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00:12Welcome to The Weekly. I am Charlie Pickering. We've got a great show for you tonight. Abby
00:16Gelmy mourns Oscar Piastri's disastrous Grand Prix. Margaret Pomerantz declares war on SAS
00:21Australia. And my guest is the most streamed stand-up comedian in the history of Netflix,
00:26Hannah Gadsby. And as always, we've watched all the news so that you don't have to. So
00:36let's kick it off with the week. We begin with Thursday and the war in Iran that according
00:45to the US is definitely not a war. We did not start a war. Strategic strikes are not war.
00:53We're not at war right now. I wouldn't call this a war as much as I'd call it a conflict.
00:58This is war and we're taking out the threat. You'll concede this is war. We haven't declared
01:02war. They declared war on us, but we haven't. We haven't declared it. Just now you said this
01:07is war. They called it war. They called it war. Okay, well that was a misspoke. Yeah. Sucked
01:14in Geneva Convention. You can't get done for war crimes if you don't call it a war. A watertight
01:20strategy. Unfortunately, nobody told the boss. I have to go back and look at the war. That
01:26often happens in war. We're doing very well on the war front. Somebody said on a scale
01:32of 10, where would you rate it? I said about a 15. Wow. 15 haigs out of 10. That is
01:38impressive.
01:40Now, the last time America started a war over weapons of mass destruction, the Secretary of
01:44State, Colin Powell, at least made a PowerPoint presentation of all the evidence with colourful
01:49maps, satellite photos, truck diagrams and enrichment tubes. I mean, it was all bullshit,
01:56but at least he gave it a crack. You know, he even brought in some fake anthrax as a prop.
02:00It was nice. So this time around, Trump must have some pretty convincing intelligence.
02:06The president prior to that phone call had a good feeling that the Iranian regime was going
02:11to strike. The president's feeling, the president's feeling that Iran was going to strike. The
02:15president had a feeling again. Oh, the president had a feeling. Yeah, a feeling is not a reason
02:20to start a war. A feeling is how you pick a briefcase on deal or no deal.
02:32Word here is he also kidnapped the president of Venezuela because his horoscope told him to
02:37seize an exciting new leadership opportunity. While we're talking about feelings, it's hard
02:43not to get the feeling that Trump didn't really think any of this through. For starters, with
02:48the ayatollah gone, who did he plan on taking over? Well, most of the people we had in mind
02:54are dead. So, you know, we had some in mind from that group that is dead. And now we have
03:01another group, they may be dead also. So, two full groups of contenders were wiped out,
03:08which means Iran will soon be announcing its new leader, ayatollah Stephen Bradbury.
03:16And what about a plan to get American citizens safely out of the war zone that they created?
03:22Don't worry, they set up a hotline.
03:24Please do not rely on the U.S. government for assisted departure or evacuation at this
03:30time. There are currently no United States evacuation points.
03:34Your call is unimportant to us. If you want to hear these options again, stiff shit.
03:41And also, when the U.S. bombing of Iran shut down the Strait of Hormuz, a shipping lane responsible
03:46for one-fifth of the world's oil, I'm sure they had a plan for that.
03:51Panic is setting in right across the globe as people race to stockpile petrol before it's
03:56too late. No container proving to be too big. People are being warned, though, against stockpiling
04:03thousands of litres at home with risks the practice could spark a fire.
04:06People are also being warned that if they do stockpile too much fuel, there is a good chance
04:11Donald Trump will invade them.
04:15To Friday, and despite Trump seemingly not being prepared for any of this, the White House tried
04:20to make us all believe that everything is super awesome by putting out propaganda hype videos
04:27featuring, and I swear this is real, Hollywood action movies cut together with actual missile strikes.
04:34Strength and honour. Strength and honour.
04:36What will you do without freedom?
04:37Mavericks in battle.
04:42You can't conceive of what I'm capable of!
05:04I think I speak for everyone when I say, holy shitballs, what the fuck are you doing?
05:15What the f**k was that?
05:19You know, this war feels different to previous American Middle Eastern misadventures.
05:24In the aftermath of US strikes, including the death of over 150 girls in a primary school,
05:30the US, our largest ally, has just shown a shocking lack of sensitivity, led by Secretary
05:37of War Pete Hegseth, who has taken to briefings with a disturbing level of joyous bloodlust.
05:43America is winning decisively, devastatingly, and without mercy. Death and destruction from
05:52the sky all day long. We are punching them while they're down. They are toast, and they
05:59know it. It was sunk by a torpedo. Quiet death. The only ones that need to be worried right
06:05now are Iranians that think they're going to live.
06:08I'm not saying he's a bad guy, but he definitely sounds like someone who watched Titanic and
06:15barracked for the iceberg. Or he watched the Texas Chainsaw Massacre and barracked for the
06:21chainsaw. Or watched Friends and barracked for Ross. History's greatest monster. And so,
06:30with Australia now announcing it's sending missiles and a military plane, can the Trump admin at least
06:35tell us how long they expect the war to go for? President Trump says he believes the war could
06:42be over soon, telling CBS, I think the war is very complete, pretty much. What I want your viewers to
06:47understand is this is only just the beginning. Mr. President, you've said the war is, quote,
06:51very complete, but your defence secretary says this is just the beginning. So, which is it?
06:56Well, I think it could say both. Yeah, it's both. It's both. He would have said,
07:01por qué no los dos, but then he would have had to deport himself.
07:07Still to come, Abby Gelmey gets the Grand Prix up on blocks to see what went wrong,
07:11and Margaret Pomerantz goes commando with the SAS. But first, the stand-up specials Nanette and
07:17Douglas turned our guest into a global sensation and changed the way the world views stand-up
07:22comedy. Now they're back with Woof, an animated comedy special that proves that even in the age
07:28of AI slop, there's still nothing quite like a human who actually gives a damn. Would you please
07:33welcome Hannah Gadsby? Welcome back. It's lovely to have you back.
07:41Thank you. So, so Woof is, it's part comedy album, it's part animation, part fever dream.
07:50I have a lot of very big questions. Where are all the Cabbage Patch dolls? There's no closure
07:56on that, because that frenzy of desire might have been biodegradable, but those anaphylactic
08:01plastic visages weren't. Where the f*** are they?
08:06It's a very valid question to ask. Where did the idea for this come from?
08:11Well, that's a good reflection of what goes on in my mind.
08:14So that's, that's almost like a little window peering in.
08:16Yeah, yeah, it's a documentary.
08:19Um, uh, look, I got sick of looking at myself, you know, like, it's just whenever you do a
08:25show, you've got to, you know, there's the editor, then you promote, and then all of a
08:28sudden, let's throw to a clip, and then you've got to watch yourself, and no offence, but
08:32I hate it.
08:33And, um, I was also having an existential crisis, and I think it's the right time in the world
08:38to have one of those.
08:39Anyone who did it before now, wasting their time.
08:42Right.
08:42They blew, they blew their shot too early.
08:45Yeah, right.
08:45Absolutely.
08:46I, I think with this project, I wanted to, uh, you know, give something to the spectrum
08:50of attention spans.
08:52Comedy, often now, we're told by the algorithm, it's your third or, second or third screened,
08:56and I wanted to create something that's the first, second, and third screened, so you
09:00can't look away, and it hurts a little bit.
09:02I watched it, and I was like, I'm going to have to watch that again to, like, to really
09:06get it all, to, to, to take it in.
09:08And I do hope you do, because I lost a lot of money on it.
09:11Okay.
09:12LAUGHTER
09:15Um, but this, you actually put it up for free.
09:18In this economy, are you mad?
09:20A little bit of regret right now.
09:21Um, I'm hoarding petrol.
09:26LAUGHTER
09:28You are back at the Comedy Festival this year, the show called The Evening Muse.
09:31What can we expect from that?
09:33Basically, what I did is I wrote a show about, um, how it's, for my mental health, I have
09:37to stop being so self-indulgent, uh, as a solo comedy performer who tours all the time on
09:43my own, and I'm autobiographical, and so I wrote a show about my attempts to be less self-absorbed,
09:48and then I thought, it's pretty rank to do a solo stand-up.
09:51LAUGHTER
09:52So, I've created, sort of, a, a Tonight Show, if you will, and I'm using the crutch of, uh,
09:58Australian Trivial Pursuit Genis edition, 1981 Trivial Pursuit Questions.
10:04That's a classic.
10:04Is that the light, it's the light blue, is it?
10:06It's the dark blue.
10:06That's the dark blue, wow.
10:07Heavyweight, all right.
10:08That's the junior edition.
10:09Thank you very much.
10:10It's a real principle.
10:12Um, you've been described as an overnight sensation, but just how drastically did your
10:17life change after Nanette and Douglas just exploded?
10:22Too much.
10:22I'd made the decision quite early in my career that I wasn't going to chase the American
10:26dream because it looked like too much hard work with a high chance of failure, and I don't
10:31like those odds.
10:32So, I found myself at a level of success that really only people with ambition and network
10:38get to, and I don't have either of those, so I'm just like, what are you doing trying
10:42so hard?
10:43There is something almost poetic about it.
10:44I feel like queer Forrest Gump, to be honest.
10:47LAUGHTER
10:47Instead of going to the White House, I just go on The View.
10:50LAUGHTER
10:52Well, we are delighted that you are our queer Forrest Gump.
10:56It's a joy to see you again.
10:57Would you please thank the wonderful Hannah Gatsby?
11:00APPLAUSE
11:04It's tough being a diplomat when you hate every country in the whole world.
11:08I don't like you either.
11:09But Donald Trump finds a way to do it.
11:12This is International Diplomacy with Donald J. Trump.
11:17We're going to cut off all trade with Spain.
11:19We don't want anything to do with Spain.
11:20What is the purpose of the United Nations?
11:23Your countries are going to hell.
11:24They're not doing a good job, Europe.
11:26One of the nastiest countries to deal with is Canada.
11:29I'm not happy with Israel.
11:30For years, we've been ripped off and taken advantage of by China.
11:35I'm not happy with Iran either.
11:36South America, Latin America, South America, uh, Malay.
11:41We have people from all over the world being dumped into our country.
11:44After the war, we gave Greenland back.
11:46How stupid were we to do that?
11:48But most European, uh, nations, they're decaying.
11:53Look at Germany.
11:54The UK has been very, very uncooperative with that stupid island that they have.
11:58We always take people from Somalia.
12:01Places that are a disaster, right?
12:03Filthy, dirty, disgusting.
12:05These countries are calling us up, kissing my ass.
12:08Somalia's not even a country.
12:10I'm in Chile.
12:11Oh, good.
12:11How's Chile doing?
12:12Those boats come in largely from Venezuela, Argentina.
12:16We're talking about Ukraine.
12:17Because I'm not learning your damn language.
12:19Why is it we only take people from shithole countries?
12:23It's the age-old question.
12:25International diplomacy with Donald J. Trump.
12:31Let's move into Saturday.
12:33And after last year's disastrous election result, the Liberal Party has been trying to get to
12:37the bottom of what went wrong.
12:39A review into the Liberal Party's disastrous election defeat will be put away indefinitely.
12:44A Liberal Party review of last year's election campaign has been kept secret, in part to
12:49protect Peter Dutton and others from embarrassment.
12:52Yes, we'd hate anyone to find out that Peter Dutton lost the last election.
12:57But like any good Canberra secret, the report was licked to the press and then tabled in
13:02Parliament.
13:03And you'll never guess who they blamed.
13:06The secret Liberal Party review has largely blamed Peter Dutton and his unpopular policies.
13:12He presided over the Liberals' worst ever election defeat.
13:16Every demographic except over 55s was lost in a campaign that alienated women and offended
13:22migrants.
13:23A leaked copy of the 64-page report says a grim and introverted Dutton made himself captain,
13:30coach and ball boy of an incoherent campaign.
13:33Now, I'm not suggesting he has no friends, but the only sport where you can be captain,
13:39coach and ball boy is solo totem tennis.
13:43The leaked report revealed that he was so unpopular with women that female candidates asked him
13:49not to visit their electorates and that female voters found his nuclear policy, quote, weird.
13:55The Liberals were quick to learn from the report.
13:58This week, newly appointed Shadow Treasurer Tim Wilson showed they were ready to put the
14:02incoherent and weird label well behind them.
14:05The problem is the Treasurer keeps pouring debt petrol on the inflation fire and he's been
14:10fuelling it for four years.
14:12You know, Deputy Speaker, there's a Billy Joel song that sounds kind of relevant.
14:33I think I speak for everyone when I say, holy shitballs, what the f*** is that?
14:40Yes.
14:44My favourite part of the clip is that you can actually pinpoint the exact moment where Flinders
14:49MP Zoe McKenzie's soul leaves her body as she says, oh God.
14:57Just longing for the good old days when the weirdest thing in the Liberal Party was Peter
15:02Dutton's nuclear policy.
15:04To Sunday and a social media storm around the CEO of McDonald's, I want to say Mayor
15:10McCheese, who failed on the most basic task, eating one of his own company's burgers.
15:17There's a new battle brewing in the fast food world and it all began with the McDonald's
15:21CEO.
15:22He's getting a lot of reaction after he posts a video of himself trying the restaurant's
15:28newest burger.
15:29I love this product.
15:31It is so good.
15:31I'm going to do a tasting right now, but I'm going to eat this for my lunch, just so
15:35you know.
15:35Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no.
15:37We're not falling for the old, I'm just going to taste it on camera and then eat the rest
15:41later trick.
15:42We all know you're off to eat some fancy French delicacy like duck a la range or a la snack.
15:51But back to the tasting.
15:53How did it go?
15:54First of all, let's try to get this thing.
15:56I don't even know how to attack it.
15:58Got so much to it.
15:59All right.
16:00The moment of truth.
16:05That is so good.
16:07McDonald's CEO, Chris Kempczynski, as he tries to demonstrate his love of the fast food chain's
16:12new Big Arch Burger.
16:14As you can see, he does not exactly take the biggest bite.
16:17It really was a tiny bite, especially when you consider that reptiles tend to swallow
16:23their prey whole.
16:26Tragically, this sparked the world's worst phenomenon, CEOs jumping on a social media bandwagon, trying
16:34to prove they, too, can eat peasant food.
16:36Burger King CEO Tom Curtis rolled up his sleeves and got in the kitchen, albeit protected by
16:42an apron.
16:43Wendy's U.S. president, Pete Serkin, suddenly had a hankering for a Baconator.
16:47Absolutely wonderful.
16:49And he took not one, not two, not three, but four bites.
16:53Wow.
16:54Four bites without vomiting.
16:56Wow.
16:57Good job, buddy.
16:58Open wide.
16:59Here comes the private aeroplane.
17:02But the big issue with this guy's burger test isn't that it was done with all the enthusiasm
17:08of the pistol and boo hostage video.
17:10It's that it was unscientific.
17:13I mean, nobody in history has eaten a Macca's burger during office hours in the work kitchenette.
17:19He made no attempt to replicate real-life burger-eating conditions.
17:23So I did.
17:30I hate myself.
17:34I don't hate you.
17:36You're beautiful.
17:49I don't know where that footage came from.
17:52Coming up, Abbie Jelmy on the Matilda's Tilt for the Asian Cup.
17:55But first, the British SAS began as a clandestine commando force, wrecking havoc on Germans in
18:01World War II and are now one of the most revered fighting units in the world.
18:05Those poor bastards don't stand a chance against the raw killing power of Margaret Pomerantz.
18:16Good evening, I'm Margaret Pomerantz.
18:18And I can't stand seeing people in pain, which is why I close my eyes when I walk past buskers.
18:25Aussies and Brits have long been fierce rivals, fuelled by Britain using Australia to dump
18:30its criminals and Australia using Britain for the same thing.
18:35Now our program aims to determine which nation truly has the toughest metal.
18:41This is Channel 7's SAS Australia vs. England.
18:45British and Australian celebrities go head-to-head.
18:49In the most punishing stages of SAS selection.
18:53Get in there!
18:54Featuring successful stars and others out-of-employment alternatives, the show is set on an SAS military
19:01selection course.
19:02And it's a formidable Australian team, including athletes, actors, whatever Toadfish does now,
19:09and swimmer Mac Horton, who immediately engages menacing intimidation tactics.
19:15This is like a rhinoceros.
19:16It's still the best way to get a seat to myself on the train.
19:21Facing the Aussies is a team of British stars who prompt the same question from SAS staff and viewers.
19:27Who are you?
19:28But who reveal themselves as undeniably impressive opponents.
19:33Oh, and I love Ireland.
19:34That I'm not just all tits and teeth.
19:36Just do that social media and stuff.
19:38Each episode, contestants endure gruelling tasks, ruthlessly testing internal fortitude and
19:45stretching bodies beyond physical limits.
19:48Being constipated is not a present, is it?
19:51Reminds me of the time I ate a wheel of cheese and had to call in an exorcist.
19:55Meanwhile, contestants are relentlessly hounded by staff, prompting existential inquiry oft-reserved
20:03for hardened soldiers calloused by the brutality of war.
20:06Can you just stand there and look at my boobs?
20:09Yeah.
20:11With normal hairy nipples.
20:12They're lovely.
20:13As the course escalates, faltering participants withdraw on physical grounds or for mental well-being.
20:20A topic understandably handled with the utmost respect.
20:24Cuckoo!
20:25Not using the old f***ing brain.
20:27But it's in rare moments of respite that the show shines,
20:30as facades are stripped to reveal real people with relatable tender fragility.
20:36I once was having sex and I shatting the guy's nuts by accident.
20:40And great to see the forbidden chocnut sundae back on the menu.
20:44Amid scenes of vaguely recognisable people being tortured and richly nuanced roles for the
20:51ethnically diverse,
20:52one is left with little doubt on television's trajectory.
20:57You must accept pain, misery and suffering.
21:00But the show's worth lies in self-discovery.
21:04As participants risk body and soul in search of illumination,
21:08one only finds when delving deep within.
21:12Went right up in there.
21:14There was a tampon stuck up there.
21:16Hmm, that reminds me.
21:17I must find a new hiding spot for my spare key.
21:20Join me next week when I watch the History Channel's Kings of Pain.
21:24Yeah!
21:26That really, really hurts.
21:27I'm Margaret Polarantz.
21:29Good evening.
21:31Expecting more from you.
21:33Toadfish.
21:36To Monday and the motorsport world was still picking up the pieces from the 2026 Australian
21:42Grand Prix when six cars failed to cross the finish line, including hometown hero Oscar
21:47Piastri.
21:48Australia's brightest Formula One hope crashing out on his way to the grid.
21:54You'd think for a Melbourne boy he'd be better at making a hook turn.
21:57British Mercedes driver George Russell took home the trophy and local fans took home whatever
22:02wasn't bolted to the ground, even tearing grass out of the soil.
22:08But F1 wasn't the only sport kicking off this weekend.
22:11Here to take us through all of it, would you please welcome Abbey Jalmy.
22:19Oh, Abbey, big weekend of sport.
22:21Charlie, it's arguably the biggest week of the Australian sporting calendar.
22:24The NRL launched in Vegas, the AFL season kicked off up north, there was a test in Perth,
22:30the Tillys in the Asian Cup, and as you mentioned, some very fast cars just trying to stay on the
22:36park in Melbourne.
22:37So basically, it's been a bit of an all-in brawl just to get on the back pages.
22:41Right, so if it's a brawl, I'd say NRL won. They definitely came out on top.
22:45Well, they are hard to compete with. They're literally up in lights in Vegas.
22:48And the AFL only really had this Hollywood cameo to try to fight back.
22:53Now, I didn't have Tom Hanks doing some sort of umpire salute on my 2026 bingo card.
22:59There he is.
23:00But the AFL clearly are trying to scramble for attention, so they threw this Hail Mary.
23:04Andrew Dillon wants Aussie rules to be on the Olympic stage in Brisbane in 2032.
23:09It's not the first time we've heard the idea, but it is the first time the league chief has
23:14confirmed the AFL is actually pushing for it.
23:16Which, you have to admit, is ambitious, considering it's the Australian Football League.
23:21No, but I like it. I like our chances. It's just Australia versus whichever country managed
23:26to learn the rules in the car park before the game.
23:29Now, in the Asian Cup news, the Tillys are through to the knockout round, meaning Australia's
23:35favourite team, you all thought it, I just said it, could walk away with silverware on
23:39home soil.
23:40Now, that's if they can topple the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
23:44Yeah, it's a big ask to topple the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
23:48That's more a geopolitical situation. I think it's beyond them at the moment.
23:51Well, if we are going to speak of politics, we do want to mention the Iranian women's football
23:55team, who have competed despite incredibly volatile circumstances.
23:58We use the terms brave and heroic and courageous a lot in sport, but I think we need a new
24:04term for what we've seen from the women in this tournament.
24:06Absolutely.
24:09And, but it's not just soccer that's been impacted by this war.
24:14Motorsport is also being impacted by the war.
24:17Well, the question is, where are the GPs going to be? Because I don't think you're going to
24:20Bahrain or Saudi Arabia anytime soon. So Melbourne has literally gone, hang on, we might have
24:26another one.
24:26Did anyone ask around?
24:27No, but I also think we were like, we had a very good chance that didn't make it to the
24:33opening lap. So if Oscar would like to have another go, I feel like Victorian tax players
24:40would like to shell out another different go for a sporting event that may or may not
24:45happen here.
24:46I mean, that's never gone wrong.
24:47That's us. We love our sport.
24:49Would you please thank Abbie Jelmey?
24:57Let's roll through to Tuesday. And while Australians were already being slugged at the Bowser, we
25:03were now being snubbed at the browser.
25:05Australians wanting to access adult content online will need to prove their age from Monday.
25:10The new eSafety code will bring in robust age verification methods, including photo ID, credit card
25:17checks and facial age estimation.
25:20Clicking a button that says I am 18 years or older is no longer sufficient.
25:25It is a sad day for the internet honesty system. My date of birth has been January 1, 1900,
25:32since my first day online. And I am insulted that that would be called into question. Thank you.
25:38But the porn websites aren't taking this lying down or against a wall or improbably stuck in
25:46a clothes dryer.
25:47Some adult websites have already started blocking new registrations or restricting access to non-members
25:54ahead of the deadline to comply with the rule.
25:57Oh, that's right. Porn sites have memberships. I've been on the waiting list for Pornhub membership
26:03for decades now. My father signed me up at birth just as his father did before him. I believe members
26:09are expected to wear a jacket and tie while enjoying the facilities.
26:13In protest, the Canadian owner of Pornhub, the world's eighth most popular website, has
26:19pre-emptively turned off the porn tap to Australia. If you look up Pornhub right now, and yes,
26:25I'll wait. Instead of the more salacious stuff, you now get videos like Women Makes You French
26:32Toast and Loves You, plus a bunch of videos of people washing their hands. Well, jokes on
26:38them, that's exactly what I was looking for in the first place.
26:41There was also a surprising number of views for Sad Man Takes Beef in Car and Cries. That's hot stuff.
26:52To Wednesday, and I want to end tonight with a tip of the hat to the good folks at Sunrise,
26:58who created a little bit of brekkie magic using the power of live TV.
27:03We have sent celebrity chef Curtis Stone down to Coles on a very special mission.
27:09I'm just going to walk up to a shopper. I'm going to ask them if they want some help with
27:13dinner. And instead of going back to their house and cooking it, I'm going to bring them
27:16into the studio and we're going to do it on live television and we're going to make a star
27:20of them. Are you ready?
27:21Am I ready? You're about to ask some strangers if they want you to cook them dinner at 7.29
27:27in
27:27the morning? Oh yeah, I'm ready Curtis. I am ready. So, how did this bold experiment go?
27:34I'm just inviting you to come with me. This is the Sunrise crew. What are you cooking tonight?
27:40I'm going to make some spinach pies, but dude, I don't have time. I've got to get the kids
27:43to school.
27:44Oh really?
27:45Starting to panic, Curtis began roaming the aisles, chasing after defenceless shoppers.
27:52Could I ask you one question? I'm inviting someone to come into the studio with me on
27:56live television.
27:57I can't speak English.
28:00No problem.
28:02Oh, well it's lovely to meet you.
28:04Don't worry madam, this segment barely makes sense even if you do speak English. And this
28:09poor woman, she had already escaped his clutches once before. With the segment beginning to spiral
28:19and a mere 12 hours until normal human dinner time, Curtis took one last roll of the dice
28:25and found Vicky.
28:26I'm offering to do a midweek meal makeover for someone.
28:30Okay.
28:31But we're going to do it live in studio at Sunrise.
28:34Today?
28:34Yeah, right now. Right now.
28:36Uh, I do have work.
28:38Yeah.
28:39Some of us have real jobs, Curtis. Well not me, obviously, but some of us do.
28:44No. The only hurdle stopping Vicky from being kidnapped by Curtis Stone on live TV was her
28:50boss, Rochelle. Let's get her on the line.
28:52Can we borrow Vicky for just an hour this morning? Would you allow that?
28:56What time are we talking though?
28:58I'll be online at 9.30.
29:02Ah, sure.
29:04Rochelle clearly fired Vicky via email just three minutes later.
29:07But none of that mattered because Sunrise got their segment.
29:11Is this the last thing you thought you'd find yourself doing on a Friday morning?
29:15Yes.
29:16I'm meant to be working, so luckily I've got an awesome boss.
29:20No, Vicky, you just haven't checked your emails yet.
29:25That is all for tonight. Would you please thank Hannah Gatsby, Margaret Pomerantz and Abbey
29:29Jelby.
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