The Unmade Podcast - 172: Vegetable Peelers Are Truly Remarkable
Episode Date: November 28, 2025Tim and Brady discuss morning alarms, weddings, a lost town, and the world’s most boring (but useful) objects.Support us on Patreon and enjoy our advent calendar series - https://www.patreon.com/unm...adeFMJoining Patreon will unlock all previous content too!Join the discussion of this episode on our subreddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/Unmade_Podcast/Catch the podcast on YouTube where we often include accompanying videos and pictures - https://www.youtube.com/@unmadepodcastUSEFUL LINKSGlacial Podcast - https://www.unmade.fm/glacialDown with the Kids - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/down-with-the-kids/id1838412996Yallourn - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YallournPictures of Spoon of the Week - https://www.unmade.fm/spoon-of-the-week
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Again, recording with me at night time.
I don't like this, Tim.
I don't like working at night.
Because you want to have boundaries or you just lost the vibe by the end of the day?
I don't know, because I'm a night.
I don't know.
I feel this need to whisper.
I'd feel like I can't go full energy because it's nighttime and, you know,
people in the apartments and houses around me.
I don't know.
I just feel this, I feel quiet.
I feel like I can't give up my full energy because it's night time.
Is that that Englishness, that sort of, you know, nighttime,
small, dark, northern hemisphere.
Maybe.
Cuddle up next to a fire vibe, you know.
I have got a can of Red Bull here that I've been drinking to try and perk myself up.
So all it's doing is making me need to go to the toilet, though, so.
Right, okay.
Well, it's morning in Adelaide, and it's a beautiful morning.
It's kind of overcast and wispful and windy and lovely.
And I've got a coffee here, and I'm loving life.
When I said, well, I didn't say, when you said you'd rather record in your morning and my evening, for logistical reasons.
I respected that because you always tell me what an incredible morning person you are.
And then I come into my office here late at night on schedule and I get a message from you saying,
oh, sorry, I slept in.
I set my alarm for the wrong time and I overslept.
I'm like, well, I thought you were like up with the sparrows at 5am and, you know,
and it turns out if your alarm doesn't go off, you just keep sleeping.
I'm not, I'm not, I usually don't have an alarm in the morning.
I just sort of wake up and go.
The thing is I, I enjoy it.
I'm like, oh, here we go.
But I'm not a super early riser.
I don't like that.
I don't like being forced to get up, you know, like for a flight or something.
I just like to naturally rise, you know, about up R6, quarter seven, something.
But I'm, then I'm in peak condition straight away.
Coffee machine goes on and I'm ready to rock.
All right.
Much, I prefer it to the nighttime.
But it sounds like we both prefer.
refer it to the night time. What happened with your alarm? What did you, how did you set the wrong
alarm? Look, I sent it for 620 and, but I just did the classic. It was on like PM instead of
AM. So just, yeah, I know, old excuse, obvious excuse. But I did not, might naturally wake up at my
normal kind of, you know, 20 to 7 kind of time and looked down and went, oh dear, oh, dear, oh, you
goose. And then a text came through from you saying, you know, you're all good for in half an hour.
And I was like, well, actually, give me an extra 10 minutes.
Yeah.
If I had a dollar for every time you've asked for an extra 10 minutes before recording,
I'd have 30, 40 bucks.
I just have a green room here, and I like to sit in the green room and prepare properly
before I go out and meet the art and engage in this highly creative, high wire act.
of commentary that we that we do well tim i don't want to muscle in on your territory and your
turf man because you know we both have our things and if you told me you were going to be a
start making mathematics videos or something of that i'd probably feel a little bit like threatened
right i'm not i'm not sure how i'd feel about that but i this week have muscled in on your turf
Oh, yes, you have. Yes.
The weekend just gone, I officiated a wedding.
Well, this is a very, you know, backroom off the record kind of job indeed.
How has this happened?
What are you doing here?
Why are you trying this sort of thing?
Well, you know I've always been a man of faith.
No, no, I'm going to know what happened was a couple of friends of mine got married.
the weekend and it was kind of a bit last minute like it was you know for a wedding it was
quite last minute it was like they only had a couple of months organizing it and a few weeks
ago now they contacted me and asked me to be like the emce at like the dinner afterwards you
know to introduce speeches and stuff like that yeah yeah that's a good brady job i can see you
doing that job yeah many times over the years yeah hello everyone welcome it's a great night for
you know yeah and i and i think my friend has
like seen me do talks before and stuff and thought that you know I was I was good I was good with
the odd gag and you know and I could pull it off so of course I agreed to it yeah and then like about
a week and a half before the wedding he calls me up and says look we're not having speeches and
stuff afterwards anymore like none of that's happening it's going to be a really low key affair
so we don't need an emcee anymore and I'm like oh brilliant you know off the hook I can just go and
have a good time. And he said, but actually we've got another job for you. We haven't got
anyone to actually do the wedding, to officiate the wedding, to be like the celebrant for the
ceremony. So can you do that instead? And like, suddenly, like, that's upping the ante in my opinion.
Yeah, I reckon. Yeah, that's a whole other thing, really. It is a whole other thing. But of course I
agree, because he's my friend. And also, like, when in my life am I ever going to get to do that? Like,
it's like a once in a lifetime thing to do for me.
For you, it's not, but for me, it's like, oh, wow.
So I agreed to it.
But like I had to do everything.
I had to write it and all that sort of stuff.
And I was just given the job.
Like, you take care of it.
So the first thing everybody asks me, are you allowed to do that?
Is that legal?
Are you qualified?
So just to deal with that quickly, the actual proper legal marriage between the man and wife
was done beforehand, like by a registrar, you know, with signatures, someone who is licensed
to do it.
Right.
So that was already taken care of like an hour before the ceremony.
So for all intents and purposes, they were married when they came to you.
Yeah, okay.
Well, yeah, yeah.
So really, I was just doing like the public declaration stuff.
So that was all fine.
So really it was just like for show.
But that's, no, it's not, I don't think it's for show.
I think they're really saying it to each other.
They want to say it.
Yeah, yeah.
They wanted to do it publicly in front of the show.
their family and friends. So I wrote like, you know, a couple of pages of
speechy stuff. They're not a religious couple. So there was no kind of, you know,
of that sort of stuff. So I did a couple of pages of, you know, a bit of talk, a couple of
jokes and that. And then with your help, I contacted Tim, of course, because for people who
don't know, Tim is a church minister and does weddings for a living. So he was able to give me
some, a couple of recent examples of ones he'd done. And I took sort of the, all the different
vows and all the different things that you do,
slightly modified them just to, you know,
de-god them if necessary.
Right.
And did all that stuff.
An absolute highlight for me was getting to do that if anyone here
knows of any legal reason why these two should not be wed, you know.
Speak now, I forever hold your peace.
And did all the, you know, exchanging of the rings and the repeat after me,
you know, in sickness and in health and all that sort of stuff.
It was brilliant.
It was so, it was great.
I loved to do it.
Oh, that's great.
It felt a bit like a movie because all this stuff is so cliched, right?
Like, rightly so, in a lovely way.
But it's so ingrained in our culture, all these different phrases and turns and the way things are said at weddings.
And you've seen it so many times, whether at weddings or on TV and movies, to be at the front saying, it was really like, it felt really natural.
It felt really easy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was amazing how familiar.
and natural it felt it was a great day and of course they were important like I think I got it
right like my feedback was like was good I loved it you know first and only time I'll ever do it but
there you go you may now that's cool kiss the bride it is a lovely role and and it's great
you got to have a taste of it how many times do you reckon you've done weddings in your
ministerial career look not as much as your ordinary minister because remember I spent
14 years at the college doing academic work rather than kind of in a local congregation.
So I think I've done like 30 or so.
Yeah.
I'd have to count them up.
They're all recorded here in, you know, you keep your own books.
Maybe it's a bit more.
But yeah, that's...
Have you done more?
I've done many more funerals.
I was going to ask.
Okay.
More funerals than weddings.
How many funerals do you reckon you've done?
Oh, I don't know.
I don't know.
Not that many more.
So about that maybe, maybe 40 to 50 and maybe 30 weddings, you know, yeah.
maybe a bit less weddings i'll look them up yeah but i much enjoy i enjoy the for the record i
enjoy the funerals a lot more really there's a i do very much so yes for two reasons one is because
weddings have heaps more work and preparation like there's heaps of paperwork and you're dealing
with a bride and what they want and everything's got to be detailed and there's a rehearsal
and there's weeks beforehand and all that kind of stuff it's really important but just for me it's
like, oh yeah, this is a whole other thing, whereas I'm more interested in the marriage.
And, you know, I like, I like a sort of a, a simple wedding that's serious and stuff.
And, and therefore has sort of a lovely joy around it rather than a big over-the-top wedding.
But funerals are, they're like, you know, an hour and they're meaningful.
I don't know.
They're just a heavy, good, strong hour about life and death and existential things and people.
so I just, yeah, I really, I feel, they feel connected and meaningful and good ministry, yeah.
Yeah, nice.
That's just my personality, perhaps a little bit in there as well.
More of a, more of a death guy than a love guy.
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Did you make any famous mistakes?
You know, there's like the classic, the minister stuffed up.
And, of course, that classic scene in four weddings and a funeral when Rowan Atkinson, you know, plays the priest doing his first wedding and gets all the names.
back to front and everything. Was there any anything like that that went on?
No, I don't think. There was like, there was a couple of little like, you know, human moments like
the groom initially going to put the ring on the wrong finger and stuff like that. So there were a few.
So there were like, there were human moments. Yeah. But there was no like, you know, saying the wrong
name or stuff, which was kind of, yeah, I guess a little fear in the back of your head. But I was amazed.
I've never been less nervous before doing something in public as well.
Like, I get a lot less nervous than I used to if I have to speak in public, you know,
to the point where it's, yeah.
But this was, I was very zen about it all.
It was, it was really, I was really surprised.
There is a natural flow to a wedding, so it's not like it's up to you to be entertaining.
It's just up to you to kind of follow the rhythm and the script and stuff, you know, keep them on tracks.
So, yeah, and because you're not the center of attention either, you're kind of meant to be present, but invisible, really.
Yes, you want that's their moment.
That helps too.
Yeah, yeah, yes, it does.
Probably the biggest problem I had was my eyesight's getting, is starting to deteriorate.
And so I had to print the text a little bit bigger.
Oh, yeah.
Then, you know, I noticed I printed the text a bit bigger on the paper.
But then also the chapel, it was in this gorgeous chapel.
but it was quite gloomy, the lighting, in a nice way.
Yeah.
But the gloomy, I think if the lighting had been any gloomier,
I would have started to struggle to read the text.
Oh, yeah.
Because I wasn't wearing glasses.
And I think my prescriptions changed in the last few weeks,
and I need to deal with it.
So I did, at one point, my biggest fear was,
am I actually going to be able to read?
Yes.
But it was all fine.
It was all fine.
It was all fine.
And it was a great time.
And it was a tremendous honour to be asked to do it.
like I feel really, um, really honored to have had even the smallest role in such an
important day in their lives. So, uh, yeah, anyway, that brings me to an idea for a podcast.
Oh, does it? Hmm. We like to draw on recent experiences for our ideas. And it did occur to me
because the legal formalities were done by someone who was qualified and licensed to do it. And that's
quite a separate, easy thing to do. And then anyone can be a celebrant and officiate a way
wedding, as I have proven. Why not have a wedding podcast where people who want to be married
by your host or your hosts sign up to have their weddings done by podcast? It's a very modern,
you know, it's a modern communication format. People love living their lives online and posting
to Instagram and being online citizens. Why not start doing weddings this way? Where people do
there, maybe you could have a part of your business where you have a licensed person
handling the marriage, the formality of the actual legal marriage, but then the ceremony,
the public declaration, is done on your podcast where they zoom in, they read their
vows and their things they want to do, you do a bit of talking with them and stuff, and you
conduct weddings by podcast.
Wow.
These are modern times we live in.
This is quite different.
This is different to just saying we're going to record the wedding and then just put it out online.
No, no, no, no.
This has got to be more like interactive looking and doing podcast intentionally.
This is the wedding.
This is the wedding done by podcast and all the podcast ways, you know.
You know, the bride and groom can dress up if they want, but they're going to have the cans on their ears.
They're going to be in front of a microphone.
They're going to be zooming it and doing all that stuff by podcast.
Wow.
Because people love podcasts so much now.
I'm sure there's going to be some subset of people who are going to say, I'm up for that.
I'm up for doing my wedding by podcast.
I want to be on the wedding podcast.
And each week you have a different one.
Maybe each Sunday afternoon or whenever the wedding day is, Saturday.
I don't know what the typical wedding day is, but every Saturday maybe.
Maybe you could do them live.
Other people could watch on Zoom and they make their declaration of love to each other to the entire podcast sphere.
Do you know what this opens up as an idea is I want to.
about the legalities of needing to be in the same room as the couple as each other and as the
celebrant. I think legally you have to be together. Like, for instance, you're in the UK and I'm
here in Adelaide today. Let's say that I was marrying you to someone who was beaming in from
New York. Now, in the podcast world, that's the most natural thing in the world to do. But I'm not
sure, that's an interesting legal perspective. I'm not sure that counts. But maybe if
this idea picked up, it would be normalized, and suddenly electronic connection would
count. Of course, you wouldn't get to kiss them in the same way. Well, at all, but you could
send them an emoji of a kiss, I guess, couldn't you? I mean, you make a fair point. I'm not
talking about legally marrying the people. No, I just think that's an interesting sidebar thought.
It is. It is. You know, yeah. Taking something that's like an embodied experience in a room and
making an electronic, which is kind of what podcast is. It's a conversation that's not in the
pub, but it feels, it's the, it's the virtual pub and how weddings would work. It is a good
question. It's a good question. I don't know whether there are any jurisdictions in which you
can marry someone without being present. Yeah, I don't know what happens. I know sometimes people
get married in prison, don't they. What happened? I don't know what happens there. Oh,
ministers go into prisons and you go in there and you're in the same room. Same with COVID. There's a
distance, but you need to be with them in the same room and they have to be together, yeah.
I don't know, man. It's probably not the best idea. It just feels like something. There would
be people who'd be up for it. You know, some people don't take their weddings as seriously
and as ceremonially as others and might be up for, oh yeah, I'd love to get married on a podcast.
I'd be up for that. Let's go on the wedding podcast. The cool thing about it, of course,
is you could add in all sorts of little bits of segue music and you could really edit together,
No, you could, oh, hang on, let me say, you know, I said, oh, I do. Hang on, let me say that
again, I do. And then edit it nicely, so it's nice and smooth and have the little music
in the background. You could start each episode with like a heavily produced segment about
the couple's history, you know, with interviews with people and stuff like that and telling
their love story, like for like 15 or 20 minutes with lovely music playing under it. And then you
go, and then you do the ceremony, recorded live on the podcast, okay, do you, Fred,
take Jody to be your, you know, and do all that and do their stuff. And then maybe even
afterwards you could bring in like, like the father of the bride and best man and all that
sort of stuff and have speeches afterwards. Like again, done the reception afterwards. Yeah.
Yeah. That's true. All part of the episode. The first, the first, well, not the first dance.
I don't know what you'd have a first, a first something like, you know. I mean, obviously this would
be recorded on video or Zoom or whatever as well so people could watch it. But I'd want to
to work as an audio experience and you could just like just for like an hour or so just immerse
yourself in the love story of these people and then live live through the vows and then live
through the reflections afterwards it could be there could be something in this i i was just saying
it because it was an obvious silly idea after my weekend but the more i think about it the more i'm
thinking this could be a thing this could be a thing all right let's do it man let's get it
Good idea. What's it called? The Wedding Podcast?
Yeah. Don't, you know, don't overthink it.
Hang on, let me overthink it for just a minute.
Yeah. Until death do us part. Or, yeah, I, yeah, what sort of stuff.
I do vow. Something that rhymes with podcast. How can you put that in there?
Odcast, the...
Yeah, like Wedding, Wedcast.
No, nothing's coming. Good. The Wedding podcast, it is.
A wedding podcast.
A bit of housekeeping.
Please do.
A bit of parish notices.
This is a bit back to front.
You've done your idea and now you're doing parish notices.
You're a classic.
I hope you didn't do the wedding this way.
Or you're like, I now proclaim you man and wife.
Oh, and now have you got some rings?
Do you know, when I first started making news reports for the BBC,
unlike the local news and I'd just been taught to make videos so I'd done on my training
and I was seen as like the experimental guy who would always do things in a different way
and really creative and I think I was like maybe I was influenced by the film Memento I think
which was obviously a great film and every time I was given a story or a job to do for the news
I wanted to do it in a different creative way and one day I had the idea of doing like a news report
like a two minute news report in the style of Memento where I wanted to tell up
backwards. Oh, right. And like, and they let me do it. It was crazy. It was a story about this
street that was having problems with car parking on the day. I remember this story. Yeah.
I remember this story. Yeah, they were having problems with car parking on the days of big
football soccer matches. And I, I said to the boss, I want to tell up back to front. Because
what happened was they were having all this problem with parking and they got the council and
the council installed some new signage and lines on the road and it took the problem away. So
I told the story where at the start, the lines were painted and everything was fixed.
And then I told the story backwards and the end of the story was all the problems they'd
been having with the football crowds.
And like, I'm kind of embarrassed that I did it now because it was so stupid and ridiculous and
unnecessary.
But because it was new having all these young video journalists making reports for the news
and the bosses were being encouraged to let these young people be creative, the bosses just
let me do it.
And it was ridiculous.
And it went on the news.
It went out on the BBC.
see this like memento style film yeah oh that's classic i don't know it was great it was weird
they were the head the heady early 2000 days where the internet was you know anything was possible
yeah and like you know this and the and the producers of the show probably thought this is
stupid and ridiculous but they'd been told to let these young people like have a bit of a free
rain to be creative and anyway so that's what i'm doing today man i'm gone all memento and i've
got parish notices here in the middle. I would just like to remind people that the glacial
podcast, one word a week, is still running. I've forgotten about this. Every Monday, a new word
is released. And if you want to go to the website, the unmade podcast website, unmade.com,
I've got at the top a little link, so you can go and have a listen. Find out what's happening.
I think we're a good 17 words into it now.
Oh, so a sentence will have formed
Or perhaps even two more than one sentence
We're well into the second sentence now
Oh, right
So if you want to find out what's happening on the glacial podcast
Go and have a listen
Because I am
It is taking some of my time up every week
And I don't want it to be for nothing
So please just go and have a listen
Are you
Surely people are interested in what the sentence is
I am because I've forgotten
The slowest podcast of all time
Surely there's going to be a record for that
There should be.
And also to let people know all through December, starting on December 1,
we are going to have our Advent calendar, fantasy Advent calendar podcast happening.
Tim and I have been very hard at work recording these.
These are cool.
Yeah.
We're deep into production.
So from 1 December through to 24 December, there will be one episode a week.
If you would like to listen to those, you should be a Patreon supporter.
Go to our Patreon page and become a member to hear the,
It's going to be fantastic
If you're not a Patreon supporter
On Christmas Day
You will be able to hear them all
As one big mega episode
That we're releasing on Christmas Day
But if you'd like to have it
As a proper Advent calendar experience
And have won a day
I think they're going to be about
10 minutes or so per episode
That's roughly how they seem to be turning out
Five minutes on each gift, each door
Yeah
Tim and I are giving each other
These sort of dream fantasy gifts
It's been fun.
Check it out.
Also, if you're a Patreon supporter,
can I just say,
there's so much cool stuff
if you're a Patreon supporter, Tim.
This is just some of the recent things
that Patreon supporters
have been able to experience.
My wife receiving her medals,
her Tim Hine and Brady Harron medals,
live recordings of her on video,
finding out about them
and receiving the medals.
Not many people know this.
Our West Wing opening credit sequence
with Tim and I,
posing and pretending to be in the West Wing
set to West Wing music
which has been one of the
unsung highlights of the podcast so far
you can go and watch that
I like that a lot yeah marble races
all by marble races
three already you can watch with commentary
and I feel another one coming Tim
I feel another one coming yeah
because they are a lot of work
there are a lot of work
God I love doing them and I'm just feeling
I'm starting to feel the hankering
I want to do another one before Christmas
and like I've got other important work that needs to be done,
but I'm just thinking that I'm clearing a day for marbles.
They are a, it's very satisfying watching a marble go down one of your elaborate tracks
and go down to the bottom.
It's a very cathartic, elaborate thing.
The fact that you turn it into a race makes it even more exciting,
but they are a lot of work, it seems.
They are.
And also for Patreon supporters, occasional extra clips.
In a recent episode, Tim and I recorded,
we had a really interesting talk about the second coming.
and comparing it to the video game Double Dragon somehow
and it ended up getting cut from the episode
just because of like the flow of the episode
and the way I was editing it
it just didn't quite fit
and I cut it but I thought
this was still really interesting
and it was fun and so I was Sunday
I don't remember how long it was 5 minutes 10 minutes
but I took that clip and I put that onto the Patreon page
so you know people could hear that as well
so that's the kind of stuff that's always appearing there
So, and you're supporting the podcast.
You know, obviously people realize we don't have ads and we can't make this show without
your support.
So, you know, that's just some reasons to consider it.
Suit yourselves.
Thank you, Patreon supporters.
And just another podcast I want to recommend, down with the kids, co-presented by
my wife, Kylie Pantolo.
Oh, yeah, right.
We've been trying to get her on the show to come and talk to us about it.
But because we keep doing these in the middle of the night, she has to stay at home and
be in the house while Edward's asleep
so she hasn't been able to come and join us yet
so I just want to give it a plug and I'll link to it
down with the kids I'm not joking
it's become my favourite podcast
I really enjoy it her and her co-presenter
got a really nice chemistry they're really funny
way funnier than Tim and I
and as a bonus you get to hear me get slagged off
on a regular basis
right yes okay
it's for your fathering failures
is that right
and husband failures and just general life failures
so if you want to hear me be
spoken about lovingly but derogatorily, go and check it out, down with the kids.
Get down with the kids.
Get down with the kids.
You heard it.
You heard about it here first.
Actually, you probably heard about it elsewhere.
It's doing really well, you know.
It sometimes gets in those charts for, you know, third on the parenting podcast charts
and stuff like.
Tim and I never get in those charts.
So, you know.
Gosh.
Yeah.
I don't know what we're doing wrong, Tim.
We're doing something wrong.
We're doing lots of things wrong probably.
Maybe more marble races will help.
Maybe more marble races.
Or maybe, maybe more of this.
Spooned, I'm weak.
Well, maybe.
Certainly if I'm going to be wheeling out spoons like this.
This is a beautiful spoon today.
And a very personal spoon.
Sometimes I bring a spoon on and it's an amazing spoon,
but I don't know from where it came.
This one I do.
And this one is actually quite sentimental.
Now, I've found it in the pile.
I'm really happy to have.
It's a very elaborate and older spoon.
Once again, it's one of these Stuart silver-plated kind of spoons with a massive scoopy bit.
The scoopy bit is shaped like a shell.
It's got that sort of shell look to it.
And it's very elaborate all the way up the stem to the, what's the top bit called?
The head, is it?
The handle.
The handle, that's right.
And then it has a beautiful colour picture.
of a town called Yerlawn, Yerlawn Victoria.
Now, if you go looking for Yerlawn today, you won't find it.
Yelorn was a little country town, not far from Teralgan.
It's in the same sort of Gippsland region.
Tim's homeland, Tim's birthplace.
People know that, people and everyone knows that.
You think?
I'm from Terrellgan.
Oh, yes.
Yeah.
Everyone, people listening to Down with the kids know that I'm from Teralgan.
Right.
Everyone knows it.
So Yelorn was a little.
a small town near Tarraggan.
What do you mean was? What's with all this past tense?
Well, it was dismantled as a town.
The reason it was dismantled is because one of the features of the Gippsland region is coal.
There's a huge amount of coal under the ground.
And so they established in about the 19, I think it was 60s or so, the Yerlawn Power Station.
And the town of Yerlorn was on like a massive motherload of coal.
So they literally created an open cut pit, like they picked up your lawn homes and spread them out all over Victoria.
So, like, the interesting thing about your lawn as well is they had a very distinctive red roof for some reason.
There was a particular kind of red roof that they used there.
So these, one by one, these homes were sort of jacked up, put on a truck and sent to other parts of Victoria.
How do you do that when houses have, like, fell down?
foundations and stuff.
Well, often, they're not, obviously, brick foundations.
These are homes that are on, on, what do you call it, posts and so forth.
So wooden homes on posts and so forth.
You can often cut a home in half, put half of it on a truck,
the other half on another truck, take it somewhere else and re-establish it.
Because people bought them.
It's like a cheap home, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So all over Victoria, like there are these homes with red roofs.
And my father, as we drove along, would say, oh, there's a Yelorn home.
Oh, there's a Yelorn home.
That's like such a phrase that's, you know, embedded in my mind.
And they dug, and where Yelon was is just this massive open cup pit with a big dredger that went through and got all the coal and burnt the coal to make electricity that supplied Melbourne.
And that's how Melbourne run on the Yelorn Power Station and the area.
So this spoon, Tim, it's got, I can't quite make out what the artwork is.
Like in the enameled handle there, obviously it says Yerlawn, Victoria.
and I can't tell what the structure is.
Does this spoon come from when your lawn was still a town?
Or is this celebrating the former town now power station?
And can you tell what that image is?
I think that image, very distinct in so many Australian towns,
I think that's their war memorial that was at the centre of town.
It does look like a war memorial.
Obviously, I never went to Yerlawn, so it doesn't look familiar to me.
But even if it was made afterwards or to commemorate the town,
town or something like that. Like every town would have a spoon. They've put the war memorial in the
middle, which, yes, I guess you're about to ask, presumably they move that as well. And that's
gone somewhere special. Yeah. Yeah, I wonder where the Yelon War Memorial. Oh, here we go.
Here's a picture of the War Memorial in Yerlawn from 1961. I have to say the resemblance
is not strong, which has me questioning our guests.
Okay. Well, it's not a power station. It could be a particular feature in the town.
I don't know. You're right, though. It does look like some kind of monolithic structure.
And to the sides of it, are they supposed to be like trees or depictions of birds and birds?
No, trees. No, that's right. Trees and then there's a little bit of sky at the top.
And maybe it's like their skate park. Maybe it's not a war memorial. But I don't think so.
I don't know what it is. But there will be a picture.
picture of it in the notes. If you want to go and see this picture of your lawn, presumably
your dad may have got this when your lawn still was a town. Did your dad remember your lawn?
Oh, much more than that. This is the other part of the story that makes this so personal,
is dad lived in your lawn and was a postman in your lawn. Oh, wow. So, yeah, this is where he went
to live and became a postman, and he gave up hairdressing, which he'd done in Mowie, having, you know,
come out from Holland, he's Dutch, and he settled in your lawn, lived in your lawn,
and in fact, I've seen in Dad's papers like a clipping from the Gippsland newspaper that
talks about the whistling posty in your lawn, because it was such a small town, he'd walk
around whistling, and people would know that the posties bringing their post because they could
hear him whistling as he whistled along, which sounds like a little quaint English, you know,
novel, but that's literally I've read a newspaper that talked about him as that.
So that's why he had such a connection with Yelorn, and then they,
pulled it all apart and he moved to Teralgan.
I'm looking at Wikipedia now.
Yelorn was a company town in Victoria
built between 1921 and 61
to house employees of the state
electricity commission of Victoria
which operated the nearby
Yelan power station. And as
Tim said, expansion of the adjacent
open cut brown coal mine
led to the closure and removal
of the town in the 1980s.
Okay, that makes sense now. Oh, that late.
Right. That late. Yeah.
So while the township no longer exists,
at the 2006 census, the adjacent region classified as your lawn
had a population of 251.
So there we go.
So I'm glad to have found this, actually.
I'll keep this in a special place.
Your lawn is I sort of, it's like, it's where my dad was kind of, you know,
just before he met mum.
And so it's just like, it feels significant.
Oh man, a spoon commemorating a town that no longer exists.
This is incredible.
It's like a holy grail.
Yeah, well, that's right.
Magnific.
Magnific.
Do you think when this makes its way
onto the Unmade Spoon Card Collection,
do you think it would be something like a gold card
or a special kind of?
Foil, like a refractor or whatever they call them,
like those special shiny, what's silvery ones?
Quite possibly.
You know what I think?
I think we should not make the Yelorn Spoon card
and it's like a card that doesn't exist.
That would be quicker.
Let's see.
let's see all options are on the table or it could be it could be pieces of a card like the card could
be made but then it's like cut up and spread amongst all other card packs so like the towns
so every time you buy a card pack you get a little piece of a yelorn card but not the whole card
your dad could be there going oh look there's a piece of the yelorn spoon card that's it could be
red on the back like the red roofs let's go maybe we're over maybe we're over maybe we're
overthinking it.
Do you have an idea for a podcast?
Yeah, well, I tell you,
it's not a million miles away
from the spoons themselves.
Although the spoons are spectacular,
extraordinary objects.
I have an idea for a podcast
where we explore boring objects.
So the history of,
and the use and the invention
and the shaping and refinement of boring objects.
This is called The Boring Object Podcast.
Right.
I like it.
I like catching.
I just look down, right in front of me now, I've got this bulldog clip, right?
It's just sitting there held papers together yesterday.
Give us a bit of following work.
Give us a click by the microphone so people can hear your bulldog clip.
There we go.
You can flick these around and clip them.
This is one.
You always tempted to put it on your ear when you were young at school.
You put it on your ear like it was in, you know, you've got to clip it onto something or your nose.
Yes.
This is, where did this come from?
Who invented this?
How have they been around?
Was it refined?
Is this its final form or is there a way it could be improved?
The bulldog clip.
The paper clip.
I've got here some post-it notes.
The post-it, you know, classic, you know, is sort of a more recent invention.
But getting even more boring.
Like I've got toothpicks here, a stapler.
Now, stapler is quite a complex piece of technology.
I feel like it's working.
I think staples are clever.
Do you know, I can't remember if I've talked about this on Unmade before.
I probably have because I've talked about everything.
But you know that I've never been that much into cooking, right?
And you also know I've never historically been like the most healthy eater.
So vegetables have never played a huge role in my life.
Right.
But in the last three or four years, they have started playing more of a role in my life.
I've gotten more involved with cooking.
Good.
And eating the odd vegetable.
and I have for the first time
with any real serious intent
started using vegetable peelers
just your basic vegetable peeler
and I think
they are truly remarkable
because when I've always
looked at them sitting in drawers
and thought how could that effectively peel a vegetable
it looks clumsy
it doesn't look like it would do the job very well
but now that I've started using them
on a regular basis to peel potatoes and carrots and other things
I am truly amazed by how effective and good they are at their job,
just your basic vegetable peeler.
But I'm also embarrassed by that because I sometimes will be the group of people,
like adults like me in their 40s.
And I just want to tell them how amazing I think vegetable peelers are.
But I realize how stupid that makes me look
because these people have been using vegetable peeler since they were a little kid.
and therefore they're quite like, you know,
but I just want you to know
if you have not used a vegetable peeler
very much in your life
and you come across them later in life as I have,
they are miracles.
They're so fast, aren't they?
Fast and efficient.
We should be thankful for vegetable pealers every day.
And to look at them, as I looked at them for many years,
I never appreciated how good they were.
Like I thought, surely you could make a better tool than that
to peel a vegetable, but I don't think you can.
I think we're naming it.
it. No, they're safe, they're fast. You've got to be careful with your fingers when you first
get going, but remarkable. Certainly better than the knife, which I guess is what came
beforehand. No, no, kudos. Kudos to Sir Alfred Vegetable Peeler, whoever invented the
vegetable peeler, because you are, you were on an absolute winner there. Boring objects all
around us, man. They're boring objects, but I do like the idea not only of the history,
like the paperclip. Who invented the paperclip? How did that come about? All that
kind of stuff. But I also like the idea how to define its final form, because they have a
distinctive form, but also is that its best form? Do you think it can be advanced in any way?
Yeah. Scissors. I mean, scissors are everywhere. Cissors are boring, but they're remarkable.
Two blades coming together in a way that's safe enough to hand to a child. Gosh, how do you do that?
Clever. Clever scissors. I mean, not all scissors should be handed to children. I should just point that out.
and take care when you're handing scissors to children and always hand them handle first.
Yes, and don't run while holding scissors.
No, indeed.
Famously, you should never run.
I'd like to know where that came from and the person and the wound they have.
I'm sure there's a grisly story to go with the whole don't run with scissors thing.
But no, I like this man.
I like it.
You're right.
You know, I love a good boring object.
Yeah, some of these, you know, the spoon, the fork.
The coat hanger.
they haven't changed for thousands of years, which makes you think, you know, it's as good
as it gets. Are there objects that stayed the same for thousands of years and then someone
suddenly said, hang on, this could be a better way?
A disrupting design that just sort of transformed it.
Like, I wonder about the doorknob.
I feel like the doorknob was round for a long time and then suddenly the idea of having
it as a horizontal bar, just like, oh gosh, that's way easier on the wrist.
That's quick and fast.
incredible
I like this
I like this
I'm very happy with this idea
I think there's
there's legs in this idea
I mean I have no doubt
the idea already exists
it's such a
it's such low hanging fruit
but I still like it
I want to talk about it
I want to talk about boring objects
Can I mention another boring object
that I think everyone's trying to improve
but isn't improving
Please
Sneakers
Yeah
I feel like
the pressures on sneaker companies every year to say, here is a massive new revolutionary way
in which our sneakers have improved. And I don't think they've improved that much. They have
improved. Certainly, you know, back people playing basketball in, you know, like Chuck Taylor,
you know, Chuck's in the 60s and so forth, wasn't a good idea. The Reebok pump,
so pumping that little basketball on the, on the tongue of the shoe to give out a little bit of extra pressure
Of course, the air, you know, the aerosol, the Nike airs and things like that.
Certainly adding more support was wise, like, you know, yes.
Who would have thought that making them more comfy would be good?
But I feel like there's a limit.
I was really big on my Adidas torsions, which had that torsion bar put into the sole of the shoe for a while.
I loved my torsions.
It's almost like that was holding your foot together.
I remember that torsion, but you pointed out and talk about it.
And I was like, oh, wow.
Otherwise, how would the front of your feet, like your toes,
if you'd be able to talk to your ankle.
Like, that's right, you'd be falling all over the place.
But thankfully you had that there.
Other objects that are being constantly tinkered with, I think,
are things in the bathroom, the safety razor,
the, you know, with more blades and lubricating strips
and hinges and new things on them.
The toothpaste seems to be this constantly, you know,
new toothpaste pro with, you know, you can get pro toothpaste,
now and ultra and like quantum toothpaste and all this sort of stuff.
Interestingly, the tube isn't changing though, is it?
Like the actual technology of dispensing.
Well, for a while it did.
When I was young, those toothpaste pumps became a thing where you would pump them out.
And there was like a little cap that would close when you finished pumping to kind of cut off the excess.
So they did play with that for a while.
But it went away.
So we're back to the tube.
It feels like the toothbrush, of course, is constantly being tinkered with
with new little springs and bristles and abrasive bits on the back to brush your tongue.
We're constantly trying to improve the toothbrush.
But it's not really improving, isn't it?
But, I mean, it's not, it's fundamental character is still the same.
I mean, the grip's changing, but, you know, like it's...
And we always go back.
It feels like we always go back and then go adventure again with new desires and then come back.
Yeah, those things in the bathroom are being tinkered with, but I think we've already got them.
We just have to accept we've already done it.
Toilet paper dispensing kind of, you know, a roll.
It's just kind of there.
Toilet paper itself, you know, you get triple cushioned, extra absorbent.
And, you know, they're always trying to, yeah.
There's another narrative that flows through this.
There could be an ongoing competition or even a massive survey to define the most boring but perfect
object that could be a way through this as well like what's doing its job in the simplest form it
possibly could and i think that would be an interesting conversation particularly for people to vote
for as well what are some contenders for that i'm thinking the fork i'm thinking the pencil
yes the pencil feels obvious like it it's always existed but it's actually quite a complex
little piece of of technology isn't the way it's come together wrapping it in wood you know and
lead and how that works or graphite, whatever it is.
Even the pen is pretty clever.
Yeah, yeah, it's a good one.
The pen is a good, the ballpoint pen is a good example of us having something for a long
time, you know, pencils and quills and fountain pens and that.
And then people probably think, well, you can't approve on that, can you?
And then someone came up with the ballpoint pen that's like game changer.
Doesn't blotch.
Yeah.
Boring objects.
The more boring but useful, the better.
it could be like all working its way towards that finale what is the world's most boring object that's right it could be the hundred and we're counting down and that would give it a real sense of dynamic and climax would you include the wheel or is the wheel to general and adaptable like is the wheel an object or is that i feel like that's a bit i feel like that's neanderthal you know what i mean like i feel like that's almost a given i know the wheel isn't a given but circles exist in creations i think you've got to take it the next
next step on. Okay. I'm thinking, I'm thinking a top 10 might be the match, the safety match.
Yes. Yes. Very good. Yeah. I'm a big fan of the match. A lot of people like the clicker,
but I'm a big fan of the match when it comes to lighting the barbecue because our automatic clicker
thing's broken. You know, how you push a button on it, that sparky thing's broken. So I'm pulling
out a match. And it's always, look, I'm seriously, it's a high wire act. And in fact,
I burnt my finger the other day because I was putting the grill back into place and so forth. But that's
all part of it in my mind. I'm a big fan of the match. I'm known in our family for my inability
to strike matches successfully. Right. I seem to always break them. They always break
like as I push them up against the abrasive. I feel like there's someone in every family like
that who's just like everyone looks and goes, give it here, don't do it. No, you're doing it the wrong way.
What are you doing? It's me. I'm the guy. I'm the guy that can't strike a match. You're, you're
You're okay? You're okay with matches. You can handle them. Oh, yeah. I'm very good with them. In fact, I used to have this little thing. I shouldn't say this case children are listening and, you know, they do this. It's dangerous. Man, man, this late in the podcast, no one's listening. It's just you and me, man. There's two things. You can actually position a match on the match box in a certain direction and flick it with your other finger. And it flies off into the air in flame. I can do that. I have done that. I do enjoy that. Yeah. Don't do that, children.
Don't flick matches.
Or adults, indeed, yes, other middle-aged men.
Anyone.
Don't go anywhere near it.
Don't do that and do not run with scissors.
I think the running with scissors is over.
Like I think that warning, that aphorism has more currency disproportionate to the actual risk in running with scissors.
Like it's much better, for instance, to run with scissors than run with a knife.
Like running with a knife is way more dangerous.
at least scissors that can be closed.
Yeah, but young people don't often have knives,
but they do sometimes have scissors.
They have access.
Young people have more access to scissors,
like if you're making collages and things like that,
you know, in craft time.
So a young person is more likely to have scissors.
Oh, okay.
If young people had knives all the time,
I think don't run with knives would also be a saying.
But I like to think most young people don't have knives.
So it's not so much that it happens pervasively,
but it's actually that it's more,
it's a more relevant warning for young people.
Don't run with glue would also be good.
If I was a teacher at school, I'd be like, don't run with glue,
because that's going to be like take more time to mess up.
At least if, you know, like the glue is going to be like,
oh, you've got it on this and you've got it on that,
and you've got it everywhere, and people could slip on it.
But I hear the danger in the scissors situation.
If you could spend half an hour doing either of the following two activities,
which one would you choose?
activity one popping bubble wrap activity two submerging your hands in that white glue you use
for craft letting it dry and then peel they don't go clear and then peeling it off your hands
in big continuous pieces i would say activity two only because i did a fair bit of activity one
like the other day something came a book i bought on ebay and it came wrapped in bubble wrap
and I immediately put down the thing I'd bought
and just went click, click, click, click for a bit.
And then I actually, this is the kind of dad I am.
I actually, instead of putting it in the bin,
I left it on the dining room table
for other members of the family to come past and enjoy popping.
I was like, oh, other people will want to have a go at this too,
so I actually left it.
And nice of you to leave a few unpopped bubbles for them.
But God, how great was it when you were a kid
putting that glue all over your hands,
letting it dry and then peeling off?
Yeah, and that's not the clag.
remember clag was primary school you would do it with aquedia it was the was the
oh is that it is i remember using aquedia but yeah uh you can peel it off yeah very satisfying
love it love it on that note on that note on that note on that note i'm going to i'm going to end
the podcast so i can go and cover my hands and glue yep i'm beating you to it
