<&>Wellington Corpus of Spoken New Zealand English Version One <&>Copyright 1998 School of Linguistics & Applied Language Studies <&>Victoria University of Wellington <&>side one <&>12:08 let's er say gidday to john john good morning good morning to you hewey dewey and louey yes <{><[>john <[>how's <.>the how's things this morning good this morning <{><[>thank you <[>oh that's good now at er big fresh they've put an increase in the number of the tut er wheel car parks i patrol this area er <.>s occasionally and er i do catch the odd one tut er i cos i sing there and busk there every so often just for a <.>s something to do tut um and <.>the you wanted to know the difference between the um tut white collar criminal and er the ones that use violence well the difference is <.>s very simple one went to university the other ones wagged school <{1><[1>okay good on you john <{2><[2>thanks for your call that's good three oh nine three oh double nine is the talkback <{3><[3>number <[1>mm <[2>how's that <[3>inhales barbara good morning to you inhales good morning <.>am am i on <{><[>yes <[>yes you are yes good morning mark and allan gidday barbara no listen what i rang for is um <&>13:00 i um heard a woman talking about the toll park of <{1><[1>the in <{2><[2>ponsonby yep yes <[1>yeah <[2>toll paddock from the er ponsonby club well that used to be down the bottom of a street called toll street and it was up further up ponsonby road opposite the church the saint john's church and um i can remember when we were kids we used to go down toll street into the paddock and we used to have bonfires there on guy fawkes how long ago was that barbara er that would be um perhaps the late forties early fifties er <{1><[1><.>dow <.>down down where stebbings are i guess <{2><[2>down around there stebbing studio no back this way more <[1>good grief <[2>word <{><[>no <[>um yes um <.>just <.>just back from all saints' church yeah no you're talking about off ponsonby road aren't <{><[>you <[>yes <{><[>yes <[>yeah yeah <{><[>i know up that road there <[>healtheries've <{><[>oh up that way <[>they've yeah yeah oh but i <{><[>don't how far i think she said that she could see it from you could see it from the ponsonby club <[>that's jervois yeah yeah yes because we never knew as the gluepot we always knew it as cos i grew up in ponsonby <&>14:00 and um tut we used to um <.>kn know it as the ponsonby club yeah i think it's only in recent years it's been called the gluepot as as a lot of pubs around the country have been because they call it the gluepot because once you're there you're stuck there <{><[>er that's what the wives used to say when the <.>b husband used to get home at er at seven oclock at night for <&>slurs rest of utterance as if drunk so where's my tea where have you been at the gluepot again have you <[>i see with a couple of flagons yeah <{><[>voc <[>well <&>slurs rest of utterance as if drunk i bought i bought you <{><[>some though <[>hey tell me just before just before you go yeah er do you er er are you do you think they should bulldoze the gluepot or <.>s save it well it was it was part of the ponsonby identity it was always there um i don't really know i mean i'm not a great fan for um because <.>we we were down there my husband and i went and had a look round the area the area's changed so much yeah and i'll tell you what i can't voc get over is the fact that where the liquor store is on the corner of oneill street that used to be a catholic church and it had a virgin mary in the ground oh goodness me <&>15:00 and um i couldn't believe it when they um took that church down and and put a liquor store there you know because um oh they would have to desanctify the ground for <{><[>that wouldn't they i i'm pretty <.>sure <[>they must have had to do that because i can remember there's a there's a catholic school down vermont street which is further up by franklin road sacred heart school yeah and i can remember when we were kids i didn't go to sacred heart but um tut the nuns used to march the girls along <.>pon er ponsonby road there'd be a nun at the top of the group of girls and a nun at the back <{1><[1>and they used to go along to that church for um tut services <{2><[2>you know <[1>yeah making it <[2>yeah vespers and things yeah good to hear from you thanks indeed tut er good call six minutes to nine three oh nine three oh double nine is the radio pacific talkback number <&>15:43 <&>two minute twenty second commercial break not transcribed <&>18:03 allan dick and mark bennett three oh nine three oh double nine our telephone number to dunedin we go malcolm good morning gidday guys <{><[>how's it going <[>gidday malc working hard? yeah <{><[>how's yourself <[>hey i was oh voc well just finished working hard so yeah yeah just er i <{><[>was on my way home and i heard you guys wondering about whether you should put any money on er vintage crop or not in the melbourne cup <[>laughs yeah? mark was then we <.>get mark was okay i i was last year on my way up to the er the adelaide grand prix i i stopped in melbourne for a couple of days to take in the um the the melbourne cup yeah and um it absolutely hosed down with rain too half the car park was under about six inches of water that's what i'm <{><[>saying yeah <[>and <.>un <.>un unfortunately i sort of um just took advantage of the hospitality tent for a little bit longer than i'd bargained on and when when it came time for the cup i realised i hadn't really put a lot of thought into who i was going to bet on swallows so i um i i i went out and had a look at the horses and what i know about horse races you could write on a very small piece of paper but um after motor racing and and theatre <&>19:00 my my big passion is wine so when this horse walks passed me and somebody says it was called vintage crop i decided to put everything i had which was about forty bucks on on this horse yes didn't know anything about it and the thing romped home and it paid about seventeen bucks did in on the er oncourse er windows yeah yeah i made about oh i suppose about seven hundred bucks <{><[>gee <[>gee end of the day so it's one of those great racing stories isn't it yeah one of those great racing stories so eh i tell you what that that's why i think it's <.>go provided it starts malcolm i think it'll go well today it's gonna be another wet day over there today it's gonna be a <.>bi the weather forecast is not that good a heavier sort of a track i think it's it's tailor made for that <{><[>horse <[>well well <.>la last year it was it was unbelievable how much it rained i mean i <.>i've <.>i voc voc <.>when when i say parts of the car park were under six inches of water i'm i'm not joking there were people there in swallows you know <.>th thousand dollar dresses walking round with gumboots and and the people <{1><[1>that had staked out their places in the car parks <{2><[2>carefully'd <.>d they they either had to get round in the gumboots or or sort of abandon them but i had a good time <{3><[3>and that's what it's all about so but i mean <.>w <.>w what i know about horse racing i mean you could find the smallest piece of paper on your desk and rip it up into about thirty bits and i could fill about half of <{4><[4>it <[1>laughs <[2>yeah <[3>yeah <&>20:00 <[4>oh well i could fill up i could <.>f you'd be twice as much as <{><[>me are you red or white malcolm <[>laughs <.>a am i red or white yes oh er wines? yes um voc oh i've got fairly catholic taste when it comes to wine word so <.>lon so long as they're good i i find the whole um the the whole topic of wine very interesting um i've been involved in wine retailing i know <{><[>that yeah <[>on and off for a few years and of course um i've been involved with festivals and things as well um and er exhales i've just i've i i guess i i cut my teeth on on new zealand sauvignon blancs and and chardonnays and and sort of started getting into the aussie reds but it it's not it's not nearly that simple now i mean there's some really really top rate reds coming out of new zealand now so it's apparently this year tut um you know the martinborough pinot noirs and things have really hit their straps for for ninety four apparently i'm going up for the the toast martinborough festival on my way back from the adelaide grand prix this year so i'll see you there are you gonna be in adelaide are you <&>21:00 yep tut <{><[>i'll tell you what i i'll um voc i might write up to you and you give you my contact number <[>yeah <{><[>okay okay do that malcolm do that <[>mm i will do okay i'll drop it in the mail <{><[>tomorrow <[>okay good on you you beauty okay see you there bye bye bye bye coming up to news time er we'll be back after the news er we've got lots and lots of things to talk about you know it's it's absolutely staggered me that er we've had so few calls on the cellphone business the a a <.>wa thinks there should be some sort of checks and balances but most people have rung and said no there's enough checks and balances already it's just that you hear so many people tut complaining about people driving cars using cellphones <&>21:33 <&>four minutes thirty nine seconds of news sports and weather broadcast not transcribed <&>26:12 <&>one minute of dialogue on fireworks between HM and HA not transcribed <&>27:12 in geraldine hazel good morning yes i've got news but this is a different sport this time laughs <{><[>it's <[>gidday hazel good morning <{><[>laughs <[>good morning <{><[>hazel <[>lovely sunny day oh good oh have you got a good day there lovely er the sun's just come out actually oh we've got the sun really beautiful <{><[>but look <[>you know it's a nice day out there now pardon <&>pronounced with final n say pardon pardon hazel yes now oui oui i um have something very interesting here have you had anything about pharlap on your <.>p programme today no not a thing well i've got it who murdered pharlap pharlap was born in south canterbury i know hooray <.>f and it's er pharlap foaled on october nineteen twenty six and they've got new zealand in brackets isn't that good yes <&>28:00 and er i'll tell you a story now pharlap won the melbourne cup on the first tuesday in november nineteen thirty he was acclaimed as the greatest horse ever do you know that yeah who poisoned pharlap er that was over in america <{><[>wasn't it <[>the americans did yeah they did and <{><[>wasn't it a shame <[>i saw the movie yes well i've been very fortunate i've followed up pharlap er because geraldine had the premiere here in eight nineteen eighty three i remember that and we had the cast here and i'm looking at the boy that took jim pike's place at the moment and um and we had a fabulous time in geraldine and my son clive is er developed a beautiful fibreglass horse and voc we had one done up as pharlap with even the white socks and we had a marvellous time and i had night raid in one <&>29:00 shop and pharlap was in the post office and the postmaster had to stamp two thousand letters with a special design stamp well how's that <.>a and this er this er world debut this world premiere was in the geraldine picture theatre yeah well it was the premiere <{1><[1>of pharlap <{2><[2>and i've got the book in my hand at the moment written by michael wilkinson <[1>yeah <[2>mm never <{><[>heard of him <[>and this well michael wilkinson <&>pronounced milkinson is a journalist with the sun news pictorial he lives in <.>welling in er melbourne that's a while ago and he is married with a young son now this book was produced i'll tell you in a minute so we'll know what's happened er they usually put what date it comes out doesn't it yeah yeah um first published in nineteen eighty by michael wilkinson okay so it's worth having so i just thought i'd let you know hazel <{><[>you're a lovely lovely person you're the best er public relations officer that geraldine has ever ever had <&>30:00 <[>voc you wouldn't believe it no i do i do and it's lovely to hear from you bye bye <&>30:04