Episode Transcript
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Speaker 3I bought a brain drover, had a few fumes.
Didn't take long for the kids to fall asleep in the back.
Speaker 2The Driver's Show with Paul Marrick and Gordy Waters.
Speaker 3We've got a pretty exciting guest on Rosso.
Speaker 1Yeah, Tim had a book that was probably one of the first books I read outside high school.
But it was with It was with Merrick, and it was literally called Eric and Rosso the Book, and it was very much a picture book, but it was very funny.
It was very funny that.
Speaker 3One sold all right in America and Rosso the book and then and then we went from Triple Jade and Nova and the buggers at ABC Books cracked it, and yeah, they stopped.
They wouldn't reprint it, so it was out of print.
Collectors on them you can get them Monday for about four dollars.
Speaker 1To turn the book.
Yeah, the shop for about three.
Speaker 3You know.
The worst thing is is I learnt very early on that when someone asked you to write something, you know, so can you sign this to my brother?
And then can you say that?
And then you're right, all right, dear Graham, why don't you yeah, yeah, so it's so funny.
And then my brother, right, he was in an op shop one day and he saw one of.
Speaker 1My books, opens it up.
Speaker 3But it's like, dear Graham, why did you go?
You got to be so when people say to me, now, can you you know, I would not do that because I'd like to think that people keep my books forever.
But they don't cost a living crisis.
They just go get rid of it.
Speaker 1I got this beautiful Bert Newton autobiography from the seventies, right, and.
Speaker 3He had the watermelon on the front.
Speaker 1He did a few It was just his yeah, it was just his head, and it was called Bert.
And I was reading it at UNI.
I was obsessed with that, sort of like late night TV back in the day, like it was such a great era that Channel nine studios, you know, Don Lane and all this.
I loved it, all right, And so I was a massive Burt Newton fan, and I was reading it at UNI and we were in Burke Road, Camberwell, I feel like it was George O's or something.
Anyway, I'm there with a couple of my mates and who was to walk in but Burt and Patty Yuton.
Yeah, and I'm like, oh my god, I've got the Burt book in the car and I can't.
Yeah, I went, I went, and I went and got it.
And he was so great.
He wrote in my book, dear Gordie, thanks for buying the book in brackets thirty cents, best wishes Burt Newton or something like that.
And I sat with them for a good fifteen twenty minutes.
That's pushing it, but well it's good, good, good fifteen seconds.
No, but I was.
I sat with him for a while and she was like, she.
Speaker 3Is like just lovely Jim.
She was doing the Apprentice or something like that, and you know, they someone I don't know, dick out or something rings up and guds.
I were trying to get as many people down here, can you come down?
I oh, fuck to go.
And she was there and I had my son, who was like a year old or something at the time.
She's so sweet and you go, oh my god, this those old fashioned showbies people nic people, and you're right, you know, of course he's gonna say yes, and of course he's gonna sit down and let you sit down and whatever.
Speaker 1That's the thing.
Like I look back on that and go the audacity of me.
He was like in a cafe having having some time with his wife and I just come up and go ome and he's like, oh yeah, come and see sit down, sit down, And the whole cafe, I didn't realize, was looking at me like Patty's just gone, oh, You've got a bit of an audience.
I'm like thanks, yeah, And like the whole crowd was like damn.
And they were just so lovely, like they were just genuinely nice people.
I'll never forget that moment.
Speaker 3I saw Johnny Young al it's cool at an island in Fiji smoking a dart and having a Fiji bit of it.
Speaker 1That's the only way I would want to meet Johnny.
Did he have a Hawaiian shirt.
Speaker 3And he literally just had his speed days on his gut hanging out the front that he was like at the beach bart in the sand.
It is so good.
And I was like, oh my god, what are you doing?
Like like he was eating that dart.
You know some people like, oh they smoke like a Frenchman.
Speaker 1He's like all smoking.
Speaker 3He's like sucking his like Speen and the duneies, and he thinks geography teacher's going to come in.
Speaker 1He's sucking that back like seventy show beers should That's what he's doing.
That is so good.
He would put that between two bits of bread and needle like a sandwich would be good.
Speaker 3Oh I loved it.
Yeah, so Johnny Farnham wants to get into it.
So I was like grade one, We're on a school excursion to Captain Cook's cottage in Melbourne.
Yeah right, and like this guy Simon who went to primary school with, He's had a spew.
He did a yogo spew down the steps upon Captain Cook's cottage.
So we had to evacuate.
Everyone went out of the front.
I went out the back, bumped into John Farnham and I said okay, Johnny, and he said god I and he waved at me.
And to this day, no one went to primary school with.
Remember, none of them believed that I saw him that you like, it was the hugest actually there though.
Speaker 1Like it was like because this film he was actually in Captain Cook's That's where he lived.
Speaker 3And now, of course they don't call it Captain cook Scottage.
It's so so it's like it's called it's called Cook's Cottage.
So you go wonder if fucking Maggie Beer's in there.
Speaker 1May Beer and Simon just a TV show from the early two thousands.
Oh yeah, what are you cooking today?
You just wore all these like twelve year old kids go in there and they just see, like, what are you cooking today, Maggie?
Because I'm cooking a nice mate trout with a bit of an orange glaze.
Speaker 3How many episodes you reckon?
They would punch it out in a day of that show.
Speaker 1I don't know, but I like to think she was like Johnny Young somewhere in Fiji with a tit out sack and back of dart just one tip.
Yeah, I don't know.
That was a great show though.
Speaker 3She was an exceptional show.
Speaker 1It was a great show.
Four teams walked into not a great show.
Speaker 3I was just going to say, this is the exact opposite.
Speaker 1We wanted to get you in basically because obviously you're a massive curR enthusiast Massive car podcast as well, and obviously the book Chuck a Yueie.
You've got a whole heap of stuff, and congrats on that new pod you're doing with Kevin McLeod as well, So that's easy.
Speaker 3He's more of a car up than I am.
Is he mad?
Mad?
He's got like never would have picked that.
Oh he's got he's got quite the collection.
He's got this thing a Mirandez like nineteen twenties thing.
Right, it's like an quite obscure nineteen twenties Italian.
Maybe it's English, you'll find out in a second camera.
And he was.
We were going through the French countryside one day, as you do, and he had this.
I wish I could remember them all.
I'll get a photo up and you can.
You could, guys and alpha.
He had a like a seventies jag, a bunch of different cars.
Speaker 1Was he leaning towards any particular type, like like UK guy, like a real UK.
Speaker 3Cars people types?
But he I think he was just interested in what he'd call old bangers.
Speaker 4Yeah, because when I tried looking for it, it keeps coming up with cars at the Menendez Brothers and I remember, I can't.
Speaker 3I'll show you the photo and then you can.
I can.
I never remember.
I'm useless with this stuff because like I'm not as that much of a cur enthusiast as some people.
That's the Kanson, Yeah, that's it Kenson.
Yep.
Anyway, I had all these cars fantastic and this Moran the old people are far up about it when they work it out.
So we were having this trip with his family.
We went from Germany back to the UK.
It's amazing, right, that's cool.
And we're going on the final day, We're going through these rolling hills in France and this nineteen twenties car and like literally it was one of those cars that if someone was twenty meters in front of you and they walked out, you just have to get out the ride because like you can't stop the car.
Yeah that's it.
Yeah, it's made of wood, right.
Speaker 1Yeah, he's Fred Flintstone, just to start it.
Speaker 3Yeah.
And so we're having this amazing day.
We're like we're side by side.
It's very tight, really beautiful, right, friends, it was picturesque.
I got us a bit lost, and he didn't get angry about it.
Speaker 1Can I bought you for a second?
Was that a cool moment that you became friends with that guy, because I imagine like there would have been a time before you knew each other.
You kind of like, was it a fanboy moment in a way, because he's a pretty cool dude anything.
Speaker 3I was close enough to sit next to him in a vintage car, but probably before that when I first met him.
Yeah, I mean I really like what he did on the telly, still do.
But we just hit it off.
I suppose it's one of those things shared interests.
So we like the sun setting.
Everyone's already back at the hotel before us because I got us lost, and we come up around the corner and this cyclist pulls out of somewhere and then we swerve a little bit and there's cars coming straight towards us, right and I thought we were going to die, like literally, because the cars may somehow along the way.
You know, it's like a small This is a really small street.
I think the road's there.
It's got cobbled walls on either side.
Somehow, I don't know how keV maneuvers the car.
It goes completely sideways and then he gets it back.
The car goes to the side, doesn't hit us.
Cheez, and then we get back to the whole tell and we don't tell anyone and then like we never mentioned it ever again.
Yeah, Like I literally like I literally thought I was going to die, and I thought, and I'm going to be the really small byline here.
Yes, it was just like keeping McLoud killed.
Speaker 1With Australian Yahoo.
Speaker 3So that's for me, Like I admire people who like wooden cars.
Speaker 1Having said that that wouldn't be a ship way to die.
I mean, there'd be worse ways to die, you know.
Speaker 3This thing, like I look at there's this worth having a look at.
Right, there's an extraordinary video that the National Film and Sound and arch I did where they put this sort of all this footage of cars from back in the day together.
Right, it goes for about nine minutes.
And I saw it at this exhibition in Coffs Harbor, and there was these blokes coming in.
They heard about it.
They just come in and watch and they'd watch nine minutes, wouldn't have got any of the other exhibition, and then they would leave.
But you know when you see those old shots of those cars and they were there back in the day to make it look like this is the sportiest car in the world.
You look at him and you think that you're going to die, Like if something just slightly you would go to a tree and that would be it.
But you just died all the time.
Speaker 1It's funny because I like, I'd jump in one of those old cars now, like it could be an iconic, it could be a testaoster or something like that, and at the time you think that is the pinnacle of automotive coolness, engineering, design, the lot.
And then you get in it and it can be somewhat When you finally drive something like that, sometimes it can be a little bit underwhelming because you're like, no, this just drives like nineteen ninety one, you.
Speaker 3Know what I mean, And you want it to be something.
Speaker 1Yeah, you want it to be like if you want to feel like James Bond a little bit more like it.
Speaker 3Just I had a DS right, and I loved that car, but it wasn't very like it was really cheap and it wasn't a great condition, and I sold it someone when my kids came along, well the first my kids came along, and this guy came and took it away, and I think his daughter was using it to bush bashing or some sort of rally driving garden.
I don't know where it's turned up.
It certainly hasn't turned up anywhay.
Not that I look at online all the time for these cars, but then I looked at more recently and I took one for a test drive.
And this my car that I bought was maybe two thousand dollars back in the day, you know, only two thousands of two thousand and seven or something, right two thousand and six, And then I was looking at one that was fifty four and it didn't drive any differently.
Yeah, well, there you go, like you can't magically make it any better.
Speaker 4It doesn't help today as well, because car prices have gone through the roof.
COVID drove up all these classic cars, and you genuinely will overpay for something today, drive it and go.
Speaker 1Back off a little bit, but a little bit still is.
Speaker 3There's still some crazy COVID prices.
Speaker 4Yeah, but I don't know that there's something about just sitting in a car that you know back then, were you know, like a GT.
You knew that was the fastest four dorsidan on the planet at that time, And to think some of the speeds that people were doing like this.
That iconic shot of it was motoring journalist that was driving the GT flat.
Speaker 3I should know this because I put in that's a robbo, is it?
No, it was someone else, but he was.
Speaker 4It was off the dial basically, and it's like just a slight side wind, a cross wind or something like that.
Speaker 3Would finish him.
But that was just the thing back then.
Speaker 4And today you've got the Chinese the it's called the yang wang U nine genuinely its name.
It just set a speed record of five hundred and something kilometers an hour.
Speaker 1They're the derivative of B I D.
Speaker 4Yeah, it's a quad electric motor.
And it's like, surely in ten years time we're not going to have twenty thirty years times.
It's going to be a car that's doing a thousand kilometers an hour.
And that seems slow and old and dat.
Speaker 3There's a point where I don't know.
I'm not an engineer, and I should say that there's a point you could only go as fast as the robots can do whatever we want them to do.
And well, the nostalgia for cars, I think is really interesting.
And I had this, got this amazing email from this guy, tell me this beautiful story about how he saw a falcon like his dad's at a motor show and he sort of went, this is like, it's amazing.
That's like my old family car is exactly the same color, the same color and teria.
And he goes up to the guy whose car it was and he said, you know, my dad used to have one of these, you know, which it would be okay if I sit in the car.
He said, yeah, go for it.
And he opened up the driver's door and he said, no, no, no, I don't want to sit there.
I want to sit in the back when he was a kid.
But here you go, beautiful we ever know.
Yeah, it's like sat there like just sort of tears streaming down his face, you know, nostalgic about the car.
And that's I think that that's what drives said, you know, the people to go and buy buy those cars that you either dad always wanted, your dad had, or you yearn for or whatever.
And then you know, obviously no one's yearning for nineteen twenties cars because they went around.
But that's like I think when I did the Chucky Yueie book, yep, and so I was on the ab Cent, I was doing all this talk back and they were like, the amount of people who would call in, who rang up, who learned how to drive in the nineteen sixties and nineteen twenties and thirties cars is quite extraordinary, isn't that interesting?
Wow?
And then they go, yeah, we used to have this car and it used to crank it up, and now I'd learn how to drive a nine to fifty five and a twenty year old cow, which makes sense exactly.
Speaker 1It's funny with the small things that you remember about those sorts of cars, like the old cars, like the fin steering wheel of the way, like it was so bloody clunky to change gears or seat belt yeah yeah, and they were like those seatbelts that were just like clicking, almost like an aeroplane sort of thing.
Just these little tiny bits that I just remember of old cars and neighbors cars and all that.
I remember going to a car show and this old dude sitting next to some sort of ferrari and he was there just in the bloody sun on a deck chair just like and he had like a sandwich board in front of his car.
And he's like one owner such and such a put the pieces together.
I'm like, oh, you bought that.
He goes, yeah, there's my first car back in you know, nineteen seventy two whatever.
I was like, your first car was a Ferrari.
He's like yeah, and he did the whole well, you know, it was either buy a house or buy a car, and you can't drive a house.
And he's had that car ever since and he's still just prays proudly, yes, yeah, it was Trevor Long.
He's just like washing himself with a class in the boot.
But he was sitting he was sitting there just proudly, and I thought that's awesome, Like that's that's really cool.
And there's something about old.
Speaker 3Cars don't have that.
Speaker 4No one sits proudly next to their tesla and goes, this is my tesla and have a look at it.
It's I can make it fat and flash lights and stuff.
I just don't think we're gonna we just won't have that.
Speaker 3Yeah, it isn't that idea.
I think we talked about this another time, about how no one runs out of the front of it your house when you get a new car any more.
Yeap, how you knew everyone in the street, who's yea someone Graham next door it's got a new car and you don't.
Speaker 1It'd be like it'd be like an event, you know what I mean, it would be like a proper even when you saw and I feel like that now, when you see like an old car driving pass, it's like it's a thing.
It's like, oh, check it out.
But when you see like a modern ev it's.
Speaker 3Just like, I mean, the romance of automobiles has changed dramatically.
You know.
I wonder where the price has got something to do with that as well.
Speaker 4Yeah, and you've got competing priorities like a house today, especially here in Sydney.
I mean, you can have a house and be under enormous mortgage pressure, or you can rent and have a new car.
Speaker 3Like you're talking about, like you can't have both.
Speaker 4And I think that is And also kids like my cousin he's like almost forty.
He still lives at home, but he never got a license, has no interest in driving.
And I'm like, this is the new kids that are growing up now.
They just don't want to drive.
They'll catch you UBA's places, they'll get lifts with friends, they just don't want to get a license.
And I think that is part of it as well, there's just no want for it.
Speaker 3Yeah, I mean freedom is easier now.
Yeah.
So you know, like as a suburban nation and arguably the world's first suburban nation, the reliance of the automobile is huge, and so what they represent is freedom.
But freedom comes in all sorts of different ways, and you don't they're not places to have recreational sex anymore, which were just sex.
It doesn't have to be recreational.
Speaker 1It's very personal to the point there is nothing recreational about my sex.
Speaker 3So they they they of course, you know, there's always going to be you know, car culture in some shape or form, but it's not as widespread in the same way because they don't the cars aren't as representative of that because you want to go somewhere and you go, oh, I'll just get mum to drive, and you don't care, you're not embarrassed.
But they Barbara is taking us.
Oh yeah, all right, there's no thing.
No thanks to live missus Johnson.
That shit's gone, you know, like it's like, oh yeah, she's probably coming to the nightclub too.
Speaker 1She probably should probably supply the bag.
Speaker 4Yeah, you know, where the culture is shifting now.
Speaker 3We spoke about the Melbourne four by four show.
Speaker 4I went there and I was not expecting much, but there was shitloads of people there.
Speaker 3And now if you go.
Speaker 4Outside the cities, you go regional people love their fall whel drives and it's almost like manufacturing in Australia ends.
People then migrate to four wheel drives to go access a lifestyle that they didn't previously.
They're modifying them, they're lifting them.
Regionally, everyone's still driving toyotas.
You know, you go to the to Burke or to Broken Hill, they're all in land cruises and highluxes.
So it's almost like that the Australian culture has evolved into these dual cab uts and enormous vehicles.
Speaker 3Now, isn't that interesting?
Of course that makes sense.
And when you look at the history of cars and the one thing that always surprise me I never realized at the time, but that window when the Sandman was huge, it's really small.
Yeah, like it's three years or four years Dice.
Isn't that crazy?
And in terms of it's it's it's play packed, it's place and its impact many a strain psyche is huge in pop culture.
But yeah, this sort of small window in time, there's probably cars that you know that probably talk about the impact of what's happening now what you're talking about with full of drives, we'll go for a much longer period of time the Sandman.
Speaker 4But well, you know, it's it's funny, there's on a slightly sort of tangential topic they've got at the moment that there's the amount of Commodore's getting stolen is insane, and this is late model Commodos.
They've got a tool basically off the internet that will allow you to clone keys on the car, and they've figured out how to disable alarms so you don't hear it going off.
So there's now a market for people to take these parts that they're buying for cheap because thieves are stealing the car, stripping them down, dumping shells in the middle of nowhere, and then these cars will go overseas and they'll they'll put LA threes and lsays in all.
Speaker 3These different things.
Speaker 4So it's it's weird that this the last little bit of connection that we have is now getting.
Speaker 3Stolen by the thieves.
It's crazy.
It's say nothing is nothing is safe these days.
It's part yeah, it's it really is disappointing.
Speaker 4And it's these thieves that ironically a younger kids who have no real interesting cars and are doing it for whatever their reasons are.
Speaker 3But these cars have such sentimental value.
Speaker 4This one dude that emailed me, he had a club sport LSA that he drove to Chadstone.
He knew about all of these thefts happening.
He drove it to Chadstone to take his wife out for her birthday lunch.
He was in there for an hour and the car was gone and this guy right.
Speaker 3Take it, Chaddy.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, how do I do want to say anything?
But like, what are you doing taking in a bloody gold class.
Speaker 3It's a pancake, parlancake.
Speaker 1There is a my brother.
When I was down in Melbourne recently, my brother took me to there's like a new wing of Chadstene.
Speaker 3And it's very fancy.
Speaker 1My brother was going, oh, yeah, you know when we when we finished all the bloody construction on this this oyster bar, hear me and blah blah blah.
We had all you know, we're here for five six hours and all the oysters and champagne.
It was like Don Perry and I thought, yeah, but you're still getting pissed in a shopping center.
Yeah, it's still fucking chatty.
What are you doing?
Speaker 3What do you want to do?
Speaker 1You get pissed and go to times?
What are you doing?
How weird anyway, But it's it's there's a there's a posh section, there's a hotel there.
Now people who stay there.
Speaker 3I stayed at the hotel.
Speaker 1It's my was it with your wife or someone else?
Speaker 3Someone's across the road was the Oakley Motel.
Yeah, first motels in the country, and so the idea was that because on Danning Long Road there was the where they had the nineteen fifty six Olympics marathon.
Really, so it's there.
Well, the idea was that it was going to be on the halfway mark to the nineteen for fifty six Olympics, so people could stay in the motel and then come out the front and then watch everyone run past because astraight and get it finished till nine fifty.
Speaker 1Remember when Chadsten was just like that, the Maya section, it's just like that square, kind of brown brown.
Speaker 3One of the great one of the great modernists.
Yeah, shopping centers in the country.
Yeah, like the motel, it was like the future had come to the suburbs.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, yeah, and now.
Speaker 3It still has the actual subburbtimes.
Speaker 1The suburb is a shopping center now, yeah, it's it's wild.
Hey.
When Merrick came on the podcast, he told a great story of you guys would quite often on a Friday get stuck into the beers and just buy random cars.
Speaker 3I don't know where there was in the afternoon.
It was probably about yeah, yes, I mean neither of us.
You know, Look, the truth is somewhere in between, you know when it happened.
My version of events and his quite often different with these stuff.
The one truth was is that there was always a copy in our office of unique Car.
I love it.
And so whenever a program director would come in, and it was mostly means to be honest, he would turn his back but just and he'd have his notes out and his glasses off.
And then yeah, we occasionally we bought a bunch of different things.
But the famous ones we bought was a Lalan P seventy six.
Yes, we bought a one eighty b's.
Oh he didn't pay for that as a station car.
Speaker 1That's cool.
Did you buy a car from two hands?
Speaker 3And then the two hands car that used to that's a long degree of Jordan.
We were just a shop it's being that shopping somewhere at Fox Studios, and he drove past.
He was trying to sell out to someone.
And then we had like a four sort of van like Captain's chairs that we had, oh cool or something.
Yeah, it was like I had it was but it was a really bad job job and worse conversion.
And we ended up giving it to a producer of ours, I don't know, and she couldn't get it registered.
I was just I don't know what happened to it, but it was like it was our vision of the eighteen van basically when we're doing a TV show.
And then I left it out in the front of my house like I had that the out an eh at the time, and then I had the Citron and then they rang the counsel on me trying to get rid of it.
Yeah, but there was I think it was.
We would be quite bored and think, you know.
And they were always just cheap bangers.
Nothing was expensive, like we bought the Blalan's I think maybe two eight grand or something off the same some dude in coeensland Mark here, you know, we'll take them.
Speaker 5Both by its like you can literally and the blokes just on the other other end of the phone.
Speaker 1Cool, Are you taking a piss right now?
I'm in the bar toilets?
Speaker 3But how you buy these things?
I bought my eh.
I was in Tasmania and I was going for a walk and I saw it there.
I wrote down it's before phones with cameras, and I wrote down phone number for it, and it was cheap, and I thought, I was just like, I'm going to buy this, and then I lost the piece of paper.
I put it an ad in the Mercury saying if you were selling a Kalgaroley Brown nineteen sixty three ah old, and I'd like to buy it.
I've lost your details.
Can you give me a good how'd you go?
So good?
And then he and then he emailed me, I rang me or something I bought at his sensational and then he wanted to buy it back off.
Yeah, isn't it funny?
Speaker 4Like I know, Gordy, you're in radio, but for me on the outside looking in, it seems it was a bit of wild West.
Back then, you kind of do whatever you wanted.
You guys were kind of stars of the show you can get away with murder?
Is there sort of stuff that you were told no, no, you can't do that.
Speaker 3I mean that stuff was they were when we bought the one, ad By were well, they paid for the one ady b It was more than I think that stuff was just like how money just doing what we want, you know, like just because we like it was just fun and I think you got a bit of money for you.
I mean, I don't know investments.
But the best thing was was we said we had the peel me great purple one.
That's the one the station took.
They put the details on it looked great and we said them, I'll lease it to you and then if anything goes wrong, we'll we'll repair it.
We want to buy it, we want to buy it, and like literally it spent all its time in the shop because they were using as a street car driving it out.
Speaker 1I was going to say they used to do really cool.
Nova used to like, oh man, they used to do really cool things when they launched in Melbourne.
And I'm not sure if they did do this in Sydney.
I suspect they did, but they had like the Nova ambos in Melbourne and they were old retired ambulance and they used to just deck them out and use them as the road cars.
Like they had this really fresh, different approach to making radio.
I loved it.
Speaker 3It was in the shop as well.
Speaker 1Yeah, really, I could imagine that would kill.
Speaker 3Those ambos great.
And you know, they got these super attractive young guys and girls and outfits getting around and people like that as well.
But they don't.
They don't have station vehicles anymore, do they.
Speaker 4I think some of them they still have a k Rock car because I'm from Geelong.
Speaker 1They had a k Rock caravan when I was there and I was director, was probably fucking living in it.
Speaker 4But what did they have for No, I've just quickly pulled this up while you were while we were talking, and in the background of one of these pictures down here, I can actually see a fuel station and you can actually just see the price of fuel sixty eight point five cents a leader for unleaded and that would have been two thousand and one.
Speaker 3Maybe I don't know when that photo shirt was for me's in them?
Speaker 4Yeah, yeah, but it's is it not crazy that when you look look at stuff like where these cars have evolved and fuel prices and stuff.
Speaker 3It is funny.
Fuel prices kept.
Speaker 4Going up, and with the advent here of electric cars, I feel like fuel prices haven't gone up for like five years about the same price that they were were five years ago.
Because they're trying to make it sound more attractive than the rising electricity costs.
Speaker 3But it used to be cheap to run a car like that, like you know, but then you think one of the strange things about this country is that no one ever thought feel was.
Speaker 4Cheap and they still don't.
Which you go to Europe or the UK, they're paying double the price.
Yeah, America's like America is expensive now as well.
Speaker 3Yeah, like people have always complained.
I mean the budgets were all around petrol price.
Yeah booze smokes, that is it's the only thing we ever cared about.
Yeah, it was like SIGs up petrol up the country.
Fuck yeah, like that.
Speaker 1Was the criteria.
Speaker 3One of the most amazing archive footage in this country is people when they brought in random breath testing and how people responded to that, how outrageously really, that's next, Why can't I drive home pissed?
Incredible because like it was a national sport.
Yeah, absolutely, but you.
Speaker 4Know, we need to be more like the South Africans.
They had tolling booths for you it to go give money.
They rolled out electronic toll gantries and started sending notices to people who didn't pay.
No one paid, and now there's all these gantries that are switched off because they just stopped the system because no one.
They all just got together and said no, no, fuck that, we're not doing that.
If you want me to pay, you're going to come and accept my money, so that it's South Africa for you.
Speaker 3We need to need more like that.
Speaker 1So I've got a few fines like that I just have not paid because I can't tell if they're like a scam or like linked T who's that?
Speaker 3Well that's real.
Yeah, yeah, probably pay that.
Speaker 1There's a warrant out for my arrest with that, but it.
Speaker 3Could still be Yeah, I do something about it.
Speaker 1Do you have a favorite like, do you have a favorite car that you've owned or that you are yet to own that you would love.
Speaker 3It's an interesting thing because I look at cars all the time and then I don't.
Someone asked me that, and I quite like slightly idea of looking at something and go I like that, and then I don't I don't need to own anything anymore because I don't need the drama.
I like my last car, older car.
I bought a Range Drover two.
Yep, it was.
It was a really good car.
And then it got done in the floods and the noise and that sort of broke my heart.
It was it was a good car, and it's like I had a few fumes, so you know, it didn't take long for the kids to fall asleep in the back had to plus and the girl the mates go, I love your car.
Can we go in your dad's car?
Yeah, no worries and then a bit back.
Speaker 6Jeez, I love you done sleep that sort of both, and then I sort of after that, I thought, oh, you know, no, no, maybe maybe.
Speaker 4But it's hard when you get kids because you need something that is reliable.
Last thing you need is a car fucking breaking down somewhere.
Speaker 1With kids, you just don't want another house and it's hard to find it.
I feel like I'm constantly searching for a family car that I enjoy it, and I just don't think there's any family cars really and yet to to have an old Ranger.
So maybe that could be one but I'm just yet to find.
Speaker 4But even imagine the middle of summer you go to go for a drive somewhere and they think overheats at the lights and yeah, your wife cracks the shits at you, the kids do that save you.
Speaker 3Then you'll get it.
But it's as it is for me.
It's actually that's it's the old ones in the fumes that I can't cop like it.
It's just it's too much for me.
Obviously didn't mind back in the day.
I don't know how we didn't notice it back then, but like and then you think, oh, maybe something maybe late nineties, and then they're not it kind of just tails off of it.
Yeah, they're just there's a commitment to it.
You know.
You see people and go, oh god, I wouldn't want one of those old little three series wagon like you know, i'd like that.
And then I just go, no, I don't care.
Yeah, which is really disappointing anyone selling a car and not buying it.
But otherwise, and I think people always and people who like cars always trying to talk you into it.
You should get it, should get it.
Well, what are you driving as a family car?
Now we've got a land drover Discovery.
That's brave, and that goes all right, it's been a good car.
What year is that Disco four?
It's two twenty something around, yes, And then I've got I've had a McCarn for five years and that's been the best car.
Speaker 4Mccarne is just so good that the new one, if you don't know, the V one is fully electric and it is like, whoever made that decision needs to get a bonk on the head because.
Speaker 3They had they rush a pet one back, haven't they.
I think I saw that well, but they're not going to call it a McCann.
Speaker 4So basically they said McCann is dead, it is ev only now forever, and we're going to bring back an internal combustion one, but it won't be called a McCarn.
Speaker 3So it'll no doubt be this'll it'll be a botched.
Speaker 4Platform share because they're rushing it in that that last McCarn was the best car they ever made because you had a great variety of engines, the tech inside was modern enough for its time, and it drove like a Porschit like it just wasn't.
Speaker 3It didn't drive like an There's.
Speaker 1The reason why they're so popular because they.
Speaker 4Hold their value.
Yeah, because people just want them.
And they also you can buy a five or six year old one and it looks like the one that was last last year.
Speaker 3You know, it didn't change myself, but I just I think it might.
It's probably been my last good car.
And then I'll just start buying silly things like just to put shit in the back and whatever.
And then I've also got Michelle didn't get around of selling our old X five and we've still got that line around yep.
And that's the one I'm really nostalgic about.
Ye and it's done three hundred and fifty.
I love an older and it's a cracker and it's like it is but anyway it gets.
It's been getting over the pits most years, and so and I sort of, you know, we are.
It's one of those things.
Go sell it and someone like it's got to scratch down the side and I just, you know, use it for holidays and put gear in the back and yeah, because it's I don't know, I'm just feel I feel super connected to it.
Yeah.
Yeah, they just don't make them, like the new X five is nice.
But BMW went through phases with their cars where they don't make any sense to me, and that in w today it's just like fusing if you I always I had a three Series touring Wagon Want two thousand and eight or something.
That wasn't a bad car in the South African.
It wasn't liked anyway.
They had a few issues, but like anyway I got, I got, I got to where I needed with it, had it for quite some time.
But after that, I would just like, they just don't look like BMW's, they don't feel like BMW's.
They look like they're cars for Americans, and so they have no appeal.
Whereas for me, my uncle had a three Series when I was a kid, and I just loved it.
It's green, beautiful, yeah, and I just and I'd always wanted one, And so we went to sho you went to get my wife a car.
She was like, where's my cars because and then she at the time, I think she was driving a Golf which was that was a good car as well.
And I was a Folkswagen ambassador for a few years, and so we had I had all of them.
I liked those cars as well.
And then she was looking for new one and she couldn't make up her mind.
Just be confusing her.
Yeah, what about that one or clever?
And then she went and then she just without she just went out and bought that X five without asking me because she knew my keys.
Speaker 1She just know that's good.
Speaker 3Oh but what about this fun just like I have a look at that.
Speaker 1Oh I should have a.
Speaker 3Look at that one, Panda, that's what that is, okay.
So that so that is the only car that I want.
And this if I had been thinking that I might get one in the UK, leave it at KEM to lock up and then I can drive it when I'm in the UK.
It's a fucking stupid it's a great eye.
Did all fit in in the UKK?
Yeah, Like I don't need one here?
Yeah, but that then like i'll drive it once a year, yeah, when I'm there for work.
But you know, that's that's a weird obsession of mine.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's good though that especially the older ones made the same with the Citron as well, made such quirky really cool in.
Speaker 3Quirki engines as well.
Speaker 4I'm just trying to look here that they offered that car with aer point nine liter two cylinder engine, amongst others.
But it's it's the quirky type of random.
It'd run your cappuccino machine.
Speaker 3I'll get one of those.
Yeah, there's none of them here.
You can't find them here.
They did the Panda for a little bit, but they weren't very popular.
Speaker 4And I just shudder at the thought of owning a feet in Australia because it would be expensive to repair and random shit like that where they don't have any parts.
Speaker 3It's just not worth is in the UK that would be time.
It doesn't Killer who used to live we used to share a house with Fladden, a band with our Killer and he had one two koiller and he had to do all the work himself and then people used to take parts off it and stuff out in the front of the house.
But he's the best and he went out went out and bought it off.
This guy in Ringwood's retired and Benny just like Kill his nickname is, but Bennie used to he liked to think that he could get a good deal and so he goes out there.
This guy is like retiring, just wants to get rid of it.
His wife wants him to move on this car, so he beats him down on the price and then he asked him to go and fill it up with fuel and then makes him throw in the driving gloves.
Speaker 6Oh my god, he had killer has huge hands, so they didn't.
Speaker 3Even fit him.
Speaker 1And he's like and a little round tin of barley sugars too, and I'll take those collection of drawing out.
Speaker 3That thing.
But I actually died by the same I remember, god, the one after the DS, the c X and I went out to the suburbs and it was this beautiful car.
The guy would let me drive it?
Oh was he that wead to do it?
Yeah, And I'm not.
I'm not buying a car that you want to drive around.
I don't get to drive it.
Like that's stupid.
I just turned up.
I was immobility stage at that's that stage.
I think it turned up in a pair of thole as he went, I'm not letting this car drive.
Speaker 1You know, you go into like a really good classic car dealership, now, like you go into like have you ever been a throttle classic?
I mean you walk around that place.
One of the cars are phenomenally overpriced, but shout out to you guys, you do a great job.
But it is it is like walking in an art gallery and you just stand there.
Speaker 4That's that's an issue for me because if I musted up enough money to buy one of those, I'd never drive it because I'd be concerned about hurting the thing or having someone run into it.
I just want something that's a little bit weathered but still.
Yeah, you know, I just don't feel bad someone you know, puts a shopping trolley into it or whatever.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Their ability to to sell something that's not really that collectible is pretty amazing.
You got some of the shit in there.
I'm just like, what, who's going to buy that?
But then it just moves.
Yeah, it's strange.
Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah, they had they had a Cayman are in there, and which is a great great yeah, but they wanted one hundred and ten.
Don't do that, Like, don't do that?
Well, what others are there in the market.
I had a look and there was like a fluoro purple looking wrap and it was around about the stad they've priced them both at the same price.
I'm like, okay, whatever.
Some of their cars, though, like you look at them and you go, these are pristine, and there's a lot of a lot of them.
Doesn't do it, you know, they all sort of do it around the country.
But I just find when I walk in there, you just kind of take a quiet moment and you're like, someone's really brought this car back to something special and it's you don't really need to say anything.
Speaker 3You just like look at it.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah, I mean so many tie Kick is literally in that going into that place.
But it always feels to me that that's that's where when people get rich and they think they need to buy a car, they go and buy one there because they feel safe and it feels like a proper car show room.
You know, they're nice guys and and they're good salespeople, and you know they've always got quality cars there.
And then they take it home and then they have them for five years and they never drive them, and then they sell them when they get divorced.
That's bad.
Speaker 1Keep them in a secret warehouse.
I've seen that.
By the way.
There's there's there's warehouses stacked with the rare G two three RS's and they're like the special edition and ones that you know go up as soon as you drive them out and they're like, no, no, these are this is our divorce money, right Because they can't trace it, they don't know.
Speaker 3Where it is crazy future planning.
Speaker 1Yes, glad some of us can do it.
Speaker 3Let's talk about Chucky eweie you.
Speaker 4We were sort of talking a little off air regarding the book and how it all came about.
Run Us through the History and has it been a success.
Speaker 3Yeah.
So I've done a book on motels with images of Austraians on holidays and that went really well, and i'd sort of I've done the I've done the series one of the cars that made Australia, and so they had all these images around and I've been talking to the National Archives and I thought, oh, maybe I'll just punch out a book for Christmas, as you do.
And so I got a hundred images or something, and they're pretty most a lot of them in Canberra, and you know, there was there was someone didn't know what they were and I was like, oh, what's this one?
And then so there's a few random people I know on Instagram what's this this one here?
One of them was like the god, it's a French car that's made by General Motors, that was assembled here by Nissan.
No, anyway, it doesn't really matter.
I can't remember it off the top of me head.
But it was one of those really obscure ones.
And so yeah, like I popped it out at Christmas time and people really liked us a good gift and made it sort of look retro with a sort of cover that was like, yes, I love it, and just people bought it for their husbands and their dads and it's just sort of kept selling ever since.
And it's not my highest selling book, but it's pretty close.
And like it's self published.
I've reprinted it like five times.
And it's not just for car nuts.
It's just because you can open it up and go nothing.
There's a whole bunch of Volkswagens on the back of a truck from nineteen seventy eight or something like that.
They take us back in time and they take us to those places and memories.
And I suppose over the years, I've been interested in the exploration of cars and connection to us in terms of what manufacturing meant to us, what it meant to capture that idea of dad excitement and when you came home and mom or Dad had a new car and you know that when that happened to us, it was huge.
Or the neighbors, as we spoke about before, and what does it mean to us when we don't make cars here?
And I think obviously there's the part of the story that we look at and go, Okay, we liked Holden's and Fords and that was important.
But ultimately the thing that saddens me the most was that all these clever, clever people that were working on putting these cars together, some of them they're using all those skills now to make shopping trolleys.
It's inside and how we lost all those people and lots of them went to America, particularly the designers, and obviously they're working on other things, but our ability, you know, the story of Australian made cars to be competitive with it, to have cars that in the end, particularly the Commodore sold so well overseas and was a great car and it was really the only the Australian dollar going up that really made a mess of it.
We should be incredibly proud of that.
And it goes beyond just because we could do it here and that tarifs made it a possible for us.
So I think there's something deeply sad that we couldn't We can't think that that's possible for us.
Again, well, we could you're like, I would imagine.
I don't know what you guys think about this idea that imagine if we had some sort of incentive where you could take your car and get it turned into an electric car, and there's all these places around there that could do this, yep, and then there's a tax advantage for that, or there's a rebait to do it, and then you'd have all this extraordinary you know, there'd be people doing it in the backyards and wherever it was, as long as it's safe, I reckon.
There would be amazing people who could do that absolutely well.
Speaker 4You know there's this company called Jaunt and yeah, they basically do classic land drivers.
You take them an old ship box.
They will take all the old crap out of it, turn it into an electric one.
And their thing is that you can have a beatina land crew as land rover that just looks like it's an old shitter that's driving down the road, but it is fully electric.
It's not gonna overheat at the lights like and you know the other thing as well, at manufacturing.
I mean we do a little bit of manufacturing now with a lot of the big pickup trucks that are converted left hand drive to right hand drives, the big industry around that, but gone is the innovation that came from designing a car from the ground out.
Speaker 3Like the Commodore at.
Speaker 4Its finale, was basically a car that was done all in Australia and it was such a good car that we wasted so much talent on and that to me is a great disappointment.
Also a great disappointment is that there was just like in Holden's case, no materials left.
Speaker 3GM just said, now, fuck it, we're closing that.
Just delete all that shit.
We do all of our filming.
Speaker 4At the proving ground and the guys there don't have anything left.
Speaker 3GM just took it all away.
Speaker 4No one knows where any of the photos and all of that nostalgic material went.
Speaker 3It's insane, it really.
They didn't try.
They don't know.
No one knows, and I've tried finding whether they have archives of this stuff, but it's just nothing around.
Speaker 1Do they still have the Ford thing in Geelong there.
Speaker 4But they had the Ford Discovery Center and I've literally found pictures from when I was a kid.
I went in there and took all these photos and stuff.
Speaker 3And that's all gone.
Speaker 4Like Ford thankfully has a much richer history and they've they've got a decent archive of stuff.
But you know Ford as well.
I mean they do still a lot of engineering work at the Yu Yang's for Australia and other markets.
But you read the tea leaves, all that stuff is going to change eventually.
And on the topic of OSSI's that made it to the to the big time, Mike Simcoe was Holden's lead designer.
He ended up retiring earlier this year, but it was the chief designer for GM.
He made it as top as he could to that tree, so there's a lot to be proud of.
Speaker 3Michael Simco also designed you know the blue Eski brig yes that you put in Young Industrial because I mean all those guys came out through r M I T.
Yeah, that's it.
Yeah, And they were all like extraordinary and if you if you're really into this, particularly the drawings in r MIT design in museum is extraordinary and they're all online you can just check it.
And like those renders of all those cars are extraordinary.
They're so beautiful, absolutely beautiful.
Luckily though they survive and they are to remind us of when we do strive to do something.
Speaker 4But you have a look at the government and how fuck parts of it are we have.
You know, the world's one of the world's biggest supplies of lithium.
So what we do is we let companies mind lithium.
They send it over to China, they turn it into batteries, they send it back to us in electric cars.
Would you not think, let's take this resource that we have, create the batteries ourselves, ship them all over the world wherever it needs to go.
There are so many industries that we could tap into.
Google Maps famously, Google bought an Australian company that basically created Google Maps in Sydney.
I mean, how do we not have this?
How do we not nurture this?
I think we need to do so much better.
Speaker 3It's easier just to dig it up offloaded.
I mean, all that's how all our wealth has been made, and.
Speaker 1They would have manufacturing that, right.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 4But ultimately, you've got to stand for something, and we can't just stand for digging shit out of the ground and making a few, you know, only a very few companies rich.
Speaker 3That's all that happens.
What about those military vehicles that we make here, so that they're making.
Speaker 4How yeah, they do some of those, so they tend to do well.
And now actually military spending and investment in military has gone through the roof, so there is a big industry there and I can't talk about that, but there's other military stuff that's that's coming soon in Victoria as well.
Speaker 1Do you know that.
I don't know if you've met my friend shift some army secrets.
Speaker 3But it's it is disappointing.
Speaker 4And to me, my my dad worked at Forward for like almost thirty years, so I have a real connection with Australian manuf actoring and one of my mates lost their jobs because I grew up with I went to union with a lot of the engineers that got jobs there and now are literally, like you said, designing garbage struck some shopping trolleys.
Speaker 3So yeah, it's just a sad thing.
I know it couldn't necessarily last forever, but the fact that we couldn't say we're not going to do that, but you guys shall do this.
So we did keep one part of it.
The luxury car text is still there.
Speaker 1That's still that to me makes no sense.
Speaker 3It's a hole that they don't need to have in a budget, which.
Speaker 1Time was to import a luxury car from say New Zealand, where like say a Porsche is really bloody cheap.
I've still got the amount of dicking around and tax I've got to pay on that when it's a short trip over the.
Speaker 3Philip Adams told me this great story about Malcolm Fraser back in the day and they wanted when Philip Adams had his advertising agency, and he said, look, I Philip, we want you to do a campaign because we don't want to tell a strands that you know, buying the States is just as good as getting a Mercedes, you know, can you do that?
Phillips says, well, they're not.
You can fucking tell it didn't didn't take on the campaign, which is it is smart.
Speaker 1Yeah, I haven't curious to know if you ever been to like I just I love that you have this love and of just nostalgia, all things nostalgia, and especially like that Australiana kind of feel about it.
But there's a really good pub here in Sydney and it's called Hawk's Brewery.
I don't know if you've been there, but it's a cool place because it's these guys who back in the day started a beer and I guess named it after I don't know that.
Speaker 3Yeah, they had with Bob Hawk, and he has a state has an involvement in it.
Speaker 1Yeah, and and so that this brewery is kind of like a shrine to him, and it's a fantastic place, like it's like a museum.
But they've got like a really old style, very fake but like an old style Chinese takeaway kind of thing like you would have had in the seventies and eighties.
The fried rice there is amazing as it's a frontos but they've got like Hawks like Australia flag jacket you go and take a pierce and stuff, and they've got you're like, what's that sound?
And they've got Richie commentating the cricket in the like it's really cool.
It's just and apparently his house.
You would have obviously seen it, but apparently it's just like this beautiful shrine to the to the eighties, like from the color scheme to just everything.
Speaker 3In Hawks house.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah, they auctioned everything off.
Oh and yeah, people were buying all sorts of stuff from him, all those old couches and stuff.
Yeah it's n scouches, but I mean, what's interesting with those guys.
Is that you know, they felt like what they were tapping into is their their personal feeling was the optimism.
Optimism of the nineteen eighties.
Yeah, and so, which is really important to think about that time.
It comes up the back of the nineteen seventies.
So you see this increase in national pride, cars, films, music, You've got the rise of World Series, cricket, you know, this whole sort of that sort of superpowers into the nineteen eighties, and then you've got the supercharged economy and then as ken doone put it right, first generation of Australians men who haven't gone to war, so they're like they haven't lost five years their life, they've got no trauma, they're boomers.
They've got like mega Megamega positivity and they feel like they can take on the world.
Absolutely extraordinary.
And then you add isolation, so you can do anything here.
You can manufacture here, like people were manufacturing a lot here in the nineteen eighties.
They often think about the nineteen sixties and seventies being a golden year of manufacturing.
It is actually the nineteen eighties we were making everything here, still making tellies and they're making VCR players you know, dishwashers.
Everything was being made and there was lots of money around and then those guys, whether it's Hoagues or ken Doon or Greek Norman, like, we can take this to the world extraordinary.
So America's cut a great example of that.
So there's this feeling that they're tapping into is like anything is possible.
You know, we go back to nineteen eighty four, eighty three, eighty five, like there is absolutely no doubt in anyone's mind that you know, this idea of Australian flavor of the month or whatever it is, we're rolling around in colors of the bullshit everything the way you do whatever week want.
So when you fast forward today and if you grew up through that time, that sits there like a baggage going, oh what did that happen?
You know, it's like why everything was possible?
Speaker 1Don't you find it interesting how national pride means and feels so much different now than it did.
Speaker 3Back then That idea of innovation went out of fashion, and so really once we get into the nineteen nineties into the two thousands, in the Howard years, like it's pretty much just sport and the Anzac Clinchen.
So the idea of things that we can create, even the arts and even music goes down PEG and those two tenets of two things that Howard taps into, and those things are really important to us, but they're not everything.
So a more rounded view of things that we should be proud of, which are sport, innovation, technology, what we manufacture, what we create, the arts, makes up a much broader idea and so I think people forget that or standing up for Australian made can also be seen as something that's sort of a new nationalism that's not particularly healthy as well.
Speaker 4Which disappoints me because as an immigrant, we came to Australia with nothing, and to me, Australia is everything and I'm very proud to be Australian because of the opportunities that gave me and my family.
So that's why I get so disappointed when people a sort of not anti Australian, but anti celebrating Australia.
Like, I understand, there's a lot of shit things going on at the moment, but to me, it's that history, innovation and creating opportunity that is what Australia is to me.
Speaker 3And when I can't celebrate that.
I find that disappointing.
Yeah, like eighty six, Yeah, you put it add in a magazine and work, and you could go and if you wanted someone to buy you had a brochure.
You put an add in a magazine like in the Bulletin magazine or Penthouse or Playboy or something like that, and you go.
If you want a brochure for whatever I'm making, send a stamp step self stamp dressd anvelope with a check for five dollars to cover for the postage and then to get the things so you can buy something off them.
It was as much easier world to actually marketing was a lot easier.
It was more expensive, but it was a lot easier.
The Internet really has fuck things, hasn't it.
It's yeah, the Internet's been amazing.
But yes, just but you know that.
But we also write this is incredibly important to think about this in terms of how it's changed and how we see world as a nation.
We were also starved for choice.
Things are expensive, so tariffs to protect our local manufacturing meant that if you wanted a pair of Nikes, they gost you twice as much.
So people would go When I was a kid.
They'd go to someone who goes to America and can you get me a pair of to America?
Yeah, and you save half the money.
So that's so when the when the tariffs disappeared, our manufacturing base disappeared, and we're not just talking about cards, we're talking about shoes and all sorts of things, right, and really particularly hit Victoria worse than ever because Victoria was always the sort of cradle of manufacturing in this country.
So then suddenly we can get stuff things really expensive.
Suddenly everything's cheaper.
So globalization kicks in.
Tarifts disappeared, so suddenly we can get stuff that we could never get before.
And so we go from a nation of people who fixed things to a nation of people who buy ship off the internet in a very society, and where people will go, I don't know where the screwdriver is easier to get one off Amazon.
That's the end of civilization.
Speaker 1By the way, I can get it, I can get it by lunchtime, drives to my house and gives it to me instead of me getting off my arse.
Speaker 3And looking for it in the laundry.
Yeah, it's fucked, yeah, yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah, we've we've done it.
We've done a number.
Speaker 1And that is why Australia in a nutshell as you've just joined us the grunge gear Sigma Pablo.
Yeah, yeah, look, it's an interesting one, but you know it's thanks to your books, like the Water Ripper book with the water with a really cool the I remember just looking at even the front cover where you've got the was it called the fridge the fridge thing, I think it's on the front.
Speaker 3It's just it's just brilliant.
Speaker 1Yes, yeah, that's it.
And it's just just this brilliant appreciation of the b grade stars of Australia.
Speaker 3And these are strange design icons.
Yeah, they're every day Like I did.
This book's got sixty every day items and it's very similar to what we've been talking about.
Things that were designed or manufactured here that somehow, like our cars, just sort of found a way into their hearts to tell a story about who we are.
Like Guy designed the Dolphin torch, you know, not far from where we are here in North Sydney in the early nineteen seventies.
That torch was the highest selling torch, not just here in Australia but across the world for fourteen years.
Cool like and but when you know when the dolphin torch, you know it clicked, the sound of it, you know what it feels like?
Yeah, yeah, here go Yeah yeah.
So all the in the and so it's in terms of a cultural touchstone, in terms of no One, you know, playing spotlight with your brothers and sisters when you're a kid, of being in the caravan park.
They tell a great story about our lifestyle.
And because we have more choices now, those cultural touchstones are fuel and far between.
So they talk about the stack at is it another classic?
Like no One?
My kids couldn't tell you what brand thereby school helmet is.
They had one for my whole life and the kids.
Speaker 1At least more from Amazon.
Speaker 3Yeah, it's like Bangle's.
I doesn't like that one anymore, Dad, what are you doing nothing?
Speaker 1Amazons?
Get a screwdriver for dab too.
I think these books are important and highly recommend getting or get them all, getting some if if you're.
Speaker 4Just having a look at the illustrations the house.
So I've got them all lined up here.
The illustrations are fantastic.
They're just all so unique in their own way.
Speaker 1Yeah, even like the God I keep forgetting it.
What a rip a book.
It's so weird that when you look at some of these items, it automatically takes you, like just to a quick flash in somewhere in my childhood, like I go, oh, that that that bloody fridge.
I remember Arnie Kay had one when we were in Paul mcquarie or you know, Port Arlington, and that that thing over there.
God, that was sitting in our shoe box outside for years and gathering, gathering, Just this.
Speaker 3Weird little they're important.
I mean.
The other thing is is that we don't realize is that we're quite happily saying you know, most of us watch Netflix this week and it's great, but it doesn't reflect our lives.
It doesn't tell us.
There are no stories about who we are Netflix exactly, and people are craving it without realizing, which is really interesting.
Speaker 1I can say.
Barry Humphreyes did a great series years and years ago called Flashbacks.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was really good, Like you'd be fantastic with carrying that on or something, because he just told the story.
Each episode was like Australia in the sixties, Australia in the seventies, eighties, nineties, and two thousands.
But it was just his brilliant take and just a really good reminder of what Australia was, where it went and where it is now and why as well, or why we became the way we are.
Speaker 3Because it's the idea of looking back right and there there will always be people, you know, and we can look through it through rose colored glasses and we did this, and we did that and that, and so you don't want to go back?
What you what were the ideas there?
What was the spirit of that?
That's important?
And how's that?
How can that spirit be rekindled for a modern Australia And that's that's what we need.
It's a shame they don't manufactured machetes in Victoria because that would be a booming business at the moment.
Like it's a.
Speaker 1Way to end on a positive comedy.
This episode has been brought to you by Bunnings where machetes are now on zale.
Speaker 4We're going to give away a few copies of Chucky.
So yeah, contact at the Drivers Show dot com dot au.
Speaker 1Well we'll run something on Insta as well.
We'll put all the deats up there.
Speaker 4Yeah, because I think it's definitely something that you've got to have have at home and enjoy.
Speaker 3Let's give them away.
I'll sign them, send them to your house.
Speaker 1Not yeah, Jonathan, go fuck your sol mate.
Thank you for coming in, pleasure, thanks so much, genuinely really appreciate you coming in and be great and thanks for sharing, Oh pleadure.
Speaker 2The Driver's Show Podcast is looking for a sponsor.
If you'd like to help Paul and Gordy fulfill their lifelong dream of reviving the world's greatest car brand, the you go.
Speaker 1Let's face it, who doesn't want to see that happen.
Speaker 3Here's your opportunity.
Speaker 2Drop us a line at contact at The Driver's Show Podcast dot com, dot a you or send us a DM on our Instagram page.
We'd love to work with you.
