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00:00Hello and welcome to The Weekly. I'm Charlie Pickering. A cracking show for you tonight.
00:18Off-court drama at the Australian Open with Abby Gelmey, plus the tradie shortage threatening
00:23the Brisbane Olympics with the hilarious Alex Ward.
00:26And as always, we've watched all the news so that you don't have to. So let's kick things
00:33off with the week. Starting off with Thursday and we found out just how effective our world
00:42first social media ban has been. The Albanese government today is encouraged by the progress
00:48made with the landmark social media ban for under-16s. More than 4.7 million underage accounts
00:53were deactivated since the start of Australia's landmark social media ban.
00:584.7 million accounts gone.
01:024.7 million accounts gone. Although suspiciously, 4.7 million new accounts with youthful complexions
01:10and prominent mustaches. A patriotic PM claimed this was a win for the nation and for the world.
01:18This is a source of Australian pride. This was world-leading legislation, but is now being
01:24followed up around the world.
01:26France is set to follow in Australia's footsteps, reportedly banning social media for under-15s
01:32from the start of the academic year in September.
01:34The French are hoping for similar results to Australia, just with thinner, more suave
01:39mustaches.
01:41But not everyone was sold. Sunrise host Monique Wright wasn't convinced the ban was working
01:46and spoke from first-hand experience.
01:49I live with a house of teenagers and I was asking them all, it's basically had zero effect
01:55on that little group.
01:56On that group.
01:57You live in a house full of teenagers? That's pretty weird, Monique.
02:01Surely it's time to get your own place.
02:03But according to Albo, post-social media kids are living a more idyllic, wholesome childhood.
02:09Meaning that young people, instead of being on their devices during new school holidays,
02:15have been cycling around facilities.
02:18Oh, finally the children can cycle around facilities.
02:24So what other wholesome activities are the kids getting up to now that they're not wasting
02:31their lives on social media?
02:33Dozens of so-called e-bike cowboys have swarmed a popular golf course on Sydney's northern beaches.
02:39Police attended the scene at the Long Reef Golf Club last Friday after reports dozens
02:45of young people were riding bikes through the course.
02:48And not a phone in sight.
02:51Just a bunch of kids getting outdoors, cycling around the facilities.
02:58To Friday.
02:59And as the clean-up began after floods ripped through coastal Victoria, one brave soul told
03:04of his rush to safety.
03:06The water was like above the jumping pillow and you'd have to swim, you could not stand.
03:11So where did you go to take refuge?
03:13I went to the pub.
03:16Smart.
03:17Smart.
03:18Like I always tell my kids, if in doubt, go to the pub.
03:23Also on Friday, a piece of history up for grabs.
03:27Sports fans have the chance to own a rare piece of Australian cricket history with a rare baggy
03:32green cap owned by Sir Donald Bradman heading up for auction.
03:36The don gifted it to a young Indian opponent the prize possession kept in his family for
03:41more than 70 years.
03:42A true sporting heirloom.
03:44And I'm a bit of a memorabilia collector myself.
03:47At home, I have a bag of cocaine Maradona forgot to do.
03:53It's estimated the cap could sell for a cool million dollars.
03:57But behind the hefty price tag is a sweet story of how much the owner cared for this legendary
04:03artefact.
04:04For 75 years, the cap stayed locked away in his home in Mumbai, passed down from generation
04:11to generation until it landed in his granddaughter's hands.
04:15Who heard the hat was worth a million bucks and said, screw grandpa, stick that shit on eBay.
04:19The cap itself is in pristine condition, thanks to the owner's very strict rules.
04:27If you were under 16, you weren't allowed to look at it.
04:30Once you grew up and you were able to look at it, you're allowed to look at it for five
04:33minutes.
04:34Mmm.
04:35Touching.
04:36You know, my dad had the same rule for his priceless collection of vintage Playboys.
04:42Still to come, Abby Jelmy serves up some Aussie open intrigue.
04:45And having banned kids from social media, can the PM ban hate speech?
04:50But first, officials recently unveiled the design for a new stadium to host the 2032 Olympics.
04:57However, there's concern over whether Brisbane can even get it built on time.
05:02Industry figures say Queensland is already short around 18,000 tradies, and that number
05:08could skyrocket to as many as 50,000.
05:11For more, please welcome tonight's instant expert, Alex Ward.
05:15Alex, you're our expert.
05:21Why?
05:22Well, Charlie, I'm actually born and bred in Brisbane, so I know the city.
05:26Plus, I'm a lesbian, which means I have a basic understanding of carpentry.
05:30So, I actually challenge you to find someone more qualified to speak on this.
05:34Well, not on such short notice.
05:36So, how are things looking for 2032?
05:39Brisbane hosting the Olympics is so exciting, but they have a lot to sort out before the deadline.
05:45There are major concerns this morning that key infrastructure projects for Brisbane's
05:492032 Olympics won't be ready in time.
05:52Now, there are 17 that we need to build.
05:54Some of them, we still don't know where they're going to go.
05:57They don't know where they're going to go.
06:00Big deal.
06:02We don't need a new velodrome.
06:03Just get them to fang it around the roundabout.
06:06Right.
06:06So, what exactly is causing this tradie shortage?
06:10Well, for starters, kids these days are snobs.
06:13I think we're seeing this shortage because for so many years, kids were told they had
06:18to go to university.
06:19And you have to go to uni, you have to go to uni, you have to go to uni.
06:21Otherwise, it's, you know, your second rate almost.
06:25Nothing could be further from the truth.
06:27He's right.
06:28I'm still renting while paying off an arts degree I did 15 years ago, proving that even
06:32if you do go to uni, you can still be second rate.
06:35That's a wonderful message to the children out there.
06:37So, do we just need to convince kids how good it is to do a trade?
06:41Not us.
06:42Someone who knows the industry back to front.
06:45Take it away, Victorian Trades Hall Council Assistant Secretary Amanda Threlfall.
06:49Tell them how good it is.
06:50Around half of apprentices in Australia do not complete their apprenticeship because of
06:56exploitation and mistreatment at work, rampant wage theft, bullying and harassment, unsafe
07:02workplace practices.
07:03Amanda, do you want to see the synchronised swimming in Brisbane or not?
07:08Yeah, but the clock is ticking here.
07:11How is Brisbane going to get the tradies they need?
07:14Oh, my great deputy premier has a plan.
07:17And that plan is grovel.
07:20Jarrod Blay, the deputy premier, has come out saying he's going to beg, borrow and steal
07:23trades from interstate and overseas to get this all done.
07:28I'm not sure any amount of begging will pull a tradie from Melbourne or Sydney.
07:32Did you know you can't even get a piccolo or ceviche after 9pm in Brisbane?
07:36Ooh, chills.
07:38So what then?
07:39No Olympics?
07:40Nah, mate.
07:41Unlike the tradies, I have fixed this.
07:44We go ahead with the Olympics, but adapt it so athletes work around the unfinished work
07:49site.
07:51Welcome to the tradie Olympics.
07:54Say bye to bouldering and hello to scaffold climbing.
07:59Forget finding hurdles when you've got materials just lying around.
08:03I present pallet jumping.
08:05We don't even need to change the name of some of the events, like hammer throw.
08:08What would you please say, Alex Ward!
08:19And now it's time for another ACA Newsbreaker.
08:25The roundabout that may win the prize as Australia's most confusing.
08:30An intersection sending locals round the twist.
08:3380 signs to me is just crazy.
08:36This roundabout has too many signs.
08:39More signs than sense.
08:41He's counting the signs.
08:43There's too many.
08:44This guy's a learner driver.
08:46He's going to be confused.
08:48He was fine.
08:50What a waste of money.
08:52Who the is this guy?
08:54It's bonkers.
08:54It's bonkers.
08:55He's got a purple beard.
08:57Chris and Sherelle drove from Geelong to see the roundabout.
09:00They drove from Geelong.
09:03Don't get confused.
09:04There's too many signs, boys.
09:07The boys don't give a shit.
09:10Here are the signs in slow-mo.
09:12But be warned...
09:14This will just be confusing, and I'm sure there could well be a tragedy here one day.
09:18These signs will kill.
09:20That was another ACA Newsbreaker.
09:23To Saturday, and self-proclaimed acting president of Venezuela, Donald Trump, turn to his next
09:32potential acquisition, Greenland.
09:34Right now, a high-stakes meeting on the future of Greenland.
09:37Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, they're meeting with their
09:42Danish and Greenlandic counterparts as President Donald Trump pushes to acquire the island.
09:47The White House says President Trump is considering options, including the use of military force,
09:52to acquire Greenland.
09:53Trump is obsessed with getting his hands on this sparsely populated island, maybe because
09:58he no longer has access to another sparsely populated island.
10:04According to Trump, there's a very good reason for taking over Greenland.
10:08Since his first term, President Trump has eyed the Arctic island, claiming it's vital for
10:13national security.
10:14We need Greenland for national security.
10:16We need Greenland for national security.
10:18If we don't take Greenland, Russia or China will.
10:21Trump's right.
10:22He must invade Greenland to stop anyone invading Greenland.
10:27But in discussion with Norway, it became clear for Trump, it's personal.
10:32The president sent a letter to Norway's prime minister.
10:35Dear Jonas, considering your country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having
10:41stopped eight wars plus, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of peace, although
10:46it will always be predominant.
10:47The Norwegian government has no influence over who wins the Nobel Peace Prize.
10:51It's handled by a completely independent committee.
10:54So Trump wants to invade Danish territory because Norway didn't give him a peace prize they can't
11:01give him.
11:02It's like that time I didn't win an Oscar, so I complained to a DVD vending machine.
11:11But Washington isn't wild about the idea of an invasion.
11:16This is the dumbest idea ever.
11:20To invade Greenland would be weapons-grade stupid.
11:25And it's feared that if America does obtain weapons-grade stupid, they could one day create
11:31a moron of mass destruction.
11:34But despite the post-war Western alliance crumbling, there's no need to panic.
11:40Just ask top-ranking EU diplomat Kaya Cullis.
11:43She's made headlines this week after a private conversation she had with lawmakers about the
11:48state of the world.
11:50Apparently, she said it might be a good moment to start drinking.
11:54Well, like I always tell my kids, if in doubt, go to the pub.
12:06And it turns out it's not just time to get on the booze.
12:10Negotiations with the US went so poorly that the Danish foreign minister sprinted straight
12:15from the meeting to his car and immediately took up smoking again.
12:19By Sunday, things escalated with NATO allies sending in the troops.
12:28It started in the dead of the night with Denmark sending in the Air Force.
12:32France's Emmanuel Macron has also sent a team of French soldiers.
12:37Other allies, including Germany, Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands and the UK, are also sending
12:43in reinforcements.
12:44Apparently, we have agreed to send one military officer to Greenland.
12:49You hear that, America?
12:50One single military officer.
12:53If you want to take Greenland, you're going to have to go through Nigel.
12:59And if you don't knock it off, we'll also send Colin.
13:03With battle lines being drawn, there was still one option that could avoid bloodshed.
13:08The art of the deal.
13:09Buying it is also an option.
13:12However, it could be an exorbitant price tag.
13:15It could cost the United States as much as $700 billion in order to buy the Danish territory.
13:21And the population is only 57,000.
13:23The Cowboys Stadium could hold more than $100,000 in Dallas.
13:26So Trump's willing to pay hundreds of billions of dollars to buy remote islands that can barely
13:32fill a stadium.
13:33Sir, can I interest you in Tasmania?
13:36But despite the generous offer, the locals in Greenland aren't keen to make a deal.
13:4885% of Greenlanders do not wish to join the United States, with nearly half seeing Trump's
13:54interest as a threat.
13:55I think Trump doesn't know about Greenlandic people.
13:59We don't really value cash and Kardashian lips and fake boobs.
14:05Let me put it in words you might understand.
14:07Mr Trump, f*** off.
14:16We'll put them down as a no.
14:18And I get it.
14:20Greenlanders are rightly concerned about becoming a vassal state of America, having their minerals
14:25ruthlessly exploited for foreign profit, while being completely dependent on the US for
14:30military protection.
14:31But to them I say, eh, you get used to it.
14:36Coming up in a minute, Mac McConaughey vs. AI and the PM vs. Hate.
14:41Can either of them win?
14:42But first, the Australian Open has landed in Melbourne and already it's breaking records.
14:48Over 200,000 people came through the gates just last week, proving the only things Australians
14:54love more than sport is joining a queue.
14:56Here to tell us more, it's Abi Jelme.
15:03Right, so Abi, huge crowds at the Open before it even started.
15:08It's the most wonderful time of the year, isn't it?
15:10It's one of the biggest sporting events in the country and it's already shattering records
15:14and for good reason, because there was just a bit of a simple rebrand at the AO.
15:18Yeah, so what was that?
15:19Did people just turn up a week early?
15:21How did this happen?
15:22What happened?
15:23No, they decided that instead of calling it qualifying, they would call it opening week.
15:27And people parted with their hard-earned and fluttered through the doors, quadruple the
15:31amount that they had last year.
15:32Do you know what they should do next year is call that week of qualifying the men's final.
15:36They would get heaps of people, heaps.
15:41They should call it the NBA playoffs.
15:42Everyone will come along.
15:43You should be on board.
15:44It's the Super Bowl at Melbourne Park.
15:46Well, you're leading with the sport, but some people really weren't there to watch the
15:50tennis.
15:51I think he's looking rather well for 38.
15:52What about the tennis?
15:54I'll bugger the tennis, I'm just here for the pool.
15:56She's actually in the audience now and she's talking about you Charlie.
16:00That's right, absolutely.
16:01That's not bad.
16:02That is exactly the same reason I go to the Westminster Dog Show every year, just to admire
16:07the hindquarters of a Scottish Terrier.
16:09You just had to take it that next year.
16:11I absolutely did.
16:12You really did.
16:13Look, the AO is cashed up.
16:15It's now the second highest paying Grand Slam in the world.
16:18But in addition to that, Roger Federer, yes, the GOAT has been back here in Australia.
16:23Not playing of course, just giving out handshakes for $20,000 a piece.
16:27$20,000 per handshake.
16:28$20,000 a handshake.
16:29I'm so glad, because he's been doing it tough for so long.
16:34Look, it's not just the GOAT filling his pockets.
16:3717-year-old wildcard Cruz Hewitt crashed out of the opening round, but still took home
16:42$40,000.
16:43So, $40,000.
16:44That works out to Roger Federer handshakes.
16:46Yeah, yeah.
16:47That's right, yeah.
16:48And is there anything more Australian though than Beck and Lele's son getting $40,000 just
16:52for having a crack?
16:53But this is one of my favourite stories from the AO because it could only happen in Australia.
16:58Giving someone a bogan nickname, wearing a Southern Cross singlet and still somehow having
17:02the country fall in love with you.
17:04A particular shout out to Ratto apparently is my new nickname.
17:08So, you're invited for every match.
17:10Just let me know or let my agent know in your head.
17:13Aww.
17:14That is the new mascot for the Brisbane Olympics.
17:16He's ready.
17:18The mystery man.
17:19And Ratto is a great nickname.
17:21With a name like Ratto, you could co-host Triple M Breakfast.
17:23I would tune in to Ratto and Donga in the morning.
17:26Like that would be...
17:27Donga.
17:28Donga.
17:29Ratto and Donga.
17:30Apparently that crossed the line.
17:31I, I, you know...
17:34Unacceptable.
17:35Name's not Donga, it's James Bray and he'll feature at all of Ratto's matches and Channel
17:399, they've gone, hang on, this guy could be a star.
17:42They've tried to get him to come on board for maths, but I fear he's too supportive of women.
17:46Yeah, I think that, I think that is true.
17:50And he, the fact that he's got an interest in women's sport, he means he couldn't co-host
17:53Triple M Breakfast either.
17:54That's, that's true.
17:56We also bid farewell to one of the great Australian athletes of all time.
18:01I'm going that far in Elisa Healey, the Australian women's cricket captain.
18:05Not only was she a Belinda Clark medallist, but she really fronted this new era of women's
18:10cricket where they're getting well paid and recognised, but I'll always remember her
18:14for this moment on Stunt Mike in South Africa in 2024.
18:18Ball required for the visitors.
18:22Oh, right in the back.
18:25That is a leader of my country.
18:27You know, in some parts of Queensland that's actually considered legal contraception.
18:31I'm leaving that.
18:33I'm going absolutely nowhere near it.
18:35Fair enough.
18:36Absolutely.
18:39Monday was the first day back at Parliament in Canberra and top of the agenda, Albo's
18:48new hate speech laws.
18:50I've said it consistently.
18:52This should be a moment of national unity.
18:56Once these laws are passed, they will be the toughest hate laws Australia has ever seen.
19:01Creating serious offences for hate preachers and leaders seeking to radicalise children,
19:07as well as allowing the creation of a list of prohibited hate groups.
19:10Anyone who's a member, recruiter or donator of a so-called hate group could face up to 15
19:16years in prison. In anticipation, neo-Nazi group the National Socialist Network disbanding to avoid arrest.
19:24They're now called the neo-nices and they get together Wednesdays for indoor cricket and also have a first Tuesday of the month book burning club.
19:34But while that bit was easy, Albo found out that when it comes to religion, things are a bit more tricky.
19:41I encourage you to read the Old Testament and see what's there and see if you outlaw that, what would occur.
19:50He's right. There's heaps of stuff in those old books that doesn't meet modern standards.
19:55Slavery, violence, homophobia, I mean frankincense and myrrh are hardly appropriate gifts for a baby.
20:01Now, while most of us focus on the nice bits, in the wrong hands the bad bits can be fuel for radicalisation.
20:10Albo's bill aims to stamp that out, but the Constitution says you can't pass laws that prohibit the free exercise of religion.
20:19It's the kind of conundrum I'd normally take to my rabbi.
20:22And like Solomon himself, Albo offered a nifty solution.
20:26Those who seek to incite racial hatred will face up to five years jail.
20:31But a defence against hate speech charges could be directly quoting or referencing a religious text for the purpose of teaching or discussion.
20:40Some things are so horrible they have no place in Australian society and must be confined to a classroom.
20:47That includes hate speech and that other crime against humanity, long division.
20:54You are of course still allowed to declare a holy war as long as you have a test afterwards.
20:59But despite having a carve out for religious teaching, faith leaders still weren't happy.
21:0427 religious leaders have expressed deep concern about the bill's potential to impact religious freedom and expression.
21:11The Christian, Muslim, Sikh, Buddhist and Scientology groups, they say the laws could threaten reasonable religious discourse.
21:17You know something's wrong when every major religion agrees.
21:21Even Scientologists were against it.
21:24And those guys are perfectly sane and not at all litigious.
21:29But Albo's trouble didn't end there.
21:33It's not just religious leaders who had a problem with the bill.
21:36Labor's own members of parliament are calling this a shit show.
21:41The Greens worried about the impact on freedom of speech.
21:44You say Labor's proposed law to combat anti-Semitism could see a person jailed for up to five years for saying Australia is the greatest country in the world.
21:55That's right, you can't show on the speech under the legislation any superiority.
22:00Jailed?
22:01What is the charge?
22:02Being a patriot?
22:04A succulent Australian patriot?
22:07Sensing his bill was in trouble, Albo hit pause on the hate speech provisions to tighten up Australian gun laws.
22:14But even that drew objection from controversial cleric Barnaby Joyce.
22:18We get firearms handed down to us like you might get tens or you might get chairs or seats of furniture.
22:25It's your grandfathers, it's your great grandfathers and they have great sentimental attachment to it.
22:30Barnaby makes a great point.
22:32As a responsible antique owner myself, I always keep my great aunt's chaise lounge secured in my couch safe.
22:39So where did that leave the bill? The Coalition hated it, the Greens hated it, One Nation hated it, religious groups hated it, even grieving farmers inheriting an arsenal of weapons hated it.
22:52Which seemed like a loss for Albo. But let's not forget what this was about all along.
22:58I've said it consistently. I have said consistently, this should be a moment of national unity.
23:05Albo, you did it. You unified the nation in hatred of this bill. But then, just as all seemed lost, a miracle.
23:14Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Susan Lee have cut a deal to pass Labor's hate speech laws through Parliament after a series of negotiations.
23:23We did it. Hallelujah, Shabbat Shalom, Allahu Akbar, praise Zinu.
23:28Nobody's happy, but everybody is equally unhappy.
23:33And that is why Australia is the best country in the world.
23:39Oh shit, pulling was right.
23:43In a brand new historical travel show from Sky News, former Prime Minister and Patriot Tony Abbott explores the origins of this great nation in...
23:53Tony Abbott's Australia.
23:55Oh, I mean, Australia, a history.
23:58Jeez, that really rolls off the tongue. Whose idea was that?
24:02Tony Abbott is a man who writes passionately about Australia by typing with two fingers and saying the words out loud.
24:10Brought a vast influx of immigrants from all over the world.
24:14He also has an internal monologue, like his favourite show, Sex and the City.
24:19But far from heralding the collapse of the established order...
24:22But his, Mr Big, is the land down under.
24:26Abbott's Australia.
24:28And as he travels this great brown land, extolling the stories of our forefathers...
24:33We owe them so much.
24:35...sometimes he forgets to keep his eyes on the road.
24:39Their courage laid the foundations of the country we've become.
24:44Oh no!
24:47Abbott's Australia.
24:49This week, Tony dug into the history of Australia's gold rush.
24:53Have you got a little tingling of gold fever?
24:56And he decided to do a bit of prospecting himself.
24:59Grab a handful there, Tony.
25:01Tony thinks he's struck gold.
25:03Ah!
25:04But it turned out it was just cow shit.
25:08Abbott's Australia.
25:10Join us next week on Tony Abbott's Australia A History, when he stands in front of a very phallic cannon.
25:19Let's roll onto Tuesday and a story we can all relate to.
25:22The world's fifth richest man, Larry Ellison, was forced to change the name of his super yacht after discovering something drastically wrong with it.
25:30Ellison, who was once the richest man in the world, chose to name the vessel Izanami.
25:35After a god from Japanese mythology, unfortunately backwards, that spells, I'm a Nazi.
25:46It could happen to anyone.
25:50Realising his error, Ellison quickly renamed the yacht Hitler McHitlerface.
25:55Meanwhile, in AI news...
26:00Matthew McConaughey is trademarking himself to get ahead of any potential deepfakes.
26:04Alright, alright, alright.
26:05The Texas star finally to trademark his voice and likeness.
26:09Potentially giving McConaughey power to sue if AI companies recreate him to sell products or train their models without permission.
26:16Some see it as a blow for artists in the war against AI, but really, it's just an excuse for reporters to do their Matt McConaughey.
26:25Alright, alright, alright.
26:26Alright, alright, alright.
26:27Alright, alright, alright.
26:28Alright, alright, alright.
26:29Alright, alright, alright.
26:30Alright, alright, alright.
26:31Alright, alright, alright.
26:32Alright, alright, alright.
26:33Alright, alright, alright.
26:34And so we arrive on Wednesday, and some of your mums might be like mine.
26:46She likes to cut those quirky stories out of the newspaper that give her a bit of a
26:50giggle.
26:50So let's see what she sent me this week.
26:52It's stories my mum sent me!
26:59Alrighty, let's see what we've got this week.
27:02Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
27:03A flock of 50 sheep has stormed a supermarket in Germany.
27:09Witnesses say they remember little of the event, but did get the best night's sleep of their
27:13lives.
27:16All's well that ends well.
27:19McDonald's is facing a class action lawsuit after their McRib sandwich was found to not
27:24contain any pork rib meat.
27:27Maccas have apologised and are correcting their mistake, renaming the sandwich the McTungsan
27:32anus.
27:35Delicious.
27:38An American man has described his confusion after he woke up from surgery with the ability
27:43to speak fluent Spanish.
27:46Unfortunately, doctors were unable to examine the man because he was immediately deported
27:50by ICE.
27:50It's sad.
27:51It's a shame.
27:54After his grande siesta.
27:56Yes, authorities are searching for suspects who stole multiple wigs at Melbourne's Queen
28:03Victoria Market.
28:05Police are on the lookout for two people who are five foot eight, medium build and have
28:09blonde, brown, red or rainbow clown hair.
28:15I hope we catch them.
28:16And finally, Donald Trump is now a Nobel Peace Prize recipient after accepting one as a gift
28:24from 2025 winner Maria Carina Machado.
28:28In other news, Trump is now officially the greatest cricketer of all time after buying Donald
28:34Bradman's Cat.
28:35And that story's my mum sent me!
28:42And that is all we have time for tonight.
28:44Would you please thank Alex Ward and Abby Gelmey?
28:48We will be back next week with Brett Blake, Tom Gleason, Celia Procola and Rhys Nicholson.
28:52Woo, hot line-up.
28:53And if you would like to be in our studio audience, just scan the code on your screen right now.
28:58Go on, scan it.
28:59Scan it.
29:00Get your phone out and scan it.
29:01Good.
29:03Stick around on ABC because up next, Tony Armstrong is back with a brand new special,
29:07Always Was Tonight.
29:08Until next week, on behalf of the team, thank you for watching.
29:11I'm Charlie Pickering.
29:12Good night.
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