 Burnto or not, it's time to eat. But first, Shane Jones has a phone call to make. Oh, should I ring Cunliffe then? David Cunliffe has been trying to talk to Jones all day about not letting the media in on the family lives of the three Labour leadership contenders. Kia ora, Dave. You've been chasing me around Taitokere. I'm up north, pal. We asked both David Cunliffe and Grant Robertson to film with us for this programme, but they refused. Now, it sounds like David Cunliffe is suggesting Shane should do the same. OK, well, it's a bit late, Dave. I've had the TV group already do it up north and go to the whare and all that sort of jazz. You might think Shane Jones has more to hide than his competitors, but he seems pretty comfortable in his own skin. And so the Cunliffe plea falls on deaf ears. Right, right, right. No, I understand what you're saying, mate, but it's come and gone. OK, catch you later, bro. I just want to let you know that... Is he not a happy chevy? Come and Grant, they're worried about... What the hell is a soft piece? Doing things in a soft fashion has never really been a failing of mine. Interesting there, what David Cunliffe was trying to do was stitch up a deal with Shane Jones so you couldn't get into their private lives. That's right, and look, that's there right, but it's interesting that David Cunliffe and Grant Robertson weren't happy for the cameras to come in and see how they lived their own lives. I think they figured that Shane Jones would have the broken marriage and the porn scandal in the past that he would have a bit more to hide, but he went in and said, look, what's in all this is how I live my life and I think it probably worked for him.