Hoover, your connection was fine. Geoff's was poor. That's a little inside joke for everyone who listened to the podcast.
I listened and I still didn't come away with the same impression as Moriarty. I didn't hear any reasoning for why Clayton thought Royal Melbourne was too firm and fast aside from when he said that the setup didn't make players want to come back (right around the 7:30 mark). I simply don't share his concern. In fact, I wouldn't consider it any real tragedy if the tournament never came back - Royal Melbourne's greatness is not contingent on whether or not it regularly hosts a women's golf tournament. I understand why he might feel the way he does, but I think he's incorrect.
I also heard Geoff mention the guy who played ping pong back and forth around the 10th green and was made to look foolish in the process. Geoff stated that two of the shots he hit were poor, but he took exception with the fact that the guy also hit a well-struck bunker shot that wouldn't stay on the green. I understand why some would consider that to be out of control, but I'm personally fine with the idea of bunkers playing as hazards once in a while. It seemed to me that players who stayed in position and didn't hit crappy shots fared reasonably on a hole that gave up plenty of birdies.
I see no reason to deem the conditions of either course as excessive. It seems to me that everyone still played the same course and several players broke par, and therefore the courses were just fine as they were. No reduction in firmness or speed needed for my tastes. In other words, what Sean said.