asked people what they
01:32:14
what they fear or what they're scared
01:32:16
of.
01:32:16
>> Yeah.
01:32:17
>> And it definitely is death for me. I
01:32:19
[ __ ] hate death. I don't like the
01:32:21
idea of it. I I hate the finality of it.
01:32:25
Hate that people face it. Hate that it
01:32:27
happens to good people when other pieces
01:32:29
of [ __ ] walk around. Um that irks me. Um
01:32:33
and I hate the idea of not being there
01:32:36
for them. Like
01:32:38
>> but of course that's going to happen cuz
01:32:39
it's natural.
01:32:40
>> Yeah. And also Yeah. The FOMO aspect,
01:32:42
the stuff that you miss out on.
01:32:43
>> Yeah. And I want them to be like I'm
01:32:45
close with my mom and dad, but I'm like
01:32:47
I can't imagine like but I can easily
01:32:49
also go a week or two without talking to
01:32:50
mom and dad, you And that's not cuz I
01:32:52
don't like them or anything, but it's
01:32:53
just cuz you've got your own life going.
01:32:55
But I can't ever see that being the way
01:32:57
for Tyson and Reuben. Like I'm like, I
01:33:01
don't ever want it to be where we just
01:33:02
don't talk for a couple of weeks or
01:33:03
whatever. Like maybe it's just a stage.
01:33:06
Maybe I'm just learning as a I'm just in
01:33:08
that new parent stage or whatever. I
01:33:09
don't know.
01:33:10
>> [ __ ] That's going to be the most
01:33:11
heartbreaking thing. E like when they're
01:33:12
in their like late teens, early 20s and
01:33:14
you want to pick up the phone and talk
01:33:15
to them. You're like, "Oh, I'll give
01:33:16
them their space. I won't bother them."
01:33:18
>> It's all part of it.
01:33:19
>> Where you feel like you're being used. I
01:33:20
mean, ask me in 10 years I might be
01:33:22
like, "Fuck it."
01:33:24
>> Yeah.
01:33:25
>> I think that's the thing like this
01:33:27
little dog that's sitting in the corner
01:33:28
and you would have found this the same
01:33:29
with your dog. It's like a kid that
01:33:30
never does anything to piss you off.
01:33:32
>> Um, but I think it's the natural
01:33:33
progression of life. Like your kids will
01:33:35
do things to piss you off. So, you need
01:33:36
that sort of
01:33:37
>> They definitely do things to piss us
01:33:38
off. Don't get us wrong.
01:33:39
>> But it's funny, you can be so worn out
01:33:42
and tired and all of that [ __ ] and be
01:33:44
like, "Fuck, we need to go out where
01:33:46
it's just us. Have our own time." And
01:33:48
then you go out and the first thing you
01:33:49
[ __ ] do is start looking at photos of
01:33:51
them or like talking about them or
01:33:53
talking to other parents sharing the
01:33:55
exact same stories. It's bizarre.
01:33:57
>> Um and while these two boys have been
01:34:00
growing up um alongside that like um
01:34:03
sort of in the sideline really has been
01:34:04
um the mental health journey that you've
01:34:06
been on. Um the mental health stuff and
01:34:09
what you've learned about that has that
01:34:11
changed your parenting style at all?
01:34:13
>> Yeah.
01:34:14
>> Yeah.
01:34:14
>> Yeah. How so? um
01:34:18
just a greater awareness of it and
01:34:19
>> yeah well
01:34:23
yeah I reckon that's where that fear
01:34:25
comes from cuz I'd never want them to
01:34:27
not be able to ask for help if they
01:34:28
needed it. M
01:34:29
>> I'd never want them to go through uh
01:34:33
Yeah. I'd never I'd never want them to
01:34:36
go through things where they ever where
01:34:39
that was ever ever a consideration
01:34:43
>> cuz I've had obviously uh people close
01:34:46
to me and in my family and stuff that
01:34:47
have taken their life
01:34:49
>> and yeah the thought of it is really
01:34:52
scary if uh if anything like that
01:34:54
happened to them. So upon us doing heaps
01:34:57
of it uh at work and all of that and in
01:35:00
the show and then having the kids. Yeah,
01:35:02
I think it's me and Sharon have been
01:35:04
really um
01:35:08
strong in our hope that we talk feelings
01:35:11
that again that's another great trait of
01:35:13
Sharon like she's always trying to get
01:35:14
them to say how they're feeling and if
01:35:16
people are making you feel a certain way
01:35:17
to be able to communicate it and
01:35:20
>> um so we're trying to teach it from a
01:35:21
really early age
01:35:23
>> and I'm sure Sharon will be really like
01:35:26
I will be really thorough in
01:35:30
trying to show them vulnerability like
01:35:31
I've cried a bunch times in front of the
01:35:33
boys um
01:35:36
which you probably wouldn't have seen
01:35:37
when you're growing up with our
01:35:38
generation
01:35:40
parents and
01:35:41
>> even discouraged from crying
01:35:43
>> you saw it maybe once when their parents
01:35:45
passed or something like that you know
01:35:46
so
01:35:48
>> yeah I want to and always we always tell
01:35:50
them crying's good and all of that sort
01:35:53
of stuff like
01:35:55
>> see it's definitely changed and shaped
01:35:58
how I will parent
01:36:00
>> I reckon
01:36:01
>> that's Oh yeah, that's
01:36:03
>> it's scary though, man. It's scary cuz
01:36:05
you can never Well,
01:36:08
cuz like it's just it's a um
01:36:13
I don't know. You can't control you
01:36:15
can't control people's brains. You can
01:36:16
have
01:36:17
>> hopes for how their brains treat them,
01:36:19
but everybody's brain treats them
01:36:20
differently. And
01:36:22
>> uh so many times you can think that
01:36:26
people are going all right and they're
01:36:28
not going all right and you'd never
01:36:29
know. And people have great ways of
01:36:31
doing different coping mechanisms and
01:36:34
>> telling people what they want to hear
01:36:35
and all that sort of stuff and you just
01:36:38
never really know. And that's that
01:36:40
scares me.
01:36:41
>> Yeah. It's [ __ ] Eh, it's [ __ ] And
01:36:42
I know not just my boys, that's for
01:36:45
anyone, you know, like it's
01:36:47
>> it's a scary concept that never never
01:36:50
gets any better in this country.
01:36:52
>> If anything, it always
01:36:53
>> continually gets worse to some degree.
01:36:56
>> Yeah. Um, you know, I know Sh, you know,
01:36:59
I actually both yours and Sharon, um,
01:37:01
you, you know, your life was tipped
01:37:02
upside down at the beginning of this
01:37:03
year with like a close friend of hers.
01:37:06
Wonderful, wonderful [ __ ] woman.
01:37:07
>> Yeah.
01:37:08
>> Um, it's hard though because everyone,
01:37:10
it feels like everyone knows that it's
01:37:11
not weak to speak and it's okay to talk
01:37:13
and you can talk.
01:37:14
>> Yeah.
01:37:16
>> I don't know. I don't know what the
01:37:17
solution is there.
01:37:18
>> No, neither.
01:37:18
>> I don't know. But I I think
01:37:19
>> it's not as easy as a solution either.
01:37:21
>> Yeah. And and if if simple solution,
01:37:23
>> if your previous 100 days have been
01:37:25
[ __ ] [ __ ] and today's [ __ ] you think
01:37:27
tomorrow is going to be [ __ ] as well. So
01:37:29
sometimes it can seem like there's no
01:37:30
light at the end of the tunnel.
01:37:31
>> Totally. It can seem like the storm's
01:37:32
not going to, you know, not going to
01:37:34
pass, but then it always does. And but
01:37:36
then there's different degrees to it
01:37:37
too, you know, like not every not one
01:37:40
person that takes their life is the same
01:37:42
for the same reason that the last person
01:37:44
did, you know, like you know, people
01:37:46
that are just brutally mentally um
01:37:50
unwell. And that's different to someone
01:37:53
who's just in a bad state of depression
01:37:56
who doesn't feel like it's ever going to
01:37:57
get better.
01:37:58
>> There's people that are great people but
01:38:01
feel like they're massive. The one thing
01:38:02
I've noticed with all the stories we've
01:38:04
had and people I've spoken to because my
01:38:06
DMs get flooded um with all sorts of
01:38:10
different stories. Some of them being
01:38:11
like great stories of how you know
01:38:13
whatever that something might have done
01:38:15
might have helped or got them to chat or
01:38:17
then there's other people like I'm in it
01:38:18
right now or my mates's in it. And so
01:38:21
often something that comes through heaps
01:38:23
is people feeling like a burden. M.
01:38:26
>> So, I don't know whether that's
01:38:27
something that we put on our kids or we
01:38:30
put on ourselves or or whatever from a
01:38:33
young age that
01:38:35
people have too big a sense of um
01:38:38
responsibility.
01:38:40
>> That's where that burden comes from. I'm
01:38:42
not sure, but that's a real common theme
01:38:44
that I've noticed. And these great
01:38:46
people that do so many great things and
01:38:48
people love so much ultimately think
01:38:51
it's for the best. And it's like, [ __ ]
01:38:53
you couldn't be more wrong. Right.
01:38:55
>> No. And you
01:38:56
>> never and you never got the chance to
01:38:57
tell them like you're so wrong.
01:39:00
>> Yeah. You don't understand the and the
01:39:02
ripple effect it leaves not just with
01:39:03
their immediate circle but it just goes
01:39:05
out so wide.
01:39:07
>> So I've I've worked out too the other
01:39:08
thing I've worked out is the pain that
01:39:11
they're in
01:39:14
like if you've got a big um say you're
01:39:17
at the casino and you've won all these
01:39:19
chips and all those chips represent the
01:39:22
pain that those people are in. Once they
01:39:25
commit uh that act, all that pain just
01:39:29
gets
01:39:30
>> [ __ ] dished out to all their friends
01:39:32
and family.
01:39:32
>> Yeah.
01:39:33
>> Like that's how it is. So the pain
01:39:35
they're in,
01:39:36
>> there's ends, but it gets given to those
01:39:40
closest to them and it lasts forever.
01:39:42
It's not a thing that could pass or does
01:39:44
pass
01:39:45
>> for the people in and around them. It
01:39:46
lasts forever. you know like I still
01:39:48
it's still brutal on on our family even
01:39:50
like
01:39:53
21 years later you know like not with
01:39:56
other friends who are at different
01:39:57
stages along with people in their lives
01:39:59
it's yeah it's forever
01:40:01
>> so you personally how's your mental
01:40:03
health been
01:40:04
>> I I I think all right but then I don't
01:40:06
know like I sometimes you can't answer
01:40:08
your own questions um
01:40:12
I'm I don't want to choose my words
01:40:13
carefully I mean luck doesn't have
01:40:16
anything to do with I guess I'm
01:40:18
fortunate that I've never really
01:40:21
suffered any bad depression. Um, which a
01:40:24
lot of people close to me have at
01:40:25
different times for whatever reason.
01:40:28
I've had definitely times where I've
01:40:30
been in better headspaces than others.
01:40:33
Um,
01:40:35
I can get a little bit of anxiety, but
01:40:37
nothing like what Sharon will get really
01:40:39
bad anxiety. Um, which is horrible. It's
01:40:41
horrible to watch. Um,
01:40:45
yeah. I I could definitely be I could
01:40:47
definitely do more and be better. I
01:40:49
definitely still sometimes
01:40:52
let things
01:40:54
uh build up without communicating them
01:40:57
or dealing with them or or whatever.
01:41:00
Whether that be small frustrations with
01:41:02
all sorts of things or messages that I'm
01:41:04
getting or the way I'm feeling about
01:41:07
things. Exercise and stuff helps me
01:41:09
heaps. Um, exercise is a great thing for
01:41:12
me or golf or seeing my mates or
01:41:16
whatever it may be.
01:41:17
>> As long as I do some form of ali if I do
01:41:19
nothing then I can just become I'll get
01:41:21
real grumpy and I know I know when I'm
01:41:23
grumpy
01:41:25
>> that I'm not
01:41:26
>> good upstairs.
01:41:28
>> I'm the same. I'm the same. If I start
01:41:30
getting angry irrationally. Yeah. Um
01:41:33
>> yeah, that's when I know
01:41:34
>> like if I'm even even little things like
01:41:36
say I'm waiting to pay at a restaurant
01:41:37
and the person in front of me is like
01:41:39
questioning every item on the menu and
01:41:40
I'm standing there going for [ __ ]
01:41:41
sake.
01:41:42
>> It's like I'm I'm able to take a bird's
01:41:44
eye view and go, "Okay, your mental
01:41:47
health isn't where it needs to be right
01:41:48
now. This shouldn't be bothering you at
01:41:51
all."
01:41:51
>> I'll always feel better after I've done
01:41:52
that exercise. Yeah, that's right.
01:41:55
>> Yeah.
01:41:57
>> I think it's all right. That's that's an
01:41:58
interesting thing about you. So there's
01:42:00
there's yeah there's um there's people
01:42:01
that have done huge amounts publicly for
01:42:03
mental health like uh Sir John Cerwin,
01:42:05
Mike King, and they both ended up in
01:42:07
that space as a result of um suffering
01:42:10
brutal depression themselves. You you
01:42:12
haven't suffered it, you've just
01:42:13
experienced it as a like a third party.
01:42:15
>> Yeah.
01:42:16
>> And now you've become this ambassador
01:42:18
for lack of a better term.
01:42:19
>> Yeah.
01:42:20
>> So it started when when when you were at
01:42:21
school.
01:42:22
>> My first experience of it uh was a mate
01:42:26
Aaron French. He took his life when we
01:42:27
were 16. Um, and Aaron was like my best
01:42:31
mate when I was growing up. And I had
01:42:33
moved to Wellington from Oakland. And I
01:42:35
remember getting called by one of my
01:42:36
mates in Wellington. Um, that that had
01:42:38
happened. And
01:42:40
yeah, he's cool sister who I every now
01:42:43
and then have seen. U, but I
01:42:47
know her, she knows me. Her mom, his
01:42:49
mom, Thelma was this awesome lady. and
01:42:51
she actually started the um the yellow
01:42:55
yellow yellow ribbon trust. I want to
01:42:57
get the right color ribbon. I think it's
01:42:58
yellow ribbon. There was the first sort
01:43:00
of suicide um awareness group really
01:43:03
advocate and they were the first ones
01:43:04
who did the first fight for lives. Um
01:43:07
but his mom inspired that um to make
01:43:11
sure it didn't happen to any other
01:43:12
family. Um so that was my first
01:43:15
experience. Uh and then when in 2004
01:43:20
um my sister's husband took his life and
01:43:24
uh and yeah that was super brutal. Uh
01:43:28
>> you know 2 and a halfyear-old son at the
01:43:30
time my nephew and I've never seen grief
01:43:33
like it like
01:43:35
>> yeah heinenous. Like you wouldn't wish
01:43:37
it on the person you hated the most.
01:43:41
>> Like it's it's horrific suffering. And
01:43:44
then uh so that was huge. And then since
01:43:47
then, I mean, we've obviously we've
01:43:50
known mutual people. Um
01:43:53
>> another friend of the the one who
01:43:55
inspired it on the show was a friend
01:43:57
Timmy Hutchkins. Um
01:44:00
>> a good old mate, good old dirt bag mate.
01:44:02
And he um he took his life in 2017.
01:44:09
Little girl as well at the time. And um
01:44:12
yeah, everyone knew Timmy. Everyone
01:44:13
loved Timmy. life of the party, all of
01:44:14
that sort of stuff. Um, uh, and yeah,
01:44:18
the whole he was the genesis of it
01:44:20
really on the on the radio because it
01:44:21
was, um,
01:44:23
uh, that morning that I was going to his
01:44:25
funeral and I'd asked Brad, our boss,
01:44:26
and asked Ro and that I was like, I'm
01:44:28
going to this funeral, site seems to be
01:44:30
this thing that's happened a couple of
01:44:31
times in my life and it sucks. Um, I
01:44:36
realized we had such a big male audience
01:44:38
and I just said, I reckon that's a good
01:44:40
opportunity for me to just write down
01:44:42
I'll prepare it. so I don't ramble.
01:44:45
Like, do you mind if I prepare this
01:44:47
little thing saying it sucks and if
01:44:48
you're battling um you know, essentially
01:44:51
go and see someone? And Brad was all for
01:44:53
it to his credit. Um, of course he was,
01:44:55
but you know, some bosses might not be
01:44:57
might not want to bring the buzz down,
01:44:59
you know, on a breakfast radio show.
01:45:01
>> Yeah. Well, it was new. It's very new at
01:45:03
the time. It was unheard of.
01:45:04
>> And Raj was the same. He was like,
01:45:06
"Yeah, mate. Good idea." Um, and then so
01:45:09
yeah, did it and it got the biggest
01:45:11
response to anything we've ever done.
01:45:13
Like because I think the video got put
01:45:15
up afterwards as well, but it was
01:45:17
immense the amount of people that it hit
01:45:19
with. And so straight away we all
01:45:21
realized we're like, "Oh yeah, well this
01:45:23
is I became really aware, instantly
01:45:26
aware of the importance of the platform
01:45:29
that we had um and the privilege that I
01:45:33
brought with it. But then it became a
01:45:34
thing of trying to um balance it cuz you
01:45:39
still wanted to do your show and be
01:45:40
yourself,
01:45:41
>> give people a laugh.
01:45:42
>> You couldn't do it every break.
01:45:44
>> But that um that that moment there, I
01:45:47
mean, it's easy to look at this with um
01:45:48
eight years of hindsight, but it sort of
01:45:50
changed in a small degree, I guess, the
01:45:53
the course of that radio station.
01:45:55
>> Yep.
01:45:55
>> Like it it really it like gave gave this
01:45:57
radio station a heart.
01:45:58
>> Yeah.
01:46:00
>> It also showed Yeah. And that's to their
01:46:02
credit, too. Like, you know, like all
01:46:04
the big bosses didn't try and dampen it
01:46:07
or lessen it.
01:46:09
>> Our immediate boss, Brad, was super
01:46:11
supportive. Um, all the other shows and
01:46:14
people bought into it, you know, whether
01:46:16
that be Jay and Dunk or whoever it was
01:46:18
that, you know, in the afternoon show
01:46:19
was doing it. Everybody was a part of
01:46:20
it. Um, but mostly and most importantly,
01:46:24
was our audience. Like, it was super
01:46:25
important to the every radio station
01:46:28
says their listeners are the best,
01:46:30
right? you know, like and every radio
01:46:31
station says they're number one. Like
01:46:32
it's a classic old gag. Every radio
01:46:34
show's number one depending on somewhere
01:46:37
somehow that you look at.
01:46:39
>> But I and I'm not just saying it, but I
01:46:41
I really genuinely know the Rumble and
01:46:44
the Rock audience
01:46:47
are pretty special. Like the way that
01:46:49
they've got behind everything that we've
01:46:51
done, the way they've looked after each
01:46:53
other in those communities.
01:46:56
Yeah, it's been it's been pretty unreal
01:46:58
to watch.
01:46:59
>> Yes. In terms of fundraisers to do with
01:47:01
it, how much have you raised? Like a
01:47:02
million bucks.
01:47:02
>> 1.3.
01:47:03
>> 1.3. Wow.
01:47:05
>> Yeah.
01:47:05
>> So, there's been there's been the kids
01:47:07
book last year, Tummy Rumble in the
01:47:08
Jungle.
01:47:08
>> Couple years ago, kids book. Yep. Tummy
01:47:10
Rumble in the Jungle.
01:47:11
>> Which sold like 20,000 copies.
01:47:13
>> Yeah. That's Yeah. Big book company
01:47:15
turned us down. Said that it's not a
01:47:17
good idea for a book. A fart book. I was
01:47:18
like, it's a [ __ ] great idea for a
01:47:20
book. Like, what kid doesn't love a fart
01:47:22
book? They're like, we don't see it
01:47:24
covering costs. So, we ended up having
01:47:26
to do it ourselves, which worked out
01:47:30
spectacularly because then like I think
01:47:33
like $16 from every $20 book got to go
01:47:36
to Gumbbert Friday and we sold 21,000
01:47:40
copies. And so that was 346,000 that
01:47:43
went straight to uh Gumbbert Friday.
01:47:46
>> Unreal. And there's there's the um the
01:47:48
darts marathon, day on the darts.
01:47:49
>> Two two different darts ones. One was a
01:47:51
day on the darts, 24 hours of darts. I
01:47:53
think that raised like 250 odd thousand.
01:47:57
The next year we did a day and a bit on
01:47:59
the darts which was um 30 hours and I
01:48:02
think that was like another 300 odd. Um
01:48:06
started off with the bowling. Uh we did
01:48:08
the bowling in 2019. That was the first
01:48:10
of them. That's still probably the most
01:48:12
important thing we've ever done. Uh that
01:48:14
was 58 hours of tempon bowling and that
01:48:17
was each minute represented a Kiwi that
01:48:20
had tried to take their life the year
01:48:22
before. It was like 6 and a half
01:48:23
thousand minutes.
01:48:24
>> And so that was how we sort of worded it
01:48:26
>> cuz a few years ago early on I they had
01:48:29
got me to try and bowl for 58 hours.
01:48:32
>> Oh, was that the Cure Kids one? Was that
01:48:33
a Cure Kids?
01:48:34
>> I did it twice.
01:48:36
>> 2014.
01:48:37
>> You don't learn, do you?
01:48:38
>> 200 Well, like I said earlier, yeah,
01:48:40
2014 I did it for Cure Kids. That was I
01:48:43
think we raised our 80K for Cure Kids.
01:48:46
But we did it in 2014 cuz it was 10
01:48:47
years on from 2004 when I first did it.
01:48:50
And that was for Nick and Raj. the
01:48:52
breakfast show at the time and that was
01:48:53
[ __ ] that was just to fill a few breaks
01:48:55
essentially. Um it was to try and get a
01:48:57
Guinness World Record which was at 58
01:49:00
hours and I got real close. I got like
01:49:02
hours out
01:49:03
>> anyway and uh so yeah it was 20 years on
01:49:06
or no sorry 15 years on in 2019 when we
01:49:08
did it and it worked out perfectly with
01:49:11
the numbers of
01:49:13
>> yeah the 6 and a half thousand attempts
01:49:15
>> or three and a half thousand maybe it's
01:49:18
>> [ __ ] sleep deprivation is the worst
01:49:20
though. It's the worst. It's terrible.
01:49:21
>> Her horrific.
01:49:22
>> Yeah. I I I was in terrible states in
01:49:25
that.
01:49:26
>> Yeah. There's a real powerful photo. I
01:49:27
think it's um actually there might be a
01:49:29
couple. I think there's one of you and
01:49:30
Sharon hugging and there's one of you
01:49:31
and you and um Andrew Mulligan um having
01:49:33
a hug as well and you look like a broken
01:49:35
man.
01:49:36
>> Yeah, I was. Yeah. He'd just come and
01:49:38
comfort me.
01:49:38
>> Yeah.
01:49:39
>> I'd just start crying. I had no control
01:49:40
over it. Your emotions would just Yeah.
01:49:42
I just didn't want to do it anymore. Had
01:49:44
this counselor come along. He was really
01:49:45
important. He was about 30 hours into
01:49:47
it. I was like, I cannot go for another
01:49:49
28 hours. like and he was like, "Why are
01:49:52
you doing this?" And he was [ __ ] me
01:49:53
off cuz he was just right in my face,
01:49:55
you know, when you're tired. He's like,
01:49:57
"Why are you doing it, bro?" And I was
01:49:58
like, "Fuck, mate. Like, it's [ __ ]
01:49:59
obvious why I'm doing it. Like, we're
01:50:01
raising money for Gumb Friday." He's
01:50:03
like, "Yeah, I know that's the end
01:50:05
result." He's like, "But why are you
01:50:06
doing it?" And uh I remember being like,
01:50:08
"What is this [ __ ] talking about?"
01:50:10
And then he's like, "Why'd you come up
01:50:14
with this in the first place?" And I was
01:50:16
like, "It's for suicide." He's like,
01:50:18
"Why?" He's like, "Because I don't want
01:50:20
people to do it." He's like, "What do
01:50:21
you not want them to do?" I was like, "I
01:50:23
don't want them to give up." And he's
01:50:25
like, "Then that's what you got to do,
01:50:26
not give up." He's like, "Just keep
01:50:28
thinking of that the whole time." He's
01:50:30
like, "Five Friday will come around. And
01:50:33
if you gave up now, when that 5:00 p.m.
01:50:36
comes on the Friday, you'll be
01:50:38
disappointed that you didn't stay doing
01:50:40
it." And I was like, "Fuck you.
01:50:43
>> You're right. Damn it.
01:50:44
>> [ __ ] you. You're right." And he was
01:50:47
right. But it was important.
01:50:50
>> Yeah. Yeah. There's a real powerful
01:50:51
metaphor in there, isn't there?
01:50:53
>> Yeah. Not giving up. And and like he was
01:50:56
right when 5:00 p.m. came around a
01:50:58
moment that I thought was never going to
01:50:59
come and was impossible. When it hit, I
01:51:02
was euphoric.
01:51:03
>> I was skulling a bear. I was like, you
01:51:07
know,
01:51:07
>> suddenly you don't feel like asleep
01:51:09
anymore.
01:51:09
>> No way. I actually took ages to go to
01:51:11
sleep after that. I was I was in my I
01:51:13
was in this hotel room by myself just
01:51:15
having a couple of beers going, wonder
01:51:16
what people are doing. remember texting
01:51:18
a mate and he's like, "Go to sleep,
01:51:20
bro." Like [ __ ] no one's coming to
01:51:22
see you. Go to sleep.
01:51:23
>> Yeah.
01:51:24
>> But putting yourself in in this position
01:51:26
and doing these things and becoming this
01:51:28
um sort of spokesperson, like what sort
01:51:30
of toll has that taken on you
01:51:31
personally? I'm guessing you get
01:51:32
inundated with all these um uh really
01:51:35
important DMs.
01:51:36
>> Yep.
01:51:36
>> Um and you're not trained to deal with
01:51:38
them. You they sort of deserve your
01:51:40
priority or attention.
01:51:42
>> Y don't know how to respond to them all.
01:51:44
Sometimes I'll just sort of do I don't I
01:51:46
started early on. I'd reply to everyone,
01:51:48
but I can't do that now because I don't
01:51:51
have the right answers for everything.
01:51:53
Um, and so I'll sort of I'll address it
01:51:56
every now and then by doing sort of like
01:51:58
a a post or a story in and around the
01:52:01
messages. Uh, and I'll reference them on
01:52:03
the show and that sort of stuff. But
01:52:06
yeah, I get heaps of heavy [ __ ] man. I
01:52:07
get people coming up at it's at concerts
01:52:10
where I get it the most. But it's a
01:52:12
strange thing because it's I've I've
01:52:14
also welcomed it and asked for it.
01:52:16
>> So I can't be sort of off it.
01:52:20
Um but I also don't always know what to
01:52:22
say or do. Like I and it's a great it's
01:52:25
a privilege cuz people are coming up and
01:52:28
being vulnerable and telling you
01:52:30
things that are really important to
01:52:31
them,
01:52:33
which is what you've encouraged.
01:52:36
But it's also Yeah. It's quite a lot to
01:52:38
take on.
01:52:38
>> Yeah.
01:52:39
>> Yeah. Yeah, like you're getting told
01:52:41
super specific heavy details at times
01:52:44
where you're like
01:52:47
>> it's like I feel like Mike King there's
01:52:48
been times over the years where you've
01:52:50
seen him sort of like crashing and it's
01:52:51
100% we had too much well he came down
01:52:54
he had that massive breakdown on our
01:52:56
show.
01:52:57
>> Yeah, that's right.
01:52:58
>> I don't know if you recall it but like
01:52:59
he just
01:53:00
>> Yeah, he had a full full breakdown right
01:53:03
in front of us.
01:53:04
>> So it was it was horrible. What would
01:53:06
your message be to um your Kiwi men in
01:53:08
particular who are struggling but don't
01:53:10
know how to ask for help or don't know
01:53:11
where to begin?
01:53:17
Well, I reckon
01:53:20
first of all they'll do well to even
01:53:25
admit it and accept it that they are not
01:53:28
doing well. Too many people will try and
01:53:30
too many guys will try and lie to
01:53:32
themselves. um that back to that whole
01:53:34
burden factor of you've just got to keep
01:53:36
going.
01:53:37
>> But I think we're getting better at
01:53:39
being able to admit when we do need
01:53:42
help. And so when you do, you can, you
01:53:46
know, you can a lot of people will
01:53:48
message us and ask us that same
01:53:49
question. And we've got a bunch of
01:53:51
people to send back as lines of hope. Um
01:53:55
it's talking to different people. It's
01:53:57
telling people that you trust. Um, which
01:53:59
can feel like a really probably silly or
01:54:01
stupid thing to do. You know, if you get
01:54:02
bad responses from people in the first
01:54:04
place of being like, "Fuck, you'll be
01:54:05
right, bro." Like, or I've got this
01:54:07
going on. It's [ __ ] way worse than
01:54:09
what you're going on. Well, they're not
01:54:10
the person to talk to, you know? Like,
01:54:13
>> I also think talking to people that
01:54:15
might not be the closest people is might
01:54:17
work for you, you know? Like, say your
01:54:19
best mate is also [ __ ] at communicating.
01:54:22
Like, that's not your mate's fault. He's
01:54:23
just [ __ ] at communicating.
01:54:25
>> He's not He's not trained.
01:54:26
>> It's not his fault either, you know?
01:54:27
Like it might be someone at work, an
01:54:30
intelligent person at work or whatever,
01:54:32
you know, or a family friend or
01:54:36
Yeah. Just trying like don't
01:54:40
>> don't not try.
01:54:41
>> I just don't think people realize
01:54:45
how many people really care.
01:54:49
They just don't know. They just really
01:54:51
don't realize how important
01:54:53
>> people how people don't realize how
01:54:55
important they are.
01:54:56
>> Yeah. Yeah. And just
01:54:57
>> because also we live in the Yeah. And
01:54:58
how dev and we live in this life of
01:55:00
like,
01:55:02
>> you know, you see everything on
01:55:03
Instagram. You see [ __ ] great people
01:55:05
doing cool things and no matter where
01:55:07
you are in life, there's always someone
01:55:08
doing cooler [ __ ] or better [ __ ] than
01:55:10
you. And so, you know, and so that must
01:55:13
be absolutely even quantified for
01:55:15
[ __ ] average Joe, you know, I imagine
01:55:18
in this day and time. Like,
01:55:21
>> and that could add pressure to you.
01:55:22
Like, so you could feel less important
01:55:24
than what you are, I imagine. Um,
01:55:28
>> coupled with everything else, like
01:55:30
>> Yeah, it's tough, man.
01:55:32
>> Yeah, life is tough.
01:55:33
>> Life's tough for a lot of people.
01:55:35
>> What about you? What What would your
01:55:36
personal like rock bottom be? Would it
01:55:38
be the the fertility stuff,
01:55:42
the
01:55:43
>> I suppose at the time the arrest thing,
01:55:45
the pilot thing must
01:55:46
>> That's [ __ ] all.
01:55:47
>> Yeah. Really?
01:55:48
>> Yeah. It was it was important at the
01:55:50
time, but it was it was nothing.
01:55:53
>> Yeah. You look back with 5 years of
01:55:54
>> Yeah. It's nothing for you. Yeah.
01:55:58
>> Yeah. Rock bottom.
01:56:02
Rock bottom is is two things. Yeah. It's
01:56:06
It's Yeah. Seeing the grief in my family
01:56:10
uh with that loss of life and
01:56:13
>> Oh, with your sister's husband.
01:56:15
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. uh and seeing how that
01:56:17
what that did to my family. And then
01:56:19
obviously, yeah, losing
01:56:23
uh having miscarriages was a horrible
01:56:26
feeling.
01:56:27
>> Wouldn't I think it's sort of um I don't
01:56:30
know. I don't want anyone to ever have
01:56:32
that happen. Uh but I certainly don't
01:56:35
think it's maybe looked upon as
01:56:39
tragically as what they are for those
01:56:42
people that it affects cuz it happens
01:56:43
like one in four pregnancies or
01:56:45
something crazy. So it happens to people
01:56:46
all the time but it's really just
01:56:50
>> talked about well no and it's also
01:56:52
looked at as yeah they happen. They say,
01:56:55
"Well, yeah, I get they happen, but
01:56:56
they're also horrific,
01:56:58
>> you know, people's Yeah. devastating
01:57:01
people's dreams end and
01:57:03
>> all that sort of stuff." Yeah, they'd be
01:57:04
my two that I can think of.
01:57:06
>> Yeah.
01:57:06
>> Have you got better through this whole
01:57:08
mental health um journey with your
01:57:10
vulnerability with mates and or have you
01:57:12
always been pretty good with forcing the
01:57:16
conversations that are more than
01:57:17
superficial?
01:57:17
>> We've definitely got better, but I've
01:57:20
always been I've always loved my mates.
01:57:23
M
01:57:24
>> yeah I've become a better person like I
01:57:27
wasn't always a good person I reckon
01:57:28
like I definitely did some [ __ ] bag
01:57:30
things when I was teenager and all of
01:57:32
that sort of stuff like
01:57:34
so I reckon I've become a better person
01:57:36
I think well I try to be also not
01:57:38
obviously not perfect and all that stuff
01:57:40
but it's made me a better person I think
01:57:42
um it's funny how bad things can make
01:57:45
people better you know or
01:57:47
>> hard things uh but with in terms of my
01:57:51
mates I've always been uh a passionate
01:57:55
mate, I reckon. I wish I saw and spend
01:57:57
more time with my mates now than what I
01:57:58
do. But that's also life.
01:58:00
>> It's hard when you get older, right?
01:58:01
>> You know, I got to go to bed early every
01:58:03
night.
01:58:04
You know, you want then you've got your
01:58:06
own relationship and then you got your
01:58:08
boys and sometimes you're just like I
01:58:10
love nothing more than
01:58:12
[ __ ] doing nothing. M
01:58:14
>> it's like a nice little like once the
01:58:16
kids have gone to bed and you've got
01:58:17
this 2 or 3 hours of your own time like
01:58:20
it's a
01:58:21
>> well you've got a treat a highly
01:58:23
socially stimulated job you know so it's
01:58:26
understandable
01:58:27
>> yeah that's probably adds to it
01:58:28
>> okay to be in the piece
01:58:30
>> what's your um Mike King talks often
01:58:32
about his the inner critic what's your
01:58:35
inner voice in a critic like
01:58:37
>> um I don't know I think everybody
01:58:39
probably suffers a little bit at times
01:58:40
from that imposter syndrome thing that
01:58:42
gets talked Uh
01:58:46
>> my inner critic uh
01:58:48
>> like are you are you generally quite
01:58:49
nice to yourself?
01:58:51
>> I don't know. It's hard to answer that.
01:58:55
>> Um
01:58:57
I think so. Like uh I am I definitely am
01:59:01
sensitive like things that I might not
01:59:04
might not look like
01:59:07
hurt you or affect you would. I reckon
01:59:10
uh
01:59:11
>> I don't know I can be self quite
01:59:13
self-conscious at times different things
01:59:15
um
01:59:18
>> yeah
01:59:19
I mean yeah you definitely critique
01:59:21
yourself but I don't know I mean I guess
01:59:23
you just always wish you were better at
01:59:24
everything you did you wish you were
01:59:26
better in
01:59:27
>> your relationship you wish you were
01:59:29
better as a parent all those sorts of
01:59:30
things um but I but I don't
01:59:34
think I also I don't think I bag myself
01:59:37
heaps either
01:59:39
Yeah.
01:59:40
>> Well, I think that's a good
01:59:41
>> Definitely don't think I'm perfect by
01:59:42
any stretch, though. I don't walk around
01:59:43
like [ __ ] Yeah,
01:59:45
>> I'm done. No work. I'm done. I'm done.
01:59:47
>> What's on the to-do list?
01:59:49
>> Yeah. Yeah. Looks like we are good to go
01:59:51
here. Certainly not like that.
01:59:52
>> Well, I think I think that's good. Like,
01:59:54
if you're not if you're not flogging
01:59:55
yourself and beating yourself up, but
01:59:57
you're aware that there's still areas
01:59:58
that have room for improve, I think
01:59:59
that's a good space to be playing in.
02:00:01
>> Yeah, I think so. I think that's most
02:00:03
people though, isn't it?
02:00:04
>> Best and worst habits.
02:00:07
H best and worst habits.
02:00:09
>> I should have asked Sharon this one.
02:00:13
>> I don't know. Do you mean like around
02:00:15
the house? Do you mean
02:00:17
>> I don't know. You interpret that anyway
02:00:18
you want.
02:00:21
>> I don't know. Worst habits I probably
02:00:23
get grumpy more than I should.
02:00:24
>> Yeah.
02:00:25
>> Um like I spoke to earlier, I would say
02:00:28
I wish I didn't get but then you can't
02:00:30
be happy all the time as well. Um worst
02:00:32
habit again I would say phone doom
02:00:34
scrolling. I'm getting I'm finding
02:00:36
myself growing more and more tired of
02:00:37
that lately. Uh that's definitely a
02:00:39
thing. Um
02:00:43
worst habits.
02:00:46
>> I don't know. It's hard to think of
02:00:47
those on the spot. Uh
02:00:50
>> I'm sure Sharon has a lot of list of
02:00:51
things I do around the house that annoy
02:00:52
her greatly.
02:00:54
>> Yeah.
02:00:54
>> Breathing loudly. She hates the way I
02:00:56
breathe. She also hates the way you eat
02:00:57
apples.
02:00:58
>> She hates the way I eat. Hates that you
02:01:00
can hear me chewing. Um she can hear me
02:01:03
chewing when I eat. That's one.
02:01:05
>> But then she leaves she leaves [ __ ]
02:01:07
shoes everywhere, so she's not perfect.
02:01:09
>> Yeah.
02:01:09
>> Yeah.
02:01:10
>> Um that stuff's cute in relationships. I
02:01:12
remember by the time I left home, like
02:01:13
my dad had a like a clicking jaw and we
02:01:16
was living in quite a small house.
02:01:18
>> I could the noise just became so loud
02:01:20
like wherever I was in the house, I
02:01:21
could hear him eating his wheat bugs.
02:01:23
>> Yeah. Yeah. That would be I'm sure what
02:01:25
she says.
02:01:25
>> Yeah.
02:01:26
>> But nothing nothing
02:01:28
>> springs straight to mind of
02:01:31
>> best and worst habits.
02:01:32
>> Yeah. What about um regrets?
02:01:37
Um what do I regret?
02:01:47
Um uh I mean
02:01:51
well when me and Sharon were first
02:01:52
together for a little bit, we broke up
02:01:54
and I was a bit of a dick and that was
02:01:57
um Michael to break that up at that
02:02:00
time. I regret that because I know how
02:02:03
much like that hurt Sharon at the time
02:02:06
and so I don't like that I did that.
02:02:09
>> So I that would say I'd say that that
02:02:11
springs to mind. Um you never want to
02:02:13
hurt people that you love that sort of
02:02:14
stuff.
02:02:15
>> Um
02:02:16
>> I reckon she's probably forgiven you.
02:02:18
>> I don't know.
02:02:19
>> Actually, what am I saying?
02:02:22
>> Does it come up from time to time?
02:02:23
>> Maybe. Um no. No, she's good. Um
02:02:28
yeah, I I reckon I regret uh
02:02:32
yeah, you know, like as I say, like you
02:02:33
weren't always perfect. So there would
02:02:35
definitely would have been friendships
02:02:37
or um you know, [ __ ] if you got into
02:02:42
whatever whatever trouble or dumb [ __ ] I
02:02:44
did when I was in late teens or
02:02:46
whatever. I'm there would be things I
02:02:49
did that I regret for sure in terms of
02:02:51
maybe how I treated some people
02:02:53
>> um and wasn't mature or whatever at the
02:02:56
time to be better. Um trying to impress
02:02:59
other people.
02:03:01
>> Yeah. Sometimes you can regret trying to
02:03:04
do what you think you should do
02:03:05
>> instead of just knowing what's right in
02:03:07
the first place, you know.
02:03:08
>> Yeah.
02:03:10
>> Part of the learning experience though,
02:03:11
isn't it?
02:03:12
>> Yeah.
02:03:13
>> Yeah.
02:03:14
>> Oh, I forgot to talk about all the
02:03:15
awards you won as well.
02:03:16
There's so there's been um yeah two Kiwi
02:03:19
Bank local hero of the year awards for
02:03:21
the the mental health stuff and also you
02:03:24
in 2020 you won the um at the New
02:03:26
Zealand radio awards uh the poor sir
02:03:28
Paul Holmes award for overall
02:03:29
broadcaster of the year.
02:03:31
>> Yeah really swept under the rug that one
02:03:32
though cuz it was in co there was no
02:03:34
awards.
02:03:34
>> Oh there's no ceremony.
02:03:35
>> Never got to do a speech.
02:03:36
>> That's what I was Yeah. We were on a
02:03:38
live stream feel really ripped off with
02:03:40
that. Everyone had already shut it off
02:03:42
by then. [ __ ] yeah. The awards are done.
02:03:44
I didn't win. But do they um are they
02:03:46
special? They they mean a lot to you.
02:03:49
>> Uh
02:03:49
>> I've seen photos on your Instagram being
02:03:51
New Zealander of the year nomination
02:03:52
one. I mean that's cool cuz you know um
02:03:55
that means someone's nominated you and
02:03:58
but then that's also that those and I
02:04:00
was as I've always said which I mean
02:04:01
they're a big reflection of everything
02:04:03
the station and shows done. I get all
02:04:06
the accolades for the mental health
02:04:07
stuff, right? But the show like Mels and
02:04:09
them and Mel and Roger, I'm not just
02:04:13
saying it, but they're equally as big a
02:04:15
part because you wouldn't be able to do
02:04:17
it without them. Um, and their support.
02:04:20
So that I think that's a reflection of
02:04:22
them. So I am proud to get them. Um,
02:04:25
broadcaster year I was stoked with
02:04:26
because it gives you a sense of like I
02:04:30
fought so hard to get on the radio. like
02:04:32
I I was told no time and time again and
02:04:35
that I you know wasn't really going to
02:04:36
be good enough. I remember dad being
02:04:38
like mate I know that you got passion
02:04:39
but this isn't working buddy like you
02:04:42
know but I knew I was like nah [ __ ] I
02:04:44
know I can do this like I know I can and
02:04:47
so I really just bullied my way into
02:04:49
finally getting a job and then obviously
02:04:51
it's worked since. So that was for me a
02:04:53
real nice sense of cuz when I was first
02:04:56
trying to get a job my dad was making
02:04:58
olive oil he'd retired from banking he
02:04:59
was making olive oil village press. Um,
02:05:01
great plug there. Go get it. Um, they
02:05:03
were making it, right? And Paul Holmes
02:05:06
was getting it. He was making olive
02:05:08
growing olives and wanted to make his
02:05:09
own olive oil. So anyway, had dad come
02:05:12
around for a meeting at his house in
02:05:14
Romeer.
02:05:16
And I went with dad trying to do a whole
02:05:19
and dad was trying to get me into like
02:05:20
this is my son and he like he's just
02:05:21
finished radio training at radio and so
02:05:25
I remember meeting him at his house when
02:05:26
I was 20 like before I started at the
02:05:29
rock and I was like you and dad was like
02:05:31
Bryce here he wants to get into radio
02:05:33
have you got any advice for him he's
02:05:34
like don't do it I remember being like
02:05:37
he's like it's you know you're going to
02:05:39
have years of where you're not liking it
02:05:40
and all of that sort of stuff but he was
02:05:42
super lovely but so to win an award in
02:05:45
his came and I remember that and
02:05:46
obviously he's one of the goats. Yeah,
02:05:48
it was cool. Definitely proud.
02:05:49
>> Yeah. And and to to be like a like a
02:05:52
dude on a a rock station on a music
02:05:54
radio show that wins this award like
02:05:55
Heather Dupy Ellen won it this year. I
02:05:58
think Hosking wins it most. Yeah. It's
02:05:59
the highest
02:06:00
>> honor you can win in New Zealand radio.
02:06:03
And you you I've won it before, but I
02:06:05
won it as part of a team with um JJ Fen
02:06:08
and Mike Padu. But you're part of a team
02:06:09
and you won it as um
02:06:10
>> 2014 or something. You won that, didn't
02:06:12
you? Was it 2014? I think it was
02:06:13
>> first first year. It was first year that
02:06:15
they had this award so I didn't realize
02:06:16
what a big deal it was.
02:06:17
>> Yeah.
02:06:18
>> But you won it as an individual as part
02:06:19
of a team which is [ __ ] massive.
02:06:21
>> Yeah. Yep. Super proud of it. Yeah. It's
02:06:23
rad. Um
02:06:25
>> Yeah. Proud but it gives you
02:06:29
Yeah. sense of uh pride for sure.
02:06:32
>> Yeah. I feel like those were goats.
02:06:35
>> So you win this um heavy gold bar which
02:06:37
is in the shape of like a a speaker.
02:06:40
Where is that? Um, and Sharon's now put
02:06:42
it on uh in our bedroom. It did have a
02:06:47
real place of pride in our house next to
02:06:49
my record player and stuff. Uh, but
02:06:51
there were too many big gold awards. So,
02:06:53
she
02:06:53
>> Okay.
02:06:54
>> So, she's moved one of them that one
02:06:56
into my bedroom on my Duchess
02:06:58
>> cuz the gold awards you only went there
02:06:59
for the big categories at the radio just
02:07:02
get
02:07:02
>> where we were putting them. We ran out
02:07:04
of room
02:07:05
>> so she hasn't won many e
02:07:07
>> so she moved.
02:07:08
>> She She hasn't won many and her She
02:07:10
should have.
02:07:11
>> I know.
02:07:12
>> Uh she did win one though for a blackie.
02:07:14
She won a blackie, but she just let I
02:07:17
think uh Ben I think took that gold
02:07:20
statue or Jonno.
02:07:21
>> Well, cuz you get one per team.
02:07:22
>> Yeah.
02:07:23
>> So the too many gold bars you're talking
02:07:24
about pretty much they're mainly yours.
02:07:27
>> Uh well, no, they're Blackie. Some of
02:07:29
them are Blackey Awards. Another great
02:07:30
broadcaster, Kevin Black. No, I mean I
02:07:32
joke when I say that, but that's what
02:07:34
she has kept them off to the side for.
02:07:36
>> Yeah.
02:07:36
>> Yeah. Well, congratulations. That's
02:07:37
huge.
02:07:38
>> Yeah. Yeah. Thanks. It must must have
02:07:39
felt really good. Like you were talking
02:07:40
before about your dad saying, "Mate, try
02:07:42
something else." Like I feel like um you
02:07:44
mentioned James Coleman earlier who was
02:07:46
like one of your idols when he was doing
02:07:47
the afternoon show at Channel Z.
02:07:49
>> James Coleman was always one of these
02:07:50
guys that had this like hum about him.
02:07:52
>> Yeah.
02:07:53
>> I feel like you're one of these guys.
02:07:54
This necessarily been like Bryce is
02:07:56
going to be the next big thing. You've
02:07:57
just like grind away, worked your
02:08:00
[ __ ] ass off,
02:08:01
>> kept your head down, and you've achieve
02:08:03
achieved wonderful things.
02:08:05
>> Yeah. Um Yeah. Well, thanks mate. Um, I
02:08:08
don't know. I Yeah, I have a great sense
02:08:10
of pride of trying to do a good job. I'm
02:08:12
I'm proud of what we've been able to
02:08:14
achieve in that space with mental
02:08:16
health, but I also I genuinely like
02:08:18
making people laugh. I like making
02:08:19
myself laugh. Like,
02:08:21
>> we laugh a lot in our show. Um,
02:08:24
and a lot of it super genuine, you know,
02:08:27
like. So,
02:08:28
>> yeah, that for me is pretty lucky and to
02:08:31
be able to do that. Yeah.
02:08:32
>> Well, if you're listening to your show,
02:08:34
say you're in the car with other people
02:08:35
and you have it on like at a gentle
02:08:37
volume in the background, you feel like
02:08:38
you're missing out on something that's
02:08:40
going on.
02:08:40
>> Well, that's great.
02:08:41
>> Those [ __ ] are having a lot of
02:08:42
fun.
02:08:42
>> That's a great compliment. That's
02:08:43
exactly what we try and do as a show. We
02:08:46
want that's the whole ethos of the show
02:08:47
is we want to be
02:08:49
>> the group at the pub that are having a
02:08:51
funny ass chat that you want to that
02:08:53
you're also welcome to join in and be
02:08:55
part of.
02:08:56
>> That's literally how we position
02:08:57
ourselves is how we want it to sound.
02:08:59
>> Yeah.
02:08:59
>> Yeah.
02:09:00
>> That's cool. So that's cool that you say
02:09:02
that.
02:09:02
>> How close are you to being the best
02:09:04
version of yourself?
02:09:05
>> Oh, good question.
02:09:10
H
02:09:14
probably probably still quite far away.
02:09:18
>> Seven out of 10, eight out of 10.
02:09:21
>> H
02:09:22
>> it's exciting thing about aging a that
02:09:24
you think cuz I would have thought by
02:09:25
the time I was um I'm 52 now. I would
02:09:27
have thought by the time I'm 50
02:09:29
everything was done. Everything you're
02:09:30
going to learn till you've maxed out.
02:09:32
>> Yeah. Well, when we were kids and
02:09:34
someone was 46, which I just turned, so
02:09:36
[ __ ] that dude's old ass.
02:09:38
>> He must know everything. You're
02:09:39
>> old, bro. And now I'm that old, bro. But
02:09:42
I don't feel 46.
02:09:44
>> No, I don't feel any like all he's at
02:09:46
work like 21, 22. And I'm like, I
02:09:49
literally could be their dads. It's like
02:09:51
that's so weird.
02:09:52
>> I don't feel 46, but I see that that
02:09:55
does like I don't feel 46. And
02:09:57
22-year-old was like, "You [ __ ] look
02:09:58
it." And I was like, "Oh, fuck."
02:10:02
>> And I I I reckon the older I get, the
02:10:05
more I realize that the less I know
02:10:06
about stuff. Whereas when I was in my
02:10:08
late 20s, I probably thought I knew just
02:10:10
about everything.
02:10:10
>> 100%. Yeah. Um, so out of 10, I don't
02:10:13
know, man. Maybe a
02:10:16
>> h
02:10:18
maybe a seven. Maybe.
02:10:21
>> I definitely
02:10:21
>> Not bad. I think you still you always
02:10:22
want to have that buffer of something.
02:10:24
>> Six and a half. Seven.
02:10:25
>> Yeah,
02:10:25
>> there are. No. Yeah. Six and a half.
02:10:27
There are many things I could be better
02:10:28
at. M
02:10:29
>> yeah.
02:10:29
>> But you you're someone that you'd want
02:10:31
to go and have a beer with?
02:10:33
>> Yeah. I like having a beer with mates.
02:10:35
>> No. No. With yourself like
02:10:37
>> Yeah. Yeah. I think so.
02:10:38
>> Yeah.
02:10:39
>> Yeah. Yes, I would be.
02:10:41
>> Yeah.
02:10:41
>> I think because um
02:10:45
>> I don't know. Like I feel like I am
02:10:48
someone who a loves to have a laugh like
02:10:50
which I do.
02:10:52
I reckon I'm a good listener.
02:10:55
>> Um
02:10:57
yeah. Yeah. And I like talking [ __ ] So,
02:10:59
>> I think they're they're a good combo of
02:11:01
three things.
02:11:02
>> Yeah.
02:11:02
>> Someone who can talk something sort of
02:11:03
serious can also pay each other out.
02:11:06
I've got I think I'm pretty good at
02:11:08
laughing at myself.
02:11:09
>> Yeah. I I'd have a beer with me.
02:11:12
Sometimes it is just me having a beer
02:11:13
with me. So, that's why that's easy to
02:11:15
answer.
02:11:16
>> And and um I I'm imagining you're the
02:11:18
person in your friend group that um
02:11:21
you're the safe space everyone can go to
02:11:22
for a vulnerable conversation. probably
02:11:26
maybe in these last few years for sure.
02:11:27
I go and MC this uh fishing event every
02:11:30
year. My mate Aaron owns Just Another
02:11:32
Fisherman, the clothing brand. He puts
02:11:34
on this um
02:11:36
>> uh fishing for men's mental health each
02:11:39
year. Anglers escape up north and uh
02:11:41
it's growing and growing and growing. I
02:11:43
see there like 140 um anglers at it and
02:11:46
I MC those nights and um yeah like
02:11:51
heaps of mates go on that and yeah
02:11:52
they'll all come up for for those sorts
02:11:54
of uh yarns and things like that and but
02:11:56
then tell me that they've been able to
02:11:58
have conversations with their mates that
02:12:00
they
02:12:01
didn't used to have and
02:12:04
>> it's amazing. It's like 140 guys that
02:12:06
are menly, you know, manly men, like
02:12:10
hunters as well. And it's so open the
02:12:13
chat of um being vulnerable and yeah, I
02:12:19
think I made the joke this year when I
02:12:20
was MCing up there. I was like, if you
02:12:21
know, I've been at the Rock 25 years. I
02:12:23
think I'd celebrated it that day and
02:12:24
then I drove up to MC it and I was like
02:12:26
if I you know had have been talking
02:12:28
about men's mental health and being
02:12:31
vulnerable and crying and um celebrating
02:12:33
that 25 years ago when I started if I
02:12:35
mced a fishing comp at the Funo fishing
02:12:38
comp I would have been [ __ ] what would
02:12:40
have been yelled at me you know like it
02:12:42
would have been some terrible homophobic
02:12:44
[ __ ] something would have been yelled at
02:12:46
me like
02:12:47
>> you'd never have been welcomed back your
02:12:49
boss probably would have been like what
02:12:50
the [ __ ] was that [ __ ] like and Now it's
02:12:54
encouraged, accepted,
02:12:56
>> appreciated,
02:12:58
>> people are right into it.
02:12:59
>> Yeah. Yeah. This is this is your legacy.
02:13:02
Whatever happens from here on in, this
02:13:03
is your legacy as like a broadcaster in
02:13:05
New Zealand.
02:13:06
>> I guess so. Yeah. Which I didn't intend
02:13:08
it to be.
02:13:10
>> It comes with a bit of responsibility, I
02:13:11
reckon, too, though. I I got to make
02:13:12
sure I don't [ __ ] it up.
02:13:14
>> Oh, you won't. You won't.
02:13:16
>> And last one. Three words that you'd
02:13:18
like um the family and friends to
02:13:19
describe you.
02:13:21
when the time comes.
02:13:25
Loyal.
02:13:26
>> Mhm.
02:13:31
Funny.
02:13:33
Um, loyal. Funny.
02:13:40
Loyal. Funny.
02:13:44
Genuine.
02:13:47
>> Yeah. [ __ ]
02:13:48
>> They're good words. Yeah, I reckon
02:13:50
they're them
02:13:51
>> loving all of those sorts of things. But
02:13:53
I think they all are byproducts of those
02:13:55
three things
02:13:56
>> and you feel like you're living in a way
02:13:58
with the words that they'd say
02:14:00
>> to the people that are closest to me.
02:14:01
Yeah.
02:14:02
>> Well, that's all that matters really,
02:14:03
isn't it?
02:14:03
>> Yeah.
02:14:05
>> This has been a great chat.
02:14:06
>> Time goes quick.
02:14:08
>> How are you tired? You did a breakfast
02:14:11
radio show this morning.
02:14:12
>> Yeah.
02:14:12
>> High energy. Then you finish on the air
02:14:14
and you sort of crash, have a post show
02:14:16
meeting or whatever. You came straight
02:14:18
here.
02:14:18
>> Then I started crying in here. That gets
02:14:20
you tired.
02:14:21
>> Yeah, I am. No, no, no, I'm not.
02:14:25
>> I enjoyed it.
02:14:26
>> Is it nice to reflect?
02:14:28
>> Yeah, it is. Cuz I wasn't sure. I knew a
02:14:30
couple of things might come up, but I
02:14:32
wasn't sure how the conversation would
02:14:33
be shaped as well.
02:14:35
>> Do a good job of uh of listening and
02:14:36
asking questions.
02:14:38
>> Yeah, it is good to reflect. It's also
02:14:40
good to have a think about things that
02:14:42
you know you need to think about
02:14:44
>> that I should put more thought into.
02:14:47
Well, I I appreciate the thought you
02:14:49
gave some of the answers before
02:14:50
answering.
02:14:52
>> Yeah. Well, I was hoping I wasn't
02:14:53
leaving you too long,
02:14:55
>> but you also don't want to say something
02:14:56
that isn't correct.
02:14:58
>> Yeah. Oh, no. I appreciate it. You're
02:15:00
you're a good bastard and I feel like
02:15:02
you just get better with age.
02:15:03
>> Yeah. Thanks, mate. Yeah. Um, as I say,
02:15:05
Yeah. Yeah. It's a funny thing. It's
02:15:07
funny thing in New Zealand. I've heard
02:15:08
you ask that with other guests as well.
02:15:10
You know, New Zealanders can be quite
02:15:11
hard at accepting praise or um whether
02:15:14
they're proud of themselves or whatever.
02:15:16
I know you've asked people that before.
02:15:17
Um
02:15:18
>> Oh, you normally end with that. Yeah.
02:15:19
Are you
02:15:21
>> I'm proud of who I've become.
02:15:24
>> Okay.
02:15:24
>> Yep. Yep. Proud of who I've become.
02:15:28
>> Awesome.
02:15:29
>> Yeah. Hope hope hopefully hopefully I
02:15:31
answer you the same way in 10 years.
02:15:34
>> Well, I think you're just going to be
02:15:36
getting better and better, aren't you?
02:15:37
>> Yeah. Hope so.
02:15:38
>> Like you're constantly like like you
02:15:39
said before, you're like a seven out of
02:15:41
10. So, there's still things you're
02:15:42
working on. So, you're just going to get
02:15:43
better and better.
02:15:44
>> Yeah. Like there's probably things
02:15:45
you're doing now and I'm hoping it's the
02:15:47
same for me that 10 years from now
02:15:48
you'll look back and go, "Oh, why did I
02:15:50
do that?"
02:15:51
>> Um, so yeah, constantly improving,
02:15:54
getting better.
02:15:55
>> Yeah, I hope so. Hopefully. Uh,
02:15:57
hopefully I'm someone you still want to
02:15:59
have a conversation with in 10 years.
02:16:00
>> 100%. Bryce Casey or Bryce Anthony Casey
02:16:04
as the New Zealand Herald called you in
02:16:05
2011.
02:16:06
>> Yeah. Dom Harvey, thank you mate.
02:16:08
Appreciate it. Thanks for having me.
02:16:10
Appreciate it. Thanks. Thank you.

Podspun Insights

In this episode, Bryce Casey takes listeners on a journey through his life, sharing candid stories that range from his early days in radio to the emotional challenges of parenthood. The conversation kicks off with Bryce discussing his unique way of listening to podcasts while enjoying his sauna time, leading to a light-hearted exchange about the quirks of their respective routines. As the dialogue unfolds, Bryce reflects on his long tenure at The Rock, revealing the familial bonds he’s formed with his colleagues and the stability the station has provided him over the years.

Listeners are treated to a glimpse of Bryce’s personal life, including the ups and downs of his journey to fatherhood, marked by heartbreak and resilience through miscarriages. He opens up about the emotional toll these experiences took on him and his wife, Sharon, and how they navigated the complexities of mental health together. The episode takes a poignant turn as Bryce discusses the impact of his friend’s suicide on his life and how it propelled him into becoming an advocate for mental health awareness.

Throughout the episode, Bryce’s humor shines through, even as he tackles serious topics. He shares anecdotes about his experiences in the public eye, including the infamous pilot incident that led to his arrest, and how it shaped his perspective on life. The conversation wraps up with Bryce reflecting on his legacy, the importance of vulnerability, and the lessons he hopes to impart to his children. With a perfect blend of laughter and heartfelt moments, this episode is a testament to the power of storytelling and the human experience.

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  • 95
    Most heartbreaking
  • 92
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  • 90
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  • 90
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Episode Highlights

  • From Gynecologist to Radio
    Bryce humorously recounts his childhood ambition to be a gynecologist before finding his passion for radio.
    “I wanted to be a gynecologist.”
    @ 06m 58s
    August 24, 2025
  • Understanding Raj's Role
    Raj is smarter than many think, contributing significantly to the show's success.
    “He's a lot smarter than what people give him credit for.”
    @ 16m 27s
    August 24, 2025
  • Commitment to Radio
    Despite challenges, the speaker has never considered leaving his radio job.
    “I have never thought about leaving the job.”
    @ 29m 31s
    August 24, 2025
  • Friendship and Resilience
    The special bond with Dy Henwood and his courage in facing illness.
    “He’s just a beautiful person.”
    @ 40m 06s
    August 24, 2025
  • The Arrest Incident
    A comedic skit turned serious when Bryce attempted to sneak into an airport dressed as a pilot, leading to his arrest.
    “It was not good timing to fuck around with a plane.”
    @ 50m 49s
    August 24, 2025
  • Support from Family
    In a moment of vulnerability, Bryce shares how his father's support helped him through a tough time.
    “He was really caring straight away.”
    @ 01h 02m 04s
    August 24, 2025
  • The Importance of Therapy
    Sharon's belief in therapy helps both of them navigate their relationship and mental health.
    “Sharon was the first one who really it sunk in with me the benefits of therapy.”
    @ 01h 12m 35s
    August 24, 2025
  • A Difficult Pregnancy Journey
    Sharon faced a challenging pregnancy, spending weeks in the hospital, worrying for their baby.
    “Sharon can sleep through anything now.”
    @ 01h 23m 30s
    August 24, 2025
  • The Burden of Responsibility
    People often feel like a burden, stemming from a young age sense of responsibility.
    “That's where that burden comes from.”
    @ 01h 38m 40s
    August 24, 2025
  • Raising Awareness Through Personal Loss
    The speaker shares the impact of losing friends to suicide and the importance of mental health advocacy.
    “It’s horrific suffering.”
    @ 01h 43m 44s
    August 24, 2025
  • Growth Through Adversity
    How tough experiences can lead to personal growth and better relationships.
    “It's funny how bad things can make people better, you know?”
    @ 01h 57m 45s
    August 24, 2025
  • Mental Health Conversations
    The importance of open discussions about mental health among men.
    “It's amazing...140 guys that are manly men, like hunters, being vulnerable.”
    @ 02h 12m 19s
    August 24, 2025

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Raj's Intelligence16:27
  • Courage and Resilience40:15
  • Out-of-Body Experience45:24
  • Media Scrutiny53:34
  • Courtroom Drama59:15
  • Personal Loss1:42:26
  • Rock Bottom1:56:02
  • Making People Laugh2:08:16

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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