Who Knew It with Matt Stewart - 161 - Geraldine Hickey, Bron Lewis and Oliver Hunter

Episode Date: October 13, 2025

Who Knew It with Matt Stewart is a comedy game show podcast hosted by Australian comedian Matt Stewart. Episode 161 features comedians Geraldine Hickey, Bron Lewis and Oliver Hunter!Check out Matt's n...ew stand up special: https://youtu.be/ZgukEPerWZc?si=SW8PttGAB-ly_GF8And his last stand up special: https://youtu.be/cWStRpI-BhESupport the show via http://patreon.com/dogoonpod and you can submit questions for the show!See the podcast/Matt live: https://www.mattstewartcomedy.com/Check out Matt's podcast network: https://dogoonpod.com/Theme song by Evan Munro-Smith, Logo by Murray Summerville and edited by Connor Schmidt! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey mate, it's titular Matt Stewart here, letting you know that I'm filming my show Bad Boy at the Humdinger Studios on the 17th of October, Friday night, 7.30. And I'm also hit in the road with good mate Serenjai Amarna. We're doing the Bendigo Comedy Festival on the 2nd of October. The Caxson Street Festival up in Brisbane on the 18th of October. Also doing a live who knew it that day as well. And on the 30th of October, heading to the Geelong Comedy Festival. Really looking forward to getting out and about grab tickets via matt stewart comedy dot com welcome to who knew with matt stewart the show where the guest write the wrong answers i'm the titular matt stewart and our first guest is a regular on have you been paying attention it's bronn lewis oh it is yeah
Starting point is 00:00:50 hello brown thanks i am waiting for the applause because we are in a big lovely space here and last time, well, usually when I'm in here, the applause doesn't stop. Yeah, it's hard to get a word in with all the applause. Guys, let me tell a joke. Our second guest is a winner of the most outstanding show at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, it's Geraldine Hickey.
Starting point is 00:01:12 Woo! So good. I won that award and it was one of the greatest days of my life and you can never win it again. Oh, that must be such a relief. I mean, yeah, it's nice. Yeah, once you've got it, got it, that's it. You've reached a peak.
Starting point is 00:01:27 shows any more after that. Unless, well, you could start a duo or something. Well, I wonder. I thought, I wonder if, like, Sammy J is eligible to win it because he won it with Randy. I think he, didn't he, I think he might have been nominated or won at a second time, maybe. Well, I think he won Best Newcomer. He won Best Newcomer, the same year that I did my first show, where I was not nominated.
Starting point is 00:01:53 Oh. And our third guest. Has been described by the Wheeler Centre as lovable, laconic, and a little bit dark. It's Oliver Hunter. Oh, I have no awards to speak of. Not yet. Or credits of any sort, really. I'm the guy you get when you can't afford to do an Alcott.
Starting point is 00:02:12 Oh, really? The guy that, what? I get, I'm the guy you get when you can't afford doing Alcott. I've been told that. That's why I get booked a lot. For gigs. And I've got a few coming up off that reason. Oh, Ripper.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Corporates. He must be dear. now so he must be yeah he's a lot breaking it in but I know that I'm mad it's a lot you should be on but also can I tell you about a time that I've mistaken identity
Starting point is 00:02:39 there's the green senator from yeah Jordan and I was in Perth and I who I absolutely thought was you yeah and I went up this guy I'm going mate what are you doing here and he was so polite and he just went oh i live here and i was just like when did you move to
Starting point is 00:03:04 perth and i'm like oh this is what are you doing a show for the and he goes no and then i was just like i'm so confused and then but then it wasn't until he went and what was your name that i was just like oh wrong i don't know like this is somebody else this is we don't all look the same um in my defense i mean you look at you look dark dark dark He's using a whole different wheelchair to me though I'm not looking at the wheelchair mate You don't see disability, I love that Yeah
Starting point is 00:03:34 Just a bit all white men with glasses look the same Yeah, dark air Yeah Yeah A bit of a beard No I haven't met Jordan but he's a ripper Yeah well he was very lovely Like when he said him what was your name
Starting point is 00:03:48 And I was just like Oh that's what I say to people That come up and talk to me that I don't know Yeah Oh that's very funny I'll put that on the next poster Gerard and Hickey thought I was Jordan to still John. But I have a different wheelchair.
Starting point is 00:04:03 Yeah, I have a different wheelchair. My eyes are up here. A different career path. All right, so this is the way the show works. I ask a relatively obscure trivia question, and you three have to write a convincing fake answer. I then read out your answers as well as the real one. You have to guess which one is correct.
Starting point is 00:04:17 And the first question comes from listener, Jonnet Newton from Tulsa, Oklahoma. Janet. Well, I'm trying to say Janet? What's happening over here? So, she's written, her name is spelled J, apostrophe, N-E-T, but in brackets. Yeah, that's all I would have thought, Jen. But in brackets, it's got fanatic, Jay.
Starting point is 00:04:44 Oh, she's, oh, they've gone to a lot. Yeah, so, so. What? Janet. Janet. Yeah, no, you're right. I just like had you, that, bed all your teeth to say it as well. Yeah, like, Jana.
Starting point is 00:04:54 like, Janet. Jeanette? I think Jeanette. Jeanette. She's classed up. Yeah. Maybe she's Janet. Janet's not fancy enough.
Starting point is 00:05:04 Yes. Like Miriam and Mario. Janette. Anyway. Is there an accent in there too? Like a... Oh. That'd be nice.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Norm loud or something. Jeanette's question is and absolutely screwed me here as well because it's a word definition. What is the definition of the word? Flockingau-S-I-Hillipilification. Oh, yeah. Flock-an-our-S-E-L-E-A-L-E-A-S-O-H-E-E? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Oh, yeah. We all know, you, son. And, um... I've got to come up with a fake definition for Flok-N-H-N-H-N-H-L-N-H-O. I might have said it differently that time, but... Can you spell it? F-L-O-C-I-U-C-I-N-I-H.
Starting point is 00:05:52 That'll do. Yeah, yeah. Go-good. F-L-O-C... No, just the pronunciation. Flocking now Sinehalifapacation. While they're writing their answer, I'll explain how the scoring works. So you get one point if your fake answer is guessed by the other contest,
Starting point is 00:06:09 another point if you correctly guess the answer. And by the way, I'm also playing as the house. And, yeah, I've put it into my own fake answers for each. question with the help of the question writers and um just say the word one more time you are this is this fun for you it's so easy to forget as soon as you flock in flock in our sinehillification okay lock in uh so each of us uh each of us can score three points per round um because we each get a point for each one of those that i guess choose uh which seems fair but probably actually favors me the house apparently called to a mathematician who listens
Starting point is 00:06:46 which is why on the final round the guests get triple points most of our questions come from our great Patreon supporters if you want to submit a question sign up on any level via patreon.com slash do go on pod which is linked on the show notes
Starting point is 00:07:01 on hey filming a bunch of the episodes now as well if you want to check them out the do go on YouTube channel or the Who Knewit's socials will have clips on there as well something to do all right the answer
Starting point is 00:07:16 They're in for the first question. What is the meaning? My name is my spelling now. Hey, hey. Oh, no, no. Don't worry because no one can see the spelling. Well, you keep pointing out Jarnot's wrong spelling, don't you? Actually, there's no red squiggly lines here, Gerardine.
Starting point is 00:07:29 You've nailed it. The question is, what is the meaning of the word, flocking our syllophication? Here are your options. Fear of a group of sheep in a specific place, they shouldn't be, i.e. a public library. Option one. Option two.
Starting point is 00:07:46 When oxygen gets trapped in between the glass and the plastic in an aircraft window. Option three. The tendency to overuse antibiotics. Option four. The official scientific term of making sourdough bread. Five. The act of considering something to be not at all important or useful. Or finally, when someone mistakes a person as a celebrity and asks them for a selfie leading to a horde of people swarming them to do the same.
Starting point is 00:08:16 happened to Jordan All right Would you want to go first there Oliver? What do you think? I'm going to go with the antibiotics one Too much antibiotics Yep
Starting point is 00:08:32 All right locking that in for Oliver What do you think? So we've got to say What is the correct answer? Trying to guess the correct one Trying to guess the correct And there was That one
Starting point is 00:08:42 And then there was The sheep Oxygen Chiodics, sourdough, unimportant. I'll go the airplane window. What do you think, Braun? I think that the flock of the thing makes it sound like it's the last one,
Starting point is 00:08:59 which is such a silly one, occasion. But I just, you know what? We're not here to win it. We're here to have a good time. Yeah. And I'm going to go with that one. Celebrity, everyone going to have a sit with him. Okay, I love it.
Starting point is 00:09:12 So here's here at the answers. The fear of a group of, sheep in a specific place? Flok. Oh, this is... No, that's Geraldine. Oh. Flok.
Starting point is 00:09:22 I wanted to have a go at you for saying the last answer because the reason was flok, but there was flock, a flock of sheep. Oh, hey, thanks for holding back. I was worried I'd give myself away. Oh, okay, no, you're right. I like, yeah, it's good. Library. I love the example.
Starting point is 00:09:41 The sourdough bread one, that was Oliver. Oh, very good. Oh, yeah. Oh, nearly went about it. that um yeah nearly i knew we were the two and then i realized that right that one sounds good actually oxygen being trapped between the glass and plastic in an aircraft window gerald any way for that was brawn
Starting point is 00:09:58 oh can you believe it that's the first time i've ever got anything right well you didn't get it right well i did get it right it just it sounded like the most thank you what a great approach to this game thank you because i um i just went for the most boring answer Oh, my, thank you. Just what I thought you were giving me a compliment. You're fucking pissed all over it, didn't you?
Starting point is 00:10:22 Oliver went for the tendency to overuse antibiotics, but that was actually written by Jarnet. Oh, okay, thank you, Janet. Usually don't show that many teeth, but when you say Jarnet, you show all of them. So that's a point of the house there. And Bron went for the selfie. celebrity one that was also the house i'm afraid oh that's all the answers what else is there
Starting point is 00:10:50 there was left there was none uh the correct answer it's really probably the dullest one the act of considering something to be not at all important or usual yeah great oh forgot about that yeah flock a notification that's good that means yeah yeah very long word for that but okay it's ironic that's the answer isn't it something that's not important or memorable or whatever where the hell it was. Question two comes from David Chisholm from Thunder Bay, Ontario. I love you're international listeners. Thunder Bay sounds sick.
Starting point is 00:11:25 That does sound cool. All right, so question two comes from David Chisholm from Thunder Bay, Ontario. And the question, basically, you just got to come up with a species of bird. The question is which of these are real species of birds? So you make up a species of bird. Okay. I don't have to describe, just the name. Right.
Starting point is 00:11:41 A name of a bird. Name of a bird. Okay. Make it up. Just make it up. So that's all we're doing. That's all you're doing. Just making up the name of a bird.
Starting point is 00:11:50 While you're writing your answers, here's some more info on flossing and nass philipication. This is according to Jarnet. Jarnet writes, the Cambridge Dictionary mentions it's the longest non-technical word in the English language. Several sources I looked at said it's mainly just used as an example of a really long word. I just want to hear you pronounce. this word.
Starting point is 00:12:16 And I know you can do it, Matt Stewart. Oh, that's beautiful. I looked it up and learned to pronounce it myself just to see. It's not easy. I did not do that. It's not easy, but I have faith in you. Also, my answer mentions antibiotics because I think the first syllable sounds as if it has something to do with antibiotics.
Starting point is 00:12:34 Yeah, well, Oliver thought so too. Well, he's good. He nailed it. Thank you, Chanhan. Yeah, I like, yeah, she's looked up how it's pronounced. But we'll not know until this episode comes out how much I nailed it. Probably doesn't help that. I said it differently every time.
Starting point is 00:12:53 Maybe one of them. Yeah, that's right. More teeth, please. Maybe one of them was right. Let's focus on the positive. All right. The answer is for question number two. Which of these are real species of bird?
Starting point is 00:13:05 Okay. White Crest Eagle. Blue-eyed olive bird. Parrot Laureate. Muddy tit. Two-paid toucan or shining sunbeam. Geraldine, you're somewhat of a bird expert as well. You know, I'm a bit of a birder.
Starting point is 00:13:27 None of those, like I are on my list of birds that I've seen. Although, read them out again. White crest, the eagle. Well, there is an eagle, that's right. Is there a white crest eagle? There's a white bellowed eagle. Oh. But there's a white crest eagle.
Starting point is 00:13:49 Is it? Hey? Where's the crest? Cress is up top. Yeah. Blue-eyed olive bird. Well, there's an olive bird. Okay.
Starting point is 00:13:58 So I don't know about the blue-eyed, but maybe that could be a thing. Mm-hmm. Parrot laureate. Parrot laureate. There's two birds together. Yeah. What kind of white trash shit is this? Is it like a, you know,
Starting point is 00:14:12 um, parrot laureate, yeah. Okay, what else? A muddy tit. Well, see, there's a tit. Yeah. There's many different, there's a, there's many different tits. I thought we were talking about a crest. What's the difference about a tit and a tit?
Starting point is 00:14:24 Well, a tit is a type of bird, you know, the crest is a part of the bird, but a tit is a great tit. There's a white, there's a great. Yeah. There's a bird called a great tit. Yeah. And there's a blue tit's quite common in the UK. Right. Tits are common in the UK, the UK birds.
Starting point is 00:14:43 But muddy tit could definitely be... Are there big tits and little tits? Is that... A bird? Yeah. They're big tits and little tit? No, just... Yeah, no, they're usually small.
Starting point is 00:14:54 Mostly small the tits. Okay. From the tit family. You got the... Two-paid, two-can. Two-paid two-can. Two-paid, too-cane, yeah. Oh, a two-paid, two-can.
Starting point is 00:15:04 Yeah, two-paid, two-cans. Two-paid two cans. Yeah, that feels not right. And then a shining sunbeam. I think there's a sunbeam bird. Like it was sun, it was a sunbird. There's a sunbird. Right.
Starting point is 00:15:22 I will go, what was the second one again? Second one was blue-lide olive bird. I'll go with that one. All right. Locked in for Geraldine. What do you think? And we're guessing the one that's real. I'm going to guess that one too is what I'm going to do.
Starting point is 00:15:39 Double olive. I wish it was muddy tip. I'm not going to go. It could be. I'm going to go something different. I'll go muddy tit. Okay. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:48 Muddy shit. All right. You stand your ground, don't because I know if I'll have to follow you. All right. Here's who wrote the answers. White Crest Eagle. That was Bron. Hey, not bad.
Starting point is 00:15:59 Pretty good. Thank you. Pretty good. Boring, like you said. You said that was the right approach. Yeah. Two-paid, two can. That was written by the question writer David.
Starting point is 00:16:08 That was pretty. It's good. I really loved that. I love that. I love that. Yeah, exactly. He's got a fluffy sort of mop of there. Parrot Laureate, that was the house.
Starting point is 00:16:17 I thought that was like a bad poet laureate. But it did not come out at all. Because I didn't say it out loud until now. I'm like, that doesn't really work. Oliver went for money too. That was Geraldine. Oh. Sold it, didn't not?
Starting point is 00:16:37 Sold it. He almost jumped shit for it. Yeah, I know. I was trying to. Maybe I could get you. Oh, very good. Jeladine and Broan went for blue-eyed olive bird. That was Oliver.
Starting point is 00:16:49 Oh, well done. So it means the shining sunbeam is the real bird. Oh, there you go. And it is. I nearly went with that, didn't I? Did I? Did I say that out loud that I knew what about it? She's beautiful.
Starting point is 00:17:02 Where is it? I think it's a South American. You can see her, the bended elbow. Yeah. Yeah, it's sort of like, I'd say, yeah, it's a good-looking bird, but that rainbow thing really makes it pop, you know? Absolutely, it makes it a sunbeam scary weather or whatever it's called. Shiny, Sunbeam, shining.
Starting point is 00:17:23 A little kid named that. What's a call to get? Shining sunbeam. Shining sunbeam, yeah. So two points to Oliver, one point to Geraldine there. It's probably a very common bird as well. Anyway. Yeah, I think it is like under endangered or whatever.
Starting point is 00:17:37 It was like not in any danger at all. Yeah, don't worry about her. Thriving. Question three comes from Caroline from Brisbane slash Mianjin. And the question is, in 1997, what did scientists, Swedish scientists, John Junberg and Eddie Weitzberg do for a bet? In 1997, what did Swedish scientists John and Eddie do for a bet? While you're writing your answers, I'll tell the listeners a bit more about
Starting point is 00:18:10 the shining sunbeam. This is according to American bird conservancy. The shining sunbeam is a large conspicuous hummingbird found at higher altitudes along both slopes of the Andes. It often perches in open areas and is fairly easy to spot. At first glance it appears to be rather plain, feathered in shades of brown and cinnamon. Jeez, it's a bit rough from the, this is meant to be a bird-loving website as well. Its specific name, cupri penis. Cupri penis. Penis, penis. It's a combination of the Latin words for copper and winged. Hmm.
Starting point is 00:18:46 Hard to write an answer and listen to something at the same time. Especially when it's your favourite. Yeah, and I'm like, oh, I want to hear this, but oh, I've got to write this. Swedish sign, it's 987. What did they do for a bet? 997, yeah. It's also sometimes referred to as the copper-winged honey, hummingbird.
Starting point is 00:19:03 Oh, of course. You heard of that one. But seeing from the back in just the right, light. The shining sunbeam dazzles with a lower back and rump a glow in iridescent shades of purple, green and gold. The sexes look alike, although the females iridescent patch maybe smaller. Answers are in for question number three. In 1997, what did Swedish scientist John Junberg and Eddie Weitzberg do for a bet? They each sampled 24 types of algae that they'd collected from the
Starting point is 00:19:39 Clara Levin River. They, that's option one. Option two, they conducted university-funded experiments in their local IKEA, making it look like they were just part of a display. Option three, they saw who could use the most Bob Dylan songs in their research paper titles before retirement.
Starting point is 00:20:01 Oh, that's good. Option four, the bet was that they could make a device that could predict water temperatures that would be featured on the Australian TV show Beyond 2000. Option 5, they ate some fish with some sugar to see if it had tasted all right
Starting point is 00:20:20 and now we have Swedish fish. Oh, that's clever. Finally, they rode miniature horses into their respective labs and worked without referring to it. That's funny. Very funny. A scientist's going wild.
Starting point is 00:20:36 Yeah. Brian, what do you reckon? I think it's the Bob Dylan one. Bob Dylan? Yep. That's a really, like, you want it to be that. Yeah, come on, science, be interesting. Yeah, I haven't a bit of fun.
Starting point is 00:20:50 Yeah. I wish it was the miniature horse one, actually. But you can't ride a miniature horse as an adult? Can you, you know, Jess? Oh, yeah, you could. You just got to get the right size saddle. And don't they that strong, a little miniature, a Shetland pony? Could you ride a Shetland pony?
Starting point is 00:21:05 Yeah. That's strong. Yeah. Well, it depends what type of miniature horse. Well, a miniature horse is just a pony. Right. Really. And they come, like a Shetland ponies from Shetland.
Starting point is 00:21:16 Yes. But there's different, there's like a, like a Dartmoor pony. They're a bit bigger. So you could go. I didn't know that. So maybe they're on Dartmoor ponies. Yeah. Okay, so maybe that.
Starting point is 00:21:25 I made that. I don't, I don't, I'm really, but I don't want to Google that to, but there, but there are different types. But the Shetland ponies are. from Shetland, that's why they've Shetland ponies. Right, that makes sense. Yeah, yeah. Now that you've said it.
Starting point is 00:21:41 I think there is a place called Dart. Yeah, there is. Yeah, so they've got ponies. Where's Shetland? Is that New York? Scotland. It's an island of, there's a great TV show called Shetland about it. Oh, is that good?
Starting point is 00:21:57 I am. I'm going to watch that. Yeah, yeah. Oh, fantastic. It's like crime. Yeah, we love crime, us girls. Yeah. What do you think, Oliver?
Starting point is 00:22:05 Uh, he, what was the last one? Oh, that was the miniature horses? Yeah. No, no. No. No. Minich horses, Swedish fish, uh, predicting water temperatures to be on Beyond 2000.
Starting point is 00:22:16 Bob Dylan's songs, uh, Ikea displays or, uh, eating algae. I don't know. I reckon. They were just like hanging out. You know, let's just munch on some of it. Let's see what happened. This could be, this could change everything. We don't know.
Starting point is 00:22:32 This is a science. Um, and I'll, yeah, I'll, I'll go the mini horses, Please. Yeah, great. I think Ikea was founded after 97. That was my little. No, it's been around for ages. I saw a billboard.
Starting point is 00:22:46 It shocked me, Oliver. It said Australian have loved IKEA for over 50 years. Australia has? Yeah. What are you? Oh, you have just a good, 1943. Well, we kept that to ourselves. Yeah, it's a secret.
Starting point is 00:23:00 We're too busy in the bended elbow. We don't have Ikea at all. The guy who's founded it was only 17. when he founded in 1943. What a nerd. Well, I'd say, here's the right, the Achaia one. That was written by Caroline, the question right. Well done, Caroline.
Starting point is 00:23:17 The other one about the Australian TV show, Beyond 2000. That was Gerald A. With me. I forgot about that show. It's a great show. I need to think of a time or it's like the future. Imagine what's going to happen beyond 2000. Is that not good?
Starting point is 00:23:35 A Swedish fish. The invented Swedish fish, that was Oliver. Is that a real thing? Sugar. I thought Swedish fish was a, well, am I thinking of Muppets? I don't know. I think Swedish fish is like they eat, there's some particular kind of, yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:51 Or is it just a thing, but I felt like that that had been around a lot longer since 1997. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Apparently there's two things, there's lollies. Yeah, that's where I go. There's also surerstroming, which is like a really gross kind of fermented hair. Yeah. Sounds good. Eric,
Starting point is 00:24:08 I got the sugar. It's what else do we have? Geraldine went for the miniature horses. I'm afraid that was the house. Oh, I did love to enjoy just so they'm going, not bringing it up. I'm trying around.
Starting point is 00:24:24 That's the best. Oliver went for the algae eating. That was Bron. Oh, well done. Thank you. You know what this sounds like? We're down to. And Bronn is correct.
Starting point is 00:24:37 is the Bob Dylan song. Holy dolly. That's awesome. It sounded fun. I'm actually really good at this when I don't bring my offspring. So two points there for Bron at the halfway mark. Here we go. Geraldine Hickey on one point.
Starting point is 00:24:53 Oliver on two points down in front. Bron on the house on three points. Question four comes from Nick Fidosa from Bethel in CT. Maybe is Connecticut or maybe. Cincinnati or something else entirely. Maybe it's a country, it's a China, I don't know. I think it is Connecticut. I think I've been through Connecticut.
Starting point is 00:25:17 So Nick's question is, what is the alternate identity for the minor league baseball team, the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers? So there's this weird thing in minor league baseball in America where they'll do a few games under a different name and sell merch for it. A slightly wackier name.
Starting point is 00:25:34 You know, they'll have their normal name, Timber Rattlers, but then for a few games in the year, they'll play as the Wisconsin something else. So you just got a... Why? Merchandise, I think, mainly. Just because they've got the wrong spelling on the merchant, they've got to get rid of it. Yeah, it could be a little typo.
Starting point is 00:25:54 Like, you've already got your timber rattlers jersey. Yeah, you can get, yeah, it's just a way to make people buy more stuff, I think, mainly. That's good on them. Like, what a... That is capitalism and its finance, isn't it? And that's what America is all about. That's right. It's good.
Starting point is 00:26:09 What team, the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers? That's their normal name. It's a timber rattler. Oh, that may be a truck. Yeah, I was like, is it a truck or a snake that lives in a tree? Yeah, I think it's probably a truck. While you're riding, here's some more info about the bat. This is according to Lauren Boycefort.
Starting point is 00:26:30 John Junberg and Eddie Weitzberg started the trend. There were two professors at Stockholm's Karolinska Institute, and they title research paper, nitric oxide and inflammation. The answer is blowing in the wind. This was a paper about flatulence. Wager began as something fun that they did because they liked Bob Dylan, but it later evolved beyond that when two more professors joined in, and then a librarian took notice.
Starting point is 00:26:57 I ended up with five of them with papers such as Blood on the Tracks, a simple twist of fate. as well as tangled up in blue molecular cardiology in the post-molecular era and the biological role of nitrate and nitrite the times they are a change in. I wonder if they changed their studies to fit the songs or whether they did the study and they went, which one fits that? Surely, well, you assume the second one, it would be so much funnier if they're going. It's a first.
Starting point is 00:27:31 I love this song. How can we work it in a study? I need to do a science experiment on a beautiful woman. I think that sounds like something one person would do, but it's wild to think that five people were like, this is genius. And this will get us respected in the science industry. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:53 There is a quote from one of them saying something like, what does he say? Weitzberg, Weitzberg said, I'd much rather become famous for my scientific work than for my Bob Dylan quotes. But yes, I am enjoying this. Such a Swedish answer.
Starting point is 00:28:12 Sorry. Don't be sorry, but I know the longest one's going to be yours. Holy hell. I just spent a lot of time looking around the room going, don't say anything in the room.
Starting point is 00:28:28 Yeah, don't be too obvious. Wisconsin tripods. Wisconsin ladders. Wisconsin, Wisconsin tits with Wisconsin tits. Can I say that again? While you're still writing your answer, let's go for a quick break. And we're back.
Starting point is 00:28:51 And the answers are in for question four. What is the alternative or the alternate identity for the minor league baseball team, the Wisconsin timber rattlers? here your options. The Wisconsin neon trees. Wisconsin cheese kisses. Well, yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:07 I like that. Wisconsin Fiesta Bears. The Wisconsin uttertuggers. The Wisconsin water rats or the Wisconsin tax evaders. Oh, pletical, pletical, plentical. Where are we up to? I think we're back to you all over. What do you think?
Starting point is 00:29:27 I'll go the water rats purely for alliteration. Yeah. Yeah, it does sound good. You're like, you're a Jay LaGeyer fan. Is that before your time? Waterouts is a TV show. Yeah, I missed that one. Okay.
Starting point is 00:29:39 It was actually pretty big. Yeah. Every crime happened in front of the opera house. Yeah. The hot spot. Yeah. Until someone came in and cleaned it up, whatever the premiere was at the time went,
Starting point is 00:29:52 fuck, I'm not enough of this. What do you think, Jody? I'll go the Wisconsin, Fiesta Bears, cheese kisses. Cheese kisses, please. Because I want that on a T-shirt. I'd get that merch. Which merch would you get?
Starting point is 00:30:09 The Cheese Kisses series. Yeah, I'm going to go the Atta Tuggers. That was another good one. Also, if you think, like, the other fun one to get on a T-shirt, the Fiesta Bears, because you imagine like, yeah, that doesn't really fun. I think, yeah, that's my favorite Fiesta Bears for sure. If any minor league team's listening, I reckon they should nab that one.
Starting point is 00:30:31 Yeah. All right. So they're all locked in. Here's, who wrote the answers? The neon trees, that was Oliver. Well done. That's wild. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:41 You looked around the room, didn't you? I was going, can't do the same thing? I go, yep. I'm right. There's neon over there. I see you. Oh, yeah. Leont, truth.
Starting point is 00:30:53 Yeah, that'll do it. Yeah. That'll do. Yeah. Wisconsin, who knew it with Matt Stewart? Wisconsin question mark. Wisconsin Bron Lewis. Are the tax evaders, that was the house?
Starting point is 00:31:14 Well done. The Wisconsin Fiesta Bears was Geraldine. I love it. Oh, God, you're going to playing this game. Yeah. I think that's so great. I want to see that, you know. That's a mascot, though.
Starting point is 00:31:30 It's a great mess. Kind of a bear, eh? I'm a fiesta bear. You can ever see, like, the guy on the suit as a yester bear? So good. I don't think it should be the temporary one. That should be their main one. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:42 It's the truck rattlers or whatever. Timber rattlers. Cheese kisses, Geraldine, went for. That was Nick, the question writer. Oh, well, thank you, Nick. That's, I was good. Appreciate that. Better than whatever the answer will actually be.
Starting point is 00:31:54 Yeah. Oliver went for the water rats. Bron. Holy. Well done. Shit. And Bronn also went for the correct answer. The Outter Tuggers.
Starting point is 00:32:04 Oh, the Otter Tuggers. That's good. That is good, yeah. I'm guessing that's a big dairy industry area or something. Yeah, hopefully. Yeah. Well, they're just pervert. Other ones that's a tourism area.
Starting point is 00:32:19 Oh, man, amazing. With two rounds to go, the scores are Gerald. We don't need to know yet. Oh, all right. Yeah. Let's not get weighed down. Question five comes from Tanya from Ride in New South Wales. And the question is, why is 19th century British surgeon Robert Liston well known?
Starting point is 00:32:41 He's written about in the history books for some reason. 19th century British surgeon Robert Liston. Liston, Liston. L-I-S-T-O-N. That's it. While you're writing your answers, here's some more info about the utter tuggers. Nick writes to the change in identity as part of the team's salute to cows promotion. Salute to cows was created to celebrate America's dairy land during dairy month in June.
Starting point is 00:33:09 We started salute to cows several years ago and it has been one of our biggest nights of every season. The dairy industry is still very important to the state of Wisconsin and the change to the other tuggers for the night is our way to show support for the dairy industry and also a nod to the dairy farmers of the past, said Timber Rattler's president, Rob Zerjav. We hope our fans have fun with the new twist on the night. On your Rob. Other Tigers is a weird way to do that, though. Yeah. Like, you know, he could have said the milkman.
Starting point is 00:33:40 Yeah. It's like, it's definitely... Yeah, but other Tuggers is like, um, like a more inclusive. Like milkman is just the men. I think that's right. Yeah. Anyone can be a Tugger. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:33:53 Yeah, like a tug. It was, you know. But yeah, I think it's also like Milkman or anything like that. That's not getting people talking. Utter Tug is a stun, conversat. Yeah. Nice of a flow, doesn't it? Bit of a rhyme.
Starting point is 00:34:09 At a party, got the merch on. What's that? Yeah. The other Tuggers, let me tell you. I would wear Utter Tuggers gear. Not as much as I wear Fiesta Bears. Yeah, I'll get it made. I reckon that is...
Starting point is 00:34:21 You got the new show title for next year? I do. Yeah, but I'll save that. that for something else. All right. Answers are in the penultimate question here. Why is 19th century British surgeon Robert Liston well known? Here are your options.
Starting point is 00:34:39 He performed an operation with a 300% mortality rate. Instead of saving the patient, he killed three people. Option two. An anaesthesia, as anesthesia wasn't yet invented, he was known to slap his patients when they could. cried out in pain. Okay. Option three, he performed his own lobotomy.
Starting point is 00:35:03 Wow. Option four, he invented happy gas. Okay. Option five, he was caught extracting a small bone from each of his patients as a trophy. That's awesome. That's very cool. That's really cool, I guess. Well, finally, Dr. Liston is known for his famous Liston Stitch, which is used on a woman's
Starting point is 00:35:26 womb after a caesarean section. So you got 300% mortality rate, slapped his patients instead of anesthesia, performed his own lobotomy, invented happy gas, took a bone as a trophy, or it's famous for the list and stitch. Geraldine,
Starting point is 00:35:44 what do you think? Oh, it's a list and stitch. It sounds like it could be a dance. Yeah. He's doing the list and stitch. Okay, I could call me the list and stitch. That I think.
Starting point is 00:35:59 Oh, you're missing it. The list and stitch dance. Did it? I did the list and stitch. It's actually really good. You should do that at your show tonight. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:09 I just did the list of stitch. Do you guys know it? Everyone's doing it. Yeah. You guys are losing. It's the latest TikTok trend. I'm going to go with the happy gas. Happy gas.
Starting point is 00:36:21 That's good too. All right. Love happy gas. Yeah. I'll go. There's a couple of creepy ones of the left there. You can choose one of ours as well.
Starting point is 00:36:33 Oh yeah, you can double up if you want to. I mean, I like to know that. I think spirit of the game, I'll choose a different answer. Yeah. You got 300% mortality rate. Slap the patients. Performed his own lobotomy.
Starting point is 00:36:46 Oh, fucking. Oh, sorry. Did he say where he's from? What's his nationality? British. I didn't say if he was German. I would have said the slap one. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:53 Imagine him. Oh, yeah. So I'll go, I reckon he just, he just killed three people. He was just bad at surgery and he just three people. Yeah. Just go out on a high. Yeah. I picked the lobotomy one is, man, I could, yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:12 That's a lot, isn't it? Yeah, I don't like the idea of a lobotomy anyway, but to do it yourself. Well, do you know, there's some women who perform their own C-sections. Really? With the C-section one in there, yeah, there's some. obstetricians who are like I would prefer to birth my own baby and so I guess they need help with the cutting open and then they say now let me get it out and then they'll fish in their own body and they'll pull out a baby oh isn't that phenomenal yeah that's a that's a that's you want
Starting point is 00:37:41 to have a go though doesn't it Christ what can't women do yeah I mean because it's obviously they'll have a local anesthetic so they can't feel any but not in the hand so yeah why not Just get in there. Yeah. Actors by playing operation, you know, with the tweezers, get them out. That's what happens to me. You don't have private health insurance. You just go, I have to do it myself.
Starting point is 00:38:03 All right. Here's all right. The answers. Performed his own lobotomy. That was Geraldine. That was me. I reckon that feels like a thing that. Yeah, that's what I went with.
Starting point is 00:38:11 I feel like someone's done it themselves. So let's go to this guy. You read of scientists and doctors and stuff who, yeah, they're experiments themselves. Yeah. Extracting a small bone from each of his patients as a trophy, that was the house. Yeah, that is a collection of bones. The slapping instead of anesthesia, that was Tanya, the question writer. Well done.
Starting point is 00:38:35 Okay, Daniel. Relax, man. Geraldine went for the List and Stitch, this is Aaron one. That was Bron. Well done. What a great answer. Thank you. That's twice you've got me.
Starting point is 00:38:51 Maybe three times. I don't be three. Oh my God. You know how to write a good answer. Thank you. Brian went for invented happy guess. That was Oliver. Oh, well done, Oliver.
Starting point is 00:39:03 Well done, mate. And that means Oliver's correct. He's 300% mortality rate operation. He was just a huge job. That's all that comes down, dude. I had a few surgeries in a time. I didn't have him. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:16 But why is he famous for that? Or infamous is probably. Yeah. So he killed everyone in the room. He didn't go well. This is all I'm picturing. It didn't go well. Like the, yeah, nurses and stuff and he's sort of like,
Starting point is 00:39:28 he just killed them accidentally. What accidentally? It was accidental. I believe that's the story. No, wait. He had surgery on one person and three people died. Yes. Did he do surgery on three people?
Starting point is 00:39:41 He was performing a leg amputation. Yep. Work so far. Oh, and he was famous for doing the fastest amputations. Oh, he had like a reptor, uphold. I think that's what you need when you're yown.
Starting point is 00:39:52 Certainly cut two fingers off his assistant's hand. And the assistant died of gangrene. Oh. So, yeah. Cut two fingers. He must have had a chainsaw in there. You can't get those off with a scalpel.
Starting point is 00:40:09 Well, I mean, yeah, maybe, yeah, what was he, what was his tool? An electric knife or something? Oh. Like, you can't. That epitator leg with the... Yeah, true.
Starting point is 00:40:22 It would have been a sore or something. So that's two people. What about the third one? Who's the third one? Well, the third one, this one sounds ridiculous, but... No, the first two sound fine. Yeah. The third one was he accidentally slashed an elderly doctor with a blade, but it didn't
Starting point is 00:40:44 actually cut him. It just cut his coat, but the elderly doctor had a heart. heart attack from the shock. Right. Okay. Yeah, all right. So that that's wild. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:56 Look, it could have happened. Could have. Well, apparently it did. Liston. Liston. Liston. You, fuck. That's a bad day in the office.
Starting point is 00:41:04 It's famous because in the Christmas party, the guys were like, fucking have a go at Liston. Yeah. Yeah. Them fingers off. He's, like, he's going to die. I thought it was like he killed someone and then someone else died for whatever. And he went, oh, so bad.
Starting point is 00:41:18 And then he died. So of all the people who died, it wasn't even him. No. He just walked down to there and said, Tomorrow's better. He did the list of pants on the way out. Yeah, did the list and stitches on the way out. I thought it was three separate ops.
Starting point is 00:41:32 He's just done the same op three times and gone, I've killed three people. They'll do. Yeah, but I'm sure doctors do that all the time. All right, final question. This comes from Tim S. Green from Surrey in the UK. We always finish with a movie synopsis. Oh, good.
Starting point is 00:41:46 So this one is. what is the synopsis of the film Welcome to Whop-Wop This feels very triggering for all three of us It's all our, it's all biopics About pointed Aubrey, Wogger Christ, how long
Starting point is 00:42:03 If you do know I just play it like you don't No I don't like if I do I do not But I don't remember the synopsis So And yeah while you're writing your answers I'll read what Tanya wrote about
Starting point is 00:42:19 Robert Liston, which I think I've already kind of gone through, but Tanja writes, Liston was performing a leg amputation, but worked so fast that he accidentally cut off two fingers on his assistant's hand. Both the patient and the assistant died later of gangrene, most likely due to the sore being unclean. So it was a sore. What about the third death? Well, doctors and other spectators would often watch these surgeries from the gallery, which was much more up close and personal than men. medical galleries today. During the procedure, Liston accidentally swiped near an elderly doctor with a blade
Starting point is 00:42:56 slicing the fabric of the doctor's suit coat. Thinking he had been cut open, the doctor went into shock and died of a subsequent heart attack. Bloody hell. All right, answer in final question. Oh, and it's worth triple points, by the way. Oh, here we go. Still truly anyone's game.
Starting point is 00:43:16 What is the synopsis of the film, welcome to whoop-wop? After a paperwork mix-up, Eric the Howler Monkey is accidentally elected mayor of small town Justinville, Texas. At first, the citizens treated as a joke until the town begins to thrive under Eric's chaotic but effective leadership. Embracing their new mayor, they renamed the town after his signature sign-off. Whoop-wop. Okay.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Option two, the true story of a small town that put itself on the tourist map by making up multiple sightings of a bunyip. Oh, yeah. Option three. An Australian biopic about Betty Cuthbert, Australia's first gold medalist in the 1956 Olympics for the 100 metre sprint. The film shows Cuthbert's inspirational journey from the regional town of Cupertadi, where she faced abject poverty and gendered discrimination as an aspirational athlete,
Starting point is 00:44:12 all the way to a victory at the Melbourne 1956 Olympic Games. I almost downgraded a Commonwealth for some reason, like it's clearly said. You're a thing of the past, mate. Yeah. Option number four, backpackers were traveling through Melbourne and saw a nice graffiti on Flinders Lane. It was a portal to another dimension. They were met by the mayor of a village who said, welcome to whoop-wop.
Starting point is 00:44:37 Okay. Option five, New York conman Teddy flees to the Australian outback after a deal gone wrong. His situation goes from bad to worse when he's drugged by a hitchhiker and wakes up married to her in a moat and bizarre town of Whop-Woop. Will Teddy escape or accept the madness and learn to love its new life? Finally, out of work, actor Henry lands a gig on a reboot of Welcome to Wopwop, a long-forgotten puppet show from the 70s. But the puppets have their own agenda,
Starting point is 00:45:09 and soon secrets to the show's sudden cancellations start to unravel, as well as Henry's grip on reality. All right, Bron, what do you think? Okay. You got the monkey mare. You got the fake bunyip sightings. You got Betty Cuthbert Biopic. You got backpackers going to another dimension.
Starting point is 00:45:27 You got the New York con man fleeing to Australia and ending up married or the puppet show. Okay. I'm just going to go right it all in. It's going in. Okay. It's the American that got tricked by an Australian woman. Oh, yeah. Because we are known.
Starting point is 00:45:41 Taylor's oldest time. Yeah, Tal is old as time. Yeah, Tal is old as time. I'm going to trick one. later. Force him to marry me, taking him to whoop-wop. That's what we do. What a good time.
Starting point is 00:45:50 Yeah. So full of Americans, baffled American man in Wop-Wop. Is he Gulliver? I reckon it's the, oh, they all sound legit. I reckon it's the Betty Cuthbert biopic. All right, locked in. Those two answers, because I was like, who, there was a lot of information about Betty Cuthbert.
Starting point is 00:46:11 Yes. And I'm like, was, was it, was the, was she, did. she win the hundred, was she, I thought she was a swimmer. Oh, there you go. So maybe I'll just, I'll count that, but I was very impressed at the 1950, the years, the details, well done. I forgot about that one. Um, but there was something about, and I liked the one that you went for.
Starting point is 00:46:34 Teddy. Yeah. Because it was like, there was something about that I'm like, first I thought, I think I've seen this movie. Hmm, same. And then it's something about. I was like, oh, that, that's triggered something in my mind. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:51 But I can't go the same as you. I can't go the same. I can, but it would mean that you would win before. You would win anyway. Yeah. No, there's triple points. You could jump up the ladder. Oh, I see.
Starting point is 00:47:03 But what if we both lose? What if we could sink this ship together, Jess? I know, I just come from the clouds. Yeah. Like who, like, or just go out. Just do how you feel. I'll say this to my kids. I'll go, same as Bronn.
Starting point is 00:47:19 All right, locked in. Here's who wrote the answers. The one about the long-forgotten puppet show. That was Tim, the question writer. Well done, Tim. Tim also wrote the one about the monkey mare. Yeah, that fits. Come on, Tim.
Starting point is 00:47:35 It was ridiculous, mate. Well, probably maybe Tim would say, where was Tim from, I know, England? Yeah. They say mayor. I love the people who say Maya. Maya, yeah. Or in America, are they, the boys in the water?
Starting point is 00:47:49 They're called boys. I'm like, come on, mate, grow up. No, the mayor is drowning. Grab the buoy. Americans listening to be like, you are not allowed to make fun of how anyone talks Australia. Yeah, that's fair, mate. Norris, Chip. Bunyip, the bunyip one.
Starting point is 00:48:11 That was Geraldine. That was good. I forgot about that one. Yeah, that is good. It was short, but it was good. It was sweet. It'd be long. He had to get up and pace for that.
Starting point is 00:48:22 Yeah, it was just like getting the, like, I love the, like the true story, like a small town that was like making, it had. Yeah. What's the, anyway. Yeah, it feels like something like, yeah, could have been made by a working dog or something. Yes. Came after the dish.
Starting point is 00:48:38 Yeah. Based on a true story. The one about the portal into another dimension from Flinders Lane. That was Oliver. Yeah, that was cool, wacky. You are on the neon trees, aren't you? Yeah. I know, sure that might fix it.
Starting point is 00:48:53 Oliver, you went for the Betty Cuthbert biopic or biopic. That was Bron. Oh, that's a lot of detail on the fly. Did you know, are they true? No, they are true. Oh, they are true. I just Googled real quick. Oh, well, done.
Starting point is 00:49:08 Yeah, I thought, well, yeah, there's a possibility that. She was a sprinter 100 metres. She was from Sydney, though. Not Cuba PD. Oh. Oh, yeah. That's where I lied. That's where I was an effing liar.
Starting point is 00:49:19 Well done. I was off the scent there, Brian, mother. And that means that Bronn and Geraldine are corrected. It's the New York con man. Yes. Oh, nice. Great. I've gone up the ladder.
Starting point is 00:49:32 I've got 100 points for that. I can't remember how the game works. What year was that movie made? It was made in the 90s. I wasn't born yet. I'm kidding. Come on. Let's have fun.
Starting point is 00:49:42 We're having fun. Can we have a bit of fun? Uh, it was, uh, it seems on rotten tomatoes that it was liked by the audiences a lot more than the critics, only 37% approval from critics, but 70% from audiences. Yeah, what are critics, no. Review by David No, uh, reads, Elliot's attempts, Elliot's the director, Elliot's attempts that killer entertainment only result in the actors making utter fools of themselves, complete exhaustion on the part of the audience.
Starting point is 00:50:11 He hated it. But Andrew F. Pierce loved it writing, I love Welcome to Woman. for its mania and madness. For Elliot's unbridled direction and decision making. For the manner, the stars thrust themselves with vigor into their roles. Very different takes. Yeah. All right.
Starting point is 00:50:26 Final score check. This is a great final score line. Equal in second place on four points, it's Oliver Hickey in the house. Out in front, way, way out in front on 12 points is Brunt Lewis. Points. Wow. How do I get 12? You just got a few right and you got me with a few and you're just really good at the end.
Starting point is 00:50:51 You've out. You've turned the tables. Holy much. Three of us together would be equal to you. Because I, yeah, I truly don't think I got a single point on my last one. And that was embarrassing. You got the right one, triple points for the last one. Yes.
Starting point is 00:51:07 Yeah. Nailed it. Well, that brings the end of the show. Where can people find you, Oliver? I'm on our Instagram, Oliver Hunter underscore 95. I've got a few shows coming up, so come along to those. Melbourne Fringe, October. It's all good. It's the show title.
Starting point is 00:51:21 Tom Ballard is directing it. Oh, fantastic. Love that man. He's a lovely man. He's a brilliant comedian and excellent director. It's going to be a great show, mate. So that's good. And I've got a couple of shows I'm running out where I live in Berwick and Willow Grove out near where in Maui, I think of where it is.
Starting point is 00:51:39 So if you want to... Gippsland, central Gippsland. There we go. It's just come out. because I think all the tickets are on sale right now. I think it will be a while to come. It'll probably be late September. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:51:49 Well, Melbourne Fringe is definitely on sale. And please come because, yeah. Yeah. I need you to come. If you don't come, it's a, I think if you don't come, it's a hate crime. Well, yeah. I really hope the listeners of this show aren't, don't have hate in their heart. Yeah, aren't able to us.
Starting point is 00:52:07 What about you, Jess? On the socials, Geraldine Hickey. And you can go to comedy.com.com. You for tickets to my shows all around the place. Wonderful. Join the mailing list. Get on board. Come along for the ride.
Starting point is 00:52:24 Yeah. So many things to say. I'm Bronlewis and my Instagram is Bronl Lewis Comedy and then my TikTok, which kills me. It's the same thing. But some people prefer TikTok. Isn't that awful? An awful place to be.
Starting point is 00:52:37 But if that's your thing, I'm on there too and I enjoy it. And it's Ron Lewis Comedy. come along awesome thanks so much for joining us so much fun in this the listeners won't know but we're doing this in the main studio at humdinger today on a stage in front of an empty audience yes feels good and we'll finish the show by doing the list and stitch thanks very much you're coming here's going to do with matt stewart now that you know i've been matt stewart now gerardine take it away with that list of stitch A quick little feet, don't you?
Starting point is 00:53:20 Even though... That was Claire Hooper's first year as well. Yes, it was three nominations for Best Newcomer. Is that it? Just three. It was Sammy J, Claire Hooper and a show called I Heart Racism with Tommy Dasselo and another guy called Dave that doesn't do comedy anymore and hasn't done for many years.
Starting point is 00:53:47 And I had so many people come up to me during that festival going, you are a shoe-in for Best Newcomer. Oh, yeah. Best Newcomer. This is, oh, geez, you're going to get Best Newcomer. Best Newcomer, that's yours. Oh, you're going to get Best Newcomer. Did not get nominated.
Starting point is 00:54:04 Oh, devastating. Get nominated. The kind of thing you wouldn't have thought about. Yeah. For weren't bringing it up nonstop. Exactly. Yeah. This is the same thing happened to Aiden.
Starting point is 00:54:13 Aiden, Yes. Aiden with the piano. Yes. Because his show was brilliant. Did you guys see that? This year? No, this year, the piano.
Starting point is 00:54:21 Tried to see it, couldn't get in. Oh, so busy. Same time. Same time. Oh, right. It was so busy. It was packed all the time. It was doing really well in Edinburgh.
Starting point is 00:54:29 And everyone was saying this to him. Mate, you are going to get best show, best show, best show, for sure. Like, you won't just get nominated. You will win it. Yeah. And he was like, oh, my God. And then he didn't get nominated. Anything.
Starting point is 00:54:43 for anything at all. Nothing, nothing. And he was pretty sore about it. Yeah, well, he was amongst the, he was talked about for the piece of wood. Oh, yes. Oh, that would have been hard between him and Dan Connell. Yeah, so it was, you know,
Starting point is 00:55:01 so not that that means anything, but, the piece of wood. No, the piece of wood means a lot, but just knowing that you're in the mix. Yeah. It's just like, it's still the same. There's no like... It's still the same kind of...
Starting point is 00:55:14 Who cares? Yeah. Well, maybe the fact that you get pumped up and then it doesn't happen. That's worse. Yeah, exactly. If you got nominated, didn't get it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:22 Okay, sick. At least I got a nomination. But they get all the pump up from the peers. Yeah. Greg Fleet, every year, for about four years in a row, I, as, when the awards night was on, and Greg Fleet would be going up to present the Peace of Wood Award,
Starting point is 00:55:39 and he'd stop and he'd say to me, hey you were you were close you were like run a rough like just so you know you were very like you no oh wow he thought he was doing a nice thing's annoying and i was just like please stop doing that anyway but then i did win it so you know aden just hold your horses just wait wait for it yeah i have only played this game once with you before matt and and i every single time that you give me one. I go, something will come. And it doesn't. It doesn't. I go, I should have said no to this podcast. It's so funny. The audience, you got so much great feedback. People like, have Bron back on. She was so great. Love her energy. I think I didn't get a
Starting point is 00:56:26 single point. Sorry about winning, no, isn't it? Oh, well, Christ. Okay. Well, then great. I'm having a great time then. Yeah. They really, they loved your vibe. And it was interesting, though, because you, I don't have to remember you didn't get any sleep that your kid was sick oh yeah i think was there gastro happening at my house yeah something happened that yeah and i you were you were in on no sleep in many coffees yeah why i don't know what happened and then i had to bring my four year old who sat in the corner of the room but david quirk in there who seemed to be more distracted by shiny things than the four year old he was a bit like oh what you think like i don't think you've grown up
Starting point is 00:57:05 further than four, mate. He's from Bright, though. Yeah, they're slower. Bless him. Where have I got your answer, Geraldine? I just write in the notes on my phone. I thought we'd just read it out. Oh, no, sorry.
Starting point is 00:57:24 Where does it go? Just DM me on wherever you like, Instagram, or Facebook or WhatsApp. Here we go, copy. Oh, yeah, message, yeah, I can go there. And then here it comes. Here it comes. Wait for it. Boom.
Starting point is 00:57:46 Yeah. What about that, eh? Have a go at that. Have a go at that. How do you like that? I don't like, because this is a pure coincidence, but you're all from the Riverina. Is that?
Starting point is 00:58:01 Riverina. Riverina. Riviera. Yes, we are, bonjour. Where are you from, Brock? Or Cullerman. Oh, yeah, yeah. Neither walker.
Starting point is 00:58:10 Yeah, it is. New two of both Aubrey people. Woodonga or Aubrey? Aubrey. Yeah, okay. Yeah, because I went to Wodonga once we drove through it. Bloody terrifying. I was like, lock the doors, kids, don't.
Starting point is 00:58:23 Yeah. That's what I said. There's a haircut, would say she's from Wondonga, but it's just, are you lavi? Are you labby? Yeah, I'm a lavy, yeah. Well, I think my mum was mates with your. siblings. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:34 That's why we went to school together. Yeah. Oh, wow. Keynes were my mum's family. There you go. I'll ask my sisters about that next time I say them. I think my grandmother was good mates with your mum.
Starting point is 00:58:43 Yeah, it makes sense. Albury, I mean, Aubrey is for the fancier end, is it? Yeah. Aubrey's nice. Dean Street, Aubrey.
Starting point is 00:58:51 Going on holidays as a kid up to like North East and Victoria and an all prime TV ads were Dean Street Aubrey. Oh, yeah. In my head, it was like, this is like Hollywood. That's a big, that's a big smoke. give you from like where I actually grew up was how long oh wow holy that was the big smoke yeah and you do deanies down deanie yeah oh that's like chap lapsed diney you got a bend an elbow how long's that be
Starting point is 00:59:17 there for is that new what no well that's it used to be the ritz oh lee yes and and it was the ritz nightclub which you could go to but only if you were wearing appropriate footwear oh yes if you weren't didn't have appropriate footwear and they thought you all right they'd the bounces will go, you go over to Sweetheart's pizza and you could hire some leather shoes from Sweetheart's pizza. That's so funny. They'd have these dressed shoes at the pizza. Like a bowling alley.
Starting point is 00:59:47 Yeah. What size are you? I remember in Canber because of the older days where they really cared about shoes, but I remember our friends would go into the nightclub and then take off their shoes and give them to someone to put in their hand back. Then that girl would come back out of the front. And then the person put, like, take their thongs off, put their shoes on the wrong side. So their heels hanging out the back.
Starting point is 01:00:09 Click, click, click, click, click. It had nothing to see here. I've got to get into moose heads. Got to get in there, mate. These bits will get it out. I assume I'd know. I didn't want to start on a new thing in case, so we rambled too much. Because we've got to, we got it.
Starting point is 01:00:31 You sent one through Oliver? Yeah, I had DMJ, I think, did I? It'd be fun if you sent it to someone else. No, definitely you. I've still got the sourdough bread is your last message. I mean, I'd send it. Show it to me. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:45 Can we get through this? I was like, we'll never get it. We'll never fix this. Stump me. All right. Finally. Sorry about that, yeah. I think you just do you just do one word every?
Starting point is 01:01:02 The game, Brian. Dancing. Yeah. I haven't got yours come through, Geraldine. Oh, there you are. Maybe you could write something down, mate. It's wondering why you're so quick. Fantastic.
Starting point is 01:01:22 I don't know what's happening there. That's weird that over two different messenger services as well. Sabotage. That's a Beastie Boy song. Sabotage. Listen all your. Listen all your. This is sabotage.
Starting point is 01:01:37 A great intro song. What a good sting song to walk out too. It's on my list. I got a playlist of walk-on songs and that is a good one. That is a great one. Mine this year is ludicrous move bitch. And honestly, really fun to come out to. Get out the way.
Starting point is 01:01:56 Is that the one? Yeah, move bitch. Get out. But it wasn't great to come on to after. As soon as the Welcome to Country finishes, that comes on. And I'm like, every single time I'm like, fuck, this is on the nose, isn't it? Jesus. Instagram.
Starting point is 01:02:14 I don't know. Like, sorry, guys. I thought it was a really fun song before I remembered what it was going to come after. Yeah. Good time. Do you go to the ads? I need to stand up and walk around while I think of this. The blood flowing and cheating.
Starting point is 01:02:45 Is Wi-Fi? Yeah. I reckon I would have picked half your answers today, Geraldine. Thank you. And also it's a fine line between, you know, being entertaining and, and been right. Yes. I enjoyed muddy tit.
Starting point is 01:03:06 Mighty tit. I think that was one of my favorite answers for today. Muddy tit. Muddy tit. Yeah, that one. But also on the same, two pay two can, that was another favorite.
Starting point is 01:03:20 Yeah. Could have been the answer? Yeah. Yeah, some of them, it's just about how it feels to say it. Yeah. It feels nice. And last time I was so distracted that I would write something down and then send it to you
Starting point is 01:03:34 and then Matt would try and read it out and try and make it make sense in real time. He's like, and then she, the following, and then that's it. I was like, he's done well there.

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