We cross to Channel 7's Mylee Hogan in Washington for the latest on Trump's military parade, Woodleigh Hills Justine Reynolds gives an update on the state of the drought in the states north, an Australian living in Israel David Elrich on the airstrikes in Tel Aviv, Breaking @ 8 with opposition leader Vincent Tarzia, Chief Pharmacist for Star Discount Chemist Shannon Hewitt on the spike in flu cases & your calls.
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Eight minutes after see good morning to you and welcome to Monday on five double a Breakfast, Big Morning Ahead Hour off to the US with Miley Hogan. Just before seven o'clock today, we're going to chat with a farmer just outside of Jamestown, Justine, about the rain on the weekend and over the last five or six days, some of which we know. The Bureau said, you're going to miss out in Adelaide, but we're hoping it's going to get to the areas that need it most.
We'll find out.
We're check in with Justine how she's feeling about the drought and whether there's any sign of the season's broken after seven thirty. Also, David Elrech, an Australian man former Melburnion who now calls Tel Aviv home, lives in Israel. We've spoken to him in the past when that city has been under sustained rocket attack by Hermas following October seven. Now against a peer state actor in Iran, he talks to us about intercontinental ballistic missiles raining down on his home city. He's coming up after seven thirty today. We've got Best of SA of course, as we head into the Best of SA week Friday Night, Adelaide Obile is the Big night eight double two three double double or Texas on zero before eight zero eight thirty ninety five, looking for your company over the course of the morning, David Pemberthy, good morning to you, Good morning listeners. Good morning Will.
Yeah h hell broke loose not long after we finished the show on Friday, I had a bit of a bit of a doze off on the couch. Have to battling through a bit of a joint fluey week last week for us, wasn't it? Will? We weren't in a good state last week.
I don't think we've ever been collectively as sick at the same time.
Wasn't it? We're good now? Though? We are?
We are?
I think I'm ninety percent. There's there's stuff going around everywhere. I went to the GP last week from routine check up and passed that with flying colors somehow. But the we we've got a pact. Will and I like you basically need to be technically dead becoming you were capable of speech, yeah, incapable of speech and movement. Some of the circumstances which were dragged ourselves in. I think you last Tuesday that was your PB. Yeah, Tuesday or Wednesday wasn't actually was good the West Lakes Dream Home. It sounded like a pleurisy ward But yeah, no, after the show, Friday dozed off on the couch and wake up like you know, got World War three had started between Israel and Iran. Imagine living in that part of the world where it just becomes so routine. You know, the idea that houses come with bomb shelter. It's hard to wrap your head around Australia, isn't it.
Well, we've just finished chatting with David Elrick. We're going to play it before eight o'clock for you. And one thing you'll hear in that interview is this sort of not weariness. But there's nothing. He doesn't see anything outside the ordinary of the ten minute. Warning's gone off on my phone, Missiles are on the way. I'll just go to the bunker. Yeah, there's no if that imagine imagine in Adelaide right now, eleven after six, everyone's phone suddy went ding ding, Go to a bomb shelter or get to a covered place. Missiles aren coming that I think rightfully, so collectively a million people would have a heart attack.
Yeah. He talks about it as though you've just been told, you know, a fire alarm's gone off in the city. Well, it's almost like a yellow yellow weather warning on your bomb app. It's like it's a marine warning or maybe a total fireban. It's it's that sort of routine, isn't it.
You know what I found over the weekend because I whenever there's a big global news event like this, I get obsessed about it and I'll watch it endlessly for hours and hours on end on the various news networks, and I'll try and follow online and try and learn what's going on where and so forth. Social media is dead as a new source. It's officially dead, and I reckon this is the first global event that's taken place where its obsolescence has suddenly become abundantly clear. Because in the past, the almost the only way it felt like to follow a big news event was on Twitter or somewhere because there were people on the ground taking pictures of what was happening. That was always better than the news coverage.
Yeah, it was faster and you were getting it, and it was unfettered, and it would often then comprise part of.
The news coverage on TV. In Australia or wherever it is. It's useless now, and it's useless because of AI. Yeah, this is stuff. I started going through it and I went it is now so everywhere that everything's useless. I don't believe anything I've seen on social media. I think it's all garbage.
Have you seen those fake RFK press conferences. I don't know. If there's some I don't know what it would be modulation thing or like a type in the text and it pops out of his mouth. But there's all of these Robert F. Kennedy, who's the health secretary in the US of the Kennedy clan obviously, but there's all these fake press conferences where he's banning stuff that he's not actually banning. Well, so people hate him, are doing this as a joke. Other people are just doing it for thrills and giggles. But you're right, like you look at anything and you go, well, this is now. The whole thing is incredible, that is incapable of being believed, and there's no alternative.
For example, and people say, of course you guys are going to defend traditional media, but if say a newspaper, let's let's take it even outside of it. Let's say there's two newspapers in Melbourne and Sydney. If one of those keeps throwing up AI images, they'd get outed by the other one and quickly lose credibility, right yeah, because it's a competitive environment. There's no competition on social media, so like I'll go to the I'll go to the Twitter that doesn't do AI. There's no alternative. It's a monopoly, so there's no accountability. So it is just I think this is it. This is the end of it. It died with the coverage of this major event, and its lifespan was pretty short in terms of being the pre eminent way major news events were covered.
I'm just trying to think, like, well, the Arab spring yep, that was probably around might have been the start of it. Yeah. Yeah, when get off he got got off by the people Ukraine, Russia. I thought, was it's only three years ago. It was incredibly useful. Yeah yeah, yeah. He used and used to see the mainstream media would rip off all of those Twitter images, like TV would run Twitter video and the newspapers would run links to you know, when Fukashima melted down, there were there were but now I mean, if Fukashima melted down, there'd probably be AI have a giant plesiosaurus coming out of the water. But this is just X ray beam was coming out of its eyes. We've always got Zilla versus Megadon.
It happened at light speed, but AI has already got to the point where there's just no point looking at unverified stuff online anymore. It's just it's it's all could be fake.
M Yeah, it's it's really just infiltrating our world so fast, for good and for real. Yeah, I was talking about mate, Yesterday's a school teacher, he said, like this whole bunch of stuff, like, you know a lot of the old routine basic class prep things that you can now do that free you up to spend more time doing one on one work with students. Yes, you know, kids who are really falling behind, having trouble reading or remembering or whatever it is. He said, AO takes the drudgery out of it. And the thing is, as a teacher, you always think, I wish I want to be able to spend as much time as possible with that kid who's struggling or this kid who's brilliant, And we've got to talk to him about extracurricular stuff to keep him stimulated or her stimulated, Like, you know, the drudgery part of it. If you can eliminate that, then it does free you up to do other things.
Absolutely, sixteen after six, let us know you thought it's eight double two three double or zero four zero eight thirteen ninety five, Tom says, so the Crows didn't lose on the weekend.
I think Tom thinks we're filibustering. No, I don't worry. We're going to get to that. That was one of the worst game the football I've seen in a long time. How did it get so bad?
Immediately after the game ended, I wanted to buy shares in stadium roof building companies.
Oh wasn't that I reckon It was actually deliberately done by the embattled liberal premiere who's the only guy in Tasmania who he thinks you do need a stadium with a roof.
I think I think of the AFL put that game on to say, oh, you guys, you want to watch this every week?
Do you know they need a roof? You want to watch that? Good luck to you? Seven and after six, tomar I'll have more on that will have more on the news headlines in just a month.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double a breakfast.
Twenty minutes after six news headlines. On this Monday, the sixteenth of June, the Israeli Prime Minister has warned Iran will pay a very high price for killing ten civilians in missile strike Spenjamin Netanyahu has accused Iran of deliberately targeting civilians.
Iran will pay very high praise for the murder of civilians, women and children, which they did intentionally. We will both achieve our goal and strike them with one deersasive that translation.
Thanks to the BBC, Iranian media are suggesting more than one hundred and twenty people have been killed in Israeli attacks. The Middle East conflict could add twelve cents a liter to Australian petrol prices. Global markets have responded to the strikes in the region, causing oil prices to surge. The AMP says the effect on local markets will become clearer once the ASX reopens today. It's been nice while they've lasted those low patrol prices and I had to fell up over the weekend. It was dollar ninety five I think we've gone back there.
I should have gone in early.
Tech giant Amazon will spend an extra seven billion dollars in a boost to its infrastructure in Australia.
This is the Prime Minister's been in Seattle. Subsequently, has already arrived in Canada for the G seven, but he was in the US to in part talk about this deal. The thirteen billion dollars already allocated to build data centers in Sydney and Melbourne will now increase to twenty billion dollars. The money in these things is mind boggling when you consider their data sense.
It's not a hospital arta center. Amazon says as will help businesses across the country boost their digital footprint. Speaking from the company's headquarters in Seattle, the Prime Minister says it's a game changer.
This investment will certainly support complex AI and supercomputing applications as well.
It will boost.
Astray as economic growth, our resilience and our productivity.
All eyes in Australia.
They will be on his meeting with Donald Trump in Canada that's going to take place on Wednesday. That has been confirmed on the sidelines of the G seven summit in Canada. Anthony phil Curry's in a really interesting piece about that this morning. We might talk more about after seven o'clock that I some of the things that are going to be on the table, and a bit of an insight into the pitch that ALBO is going to be making to Donald Trump around why we shouldn't be held to the same standard as NATO countries, for example, when it comes to defense spending as a proportion of GDP.
The Amazon story has become a bit of a drama for ALBO. Internally. There's a whole bunch of labor and peas, including some South Australian sanator Mariel Smith for example, who have spoken out about Amazon and being critical of its non payment of tax, critical of its labor laws, the poultry wages that they pay a lot of their delivery people, for example. And at the same time you've got the PM cuddling up to Bezos. But it's hard to wrap your head around that that volume of money twenty billions. So let's think about that five five women's children's hospitals. Yeah, but there's no people involved. Companies might be one who watch this space.
Let's have a look at the weather for today and the rest of the week. Today looks like it'll be the wet day until we get to Sunday. So today one to seven mills of rain, a top of just sixteen for Adelaide. Tomorrow ten to sixteen with up to two meals of rain. Sixteen on Wednesday, no rain. Wednesday dry, middle to the latter part of the week. Thursday be dry and nineteen. Friday looks like the pick of the days if you've got somewhere to be or something to do. Twenty degrees and sunny on Friday, that'll be beautiful, light winds as well. Sounds like an absolute pick. Nice that Saturday won't be far off. It'll be twenty. There might be a shower, Saturday might get a drizzle. Sunday looks like the day though that we'll get our next decent drenching beyond today. One to nine mills of rain predicted for Sunday and a top of eighteen degrees.
Nami will she got stung premium unladed two dollars twenty oh and now good mate Rob says, a year and a half to two years ago, AI was so obvious that you could pick anything. But now it's developed so fast that nothing is what it seems and you second guess everything that you see. Yeah, that's very true. Remember they did that thing of Trump and Putin and Kim Jong Ill walking down the street to the sounds of staying Alive. That's right, Like it looked like one of those things. It looks silly. Yeah, well it looks obviously not. Yeah, like their heads look like they've been stuck on they do.
Now these they can do these videos and like loose track of which company does what might be called vo or something, And they're doing reports from natural disasters, and I challenge anyone to say that that's they're not real people. Yeah, it's someone reporting from a hurricane in you know, Fakesville, And they'll be standing there in the raincoat looking like every generic news TV reporter in the world, and good luck saying it's not true.
The capacity for using this in a malicious way is just off the charts. I imagine, like a couple are going through all bad divorce and one of them accused the other one of infidelity or something like that, and you could just mock up all stick, mock up anything, and then the onus is on you to prove that it's not you.
It doesn't feel like there's the tools to determine fakery. Have kept up with the ability to make fakes?
Have they? No?
No, have you ever met anyone? Goes I'll just run it through my Is this aio or not machine? N exactly, It's crazy. Yeah, that's concerning Tom Rens in the five double, a breakfast studio where there's lots to digest out of the weekend in sports. Some of the sports still ongoing, glad or garage, doors and strength, style and safety, do your home gliderol dot com dot are you what are you ready?
Morning? Will Warning David. Yeah, plenty happening over the weekend. Fellas. We'll get into our winners and losers. You called the game yesterday, Will, It felt like a top eight clash to meet. It was a real high quality game of football, but port big winners yesterday. Mitch George Ardi's in particular seven goals.
Career high could have kicked ten, should.
Have missed a couple of sodas, didn't he and that can be an issue for him is kicking. But it got better throughout the day. But he was superb, as was the Sava Rada Ghalier at the other end, he was brilliant.
So that was it was a weird game to watch because Melbourne destroyed Port Adelaide in the middle of the ground. Yeap that absolute dominance in the middle, and.
That's usually where Port is so strong, so that they won a different way yesterday. They won with their bookends, which I think is encouraging a bit of a concern in the midd field. But horn Francis that said, was still really strong and he should be okay. But we'll see if they can capitalize now and get a bit of momentum. It was a good performance. They beat Melbourne. Now they got Sydney at home, should win that. Then Carlton at home. They can get to eight and seven. Then it gets a bit tricky Brisbane away, ge Along away, et cetera. But you know, if they can look after these home games, they're at least.
A chance through the next four. Very winnable. Very tread As and Timmy were very up and about after the game.
And with good reason. I called the game on Friday night.
Geet commiserations on having to do that.
It was a tough and it was one that got away. The Crows led the ninety five percent of the game. Conspiracy going around at the AFL deliberately put it at night time to prove you need a roof in Tasmania, because.
That's a very plausible theory.
Yeah it was. It was a tough watch the skills because of the weather they do suffer. It was slippery, it.
Was you could see the air coming out of their mouths as old breathing as well.
Yeah it was. It was tough going and.
Look we've got Scott's last day expedition.
It was unbelievable, it was, and credit to Hawthorne. They changed the game after halftime. But a couple of moments like the foggy delibered out of bounds, you just go, you're kidding at when he spoiled the ball and.
Off from the fist.
Yeah, yeah, I didn't think they pay those ones where, you know, in a continent.
But there were freezing fifties that the Crows got or was the thing put your damn which loway?
Yeah, yeah, it was that kind of game. It was, and the Crows got a couple of soft ones earlier in the game. Other winners and losers West Coast big losers yesterday. I thought that was a winnable game for them, the Aussie cricketers the big losers. That was a bat and the top order. I think Ozma Kwaja was done eighteen months ago. Shane and Cam Green. They tried to fit a square peg in a round hole and bat him at number three.
He made what he doing at the moment just kicking around in Australia somewhere.
Well, he's there, he's there, but he just didn't get picked ramping in the nets yet. The other big loser from this morning is Lando Norris. Let's have a listen to what happened at the Canadian Grand Prix with his teammate Ossie Oscar Piastree.
This was so they're both going well to the world and it's too McLaren's powering.
Down the backstraights down the inside goes Oscar Pastry to hold on to that position.
Wow, the front winger's gone.
Norris is out of this race. Oh dear Audio, thanks to Fox.
So the two teammates tangled, but Lando Norris has accepted full responsibility. The team will with filthy because you're basically, you know, the championship Drivers Championship, you're taking points out of the race and you're giving them you're gifting them to other teams. So look in the n pstre came fourth, so he actually extends his lead. Even though George Russell and Maxistaff and gained some ground, He's extended his.
Lead over Norris.
It's not a horrible result for Piastre, but it's not great for McLaren.
It is unique among in inverted commas team sports. Everyone is everyone accepts that's probably gonna happen at some point if you're in a dominant car and you're just gonna have to race each other.
And it's great driver.
It is, and massive egos, huge go so ever, it's great the goal keeping eye on this. They've just gone off for dangerous weather, but I reckon they'll be back out the next half hour. Adam Scott, he's forty four years of age. He's one shot behind with twelve holes to play, brutal.
Course, a huge third round, didn't he huge?
And three under which was, you know, lights out in tough conditions. He's too good a play it off. Only one one major he won one back in twenty thirteen, so keep updated with that. Sam Burns is two under. Scott's one under the next best is two shots further back at one over. He's age.
I've on the same group renning.
They are, so it could come down to match play in the back nine. Still a lot to play out, but keep an eye on that. Other winners Kyle Chumas did really well at the swimming Championships here and the Thunderbirds needed a win in the weekend.
They got it, so that was a good result. Good on your reading.
Thanks boys, on your tom.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double a breakfast twenty three.
Minutes seven Police and whether not too far away or off to the US as well. We'll do some texts and then in a moment I want to talk about old dads. How the animal Kingdom has us beat. There is a there is a bit of a traffic note to be weary of already this morning as well. Police at the scene of a crash on the Augusta Highway at Port Jermain involving a car and a truck. No reports of serious injuries, thankfully, but traffic is effected in both directions. Please avoid the area if possible.
One here is saying that AFL players should harden up. They play NFL and soccer in the snow, calm down, and Phil says, sometimes I wonder if ifl umpires or AI with some of the decisions they make, it's hard to tell if they're real or fake exactly that I.
Think it might be about time. I think I might want to step into that space. Might be the best advancement for it as you could ever get.
David Blake for you. Good morning, good man, Thanks Dave.
I go to.
I'll be here on the top.
Someone's sorry, you're just your phone's doing you with disservice, Dave. Someone's lost a double bed mattress.
Did you say a double bed mattress?
Where? Whereabouts? Did you see it? Sorry, Dave?
You know the overtaking line, the other sort of.
Four wait, oh yeah, yeah, it's.
Going to the free liner and the third chicken spark.
And it looks like does it look like a brand new mattress?
I didn't see it that quick, mind, I had to go around No. But somebody else come along with splitter and rolled up the big park on the shot the top fence. So if they're looking for the mattress.
That's where she is.
There things you're going to see when you're out of the bat especially this time of the morning. They tend to be a little bit more interesting.
Nice community service there by, Dave, if you've lost your mattress, Yeah, it's just farm now you know where it is on Field Road.
Al Pacino became a father again at the age of eighty three. You might recall he a son named Roman. Robert de Niro became a father at the age again, most recent the age of seventy nine. He had a daughter by the name of Jea. Both of those have been significantly outperformed, though in the geriatric father's day estakes by Goliath, the two hundred and thirty four kilo galapagus tortoise at South Florida's Miami Zoo, who just celebrated a birthday and a Father's Day on the weekend, having become a father again at the age of one hundred and thirty five years old.
He is the zoo's oldest resident. Here is handler Ron McGill.
He is one of the easiest going, most mellow Galapicus tortoises that I've ever worked with. There's something special about Goliath. First of all, he's very attracted to people. He'll come walking right up to you and at over five hundred pounds. You've got to be very careful that he doesn't step on you.
Never too late to find someone g This is the Goliath's first offspring first, and the mother is estimated to be nearly one hundred years old.
So there you go. How long days tortoises live extraordinary.
So one hundred and thirty So obviously that goes without saying the oldest resident at the South Florida Miami Zoo.
They're a good advertisement for moving slowly and not doing secsually. Something to this tortoises is you don't see him zipping around. You know, they're sort of very recumbent attitude to life, and you know, if I need to do something, I'm going to do it slowly and methodically. Amazed that they remained fertile for that long though, one hundred.
And seventy seven the oldest galapicgest tortoise that we're a wet I mean, the one that we're aware of. It's not that we've got them all knocking around, we check them all, but the oldest that humans are aware of lived at one hundred.
And seventy seven years of age. Well, I'll tell you what it must be a weight off Goliath's parents' mind because for years they were thinking, you even going to settle down and find someone. Oh cliath, he's under ten.
He's going to look at people again, nicely looked at a couple of female daughters occasionally.
Hey, Goliath, stop staring at those people over there who were feeding you papaya and going that she going in the corner. She's been giving you the She's a sprightly young ninety seven year old. The very slow eye, the very here retortoise. How would you give someone the eye? Take you while? Yeah, it's just a very subtle movement. You'd have to blink like Matilda the kangaroo at the the Brisbane Commonwealth Games. Remember that that's right? Yeah, slow wink, the big slow wink. Yeah. Happy news though for Goliath and missus.
Goliath eight double two three double O double is at Abby, Texas on zero before eight zero eight thirty ninety five.
Job of the Facebook and YouTube live stream. What do we think of this footy dad who has been spared jail for assaulting that kid? I Jesus, there's there's some parents who really shouldn't be let within cuie of kids sport. I find that it extraordinary that story you without going too much, you know it. You've done some coaching. I've never seen anything. I've never seen anything like that.
You've seen parents that would fit into the category where we go, this is a bit uncomfortable.
I'm guessing the thing I don't like his parents who criticize the umpire or the ref at footing in school soccer, who at school a little kid themselves? Oh yeah, often often the umpire is about the same age as the players. But you do hear a bit of that, which is never good, I don't think. But this is in a category of it's a like, actually, you know, thumping a kid and I know the dad his defense would be, well, my own son had just been injured by this child. But you know, it's a contact sport. Kids are going to fire up the same way adults fire up. They shouldn't, but they do. And for an adult to involve themselves in it by running out there onto the field and actually hitting a child, I mean, what did the other parents think? So for the people that aren't aware of the story, my understanding of it was that during an under thirteen's game, the man at the center of this, Michael James White was the team manager of North Haven's under thirteen team and his own son being hit and hurt in the game in some way whilst he was being treated, ran out there and ran into the kid who did it. Seems to be the long and short of it. And then there was some debate within the court about whether there was a raised elbow to the head, whether it was sort of a bump, and that was the element of this that got debated and went to what kind of penalty there was there was going to be. But he was in the original judge Well, I was going to say he was going to jail. I was three months. I don't know what I know.
The point of this is not where I'm going to take it, but I put me away that he got a custodial sentence given what we've just been through with that. They beck, Yeah, I was surprised that he that he got jail time. This was the one time I overwent hang on what three months in the clink.
But there's people who do way worse things than him, Like people have got terrible exploitative child material on their computers often get off. Yep, without a custodial sentence. You know, which is way worse than what this guy did. Yeah, this was bad, but that's that did. That did surprise me. But on appeal, Justice Doyle said he found that White had strong prospects for rehabilitation. This is the father Michael James White said there was good reason to suspend the jail team if he signed a five hundred dollars eighteen months good behavior b I mean, the one thing I would say, yeah, he definitely sounds contry it and says, look clearly no way I should have done it. Won't happen again. A grown man running out at other thirdeen, se eleven and twelve year old boys. Yeah, I mean yeah, they're like getting a rip. It's primary school, get a grip. Just bizarre.
One of our listens have seen, ever witnessed any parents behaving badly at school or kids sport eight double two three double double. Let us know what we can text us on zero four eight zero eight thirty ninety five. We're going to check traffic and come back with police and weather in just a moment. Lin Andrews' real estate experts in commercial and residential property management Lynnandrews dot Com toda you.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double a breakfast.
Twelve minutes and seven. Let's talk about the weather this week. Hannah Marsh from the Bureau of Meteorology has the forecast for us, but also an update on how we're traveling rain rot wise for twenty twenty five and because all of a sudden we've had a bit of rain. Are we catching up to that average at all?
We are improving, but I wouldn't really say catching up. So we did have nine point two millimeters in the city in the twenty four hours to nine am on Sunday. That brings our month to date total to fifty one millimeters, but our June average is still seventy two point one and a year to date, we've had ninety seven point eight millimeters, whereas our average to the end of June is usually two hundred and forty eight millimeters. So we're still, yeah, close to one hundred and fifty milimeters below our average to the end of this month.
Not even halfway yet, header No.
Unfortunately not. But as we've mentioned that, we have seen an improvement in June.
And what's the forecast light for the coming days. There's still a bit of rain on the horizon, isn't there?
Yeah, there is. We've got a front toer that's moving through as we speak. We are starting to see that shower activity at developing. It will continue as we head deeper into the day as well, and we've had a minimum of nine point one degrees currently sitting on ten point eight degrees and heading for maximum of sixteen degrees in the city Elizabeth and Glenelg and also in Nalanga. We're fourteen for Mount Barker today. We will see that shower activity easing as we head into the evening period and particularly into tomorrow as well. So just a shower or two around mainly during the morning period and looking at a maximum of sixteen on Tuesday, claudy sixteen degrees on Wednesday. Then we start seeing the temperature increasing, getting up towards twenty degrees for Friday and Saturday, before we do see another system move through bringing the return of some share activity and dropping that temperature back again on Sunday.
Thank you Hannah Marsh at the Weather Bureau. It's had to save poule. Sergeant Peter Williams joins us. Peter, a driver tried to get away from police yesterday at Woodville, turns out there in court today, so it doesn't sound like they got far.
No escape plan failed on this one. In the early house of Sunday morning, police are traveling on Torrean's Road and the spotted a silver Masda zipping Baston on the opposite side of the road. The patrol officers conducted a swift utune and followed the speedy nasday. The driver, obviously clearly not a fan of straight roads, heed into the back streets and eventually ran himself into a dead end on Leslie Street East. At that point in time, he realized his escape plan was flowed and he ditched the car and took off on foot. Police set up cordons before PD Bandit entered the event, and the trusty camp canine sniffed out the man's trail along the grove and after a game of fight and seek through his several properties, found the man carrying behind a vehicle on Lyle Court. The fifty seven year old man from Rawal Park was promptly arrested searched in his car. A search of his car also revealed a stash of cannabis and crystal line substance believed to be methamphetamine and cash. To top it off, his license showed that he was disqualified from driving, so he's seen charge with the laundry list of offenses including driving to qualified, hindering police and lawfully on premises and trafficking drugs. He's been denied bail and will appear in the Port Adelaid Magistrates Court today and his vehicle which is now sitting in the impound lot for twenty eight days.
Good word by sapole there and Pete. Also, a drink driver's been caught in Nne.
Yeah around four twentyth afternoon, police received a tip off of a potential drink driver in a Hinde station wagon in the Nan area. Patrols swiftly responded and located the vehicle nearby and identified the driver and when subjected to a breath test were staggering blood alcohol reading of point three to oh three, more than six times the legal limit. The fifty three year old man from Nan was reported for drink driving and his reckless decisions earned him a twelve month loss of license and his car in pounder for twenty eight days. So he'll attend the Mount Barker Mata Streets Court at a later date.
And good and just finally, Peter, there was a house far at and over gardens overnight. What happened there?
Yeah, a rough night for a homeowner in Bison Avenue. At around eleven twenty, police and fire crews responded to a house fire. Upon arrival, they found the home fully engulfed in flames. Fortunately the optment was not home at the time and no injuries were reported. Fire CAUs investigators are now working to determine the cause of the fire and if anyone saw or heard anything suspicious. For any information could help the investigation, we asked them to contact Crimes. That was on one eight hundred, triple three, triple zero.
Thank you for that, Peter, Sergeant Peter Williams from say We've got a text a moment ago from Lisa on the text lines before a zero to before eight zero, eight thirteen ninety five, with regard to parents acting badly at kids' sport, Lisa says, I've been at a kid's footy game might have been under twelves are under thirteen's where the crowd re issued with a blue card from memory. Subsequently two or three were given and then the game was called off. It was horrible, Lisa says. We all felt so.
Sad for the kids whose game got canceled due to the behavior of their families. Jeez, I just had a flashback. I remember years ago we're playing against one other school and a couple of our parents came over to me and they said, Dave, have you noticed that the opposition is one of their parents is goal umpiring, but he's smoking in the goal square while he's doing And I went over to this bloke and I thought, well, okay, thanks for pointing it out. Why do I have to go?
And it's not really having trouble dealing with their tall forward line, is it naturally? And the coach's sort of the fact that the guy also had a large claw tattooed on his left cheek, So I thought, my technic with this chap is going to be a sort of smoker, a smoker type thing, because I was back then a smoker.
And I went over to him and said, hey, mate, look, I have the odd path, but do you reckon? You could do it not in the goal square while the under fives are playing, and there were there were three butts on the ground. He already had three darts. It's not caught at times, non stop fag and I and he goes, who's complaining? A couple couple of apparents, and he goes, why don't you tell them to come over here and tell me to stop smoking? Mmm? Okay, yeah, and yeah, I think you finished most of the pack by the end of the game. I won't say where it was. Yeah, you might have.
Might have just been been the kid's best interest, just to ever sort of clear out the forward fifties sort of.
Strategy on that day. Exactly.
That's extraordinary. Let's say to the United States. Miley Hogan is in Washington, d C. For the Channel seven and the US Bureau there. Miley, good morning.
Did you did you get to the parade?
Good morning, Yes, I was at the parade yesterday. Actually, I was watching the troops march past and the tanks go past and mingling with people military members, families and people that were there to support the parade and Donald Trump. Of course, there were a few protests in the Capitol, but nothing compared to the protests that we saw right across the United States, with tens of thousands of people out protesting against the parade.
So my one thing I have not been able to work out. Has a parade like this happened before? There have been parades like this in the past, are there not?
The last parade of this scale in the nation's capital was actually the end of the First Gold War, So nineteen will ninety one? Please someone correct me if I've got that date wrong. So it's been decades since making a parade of this scale in Washington, DC. It's actually quite rare for the American military to get out and show off its force. As one law maker put it, the world knows that America has this big military mice. They don't need to show it off. It's not something that they felt was appropriate. And look, it's an idea that Donald Trump actually wanted to make happen in his first term, but the people around him said, no, this isn't what we do here in the United States. But now that he's back in power and he has a team stacked with loyalists, he was able to make history in a reality yesterday, But of course it was met with a lot of.
Protests as well and Miley.
The US President has shared his thoughts online with regard to the ongoing Israel Iran crisis.
What's he said.
Was issued a very stark warning to Iran, saying that the US had nothing to do with the attack on Iran, and if we are attacked in any way, shape or form by Iran, the full strength and might of the US armed forces will come down on you at levels never seen before. He has gone on to urge Israel and Iran to strike a deal to end this conflict. He's posted that there's many calls and meetings taking place at this stage, but hasn't actual provided any detail about that. It appears that a diplomatic path to end this conflict at this stage is limited. We know those tip for tut strikes are continuing. There were pre planned talks to take part today before those initial strikes were set off, but they've now been canceled as these titsa tut strike continued.
Miley, Thank you.
Miley Hogan in Washington, d C heading up the seven News US Bureau of c Miley's reports tonight on seven News from six o'clock. The story that I cannot get my head around out of the US is the assassination of the two Democrat politicians and then also Minnesota in Minnesota. But the guy who's done it drove fifteen k's for the house of another couple who were involved with the Dems and tried to kill them too.
He's still on the run. He's wearing like a Halloween type mask when he did it. That country's going to he in a handbasket. And it's across the divide. I mean, you know, when Trump was shot last year, there were people openly cheering is he dead? Is he dead? Like you know, this is meant to be the world's great democracy. Well, isn't it? Doesn't it?
I mean, it's beaten a pretty dead horse now. But doesn't every country have crazy, ill equipped people to deal with the cut and thrust of political debate, but they just don't have all have easy access to guns.
Well yeah, exactly, exactly, Yeah, a minute to seven. It is a shocking story though. Five Double News is coming up our wrap of the morning's big stories. There coming up in just a moment and we're off. Tel Aviv will be chatting with a man who used to call used to call Melbourneme about what it's been like with intercontinental ballistic missiles raining down on you. That's coming up before.
Right David Pemberthy and Will Goodings six to nine, five double a Breakfast eight after seven.
Tom Ran in his sports rap about forty minutes ago said words that excite me. As we get to eight after seven.
He said Stephen Rowe was going out of his mind on Friday night, which means we're going to hear some of that in about fifteen minutes time. When Rowie joined us to wrap the week the weekend.
It built up the ten wins, quarter losses, the quad. He didn't get his quotdit Ah right at the death. Yeah, heartbreaking minute ago. The quaddy. We'll chat with raval Responsible very shortly.
Also, we sped a bit oft the time of the first hour talking about the rain and whilst we're not exactly catching up to the average, we're doing better than we have been when it comes to rainfall. But what about in the areas that rely on it for their livelihood. Justine's a farmer just out of Jamestown, is going to join us after seven thirty today and we will we'll talk to her about whether there's any sign the season is breaking. Let's jump into the news cycle today, though there are some developments coming out of the Prime Minister's trip to first Seattle and now he's landed in Canada ahead of the G seven summit that's taking place there. The headliner out of that, as reported by our man Phil Kurry in the finn Review and in other places, a timeline has been announced for his meeting of US President Donald Trump. They're going to have a faced, their first face to face meeting on the sidelines of the G seventh summit on Wednesday our time, so Tuesday over there Wednesday morning our time. We'll hear more about this meeting, of course, on the agenda, big big ticket items, the umbrella being the state of our relationship with our biggest and most important ally, orcus, where's it at the moment, What about tariffs? What can we possibly do given some of the demands that the US is making. That'll all be on the agenda. Phil Curry is writing from Seattle that part of what the Prime Minister is going to say is he's going to push back on this whole you need to spend x amount of GDP on defense. He's going to say that we have increased spending, but we also do things like provide actual physical military bases and resources for American submarines, things with American warships in Australia.
He thinks that Pine Gap, Northwest Cape, all that sort of stuff should be counted as part of our contribution. That would seem to be the pushback, whereas like if you know Poland, for example, wants to spend five percent of its budget on GDP, then of its budget on defense, he's saying, well, they're not doing anything, expert, that's right.
That figure encompasses everything they do with us or to help us. Whereas I think Anthony Albeezy could make a very strong pitch that will hang on. There are things that aren't technically defense budget that we're doing in Australia that actually go to a level of cooperation that you're not going to get elsewhere.
Here.
He is talking in Seattle before going to Canada about UCUST and some of what he's going to talk to the President about.
The potential that UCUS has to allow for a range of benefits to the United States. It comes from our assistance for the industrial capability in the United States, of which Australia has already contributed five.
Hundred million dollars.
Australia has currently over one hundred personnel in Hawaii as working on maintenance, working on skills contributing there, as well as many more people here in the United States as well. The benefit that the presence of US Marines has in the Northern territory is also important as well as the fuel reserves.
So a little bit of an insight and what's going to happen over the course of the next forty eight hours. In Canada, he's meeting with the Canadian prom minist Mark Carney first. I imagine they'll have that'll be a fairly cordial discussion, that would be more of a friendly catch up. Yes, he might get a few tips off him about you know, because Carney's proven himself to be a bit of a Trump whisperacity. It's funny, isn't it Seeing all these guys preparing. It's like some sort of end of year exam or something. You're meeting with Trump. You've got a war room and have you know, get your strategic advisors in to throw left field questions at you. What if he says this, what if he says that. But importantly, when you hear Phil's peace, you know the way it's described. No journo can write a piece saying, mister Albanezi will say this unless mister alban Easy or senior people in mister Alberansi circle have sat field down and said all right, here's the plan, so let's see if it works. Do we know how long the meeting is going to go. No, we don't have any They've been really tight on the details of it all. We've been saying for weeks they're going to meet at G seven we think. But it got to the point yesterday I know Richard Marles got interviewed the Defense Minister and he was saying, oh, well, we're not going to speak later on anything to do with this meeting, to the point that some people started saying, is that even happening?
But they've been really buttoned down with all the specifics, so we don't know that. We don't know much about that. The Defense, of course, is front of mind, and even more so out of the weekend given the Israeli Rahan conflict turning white hot. We're going to speak with David Elrick before eight o'clock this morning. David is a former Victorian who he's a Victoria calls now Tel Aviv in Israel High We've spoken to him following October seven and when rocket attacks will have rained down on Tel Aviv in the past, and he gives us an insight what day to day life is like there when his home city is under attack. Well before right, we're going to play a full interview with him where he goes into more detail about the differences between a Harmas rocket attack and one that has been undertaken by the State of Iran. Have a bit of a listen to what he's going to tell us.
The difference is that the new the Harmask was sending were not at all accurate and they're sort of missing this weapons as terrible, and these weapons are intercontinental ballistic missile. They're guided, they have the ability to avoid arm if I shoot them down, and they're extremely deadly. They've killed some people. They've knocked down precinct buildings in television suburbs, and they're much much harder to destroy.
Planning that fully of you with dive you just before write o'clock. In the meantime, Israel's President Isaac Huitzog has been calling for greater international assistance to combat the r Any attacks.
And I call upon the leaders of the G seven who will convene tomorrow in Canada.
They should all be with us because if you.
Want to get the nukes out, but with a better work together with us.
And he's Lieutenant Colonel and ned of Shoshani on those attacks.
It's important to notice there was a truth Promise number one and number two when they ran attack is roles ballistic missiles before this Israeli operation, and by the way, they were threatening to carry out truth Promise number three for months now. They have been planning to carry carry out a plant an attack against us. Regardless, we've been the last two nights in Israel, which is morning in Australia, but we've faced hundreds of ballistic missiles and UAVs fired towards Israelis. Those ballistic missiles are fired towards civilian population centers at places like Tel Aviv Feifa, which you spoke about, and we've seen a lot of damage to buildings in Israel. We've also sadly seen casualties in Israel fourteen casualties already from these Iranian attacks.
It's just been extraordinary to watch unfold over the weekend. We've seen the limits of the Iron Dome as well. When it comes to dealing with ballistic missiles and hypersonic missiles too. It does much better at missiles that don't leave the Earth's orbit, that stay or sorry, that don't leave the Earth's atmosphere, that stay much closer to the ground. Just it's it's awful to watch watch unfold two powerful states now engaged in the conflict like this. The technology that I name things extraordinary, That wasn't it. Just that's what Trump wants to build for the US. How do you do it when you know you've got two gigantic coastlines? Though, well, I think he wouldn't be covering the coastlines. He doesn't have many votes there, so it wouldn't be an more of a Domelifornia. I don't think they might just miss out. Yeah, yeah, they'll start. They'll start on the on the eastern border of Arizona and worked at Wayne Lend from there Portland, New York City. Nah, yeah, it's more about you know what this means for Wichita Hey locally A big name actors committed to the Australian Grand Grand Final Supercars event on the twenty ninth of November.
Let's super plan.
Gets me every time? Now the VP, then you're naming the BP Adelaide Grand Final Supercars event.
Lenny Kravitz will be playing. He's touring around the country with Jet as a support act. That is starting in Sydney on the eighteenth. It will be in Newcastle, Brisbane, Melbourne, and there'll be a special outdoor concert in Mildura before his tour wraps up at the V Eights in Adelaide at the end of November.
Sixty one. Lenny Kravitz, he's in pretty good?
Is he?
Sixty one? Sixty one year? Kidding Matt. I just did a Google search on him. You look at the picture of him, page three of the TiSER. He's got the physique of a twenty year old Jez, how do you do that?
You'd feel like this, and I'm sure our listens feel like there's sixty When I was in school, felt like, wow, you were sort of you know, you had one foot out of door. You know, you were hold and haggerty, and you know you could barely move. And sixty one sixty one Now, people today, sixty one doesn't look like thirty years ago.
Sixty one well, certainly not for you've happened to be Lenny Kravitz. But you know. I mean, he's on a different trajectory altogether. If you're Goliath or Galapagus sixty sixty one, you've been the prime of your youth. Well, speaking of sixty one, even halfway towards fatherhood, Brad Pitt is sixty one and I walked past the sign at the Redding Cinemas at West Lakes and he's starting to be a driver in the Formula one movie that's coming out. He's sixty one years of Look, I think in our defense, well, they've got they've got a lot of people around them help them with their diet, and I've probably got lot personal trainers. Well you probably think a bit of that through Channel seven days No got your own diet. Won't surprise anyone. There's none of that kind of support. How was wondering last night Dansing with the Stars a lot a lot of the seven talent. I saw Michael asha Is on it, and I said, Okay, I wonder when Will's going to go on it? Can I just ask you that now on live radio? If there been internal talks about this, because I only want if there's the only thing that might ever get me watching Dancing with the Start, did they see your gymnastics routine, because I'll tell you a lie that that is almost like an audition tape.
Oh.
I have enough moments where I think, me and TV think of this. I think if the call came for Dancing with the stars, that might be the sign from the heavens.
That's right, that I meant the wrong. Yeah, five out, that's right.
We're going to check traffic and Stephen Rowe is covering up in just visit Jarvis Tartis you home and on Brighton Road? Someone in park for savings across the toy to certified pre owned Ray.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings sixty nine five Double a Breakfast.
Twenty three after seven remarking about how Lenny Kravitz is looking good for sixty one. Chris has texted and he says, boy, sixty one is not old. I had a stroke at forty nine and ran my first marathon at fifty nine years old in New York City last year running Berlin this year. Age is but a number. Yeah, good on you, Chris. Yeah, first marathon at fifty nine that is exceptional.
Work.
Could be me in three years. Well, if I've ever you know, start jogging around the blocking stuff. Yeah, you'd have some long distance chops when you lot of snowballs counting Hill.
Thank you, Scott says boys, I see we fly as one doesn't stretch into the studio, David want to stitch up and as much as you don't want to do it, we don't want to see it, will Thank you, Scott.
I think you're on my side. Yeah, we all are good, We all excellent. Thank you, Stephen right on five double a breakfast, oh bit weekend in sport and talking about stretching right back to Friday night when if you're in the stadium roof business. I think you fielded some calls on Saturday morning that was jocking to watch Growey you called it and good morning to you.
Pimbo Will good morning. Yeah, Crow's lost port one. The proteg has beat us at Lord's. I think the tea birds one. What else Iran and Israel bombing each other, US is imploding? What's our debt? Trillion dollars?
So on?
In different weekend?
Chaps, do you want to start after after all that the word you came up with was indifferent.
Yeah, yeah, well I wanted to get it away from the Crows see how I did that. I was just taking.
Yeah.
Look, Crows didn't lose any admirers on that game Friday night, and it's very hard to be critical of their game at the moment. I think they simply lost a couple of big moments. One of them was contributed to my mate the quiff, and I'll leave it there. But if there's one work on, people know that. Listen, they know, I know you know. If there is one work on, it's how they play protecting a lead. It's been an ongoing problem. Just have a look at the history of it. They have no problem chasing a win. They can chase a win because when they play their best, but they struggle in a sporting term of closing out the set. So you know what, they're nine wins, five losses. They've got the buy. They're equal fourth, the best scoring team, best defensively since round six.
I'd take that before round one, wouldn't you nine and five? Well, yeah, but you would. But if you look at the game in isolation, was there to be one? Yes, the execution in front of goal was woeful. Yes, we should have been five goals up at half time. All of that, Yeah, I think I think fans are entitled to be frustrated by it. And again it goes to the criticism that the Crows at home they're champions, but on the road they struggle.
Will will they leave for one hundred and twelve minutes of that game, Pimbo except at the end. Well, that's right, and that was the most important bit. Yeah, I've got that eight. No one's more disappointed than me and our production manager at the station because we had a production piece that the minute the siren went was going to be played and it was lifting lids and all sorts of.
Things, so no one, no one was.
Yes, yeah, ye, goodness, the footy gods have got me, they have depicted me, yet they bit me fair on the lemonade and sass deacon if it's up the last.
Eight quarters as one as opposed to two separate games, it felt like the Crow's got the rubb of the green with bad goal kicking in one game, and then they were on the other end of it in the second and it all even out in the end. Hey, you're gonna have a very up and about Timmy g in the studio today because him and Treaders were going through the next month of games for Port. After the game yesterday, and all of a sudden they're starting to say things like top eight, yeah far away, anything happened.
See anybody that thinks so I haven't rubbed off on little timmyg Catney conservative, Well I have, Oh man, I have. Well they're saying hello. Last week Ken said, we poked their head around the corner. And I've got themselves in a little cordy as well. So they won against GWS, they won yesterday. They got Sydney and Carlton at home. That's their little cordy. But look they're back. They are back, they're hunting pressure. They got their stoppage game. They kicked the handbill ratios better, they connected inside fifty, all the things they've had to work on. The Mitch kicking seven helps he should have kicked ten. But they got their game back. And full credit to Kent because his stoic competitive never give up, stick it up, your jump or all that sort of stuff that he is. It's coming through. So well done. Give credit where it's due. They were good yesterday.
They were good. The good thing for him too, I reckon Row is that there's looks like there's actually a few entry points into the top eight. I mean free a free a yesterday beating North at home in Perth by one by just one goal. Yeah, they are not a convincing top eight member at the moment. So if Port can knock off those middle sides like Carlton and that they can sneak.
In, they can, they can and their best is bloody good. The stats are from round fifteen, two in and two out in that top eight. So who are the two in and who are the two out? I think Bulldogs need to be in there. They're sitting night at the moment. But well I didn't hear that with Timmy. I was too busy doing things. So he starts to get the cart before the horse, is he.
Yeah, smile and the voice, Yeah, that's a bit rich covin from you. Given you got the can you feel it audio? Ready to play on Friday night? Mate?
This production piece was something to behold and we're not going to hear it. No you can't now, No, no no, we'll play it when it's ready, like we might have to wait till we're actually locked away in the eight.
But you know it needs to be found that the hard drive needs to be put into a microwave somewhere and it needs to be burnt to.
I'm telling you it is all my fault, all due credit to myself.
The crows up and it's like the video and ring, You've got to make somebody else listen to it. Now continue see your boys.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double a breakfast.
Twenty minutes to wait. We're off the tele Aviv. Shortly.
We'll be chatting with David Elrich, who we've spoken to in the past from Melbourne originally give us get some insights and what it's like living as the conflict between Iran and Israel is now officially a white hot that's coming up. Then after breaking at eight today, we're going to send some more people off the best of Say that's taking place on Friday night here in Adelaide as we profile some of the wonderful local South Australian and businesses that mean so much to people here in Say. The other people that mean a lot to South Australians and people right around the country are those on our land that feed us and provide, at often great sacrifice to make sure that this country runs and works, and sometimes they need a bit of help from other nature. They have not been getting it in South Australia so far. In the last well, I was going to say this year, but it goes back further than that. Justine Reynolds runs Woodley Hills and Justin I think we spoke about ten days ago.
She has.
Been the recipient of some of these hay bales. That will talk to her about in the moment, but Justin might be interested. Here's what Hannah Marsh from the Weatherbewer said to us a short time ago.
So we did have nine two millimeters in the city in the twenty four hours to nine am on Sunday. That brings our month to date total to fifty one millimeters, but our June average is still seventy two point one and a year to date we've had ninety seven point eight millimeters, whereas our average to the end of June is usually two hundred and forty eight millimeters. So we're still, yeah, close to one hundred and fifty millimeters below our average to the end of this month.
Yeah, that's not news to Justina joins us from Washpool, which is twenty k's out of Jamestown. Did you guys get any rain out of the weekend, Justine.
Ah, yeah, well he did probably about six meals.
I think how much more do you need at the moment, Justine? All of it?
Oh, well, our average rainfalls about eighteen to twenty inches over the year, and generally, obviously it's going to have to start probably a month ago for us to get going in the crops. So yeah, it needs to start raining a bit more. We really really appreciate the rain that we've had. It's a good start. It's a long way to go.
How are you going with your own water supply for your own use? Is that has that been a problem?
Yeah?
I mean, of course your dam's dry up and then you've got some bore water and that's sort of not always reliable. So we're pretty blessed we can hook into the mains here, so yeah, but you know that costs.
So yeah.
Yeah, Hey delivery you got Justine when we last spoke to you about ten days ago. How long will that.
Last till today?
Right? Really?
Yeah, we've got three bales left, so they'll go out today.
So what happens tomorrow? We're feeding stock and so forth.
That's you always start buying more.
Yeah, so what what when you when you said before justin you know, getting ready for the crops. What what are you? What are you? What are you farming there?
So we're putting panola and baliah and.
All of that obviously is weather dependent. There's no I mean, you can't sort of turn on the tap for it, ken you. It's all at the mercy of the elements. Yeah. Yeah, so it was the last time you've got income justain from the farm.
Oh well, I guess it's all relative. I mean, your self in shape, but you've got there's not no cover of the jet that you've.
Got, but the selling sheeaps not normal order of business. I mean the kind of the cropping that you usually do.
Oh so we well we were a sheep. We're mixed farming, so we shopping. So we're probably blessed in that way as well. Have that back up. But I mean, like last season with our crop, we were probably we probably made twenty percent of what we usually like. So you know, it doesn't even cost putting it in the ground, doesn't cost your bank lines, your insurance or anything like that. And I don't think people realize that, you know, most of us farmers live on overdrafts. And we've going to pay those overdrafts offs.
So if you're if you people in your area are crop sole cropping farms, they probably haven't covered their costs for what are year? Two years?
Oh yeah, yep, definitely one wow. Yeah, possibly true. There's a lot bigger farmers than us out there that would be you know, their losses would be a lot more. Yeah. So it's it's just crazy to think that the government don't see the you know, the point in helping us feed us dop to feed the country. Yeah, helping helping us keep the crops going to feed the country. And yeah, it's not just feeding the country, it's food and fiber and yeah, what do we do if we do we don't have this? What's the answer from the government where they're going to get it from?
Yeah? Well good question. So justin what's the nearest town for you is Jamestown, isn't.
It pretty Well we're smack in the middle of Jamestown building.
Yeah. Right, So on a weekend you have a like go in a town to well, you meet friends, have a countermeal, like yeah, footy this.
Time year, we've got footy.
Yeah, what's the what's the vibe of you know, when you're chatting with people at footy on a Saturday, what is everyone sort of feeling the same as you about you know, all this stress about the weather and a bit of a bit of a sense of despondency about the level of support.
Yeah, definitely with the level of support from the government. You know, the fact that there's for other farmers and other people out there that are doing what they're doing to deliver hay out of their own pocket off their own farms, in their own trucks and their fuel and the logistics of all that. You know that that was incredible for the town. And I guess we feel pretty alone when it comes to support, but when you know, when other people put their hand in their pocket to come and help us. Yeah, it was like the cavalry was coming in. I guess we're all in the same boat and we're all just hoping and waiting for rain. And that's all you can do. Any People talk, So that's good. You know, you've got to keep talking. You've got to keep talking about it.
That helps. Yeah, for sure, we'll stay in touch with you. Justin. We always appreciate our chats. Justin Reynold, the owner of Woodley Hills there just down the road from Jamestown. Beautiful part of so great insights into they apply to farming in twenty twenty five country Chat, because it's not a world that you relate to unless you're reminded of it. Living in the suburbs where I love the way they will speak to ye. There's no obfuscation, there's no exaggeration. It's just this is how it is. Yeah, Yeah, it's all very matter of fact. Thank you for that, Justine.
We're going to take a break in a moment. Were going to be chatting with David Eleric. We recorded this interviews before we came on air this morning, in large part because David lives in Tel Aviv and he doesn't know when he's going to be called into a bomb shelter at the moment, of course, because Israel and Iran are exchanging missile attacks even as we speak. In fact, thirty minutes ago, he just sent us a text message saying up and called back into my bomb shelter and the goings on before the interview was he said, I'll do it whenever I can, so long as it's during a point where we're not in the shelters.
So we bear in mind too, he's been called into the shelter. When we interviewed him, it was almost midnight over there because it was quarter to six. We did the interview before we started broadcasting this morning, so two o'clock in the morning. People, you know, families and stuff up and down all night in the shelter. Out of the shelter way to live.
Is extraord thearre used to in part, but not the power and velocity of missiles that have been sent their way from Iran. We'll talk to David about that experience on the other side of this break So I don't go anywhere traffic first though, visit Javistitis new home in Brighton Roade Someone and Parker Savings across the Toyota certified pre owned range.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine, five double A Breakfast.
Let's go to Tel Aviv now, where we catch up with David Elrick, former a Melbourne man who moved to Israel a number of years ago and we've spoken to in the past. David, good morning to you. Thanks for joining us again on five double A Breakfast. I think we've spoken to you previously in the context of missile strikes on on Tel Aviv.
How is this different?
That is correctness. The difference is that the news of the hamask was sending were not at all accurate in there sort of missing this weapons of terrible or these weapons are intercontinental ballistic missiles. They guided, they have the ability to avoids shoot them down, and they're extremely deadly. They've killed some people that knocked down pres in buildings in televish suburbs, and they're much much harder to destroy, and they're also coming in much greater quantities too, for the more determined enemy.
David, it was about ten am Friday, we just finished our show here when the news broke of Israel going after Iran's nuclear capability with the surprise attack. From that point on, have you and other Israelis been bracing yourselves for what you've been enduring for the last seventy two hours, as you expect that this would be Iran's response.
Yeah, the whole country expected that that would be the response. I think with about three am out of time or something like that, and all of a sudden we were worcome with sirens which everybody thought were already their end in the attacks, but they weren't. And then on Friday was relatively quiet. The supermarkets were very full. People were buying what they needed for Saturday, which is the Sabbath here. And then on Friday night in the middle of the Friday, so with Sinners we had company with either two or three or signs we got to run down to the shelters, and then on the day itself we also had to and then said they know we also had Yeah, people knew what was going to happen.
We we've spoken previously it was actually going to.
Be far worse than what it actually is. I think that's that's what people have thought, the authorities that prepare for something much worse than what's actually happened.
To That goes to my next question then, because when we've spoken previously, comfort sounds like a silly word in this context, but you've spoken about how the bunkers that you've got either in homes or indeed in public places in Tel Aviva for the population a degree of comfort when rocket attacks have happened in the past. Do they hold up as well given the scale of these attacks and the size of these missiles they're now running down.
Yeah, Well, what.
Happened in Batchian, which is a suburb of Tel Aviv. Building and other places took direct hits. People who were actually in their in their shelters or in their secure rooms were actually okay as far as I know. They showed a picture and the press of the building which had been demolished, and the sort of the column of secure rooms because people mostly of an apartment here was intact, and the people they were okay. Our buildings and all the buildings, so we have a shelter downstairs, which is also okay.
I mean.
The belief is that if you do the right thing and you go to your shelter and it's quite about ten minutes when they start shooting to get to it, you will be okay. It could be that there were some people who didn't get there on time. It could be that people lived in old buildings and didn't have them. It could be that something that wasn't necessary, didn't really understand the danger behind it. I don't know how it happened. I haven't read how it happened. How they were killed, I don't know. But the belief is, and the practice is that if you go according to to the regulations and you will be okay, and that's what we've done so far. Our area we see with fragments last night, but there's been no damage in our city. But as this on to me, there has been in other.
Places, David, despite the civilian deaths and hundreds of injuries as well, And obviously it sounds from what we're hearing overnight Australian Time Sunday, that the death toll will rise again. Do you think most Israelis would still be kind of relieved that the Israeli government has taken this action, because the last thing you want is a nation that believes Israel should be wiped off the map having its own collection of nuclear weapons? Is that the sentiment?
I would say that everybody is behind the government at the moment. The opposition is behind the governments. Aren't sell all the people behind the government the moment?
Yes, But.
You know what watching a new segment is like. People watch for a few minutes and then they move on to the next thing, and people change chances on TVs so quickly. I think that if it's not over soon, people will lose patients. I think the West will start getting nasty, and I think the population. He could also lose patients if there an results, but most people think this should be over within a two weeks tops. I hope, I hope. There was thought that they're going to go after Hama Nia or whatever his name is, seam of the President or the Supreme leaders Iran. Reports I saw in tonight's press said Trump said don't and say, oh no, no, we weren't going to do that, but that was original intention. There are also many many Iranians that picked up reports. I saw reports today on the on the TV here of Iranians who are extremely happy in the Iran of what's going on and want Israel to take out this regime. He says, they want their freedom, inspect, they want their lives back. They think of what's going on there. They're not interested in nuclear being in nuclear power. They want to, you know, leave us three people not under a tyrannical society, which is what's going on. So there's there is actually support Iran too for what's going on the Iranians in Iran on is wrang side. I just wish the West of the West would have a stray ball and choose which side of history to be on. I don't think that the British and the French and the German has been particularly helpful and enough they're scared and they work. Couldn't tell you, but they haven't been as selpful as that were last time when they helped a ship down, then they saw barranche and then it was basically no damage.
Last time you mentioned the ten minute warning you get to go to a bunker. How many times have you been in and out of your your bunker or a bunker over the course of the last three days?
Probably ball see the London on my hands.
Wow, So what happened? Is it somewhat predictable? Does it come every couple of hours?
No, it's not predictable at all, not at all predictable. I mean we figure we'll get in the middle of the night, because you know this in inverted comes a scary time. That's you know, when they catch people off garden. That's when people might be a bit tired, they might not make it to their security blace on time and everything. It happened. I think it happens this morning, It happened on Friday nights. Isn't not predictable times as well? They shoot when they can and they don't shoot at everybody at the same time too, so the whole country might get an alert. But something's going on because the authorities are able to send alert to all phones. The Linit phone is on silence. It will still when and you know you've got X amount of minutes, ten minutes. The top step to get yourself ready and be prepared that then your area might not actually be hit. It could be a different area, but it's been hit. Might come. I think it's today. I live near Tel Aviv and near Hypo, which is that an and a half north of where I live was hit that was todayous see this tract at the time, but other areas so not everyone seems exactly at the same time. The thing is a hooties also from Yemen, also firing lockets soon and spending in the drones and the sort of thing. I mean, you wonder what's got into these You wonder why they can't just be like the Family of Nations and just on the live good lines. It's just they worship death and destructions. It's very sad.
David's been an illuminating chat. Again, mate, you stay safe and thank you and your family and we'll talk to you again. No doubt. Thank you so much, David.
We'll look forward to him.
Fantastic Thank you David, David Pemberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double A breakfasts did.
After eight Breaking eight coming up in just the moment.
Got some tickets to our best of SA gala dinner that's taking place on Friday night. It is not too far away at all, but still time for you to get along with someone else's two tickets if you're the first quarter through when we play the best of say feature profile in just a few moments. Time eight double two three double O double our enemy contexts as well on zero four eight zero eight thirteen ninety five Time for breaking a eight.
Well. Tomorrow the opposition lead, a Victantazi, will be presenting his formal reply to the state budget brought down by Steve Mulligan a couple of thursdays ago. It has at its center a pretty significant announcement about stamp duty, where mister Tarsia is promising that if the Liberals do get in at next year's election, they will abolish stamp duty in its entirety for first home buyers, meaning not just new builds but existing homes. My understanding is it doesn't matter if it's an apartment or a house. Any property valued up to one million dollars will no longer attract stamp duty. And the estimate is that that's going to save first home buyers about forty five thousand dollars when they buy their first home. Mister Tarsia, good morning, and thanks for joining us today. This is a pretty significant policy. What's the key difference between what you guys are offering and what the government's already put in place?
Morning David morning, Good morning, Will Yes, very good question. So every state in Australia has got an incentive on stamp duty for existing homes, but not South Australia. And so what we want to do, knowing that stamp duty on existing homes is just this massive barrier for first home buyers in South Australia as as you point out, actually nearly fifty grand sometimes for the cost of almost a medium priced home, what we want to do is we want to scrap stamp duty entirely for established homes up to that million dollar value for first home buyers. And as you point out, that will save the average home owner nearly fifty grand, and you really give them an advantage in what is a very competitive home market.
So it doesn't matter if it's a new build or if it's an existing house, as long as it's less than a million. What if it's a one point one million dollar house, does the stamp duty get abolished on the part of it up to a million?
No?
So yeah, so it doesn't apply to over one million. What this is about is it's more about that first home buyer level entry purchase. So just helping them to get into the property. We know at the moment, you know, young South Australians are trying their hardest to say diligently. We're out there on the weekend with one called Michael, you know guys like him. He's thirty years old. They're on average now, they're having to save twelve years to save for a deposit. So what we want to do is instead of what they're doing at the moment where they're paying off their landlords mortgage a lot of the time, we want to help empower them get into their own home, build some equity, allow them to take personal responsibility and then develop some equity and then they can get established here and move on from there.
You know.
Net Interstate migration. When you look at our young people here in this state, we've had eight consecutive quarters where young people leave in this state. So chances are if they can get a home, if they can get a good job here in South Australia, they'll stay, they'll grow their family and that's good for the economy.
So what's the hit to the budget of adding this component to the stamp duty concessions?
Yes, I thought you'd ask that question, will very good question. So at the end of the day, it depends how many people take up the grant, but on average we think it'll be a commitment of over one hundred million dollars a year. And the next question from that is people say, well, how are you how will you pay for that? The fact is this, we all know in the last three or four years alone, some of these property values have gone up by thirty forty percent given the recent boom, And the fact is that the government are literally banking billions of dollars. If you look at say twenty eight twenty nine, the government is estimating about one point eight billion dollars in stand duty revenue just that year. So because that figure has to be one point seven billion, we know that what are alluring and getting rid of a tax effectively will do is will also stimulate economic activity. But of course all of our costings will be released in the lead up to the election in the usual way.
What would you say to the economists that when it comes to these sort of demands aside policies, would say that all they actually do in effect is drive up the cost of what is already the second most unaffordable housing market in Australia.
Actually to your point, the sixth at least affordable jurisdiction in the world at the moment. So of course the demand side policies have got to be backed up by the supply side policies. And so recently when the government made that ESPA changes, we actually wanted to create another ten thousand homes there that would have grown to twenty five thousand people. They voted that down. We're still concerned about why they voted that down. But I'm also in my budget reply speech, I'm also going to address the more concerns around supply, because you're right in that we also need to increase supply. But this is about a very targeted measure. This is our saying for young people We hear your pain. And it's also you know the parents of young people, they are really concerned at the moment. That's why we are creating a bit of a preferential system here. We're going to allow young people and help them get into their first time here in South Australia.
Mister Tarsia. When the budget came out, you guys were critical of the debt bomb as you called it, others called it the amount of money rocketing towards forty eight point five billion dollars a year or sorry, forty eight point five billion dollars in three years time, going up by about four billion dollars a year. How does the Liberal Party reconcile being so critical on debt while at the same time embracing a measure like this which is going to, as you said, cost about one hundred million dollars a year. Are you sort of having your cake and eating it to a bit?
Look, I understand where you're going there, but if I could just explain that one. So the government continues to benefit from rising property prices and they're raising their stamp duty revenue, it's never going down. So really, instead of baking that money in what we want to do is we want to provide relief to those buyers, but by reducing the tax, and sometimes this is what's missing in these debates. By reducing the tax, what we're hoping to do is to grow the pie. So we want to grow the economy and then we help that. Of course, that will help retain our youngest and brightest, and that is a step in the right direction. So it's not contingent on cuts. I appreciate the death argument. The debt has got to be used productively. Our main message. So when again I don't want to harp on it, but when we see things like the hydrogen issue where up to two hundred and fifty million dollars has basically gone down the drain, that's what's really disappointed. Disappointing. So we have to keep an eye on the debtsish situation absolutely.
Vincentazi, a leader of the opposition, thanks for joining us this morning for breaking it out.
Thank you.
Policy, isn't it. Yeah, we learned a bit there. Two hundred million dollars a year. There's going to be some supply side announcement in the budget reply speech as well. Yeah, the government were champion at the bit to come on and turned into our head to head. But I actually think there are times when you know we have the premiere on, I'm molested, unharrassed by opponents. We had the Treasurer on the day after the budget. We have the Treasurer on frequently for his regular spot with us. So you know, if people are going to be critical as we have been about not enough policies coming from the opposition, when they do have one that's significant l like this, I think it's only fair that we give them a chance to explain it. So, yeah, a lot of texts coming through, some supportive, some negative. One here I thought will might have go strippen. This one says our entire political class are a bunch of nincom poops. Getting a break on stamp duty for first home buyers just puts a rocket under home prices. Although this person goes on to say, surely mass migration is the problem in terms of the lack of availability of housing stock. These are all parts of the problem. I think they're all parts of it. That's absolutely right.
Zero zero eight thirty ninety five is then able to keep your thoughts coming through. You might be excited about this news. Daka daka ac DC.
Currently on a world too at the moment when the summer in Europe as we speak. Fred AB's broken the news this morning that they're coming to us Australia for the first time in ten years. They're going to be touring.
At very least they know the MCG tour dates are going to be at the end of November.
First artists have played the MCG since Taylor's swipt Yeah Oases are playing Melbourne around that time too, although I don't think that's at the MCG. That's if Nolan and Liam are still talking to me other rather penning them still liking each other. Akka Dakka. How many of our listeners have seen Akadaka live over the year. I've never seen them live, so they're a speculation. I sat outside the Hell's Bells concert with some schoolmates in about what was that eighty three eighty thir eighty three when they started with the big dong up the front.
I like this.
There was a line in the coverage in the Herald Sun this morning. I just read it verbatim Harold Sun.
By the way, if the band does come down Under, it would be expected they would do shows in the major city Sydney, Perth, Adelaide and Brisbane as per normal for a group of their high status.
Damn straight, Harald sun. I don't know how accurate I was going to say, but you're right, Harold Son, this could be a Katy Perry scenario't what if From the lead up to the election, Malley gets wind to the fact that Brian Johnston and the boys aren't coming here. Well, what I'm just quite word in there.
Ere he might have to push against hundreds of thousands of people trying to leave, throw bodies out the way exactly Undaunted, he s quest to get big ex to Adelaide, check traffic, come back with more in just a Vibe visit to Javistuart's new home and Brighton Road Southern Park for savings across the toyot a certified pre owned range.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double a Breakfast twenty.
Three minutes after rat Hayden Nelson from Channel seven Sunrise program has been reporting this morning about a pretty scary situation that unfolded at eight pm last night at the Bowden IgA. PM's pretty heavy traffic sort of time of the night too, particularly in Ia. Yeah, the shop attendant. They tried to stop someone stealing a trolley full of groceries and in the process of that there was an altercation. The shop worker received a hand injury and has been looked after by paramedics. Has understood that one of the items in the trolley was a knife that was taken from behind the counter far out. Now unclear yet what role the knife may have played in the attack, So we don't.
Pick that I GA the Bowden one. Yeah, and such a densely populated area, you think there would have been a lot of people who would have seen it.
Police are still on the lookout for the suspect this morning. Now we've called the i g A and spoke to them. Now they've been told by the IgA corporate arm not to do any interviews on this. They wanted to make the point the manager. They wanted to make it clear to us that this was not a hold up but a theft. The two discreete events. So it was someone who was trying to walk out of the store with a trolley load of stuff, not trying to rob the till. I'll tell you some of the things late not supermarkets. All this stuff's just become so ritualized for them. I mean, you know, the i GA and Gilbert Strait, like there's this wall of shame of all the recidivus.
Thieves that go through there. There would be I was there last year. We spent a week staying in Gilbert Street because their house was being painted, and I was shopping in that IgA all the time. There'd be fifty photographs, so there cast of dozens of neer do wells going in there habitually robbing. That what point did we all become conditioned to accept that this was just part of running supermarkets or living in Adelaide. Well, in Gilbert Straight, it's normalized. I mean the BWS next door. I went in there to you know, buy some refreshments and there was a broken glass on the ground and I said to the security guard, I make you drop one. He has not me. Some kids came in, grabbed a six pack, tried to run past him, he got in their way. They dropped it and he's mopping it up. Like there are components to this that are now no longer surprising on any level. The first being this happened. The second being that nothing's going to happen to those involved in the third being it's probably the same group that will do it again somewhere. Yeah, and I know all collectively shrug our shoulders. But the end result is this stuff is just not even newsworthy anymore. It's just called living in Adelaide in twenty twenty four. That's the saddest and scariest part of the whole thing. Yep, yep, where it's just become just another day for those supermarkets. Shocking. All right, that's much happier news. Let's talk best of say, Friday night, Adelaide over. We're going to be there. The gover is going to be there, looking forward to that, the Premier is going to be there. Yeah, this is going to be a big night. The gub's about to get bigger. They've applied for a for some extra head count, which is good for bigger gigs.
No, I mean the gover is in, the governor. I think governor, we're not behind the pub to best of say, it's not going to be that. I don't know how I imagine that was going to happen. Not great to interview either the governor hind manage, but I think meant the owners probably informalized the name. Yeah, yeah, Heir excellency. If you said that, I would have gone, oh yeah. The Governor will be joining us tomorrow. In fact on five double a breakfast ahead of the big night anyway.
Eight and Ossi Fast Transport Solutions are in focus. This get calling down does is she aware that there's a pub named after it? We might ask you that tomorrow.
Today I'm an Ossie Fast Transport Solutions chatting with their general manager, Michael Nindorf. Ossi Fast is a national transport company. What kind of things do you carry?
Anything from medical products to manufacturing products. We do a lot of major clients, but we also do the one to two pelt clients as well.
The big key message with Ossi Fast Transport Solutions is about service, and it's the fact that a client can contact someone here at twenty four to seven.
We're on call twenty four to seven, which is important not just locally but into state. It's important that we're available for the client.
Your head offices here in Adelaide. What do you like about operating in South Australia.
Number One, the transport.
It's easy to get around in Adelaide and it's a born and bred business here.
And essay, we're proud of it.
What's the best selling service that you offer to clients from a.
Local career point of view, It's VIP service, twenty four hour service and interstate. It would be anything that's palletized or on a skin. We're set up for everything.
Tell me about the VIP service.
VIP service is picked up and delivered on the first direct vehicle, so if there's something urgent, rest assured, it's the first available vehicle.
So, Mike, if people want to get in touch with Ossie Fast Transport Solutions a new client, maybe, how do they get in touch with you?
Yeah, just quite simply called thirteen thirteen sixty four and you'll get a response straight away.
Great, and thank you so much for being part of five double A's Best of Say always a pleasure.
And Fiona and Nettley was the first caller through, so Fay, congratulations. Do you You've got two tickets to our Best of SA dinner on Friday night plus a one hundred dollars visa card, all thanks to Ossie Fast Transport Solutions into state freight, distribution, warehousing and local letterled couriers. Call Ossie Fast on thirteen thirteen sixty four.
A lot of listeners texting in about the Akadaka memories. I think Mark though, Mark from Para Hills says, I've seen ac DC four times. Well Clave Derby Park was an experience, absolutely cracking live band. Indeed, they are what I can gather. Mark, Well, you might find itting outside later this year. The tour expected to come into Australia in twenty twenty five. We going to take a break more on five Double A Breakfast next.
David Pemberthy and Will Goodings six to nine, five Double A Breakfast.
Twenty one minutes to nine. We spoke.
We started off the boat of the program talking about the fact it was delightful to be both well this week after somehow got coordinating sickness last week. Seriously, I thought I was going to kill over a couple of times last wenk.
We made it through. But we're not alone. We are You know what it was it sixteenth of June. Flu season. Cold outside, people are inside more often spreading diseases, and so far the official data from SSA Health does reflect that if you look at flu cases. So far this year we've had six seven hundred and fifty five reported cases of influenza this time last year two hundred and sixty seven, so it's about a fifty percent increase year on year. It's amazing where the number gets to. So last year at this point thousand, nund and sixty seven ended up with twenty two thousand, nine hundred cases, so it accelerates from this point on. It's also greater than the year before. Twenty twenty three. Hooping cough is particularly concerning thousand, five hundred and forty two cases so far this year. Last year at this point one hundred and seventy seven the year before twenty four at this time of year, so we're having a shocking year hooping cough wise. That said, rsv's lower than than last year, and COVID's fascinating if you look at the official figures on COVID. So COVID so far this year we've had three three hundred and fifty eight cases this time last year, ten thousand, two hundred and thirty seven cases this time in twenty twenty three, twenty thousand, one hundred and forty four cases. I bet a lot of that it's got to do with reporting though, Yeah, there was a level of diligence that was around two three years ago that people don't even and in testing as well, people aren't testing. No, I don't think they are. It's also in terms of their behavior they're not They're not staying home the way they used to. Exactly right, that's the big thing. Yeah, Shannon, what Shannon Hewitt should I say? Sorry, Shannon, run Star discount chemists, Shannon, good morning to you. Good morning, So Shannon, just in terms of how on the front line they're running a pharmacy, what's what's the lie of the land at the moment?
Well, I mean I can say I'm seeing exactly the same thing as the data for the most part. You're exactly right about COVID, though there is a lot of underreporting, I believe based on a number of people that are telling us that they have COVID when they do their own tests themselves with a rapid antigen test, but there's no obligation anymore to report that to SA Health or any other reporting system. So a lot of them they are, but no one actually knows those figures. So there's definitely a lot of it going around at the moment.
How hard is it for you and your staff when you're actually you know, on the front line all day and you've got people coming in saying, you know, occasually telling you that they've got COVID while they're standing, you know, a meter away from you. The world's changed a lot in the last few years, hasn't it.
It really has.
I mean a few years ago, everyone was very cautious. They were all doing the right thing, you know, wearing masks, not going out, the big thing, you know, staying home if you're sick. But they're not there all coming out and you know, just doing their normal thing, which does mean that, you know, as health professionals, we are at sort of an increased risk of contracting these things ourselves, so we make sure that we do everything we can to limit that spread within our pharmacies so that we don't have well, we still have the staff basically to help you when you're sick, but also so that we don't spread it on to any of our other patients as well, because we want to limit the transmission as much as possible.
I'm not sure how long you've been in the pharmacy game, Shannon, but I'm intrigued to know whether you think that there's been a change in the way people present or turn up at pharmacies now, given how difficult people are finding it to get into GPS, or people have been conditioned not to be able to even go to the GP if they've got flu like symptoms. Over the course of the last few years, have you guys gotten increasingly busy and do you think it correlates with that experience with the GPS.
Well, I can say I've been in pharmacy for over twenty five years myself, so I've seen patients come to us ever since I started in pharmacy have always come to us first a lot of the time, and then we say, look, you need to go and see your doctor. But certainly in the last few years where we are getting reports from patients that they are finding it more difficult to get to their doctor, particularly people who are are stick at the last minute and don't know that they're going to need an appointment. They're finding it quite difficult. So we do as much as we can for them within our scope of practice and then send them on and help them try and where we can get them appointments with their doctors, either through their regular GP or if it's urgent and they can't get their GPS through a telehealth or some other service to make sure they're getting the health care they need. But yes, certainly a lot more demand on fharmacists time doing as much as we can, and that's evident in the last few years where we now do vaccinations, we do a whole plethora of them now, so you can come and see your pharmacists whenever you need for some vaccinations and they can help you with that, and then looking at other services in the future as well, with recent announcements that there will be expanded scope of practice for pharmacists to help support those patients get timely and equitable access to healthcare when they can't get through to their GP.
On the vaccine front, Shannon, are you we're seeing a drop off in the take up of vaccinations.
Unfortunately, Yes, So we did have a really big peak a few years ago with COVID. Everyone was highly motivated to get their vaccines, and we're seeing year on year that's decreasing. Fortunately for us, we're seeing in our little communities with our pharmacies that those numbers are actually increasing. We've done a lot to try and increase vaccination rates in the communities that are pharmacies support and so we're above the national average in a vaccination there, but unfortunately as a national average, yeah, vaccination rates are considerably down, particularly in COVID. There's a lot of fatigue there around that, and unfortunately that frees a little bit of complacency and people are still getting quite sick from COVID. So we do need to make sure that, you know, to protect those people that can't have the vaccine, such as anyone that has an allergy to a vaccine or the very young. We should be trying to get our flu vaccines every year, and lots of other vaccines as well.
I think Channon, you started touching on this just a moment ago. But given the stats we're seeing, given the increase in population that we have in South Australia and austraight at the moment, is there any low hanging fruit with regard to extra services that you think pharmacies should be able to provide they currently can't that might help people get the treatment they need.
Well, in terms of vaccination in South Australia. South Australian government actually announced that pharmacist could do.
All vaccinines even beyond that books.
But beyond that we are expecting there is an expanded scope. The details of that have been released by partially being released by Essay Helps, and we're expecting more information really really soon, and it will actually see pharmacists be able to provide consultations in the pharmacies for a whole range of acute and possibly some chronic health conditions, so that you know, if you have some skin conditions, you can come in your pharmacists can actually diagnose it and would be able to prescribe something for you that you would normally get prescribed from your doctor. So that's in the pipeline. It's still a little way away, but we're very excited about that and I'm certainly excited to be doing my training when it becomes available, hopefully next year.
Great chat, Channon, fascinating review it from the chief chemist, Chief pharmacist. Sorry for the start discount chemist change, Thank you for that. I enjoyed that. Chet. We'll chat with Janet again in the future. I reckon, let's check traffic. Hey, what about Steve though? Before we do. Steve from Christie's I was seventeen and in the Navy in nineteen seventy six. I was on leave in Melbourne on Swanson Street, when ACDC came past on the back of a flatbed truck singing long way to the top. I didn't know what I was looking at until Sunday night at hgmay Is Serbers, We're watching countdown, countdown, and I realized, hang on with text con and I realized what I saw on Saturday morning. Bit of rock and roll.
History that is brilliant. Thank you for that text keeping coming in. We just got a message to a short time ago about an accident in front of the Halllet Cove shopping Center. Traffic backed up to Major's Road affecting southbound. Emergency services are on the scene, three cars involved. We've been told everyone is okay. Let's check tarraffic more broadly. Now visit Jarvis toyt a new home in Brighton Road. Summoned park for savings across the Toyota certified pre own range.
David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double a breakfast.
Hey minutes the night. It's a look at the fuel situation. It's somewhat tied to global events at the moment. The better to be a member with RAA road service, albeit you can still get it cheap. This morning, I don't know how much longer're going to be saying that. I think it's probably not much longer. DZ who you can get for hundred dollars sixty The United has Seat and Tatleys Sail Road dollar fifty eight point nine. The SHALLOTTR Parak Bridge Row dollar fifty nine point nine. Unleed, you can still get under a dollar fifty. The United Rosewater On Grand Junction Row dollar forty nine point nine.
Gee whiz.
If you're going pass, theyre just going and gets. It's going to change. The United Merrows Park South Row dollar fifty three point nine. The shell Otr at Old nor Langa Main South Throw dollar fifty three point nine. Even the shell OTR glen Osmann On glenosmand Roade dollar fifty nine point nine is good because what do we know about conflict in the Middle East? Petrol prices go up. It's going to happen.
It certainly is. Talking about that robbery at the IgA at Bowden yesterday, Andrew writes, I was at a prominent retailer in Woodville on Saturday morning. While I was waiting, a guy walked in and pinched an expensive item. He simply ripped the security tag off and walked out of the store to despite the staff demanding that he handed over and more akadaca texts here, This one from Roger and Chris up in Loby Lobethal. I saw ACDC live the Bridgeway in nineteen seventy two Dave Evans aware of Dave Evans. Dave Evans was the lead vocalist and their first song was Can I Sit next to You Girl? Angus was only about fifteen then. I think they didn't have a national profile back then, but sure made up for it after. It was one of the first dates that me and my future wife ever went out on. What a lovely date. It sounds making diagons that dacka dakker terrific work. They better be coming to Adelaide. Yeah, we'll watch this space.
November they normally do. We've got Lenny Kravitz coming for the BP Grand Final of the Supercars. Could be a busy musical end of the year in Adelaide, Well we hope. So anyway, during the break, we're just talking about a study that has been done. Bit of a new research that came out about gen Z's moving out of home. Now, I think on average to move out home these days, you're generally about forty five with three kids, so that makes this all the more interesting. Nearly half of Bozzie's age eight in to thirty. Okay, so you moving out of a reason age then feel unprepared to manage household jaws. That's according to research from Westinghouse. I just drew down into some of the data here. Thirty percent of never mode a lawn, Twenty six percent of never paid all their own household bills. How many household bills do you have when you haven't moved out? I guess your phone. Maybe you're part of it, you're part of the cost.
Yeah, but you know you're not sitting there going all right, little timmy, it's time for you to pay the mortgage.
Are you.
Another quarter?
I've never prepared every meal, have never prepared every meal at home for a full week. While twenty four percent admit they've never cleaned an oven in the kitchen, Forty five percent don't know what to cook. Well, that's our house every day, I reckon. Ninety percent of every conversations is every day.
So for dinner. I can't believe it's only forty five percent Pass me my phone.
Fifty one percent skip meals multiple times a week, and thirty eight percent rely on takeaway or eating out multiple times a week. Laundry management is a problem to thirty nine percent admitting to take their dirty clothes home to parents.
Oh, that sounds like a good deal.
Seventy three percent report ruining their clothes due to incorrect washing or drying techniques. Everyone's done that at some point in time, haven't they. That's just all part of growing up, isn't that the fun of growing up.
I'm at this really nice school principal a couple of weeks ago, and we're talking about like the modern sort of capacity for parents to molly coddle their children. And everyone's familiar with the term helicopter parents. He used a term that I'd never heard before, which he said, no, we don't call them helicopter parents. We call them lawnmower parents. He said. The idea is they want to get in front of their kids to clear a path for them in life, to remove any obstacle, to make sure that life is completely unchallenging and non confronting for them. And maybe part of that gen Z figure is actually less on the kids, but the kids realizing that they can get away with it because they don't have to do anything because their parents are just fussing over them all time, as opposed to, hey, can you go make the lawn for me? You're right about that. We're only just coming into the start of this as parents. We're planning for early childhood education and primary school and so forth. So you've asked Rosie to contribute to the cost of the power.
Buildings, and now she understands the basics of economics, belind demand and so forth. She's already read The Wealth of Nations. Yeah, that's right, read to her. Yeah, she's got some she's part of her mother's daughter. She's not totally nine rand. But you know, nobody's perfect. I do not forget possive magic.
Honey.
We're reading the fountain Head. But one of the things is that I certainly wasn't but I was a kid. There's already material I've read about going to school in the early years, from the various places we've looked at sending her that say, oh, now, we've got a policy with the prickly area of birthday invitations, because it can be confronting when certain kids don't get invited. I thought I remember that it's called not getting invited. Yeah, yeah, totally, and then sometimes you did.
I am aware of debates about the apparent wrongness of handing our invitations. Yes, at the end of school, all of his policies. Now Timmy doesn't get an invite. What happens to those children when they get to work and find out that Niage in accounts doesn't like them and that he's got his own group of friends or you know, like you can't be friends with everybody. It's bizarre, but it goes to that lawnmower point, doesn't it. Well. I mean, you know, I think a lot of things, like the sort of mandatory non scoring in sport and everything. The problem with all this stuff is it's actually like it runs contrary to human nature. Like if you tell kids that they're not allowed to school, they go, yeah, okay, and the halftime they're gone with three nil up keep going.
Of course they do guess what that was a policy derived by someone who doesn't enjoy sport, because everyone who does knows the whole point is the score.
It's while we're here. Yeah, and you know that when you're five years old as a kid, you know who's good you know if you're bad.
I knew I was bad sports the ball and I stepped onto a field and it turns out I'm crap at.
This and it's really important. It's really important to learn that you're really bad at some things. Yes, I did say I was an embarrassment as a footballer. I would hide in the back pocket hoping the ball didn't come near me, mainly because I was two feet shorter than everybody else because in grade I was about seventeen when I finished school. But you know, then you work out I'm actually pretty good at this drama stuff and like, you know, laugh at me. I don't care. I got a good mark for that. My to be or not to be, you know, like everyone's got a talent, that's right. Sometimes it's a process of elimination. Correct, you need to be, You need to have your non talents eliminated.
That's all from us On this Monday morning, I enjoy what's potentially going to be a fairly wet day.
We hope it falls in the right places. In South Australia. Stick around.
Graham Goodings's Nick, David Penberthy and Will Goodings six to nine five double a Breakfast