Episode 1 Have I Got a Bit More News for You


Episode 1

Similar Content

Browse content similar to Episode 1. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!

Transcript


LineFromTo

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:00:290:00:31

Good evening. Welcome to Have I Got News For You. I'm David Mitchell.

0:00:370:00:40

In the news this week...

0:00:400:00:41

While Miley Cyrus is out at the VMA Awards, her dog is back at home

0:00:410:00:46

watching her performance on TV.

0:00:460:00:48

In Farnborough, the MOD proudly unveils

0:00:550:00:58

the £60 billion replacement for the Harrier Jump Jet.

0:00:580:01:01

And as officers from Operation Yewtree move in to arrest

0:01:050:01:08

one of the stars of Play School,

0:01:080:01:10

he makes a desperate, last-minute bid for freedom.

0:01:100:01:13

On Ian's team tonight is the presenter on Channel 4 News

0:01:210:01:25

who claims that she reads every national newspaper every day.

0:01:250:01:28

As does Ian! So you can see how useful that is for THIS show.

0:01:280:01:32

Please welcome Cathy Newman.

0:01:320:01:34

APPLAUSE

0:01:340:01:36

And with Paul tonight is a writer and presenter who is currently

0:01:410:01:45

hosting a show on BT Sport, although we only have his word for that.

0:01:450:01:48

LAUGHTER Please welcome Danny Baker.

0:01:480:01:51

Thank you.

0:01:510:01:53

APPLAUSE

0:01:530:01:55

And we start with the bigger stories of the week.

0:01:590:02:01

Paul and Danny, have a look at this.

0:02:010:02:04

Ah, yes, obviously, Conservative Party Conference.

0:02:040:02:06

There's the Prime Minister and his lovely wife. And there's...

0:02:060:02:09

Osborne trying to get blood from a stone. Yeah. There's, uh, ooh...

0:02:090:02:13

What's his face doing? I don't know. It's very odd, isn't it?

0:02:130:02:16

Ah, look, I believe Mia Farrow says, "It's your son." Yes.

0:02:160:02:19

So this is the Conservatives have been having their conference

0:02:210:02:24

and Boris has been speaking, I think. Yes.

0:02:240:02:26

Osborne made a major announcement at the Tory Party conference.

0:02:260:02:29

About his haircut? Did... Did he? Well, he had a comb-over. Yes.

0:02:290:02:33

He's ending the recession, isn't he?

0:02:330:02:35

Do you remember? He's literally combing over the recession?

0:02:350:02:38

Hiding the recession. It's still there, but he's hiding it.

0:02:380:02:40

No, that's not the announcement I meant.

0:02:400:02:42

LAUGHTER Is this the return of the workhouse?

0:02:420:02:45

That's the announcement I meant. Yes.

0:02:450:02:48

It's part of the buy-your-house, except you don't know

0:02:480:02:51

if it's going to be a big one where you make rope.

0:02:510:02:54

LAUGHTER

0:02:540:02:55

People have to go to the Jobcentre every day to

0:02:550:02:58

register the fact that they're still unemployed? Yes. Precisely.

0:02:580:03:01

He said the jobless are to be required to

0:03:010:03:03

work for their benefits by, for example, picking up litter.

0:03:030:03:06

Here's how it went down in the hall.

0:03:060:03:08

It used to be a lot more entertaining -

0:03:100:03:12

and I'm not suggesting they should do a Strictly Tory Party conference.

0:03:120:03:15

They used to tell jokes and sing songs. They did.

0:03:150:03:17

People who couldn't tell jokes would do, it was extraordinary.

0:03:170:03:20

My dad used to say, "Ooh, it was a lot of fun." Like the X Factor.

0:03:200:03:23

The best acts have been stolen.

0:03:230:03:25

Ann Widdecombe went to Strictly. I know. You know, got poached.

0:03:250:03:29

The idea of Ann Widdecombe being poached is one

0:03:290:03:31

I can't quite get out of my head.

0:03:310:03:33

Think of the size of the pan you'd need. Exactly.

0:03:340:03:37

Do you think Boris Johnson really was loyal?

0:03:370:03:40

Yes, he just did one joke about whether it is possible to be Mayor

0:03:400:03:45

and Prime Minister at the same time

0:03:450:03:46

and got a big laugh and said, "Joke. Joke."

0:03:460:03:48

Which is what people always say when they mean it.

0:03:480:03:50

Do you know what he said about UKIP?

0:03:510:03:54

He said, "UKIP..." ..if you want to. Yeah, that was the joke, wasn't it?

0:03:540:03:57

I'm not for kipping. I'm not for kipping!

0:03:570:04:00

He said, "UKIP if you want to..."

0:04:000:04:01

But that wasn't kipping, that was chillaxing,

0:04:080:04:10

and there is a difference. Apparently.

0:04:100:04:12

Yes, but unfortunately, the party isn't called U-chillax.

0:04:120:04:14

The conference then degenerated into

0:04:160:04:18

can you answer questions about groceries?

0:04:180:04:20

Someone else got the milk question. Boris did. That's it.

0:04:200:04:23

And Cameron was asked how much a loaf was. Four guineas!

0:04:230:04:25

He said, "I have a bread-maker."

0:04:270:04:30

As we all do - it's Albert in the village.

0:04:310:04:33

How much is a bottle of milk? Well, I have a cow.

0:04:350:04:37

I have a cow and she goes down to the village and buys the milk.

0:04:390:04:42

Yeah, but, how much is a loaf of bread, Paul?

0:04:450:04:47

65p. Everything is 65p.

0:04:470:04:49

Always has been and always will be.

0:04:490:04:51

Bread, houses, Shropshire, it's all 65p.

0:04:510:04:54

And Boris didn't know the answer to anything.

0:04:550:04:57

He said, "I know how much a bottle of champagne is."

0:04:570:04:59

I'd rather that than some weaselly little journalist

0:05:000:05:03

saying he doesn't know how much bread is. "How much is it, mate?

0:05:030:05:05

"How much do you put it down for on your expenses?"

0:05:050:05:08

Well, Boris did that, he asked Jeremy Paxman how much a loaf was

0:05:080:05:10

and Paxman said, "Well, I can't possibly answer that."

0:05:100:05:13

Panic, panic.

0:05:130:05:14

Yes, Boris had a bit of a Newsnight knock-about with Paxman.

0:05:150:05:18

They were discussing Boris' rumoured return to the Commons initially.

0:05:180:05:22

I think this is a now super-masticated subject.

0:05:220:05:26

And what... Well, masticate a little more.

0:05:270:05:29

Spit it out. What I would rather do... Spit it out.

0:05:290:05:32

That's public school, isn't it?

0:05:350:05:37

One person masticates it and the other person spits it out. Oh!

0:05:370:05:40

But Boris and Paxman also discussed, as you say,

0:05:420:05:44

the price of a pint of milk.

0:05:440:05:46

Do you even know the cost of a pint of milk?

0:05:460:05:49

About 80p or something like that.

0:05:510:05:53

No, it's about 40-something p.

0:05:530:05:55

OK, one of those biggish ones.

0:05:550:05:58

This is a classic case

0:05:580:05:59

where you're going to change the sort of milk. I said a pint of milk.

0:05:590:06:03

Oh, right, a pint of milk, OK, about 40. Well, there you go.

0:06:030:06:05

I don't know how much a pint of milk costs. So what?

0:06:050:06:08

Well, don't you think you should

0:06:080:06:10

if you're concerned about the cost of living?

0:06:100:06:12

How much is a loaf of bread?

0:06:120:06:14

I'm not standing for election. You are.

0:06:150:06:19

I mean, I thought he missed the killer question, for Paxman is,

0:06:230:06:25

how much does a razor cost?

0:06:250:06:27

You had a beard for a bit, didn't you? I remember that you said,

0:06:300:06:32

"Do I look like a submarine captain?"

0:06:320:06:34

What made you shave it off?

0:06:340:06:36

Blackmail.

0:06:370:06:38

That's an excellent... It's an intriguing answer, isn't it?

0:06:420:06:44

Going back to Osborne, he made his announcement

0:06:450:06:48

that you weren't going to get benefits without doing work

0:06:480:06:50

but he said also if they're not doing community service,

0:06:500:06:53

jobless people will have to turn up at Jobcentres.

0:06:530:06:55

Do you know how long for?

0:06:550:06:56

All day. 9 to 5.

0:06:560:06:58

Yes. Really? For 35 hours a week.

0:06:580:07:02

That's ten minutes a day to check the vacancies

0:07:020:07:04

and 34 hours, 10 minutes of Angry Birds.

0:07:040:07:07

Also, there's a slight...

0:07:090:07:10

Obviously, I'm not taking sides here because I come from a culture

0:07:100:07:13

that is quite resilient when it comes to signing on.

0:07:130:07:16

Most people... I did it myself for two years, but during...

0:07:160:07:19

You used to be able to go to, as they called it,

0:07:190:07:21

the labour exchange and I know culture has changed

0:07:210:07:24

but there were window-cleaning vans outside and minicabs

0:07:240:07:27

and people going, "Hurry up, love, I've got a fare at 8:30."

0:07:270:07:30

Now, it's all been stigmatised,

0:07:300:07:32

everyone's "spongers" and all of this.

0:07:320:07:34

Never mind over in the City and all that.

0:07:340:07:36

But people earning a few quid the other way, these days

0:07:360:07:38

they want to make out that, you know,

0:07:380:07:40

it's the worst possible sin of all. And I say good luck to anyone

0:07:400:07:43

if they run their cab down, sign on, get a few more quid

0:07:430:07:45

and go home again.

0:07:450:07:47

Because making them sit there from 9 to 5, that's just...

0:07:470:07:50

that's pushing them around. That was a party political broadcast. I know.

0:07:500:07:54

On behalf of the Slightly-Dodgy-But-Quite-Nice Party.

0:07:540:07:57

A bit of embezzlement just shows gumption. Embezzlement?!

0:07:570:08:00

When I used to work at an employment office,

0:08:020:08:04

some people didn't really think it through.

0:08:040:08:06

You'd get painters and decorators,

0:08:060:08:07

in their overalls, covered in wet paint.

0:08:070:08:09

I know, exactly. "I've not had a job for six weeks."

0:08:090:08:11

The Tories are trying to out-Thatcher Thatcher

0:08:130:08:15

but David Cameron obviously thought,

0:08:150:08:17

"Oh, we're going to be called the nasty party again."

0:08:170:08:19

So he slipped in this thing about social workers

0:08:190:08:21

and how great social workers were.

0:08:210:08:23

He got the whole Tory conference applauding.

0:08:230:08:25

He said, "Can we have a round of applause

0:08:250:08:27

"for those hard-working people, the social workers?"

0:08:270:08:29

A lot of people going, "Who are they?" Exactly.

0:08:290:08:33

"Social workers?

0:08:330:08:34

"Those are the wonderful people who organise parties?" Yes.

0:08:340:08:38

As has become traditional during conference season,

0:08:390:08:42

the press were obsessed with what Theresa May was wearing.

0:08:420:08:45

These were her shoes.

0:08:450:08:47

Don't you get fed up with people...?

0:08:470:08:49

Very nicely dressed, by the way, Cathy.

0:08:490:08:51

Do you get upset with people going on about what women are wearing?

0:08:510:08:54

Yeah, all the time, but can I just point out, those shoes,

0:08:540:08:57

they were quite reasonable.

0:08:570:08:58

I think they were from somewhere quite cheap,

0:08:580:09:00

but the suit is Vivienne Westwood and cost a bomb,

0:09:000:09:03

and was worn by that model, the really beautiful one.

0:09:030:09:07

The beautiful model?

0:09:070:09:09

The one who doesn't have to appear with a sack over her head?

0:09:090:09:12

You'd never get away with that on Channel 4 News.

0:09:120:09:15

"Model, you know, it was that one, I can't remember her name.

0:09:150:09:18

"Very skinny. Anyway, she did something..."

0:09:180:09:20

I've taken the night off, though. Oh, you're off. Sorry.

0:09:200:09:22

So it's OK. Stupid of me.

0:09:220:09:24

Those shoes apparently, according to the Sun, cost £215.

0:09:240:09:28

So they weren't the cheap ones.

0:09:280:09:30

But the suit's really expensive.

0:09:300:09:32

How much?

0:09:320:09:33

Hundreds? How in touch are you?

0:09:330:09:36

I'm not in touch with Vivienne Westwood.

0:09:370:09:40

Though I did get married in Vivienne Westwood, so... Did you?

0:09:400:09:42

What, inside her?

0:09:420:09:44

Karren Brady, off of The Apprentice, was at the Tory Party conference.

0:09:450:09:49

Erm, what was she wearing? I mean, what was she there for? Oh, yeah.

0:09:490:09:53

LAUGHTER

0:09:530:09:54

I can tell you what she was wearing.

0:09:540:09:56

OK, you can say. It was one of those body-whatsit illusion dresses

0:09:560:09:59

that makes you look half the size you are.

0:09:590:10:01

Yes, a bodycon dress. Is that it? Yeah. Yes. I've never heard of that.

0:10:010:10:05

Is it good? Really good. Yeah. Try one next time.

0:10:050:10:07

I will, yeah.

0:10:070:10:09

Not that I'm saying you need to. No. Not saying I want to.

0:10:090:10:12

But I will.

0:10:120:10:13

We can have a look at Karren Brady's bodycon dress.

0:10:150:10:19

If you believed the bodycon there,

0:10:190:10:21

you'd just call an ambulance, wouldn't you? Yes.

0:10:210:10:24

Brady was there to introduce George Osborne,

0:10:250:10:28

do you know how she did that?

0:10:280:10:29

George Osborne.

0:10:290:10:31

Bill Clinton did Tony Blair once. Really?

0:10:330:10:35

I mean, introduced him.

0:10:350:10:38

Get your wife to do it now. That's the other thing at the conference.

0:10:380:10:40

I think after, after Justine's performance in the Ed Miliband show,

0:10:400:10:45

no wife is going to do it again, are they? Anyone see that?

0:10:450:10:48

She was told to kiss him, though. Oh, and she has to do it?!

0:10:480:10:51

Not even prostitutes have to kiss!

0:10:510:10:53

APPLAUSE

0:10:560:11:00

And there was also a spectre at the feast at the Tory conference.

0:11:000:11:03

Do you know who that was?

0:11:030:11:04

Ah, Nigel Farage.

0:11:040:11:05

Yes. I suppose the ghost of Margaret Thatcher was probably there.

0:11:050:11:09

Because she was invoked, wasn't she?

0:11:090:11:10

Was she? They did a seance?

0:11:100:11:12

Anyway, he turned up, didn't he?

0:11:140:11:16

Yes, he turned up in Manchester to address a lunatic fringe -

0:11:160:11:19

sorry, Freudian slip - a fringe meeting. Um, here he is arriving.

0:11:190:11:23

Do you expect a warm welcome at the Tory conference?

0:11:230:11:25

No.

0:11:250:11:26

Um, that's the spirit, Nige. Shall we, er,

0:11:270:11:30

have a look at a picture of Farage

0:11:300:11:32

on the front page of The Times this week?

0:11:320:11:34

Oh, yeah.

0:11:340:11:35

It's Hitler combined with a one-sided Fu Manchu. So...

0:11:390:11:43

it shows he's multicultural.

0:11:430:11:46

Meanwhile, David Cameron gave an interview to The Sun on Monday

0:11:460:11:49

this week. He said that he can do the dance to Gangnam Style.

0:11:490:11:53

Urgh!

0:11:530:11:54

Erm, a surprising number of people can do that, can't they, Cathy?

0:11:540:11:57

Oh, God.

0:11:570:11:58

# Gangnam style What about C4 style?

0:11:580:11:59

# Gangnam style, op, op

0:12:010:12:03

# C4 style Whop, whop, whop, whop, whop

0:12:030:12:07

# Gangnam style C4 style

0:12:080:12:10

# Op, op, op, op O pan Gangnam style

0:12:100:12:13

# Waaay, sexy newsroom... #

0:12:130:12:16

APPLAUSE Oh, God!

0:12:180:12:22

Could we ask the question why?

0:12:240:12:27

It was... It was showing that a woman can dance in high heels

0:12:280:12:32

and not be inhibited. Exactly. DANNY: Yeah. And that was news?!

0:12:320:12:35

But at least I wasn't twerking. No, you weren't twerking.

0:12:350:12:38

It could've been much worse.

0:12:380:12:40

Oh, hang on, that's your editor on the phone...

0:12:400:12:42

This is the Tory Party conference held in Manchester.

0:12:430:12:46

An eye-catching policy announced this week is that people

0:12:460:12:48

claiming unemployment benefit will be made to pick up litter.

0:12:480:12:51

This could put the people

0:12:510:12:53

who are currently paid to pick up litter out of a job

0:12:530:12:56

but the good news is, they will then be forced to do it for free.

0:12:560:12:59

George Osborne revealed during the conference:

0:12:590:13:02

God, even THEY hate him!

0:13:050:13:07

Ian and Cathy, take a look at this.

0:13:080:13:11

It's Ed Miliband trying not to listen to an Ed Balls speech?

0:13:110:13:14

Oh, look, there's someone spying on him from The Mail.

0:13:140:13:17

And that's Karl Marx's grave.

0:13:170:13:20

This is the Labour conference, which was equally thrilling.

0:13:200:13:23

Stirred the Tories up. It did. They were very worried about it.

0:13:230:13:26

And they had Damian McBride's book, which was very entertaining.

0:13:260:13:29

I'm sure you all read it. Apparently Blair and Brown hated each other.

0:13:290:13:32

Really(?)

0:13:340:13:35

Yeah, no, it was one of those shock horror books that we all got

0:13:370:13:40

very over-excited about.

0:13:400:13:42

But, unfortunately for Miliband, he was one of the gang.

0:13:420:13:45

So it was him and Balls and McBride

0:13:450:13:48

who were all working for Gordon Brown,

0:13:480:13:50

who doesn't come out well.

0:13:500:13:52

Yes, this was Damian McBride was hoping to upstage the conference.

0:13:520:13:55

Did you see him being introduced on Newsnight?

0:13:550:13:58

Damian McBride,

0:13:580:13:59

McPoison as he's known to his many enemies,

0:13:590:14:03

or McPrick-Face -

0:14:030:14:04

as he was referred to in a recent cache of Downing Street e-mails.

0:14:040:14:08

He's so used to being called McPrick-Face.

0:14:120:14:15

He also caused a fight, didn't he?

0:14:160:14:18

Um, because he was doing an interview.

0:14:180:14:20

Yes, during the Labour conference in Brighton,

0:14:200:14:22

an interview with Damian McBride didn't go entirely to plan.

0:14:220:14:25

I mean, I think if...

0:14:250:14:27

DOG GROWLS

0:14:270:14:30

..I've said worse things about myself in the book...

0:14:300:14:32

DOG GROWLS

0:14:320:14:34

INTERVIEW BLURRED BY BARKS AND GROWLS

0:14:340:14:36

APPLAUSE

0:14:430:14:46

That's Iain Dale, who's... Who is the publisher of the book!

0:14:460:14:51

So what he was... That man's a long-term protester

0:14:510:14:55

who likes to get himself into news stories. The publisher of this book,

0:14:550:14:58

who hadn't been invited to the conference, was trying

0:14:580:15:01

to get his book into a news story, started pushing the other man out.

0:15:010:15:05

They were both shamelessly trying to hijack the conference,

0:15:050:15:08

so they ended up beating each other up.

0:15:080:15:10

The dog seemed to be biting the arse of its owner, though.

0:15:110:15:13

Dogs are extremely fickle.

0:15:150:15:16

He could see where the power shift was going.

0:15:160:15:18

We're going to have a look at it again.

0:15:190:15:22

It's amazing what the dog is doing to its owner.

0:15:220:15:24

"Why? Why do you make me wear these placards?!"

0:15:340:15:37

What's been the other big story about Miliband this week?

0:15:380:15:42

Well, this upstaged the Tory conference. Yes.

0:15:420:15:45

The Daily Mail managed to not merely shoot its own foot off

0:15:450:15:48

but sort of blow it off with a mortar.

0:15:480:15:51

They had a go at Miliband's father.

0:15:510:15:54

They ran a piece saying, "This is the man who hated Britain."

0:15:540:15:58

On the evidence of one entry in a diary when he was 16,

0:15:580:16:02

when he'd just arrived as a refugee in this country.

0:16:020:16:04

Before he fought for the country in the Second World War. Yeah.

0:16:040:16:08

So it was the most pathetic piece.

0:16:080:16:11

Basically, Miliband, the Daily Mail has decided, is a Communist

0:16:110:16:15

because he wants to freeze electricity prices

0:16:150:16:18

and he's Mugabe

0:16:180:16:21

because he wants developers to use the land that they have to build on.

0:16:210:16:26

Now, the first person to suggest

0:16:260:16:28

that developers actually build houses on the land they own

0:16:280:16:31

was Boris Johnson, who's a well-known Communist.

0:16:310:16:35

The first name's the clue. It's a double-bluff.

0:16:350:16:38

He's obviously a Russian agent. It's a double bluff!

0:16:380:16:41

Called himself Boris, so he can't be Russian, but he is!

0:16:410:16:43

The Daily Mail accused the father of being a committed Marxist.

0:16:450:16:48

But what's the point of being an uncommitted Marxist?

0:16:480:16:51

Even if we suppose and make the leap of faith that,

0:16:510:16:54

you know, his old man did hate Britain -

0:16:540:16:57

my dad hated David Bowie, I think Hunky Dory's a masterpiece -

0:16:570:17:00

it doesn't work like that.

0:17:000:17:02

Apparently they've played the national anthem outside the grave

0:17:020:17:05

and the corpse hasn't stood up and saluted

0:17:050:17:07

so therefore, you know, that's all the proof they need.

0:17:070:17:10

What I think will be embarrassing, the editor of the Mail,

0:17:100:17:12

the Mail is owned by the Rothermere family. Yeah.

0:17:120:17:14

And once you start saying, you know, "What did your dad do?"

0:17:140:17:18

The current Lord Rothermere's father loved Britain so much,

0:17:180:17:21

he went to live in France as a tax exile.

0:17:210:17:23

Erm, he then passed on that non-dom status to his son, who doesn't

0:17:230:17:27

actually pay the normal amount of tax, despite owning a newspaper

0:17:270:17:31

that's owned through various companies in Bermuda.

0:17:310:17:34

Erm, so, once you start doing, "I'm looking at your family,"

0:17:340:17:37

it gets embarrassing. And I think the Rothermere family,

0:17:370:17:40

if you want to go further back, we get to the great-grandfather who,

0:17:400:17:43

let's join in together, ran the headline -

0:17:430:17:46

"Hurrah for the Blackshirts".

0:17:460:17:49

But the Daily Mail went on to publish

0:17:490:17:51

a full-page apology for that, didn't they?

0:17:510:17:53

What? For the Blackshirts? Yeah. Yeah.

0:17:530:17:55

No, they didn't.

0:17:550:17:57

Once you start throwing this stuff around, it gets embarrassing.

0:17:580:18:01

I think, you know, they will find that their editor

0:18:010:18:04

is now a major embarrassment. Yeah, gone toxic.

0:18:040:18:06

The figures they kept saying when he was on Newsnight,

0:18:060:18:09

the fella they actually did put on Newsnight to be the fall guy,

0:18:090:18:12

he said, "Oh, well, if you're going to go back 80 years,"

0:18:120:18:15

as opposed to the 75 years

0:18:150:18:17

you're going back for Ed Miliband... When he was 17.

0:18:170:18:19

There's a 75-year cut-off point, that's how journalism works.

0:18:190:18:22

I mean, I thought

0:18:220:18:24

it was quite funny that Dacre's nickname at the Mail is Mugabe.

0:18:240:18:28

He's very old, he won't retire and he hates the opposition.

0:18:280:18:31

The ancestor, the first Viscount Rothermere,

0:18:330:18:35

of the current owner of the Daily Mail, do you know what

0:18:350:18:38

he had to say about Britain's enemies, the Nazis, in 1933?

0:18:380:18:42

Open the borders.

0:18:420:18:44

He said:

0:18:450:18:46

LAUGHTER AND GROANING

0:19:050:19:07

Yes, so, ancestor bashing...

0:19:070:19:10

And it's also, apart from all the other things,

0:19:100:19:12

Ralph Miliband's books, I read today, have had a huge increase in sales.

0:19:120:19:17

Parliamentary Socialism 1961, which I'm sure you've all read,

0:19:170:19:22

today sold two copies.

0:19:220:19:24

Which just makes the Mail look ridiculous.

0:19:270:19:29

And who did Labour send in to do battle with the mail on Newsnight?

0:19:310:19:36

Alastair Campbell. Yes.

0:19:360:19:38

Which I thought was a bit unfortunate.

0:19:380:19:40

I don't want to be unpopular here,

0:19:400:19:42

but if you're sending someone in to talk about making up headlines,

0:19:420:19:45

poisoning, briefing against people,

0:19:450:19:49

making up and exaggerating stories in dossiers,

0:19:490:19:51

Alastair - not your man.

0:19:510:19:54

The thing about Alastair Campbell is,

0:19:540:19:56

he knows that he gets angry in interviews, and I remember him

0:19:560:19:59

once saying that when he was doing a Select Committee appearance,

0:19:590:20:02

the only way he could stop himself getting too angry

0:20:020:20:04

was by holding a pin in his hand

0:20:040:20:06

and every time he felt himself getting a bit angry,

0:20:060:20:08

he would prick himself with this pin,

0:20:080:20:10

so I think he just didn't have the pin with him on Newsnight.

0:20:100:20:13

Or do you think it had gone right through his palm

0:20:130:20:16

and out the other side? I think that would just make me angrier.

0:20:160:20:19

Not only am I annoyed with this person, I've really hurt my hand.

0:20:190:20:22

What was the subsequent development in this story?

0:20:240:20:27

They sent a journalist or two journalists along

0:20:270:20:31

to Miliband's uncle's memorial service to get quotes off people.

0:20:310:20:35

Guy's Hospital. Guy's Hospital. "Did you know the deceased?

0:20:350:20:39

"(What did you think about Ed Miliband's dad?)" I know!

0:20:390:20:42

Two rogue journalists working on their own initiative, a couple

0:20:420:20:45

of bad apples, making the whole thing, the whole paper look bad.

0:20:450:20:48

Not like the one who put up a photograph of his dad's gravestone,

0:20:480:20:52

which was an error of judgment.

0:20:520:20:53

Did you see how the Daily Mali, which as you all know is...

0:20:530:20:56

Daily Mali?

0:20:560:20:58

It's all about everything to do with Mali, apparently,

0:20:580:21:00

they tweeted that they wanted to make clear they had absolutely nothing

0:21:000:21:03

whatsoever to do with the Daily Mail!

0:21:030:21:06

Brilliant!

0:21:060:21:08

Yes, the editor of The Mail On Sunday has apologised:

0:21:080:21:10

Describing what they did as:

0:21:120:21:14

It's important to note that he apologised on behalf

0:21:210:21:23

of The Mail On Sunday.

0:21:230:21:25

The editor of The Mail On Sunday is a man called Geordie Greig, who is

0:21:250:21:28

quite keen to get Paul Dacre's job.

0:21:280:21:30

Um, and has somewhat increased his chances this week.

0:21:300:21:33

Ed Miliband, of course, used his conference speech to position

0:21:330:21:36

himself further to the left of politics, people say, but

0:21:360:21:39

did you see how he appears to be growing his own Michael Goves?

0:21:390:21:43

You can see sort of...

0:21:440:21:47

It's like a Gove farm.

0:21:470:21:49

On the right, that's a sort of young beginner Gove and then slightly

0:21:490:21:53

more mature further to the left.

0:21:530:21:55

And then the one on the left of the picture, that's nearly finished.

0:21:550:21:57

DANNY: Actually looks like the world's dullest boy band, don't it?

0:22:000:22:04

No Direction!

0:22:040:22:06

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:22:060:22:10

And how did the old, old Labour leader Neil Kinnock

0:22:140:22:18

make the news this week?

0:22:180:22:20

Did he fall into the sea again? That was a big hit for him in his day.

0:22:200:22:24

I don't know, what did he do?

0:22:240:22:25

He was moved from his seat at a football match

0:22:250:22:27

for making too much noise.

0:22:270:22:29

He was watching Cardiff beat Fulham,

0:22:290:22:31

but for some reason, was sitting at the Fulham end

0:22:310:22:34

when he started celebrating a goal

0:22:340:22:36

and I think we can imagine how that will have felt

0:22:360:22:40

to the surrounding Fulham fans.

0:22:400:22:42

First away match that they'd won in the top division since 1963.

0:22:420:22:46

'61. '61? 1961 was the last time...

0:22:460:22:48

Ian, stay with us,

0:22:480:22:50

the last time Cardiff won an away game was 1961.

0:22:500:22:53

Did you predict this on your show?

0:22:530:22:55

Thank you very much, of course we did.

0:22:550:22:57

We have two toasters who predict results.

0:22:570:22:59

Which I think is the way forward for getting the electorate

0:22:590:23:02

into voting booths. You've scrapped pundits and you have toasters.

0:23:020:23:05

I think if they did this in voting booths, everyone would have more fun.

0:23:050:23:08

You go in, there's a series of toasters, you put bread in them.

0:23:080:23:11

65p a slice. You set them down at the same time and you sit there.

0:23:110:23:14

You might find yourself voting BNP,

0:23:140:23:15

but that, that is the gamble you take.

0:23:150:23:19

That's too big a gamble! That's too big a gamble.

0:23:190:23:22

The other party conferences have also been taking place.

0:23:220:23:25

Of course, it wouldn't be right not to show the traditional clip

0:23:250:23:28

of what passes for a Lib Dem joke.

0:23:280:23:30

Now, you know how they always tell you to start your speech with a joke,

0:23:300:23:33

and I spent some time trying to think of a tax-based joke,

0:23:330:23:37

and I'm afraid I didn't manage to come up with one.

0:23:370:23:39

The best thing I can do is to say how astonished I am

0:23:390:23:42

that we almost got through Liberal Democrats spending an hour and three quarters talking about tax

0:23:420:23:46

without anyone mentioning land value taxation.

0:23:460:23:49

CATHY LAUGHS

0:23:510:23:52

That's unfair!

0:23:520:23:53

They're picked on the one person in the audience that wasn't laughing.

0:23:530:23:57

And finally, would anyone like to see the chat-up technique

0:23:570:24:02

of Danny "fancy a brandy" Alexander? Oh, yeah.

0:24:020:24:05

This conference has been so busy, so many things to do.

0:24:050:24:08

So I haven't been up, haven't been up late...relaxing in the bar.

0:24:080:24:13

So, that's not a problem. That'll come on Wednesday, maybe?

0:24:130:24:17

Maybe tonight. Maybe tonight? Good.

0:24:170:24:19

How about you? Um...

0:24:190:24:20

LAUGHTER

0:24:240:24:25

Whenever I see him, I think of the Cairngorms National Park

0:24:270:24:30

because he was Cairngorms National Park press officer, wasn't he?

0:24:300:24:33

And that's how he'll always remain for me.

0:24:330:24:36

Who was he talking to there? It wasn't you? No!

0:24:360:24:40

That's actionable!

0:24:400:24:42

CATHY: It is really, isn't it?

0:24:420:24:43

He's talking to a correspondent, asking them for a brandy.

0:24:430:24:46

Were you there? I laugh it off, but inside, that hurt.

0:24:460:24:49

I didn't know he was the press officer for the Cairngorms National Park.

0:24:490:24:53

I hope I've got that right. Check your facts.

0:24:530:24:55

"This is Channel 4. Yeah, Cairngorms...

0:24:550:24:58

"Check your facts. Probably...

0:24:580:25:00

"I think he's shagging that model who's the one I can't..."

0:25:000:25:04

"That's all we've got from Channel 4 News tonight.

0:25:040:25:07

"Might be true, might be not."

0:25:070:25:08

Yes, this is the Labour Party Conference

0:25:090:25:12

and the Daily Mail's character assassination of Marxist historian

0:25:120:25:15

Ralph Miliband, who they described as:

0:25:150:25:17

For legal reasons, we can't make any derogatory comments about

0:25:190:25:22

Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre, but apparently his dad's an arsehole.

0:25:220:25:26

Sorry, sorry, sorry, WAS an arsehole!

0:25:260:25:28

After it was revealed

0:25:300:25:31

that The Mail On Sunday had sent an undercover reporter

0:25:310:25:34

to his late uncle's memorial event,

0:25:340:25:35

they apologised to Ed Miliband for the gross invasion of his privacy,

0:25:350:25:39

in a letter they slipped under his bathroom door

0:25:390:25:41

while he was on the loo.

0:25:410:25:43

Education Secretary Michael Gove is one of the few people

0:25:430:25:46

to defend the Daily Mail,

0:25:460:25:47

saying that political commentators should always have:

0:25:470:25:50

I couldn't agree more, you four-eyed reptilian toss pot.

0:25:520:25:55

APPLAUSE

0:25:570:25:59

And now it's time to play The Wheel Of News Or Not News.

0:25:590:26:03

I'll spin the wheel and you have to identify the story and tell me

0:26:030:26:08

if it's news or not news.

0:26:080:26:10

Cathy, all you have to think is, would we do this on Channel 4 News?

0:26:100:26:14

And if the answer's yes, you'll know it could be either.

0:26:140:26:17

So, let's spin the wheel.

0:26:170:26:21

DRUM ROLL

0:26:210:26:23

BUZZER

0:26:250:26:26

Not news. It's, um... Well, what's the story?

0:26:260:26:29

There isn't a story - it's not news.

0:26:290:26:31

It's a policeman giving Iain Duncan Smith a head massage.

0:26:340:26:38

Clairvoyant police?

0:26:390:26:41

It IS clairvoyant police.

0:26:410:26:43

And it's...

0:26:430:26:44

The police are going to be able to predict crimes before they happen.

0:26:450:26:49

Ah! They'll be like Tom Cruise in Minority Report, only taller.

0:26:490:26:53

And do you have any idea how they're going to do this? No. No.

0:26:530:26:56

You think I'm making it up? No, not making it up.

0:26:560:26:59

I think you're reading out something that somebody else has made up.

0:26:590:27:02

Well, according to pre-crime Commander Simon Letchford...

0:27:020:27:06

Pre-crime? Pre-crime.

0:27:060:27:09

Which has already identified the county of Midsomer.

0:27:140:27:16

Sounds absolutely ridiculous.

0:27:180:27:20

Someone has just...

0:27:200:27:21

They put on the map where someone has just stolen something.

0:27:210:27:24

By definition, there is now less to steal there,

0:27:240:27:28

and so the chances of a burglary there MUST be reduced.

0:27:280:27:31

It's all gone.

0:27:310:27:32

OK, that makes some sense, yes, it does.

0:27:320:27:34

No, it doesn't, it's just nonsense.

0:27:340:27:36

In other crime news, what did this man do wrong?

0:27:380:27:41

Is it the glasses or the suit?

0:27:410:27:44

I'll give you a clue. Onions.

0:27:440:27:46

Pretended to be an onion? That wouldn't get you very far.

0:27:460:27:49

It's not a crime. No. Should be.

0:27:490:27:52

The onions made him cry, so he put his glasses on.

0:27:520:27:55

That would be pretty thin for a news story - Man Cries Because Of Onion.

0:27:550:28:00

You don't know, do you? No.

0:28:000:28:02

He stole from Sainsbury's 20 times in three months

0:28:020:28:06

by fooling the self-service scanner

0:28:060:28:08

into thinking more expensive items were loose onions.

0:28:080:28:11

Did I say onion earlier

0:28:110:28:13

without having any idea what this story was about? I did, didn't I?

0:28:130:28:16

I said he pretended to be an onion. I gave you the clue "onion".

0:28:160:28:19

Oh, did you?

0:28:190:28:20

I heard it somewhere, I just wasn't listening. That's clairvoyance.

0:28:200:28:24

I thought I was better than I was.

0:28:240:28:25

They got onto him because...

0:28:260:28:28

That's the end of Crime Today.

0:28:320:28:34

This is the news of police plans to predict crimes before they happen.

0:28:340:28:38

Will it work? It already has -

0:28:380:28:40

in two years' time. Enjoy that one on Dave during the riots.

0:28:400:28:43

The technique of identifying

0:28:450:28:47

and arresting potential criminals before they commit a crime

0:28:470:28:50

is based on a method developed by the Metropolitan Police...

0:28:500:28:53

known as institutional racism.

0:28:530:28:54

APPLAUSE

0:28:570:29:00

Give it another spin.

0:29:000:29:01

DRUM ROLL

0:29:010:29:02

BUZZER

0:29:040:29:05

Yes, Bridget Jones' Diary is coming out - this is news or not news -

0:29:050:29:08

and the hero of the previous books is no longer with us.

0:29:080:29:11

It started off in a Sunday newspaper who, not coincidently,

0:29:110:29:15

had paid for the serialisation of the book.

0:29:150:29:17

So the fact that they thought it was news may be due

0:29:170:29:20

to the fact that they paid a great deal of money for it.

0:29:200:29:22

And then it appears on this programme along with a stupid

0:29:220:29:25

pre-crime report.

0:29:250:29:27

Who killed Mark Darcy? I expect you already know!

0:29:270:29:30

LAUGHTER

0:29:300:29:31

I've got an idea. If we got ourselves a gallon of petrol,

0:29:310:29:35

we could set fire to The Wheel Of News.

0:29:350:29:37

How much is a litre of petrol?

0:29:380:29:40

65p. Right, you're on.

0:29:400:29:43

Everything's 65p.

0:29:430:29:45

You're right, this is not news.

0:29:450:29:47

This is the not news that an author has got a book out,

0:29:470:29:50

but that didn't stop it being a story on the BBC 10 O'clock News.

0:29:500:29:53

We didn't cover that one,

0:29:530:29:55

but actually, there is a sort of poignant little twist to this,

0:29:550:29:58

which is that Helen Fielding,

0:29:580:30:00

her dad was tragically killed in a car crash when she was 24, and so

0:30:000:30:04

apparently that's why there is this sort of poignancy to her writing.

0:30:040:30:08

But that was 25 years ago.

0:30:080:30:10

That's quite heartless, actually.

0:30:100:30:12

Well, you know, my dad was killed 30 years ago. Well, he died, actually,

0:30:120:30:17

but is that a reason for getting a book plug out?

0:30:170:30:20

Mum died as well. I'm an orphan!

0:30:200:30:24

You know what? Three years ago,

0:30:240:30:27

three years ago yesterday, I was diagnosed with cancer,

0:30:270:30:29

and that bloke up there ain't laughed at what I said once.

0:30:290:30:33

There's nothing like mentioning cancer to get people laughing.

0:30:330:30:37

You know what? Hey!

0:30:370:30:39

Everybody, I'm here, and I lost three and a half stone.

0:30:390:30:42

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:30:420:30:43

I thought it was just your bodycon shirt.

0:30:430:30:47

But no, you're quite right.

0:30:490:30:51

On Channel 4 News, you stuck to the big news...

0:30:510:30:53

like this...

0:30:530:30:55

I saw a man with a fan in the basket of his bicycle in Westminster today.

0:30:550:30:59

That's a sign of the times. That's Channel 4 News.

0:30:590:31:02

He might as well go, "I'll tell you what,

0:31:050:31:07

"my garden is really the lawn. It's terrible. That's Channel 4 News."

0:31:070:31:11

"Getting stuff up to the attic is really tricky.

0:31:120:31:15

"That's Channel 4 News."

0:31:150:31:17

Next spin.

0:31:170:31:19

DRUM ROLL

0:31:200:31:22

BUZZER

0:31:220:31:23

RIP Mark Darcy's a fictional character. No, no.

0:31:230:31:26

I deftly nudged it back with my hand. Pilots are asleep.

0:31:260:31:29

Pilots are asleep. Next.

0:31:290:31:31

You're right, it's pilots are asleep. Next.

0:31:310:31:34

Is that news or not news? Not news. News. I think it's news.

0:31:340:31:37

It's big news. These jumbo jets fix into a beam

0:31:370:31:40

and land automatically. You don't actually need a pilot on board.

0:31:400:31:42

They sometimes land them manually just to keep their hand in.

0:31:420:31:45

Yes, but who's going to say, "Hello, this is Captain Collymore..."

0:31:450:31:48

Captain Collymore would say that.

0:31:480:31:50

So he doesn't need to fly it? He doesn't need anybody else.

0:31:500:31:53

Do we know any specific airlines where this has been a problem?

0:31:530:31:56

The ones that have pilots.

0:31:560:31:58

That rules out Ryanair...

0:31:580:32:01

No, it doesn't, because he'll sue.

0:32:010:32:04

He's very touchy, Ryanair.

0:32:040:32:07

Very touchy if you suggest no-frills has gone a bit far.

0:32:070:32:10

I went on a Ryanair plane

0:32:110:32:13

and I hadn't put my things in one of those plastic bags

0:32:130:32:15

and they said, "Would you like a plastic bag?" I said, "Yeah."

0:32:150:32:18

I put my toothpaste in and they said, "That'll be a quid."

0:32:180:32:22

Isn't that shocking? That's news!

0:32:220:32:24

They also said now you have to have correct change for the oxygen masks.

0:32:240:32:28

Oh!

0:32:280:32:30

According to The Times, both pilots

0:32:300:32:33

on a Virgin Atlantic flight from Orlando to Manchester last month

0:32:330:32:37

fell asleep at the controls of their Airbus A330.

0:32:370:32:40

In the Virgin pilots' defence,

0:32:400:32:41

they were probably taking pills to erase this image.

0:32:410:32:43

You can see why he's a virgin.

0:32:460:32:48

If I was one of the cabin crew,

0:32:490:32:50

I'd play a joke on one of the sleeping pilots.

0:32:500:32:53

First I'd light some paper under his nose, clash two dustbins

0:32:530:32:55

and throw a bucket of water over him.

0:32:550:32:58

So in his sleepiness, he'd assume he's crashed into the sea.

0:32:580:33:01

Oh, imagine the larks!

0:33:010:33:03

Get a printer, and get a really big picture of the face of Big Ben

0:33:030:33:06

and put it on the windscreen for when he wakes up.

0:33:060:33:08

And the last spin.

0:33:110:33:12

DRUM ROLL

0:33:120:33:13

BUZZER

0:33:130:33:15

Ooh! It's a fictional character. Oh, no, no, no.

0:33:150:33:18

America's gone bankrupt

0:33:180:33:19

because it's a fictional character that's been killed off.

0:33:190:33:22

And it's all closed. Republicans and Democrats can't agree on the budget.

0:33:220:33:26

And is that news or not news? DANNY: Oh, it's news.

0:33:260:33:28

The Republicans can't agree the fact that they lost. Yeah.

0:33:280:33:31

They lost the election and they lost this vote repeatedly

0:33:310:33:34

but the Tea Party, which is a sort of UKIP with guns, um...

0:33:340:33:38

..have decided that basically, they don't care.

0:33:420:33:45

Um, America, home of democracy,

0:33:450:33:46

vote goes the wrong way, you refuse to accept it.

0:33:460:33:49

So they've basically said, "No, we're not going to agree."

0:33:490:33:52

So they would literally rather America close down

0:33:520:33:55

than a very, very minor and not very radical change

0:33:550:33:57

is made to public health care.

0:33:570:33:59

There are 800,000 federal workers

0:33:590:34:01

who've been forced to take unpaid leave.

0:34:010:34:03

According to the Guardian:

0:34:030:34:04

An idea they got from BT.

0:34:080:34:10

APPLAUSE

0:34:120:34:15

And the international consequences?

0:34:150:34:17

It could send the rest of the world's economy plunging over a cliff again.

0:34:170:34:21

They're almost too severe to comprehend, though this man's story

0:34:210:34:24

will give you some idea of the torment this is causing.

0:34:240:34:26

Already actually sent a text to my mate at home, saying,

0:34:260:34:29

"Just about to go to the Statue of Liberty for my birthday,"

0:34:290:34:32

and obviously now, I need to text him to say I'm not going,

0:34:320:34:35

so yeah, bit of a disappointment.

0:34:350:34:37

How much is a text?

0:34:370:34:39

From America? A pint of text.

0:34:390:34:41

65p. I think it's at least 65p.

0:34:410:34:43

This is the news that America has closed until further notice.

0:34:450:34:49

If your enquiry is urgent, please contact Canada.

0:34:490:34:52

Time now for the Odd One Out round. One between you this week.

0:34:530:34:56

Your four are...

0:34:560:34:57

SpongeBob SquarePants, Sally Bercow,

0:34:570:35:01

Walter Tell and Carmen Miranda.

0:35:010:35:04

BUZZER Three!

0:35:040:35:06

CATHY: Sally Bercow - fruitcake?

0:35:060:35:08

No, she was caught. This... I'm sure I saw this on Channel 4 News.

0:35:080:35:11

This was big. She was at one of the conferences

0:35:110:35:14

balancing some item of fruit on her head in a bar.

0:35:140:35:17

Yes, that's correct.

0:35:170:35:19

Walter Tell, son of William, balanced an apple on his head

0:35:190:35:22

and had it shot off by his father.

0:35:220:35:24

Carmen Miranda had a whole bowl of fruit on her head.

0:35:240:35:28

Fantastic, and sang Yes, We Have No Bananas.

0:35:280:35:31

SpongeBob SquarePants...

0:35:310:35:32

He's quite a guy.

0:35:320:35:34

Bob is the odd one out.

0:35:350:35:36

Is it because he... he's got a friend called Patrick?

0:35:360:35:40

And he's the odd one out

0:35:410:35:43

because nobody else knows anybody called Patrick.

0:35:430:35:45

Where does SpongeBob live?

0:35:450:35:47

Under the sea. In a pineapple.

0:35:470:35:48

Yes, but also, under...?

0:35:480:35:50

A pineapple. Yes!

0:35:500:35:52

APPLAUSE

0:35:520:35:54

Hello! Is there an echo? Did you say it? Is there an echo?

0:35:540:35:57

Did you say under a pineapple first?

0:35:590:36:01

There was a little echo over that side.

0:36:010:36:04

You know what? Let them have it.

0:36:040:36:06

Proper chairman, and God love you, Humph,

0:36:060:36:08

would have said by now, "I'm going to award points to both sides."

0:36:080:36:12

But I can't say it now. How spineless would I look?

0:36:120:36:15

Yes, SpongeBob SquarePants is the odd one out.

0:36:170:36:19

How would you describe his voice, Ian?

0:36:190:36:22

Er, rough, manly.

0:36:220:36:25

Touch of Lord Hailsham.

0:36:260:36:28

Well, Tom Kenny, the man behind the distinctive voice,

0:36:280:36:32

describes it as...

0:36:320:36:33

Which is also a starter at Heston Blumenthal's.

0:36:360:36:39

And, um, can you name any of Carmen Miranda's hits? Yes.

0:36:410:36:44

BOTH: # I, I, I, I like you very much. #

0:36:440:36:48

# Down among Brazilians coffee beans go by the millions

0:36:480:36:51

# And they got a lot of coffee there to sell

0:36:510:36:54

# There's an awful lot of coffee in Brazil. #

0:36:540:36:57

At last! The show's coming to life!

0:36:570:36:59

Carmen Miranda cracked America, but her English wasn't great.

0:37:000:37:04

She told one magazine:

0:37:040:37:05

She went on to teach Nancy Dell'Olio how to speak English.

0:37:100:37:14

Yes, they've all had fruit on their heads

0:37:140:37:16

apart from SpongeBob SquarePants,

0:37:160:37:18

who lives under a pineapple in a fun town under the sea.

0:37:180:37:22

Sort of like Blackpool will be once all the fracking starts.

0:37:220:37:26

According to the Daily Mail,

0:37:260:37:27

late one night at the Labour Party Conference, Sally Bercow...

0:37:270:37:31

..tried to balance a pineapple on her head.

0:37:320:37:35

"I really regret this embarrassing incident

0:37:350:37:37

"and I'm just grateful I wasn't caught on camera looking so stupid,"

0:37:370:37:40

said the pineapple.

0:37:400:37:42

Time now for the Missing Words round,

0:37:420:37:44

which this week features as its guest publication...

0:37:440:37:47

Fantastic. Perfect if you fancy a short circuit round the lake.

0:37:480:37:53

GROANING

0:37:530:37:55

As electric boat puns, that's fairly high up.

0:37:550:37:57

I thought that was pretty good.

0:37:570:37:59

And we start with...

0:37:590:38:01

One of the rounds on Bake Off.

0:38:040:38:06

Do you think you could just add boiling water and he'll come back?

0:38:120:38:15

The process reduces the body to powder, and has been

0:38:150:38:18

pioneered by a company called:

0:38:180:38:19

Whose slogan proudly states,

0:38:210:38:23

"We're the people who put the gran into granules."

0:38:230:38:26

Next:

0:38:280:38:29

CATHY: Dancing Gangnam Style.

0:38:320:38:34

Paul Hollywood.

0:38:340:38:36

How would Paul Hollywood give people wobbly bottoms?

0:38:360:38:39

Out of just sort of quivering with desire?

0:38:390:38:43

The answer is simply!

0:38:430:38:44

According to the Express...

0:38:470:38:50

And I Love My Country has topped a list of shows

0:38:530:38:56

that make you want to drink more.

0:38:560:38:58

Next:

0:38:580:38:59

Enchanted with electric boat.

0:39:030:39:06

It is an electric boat. Oh, is it?

0:39:060:39:09

MC Arse Admiral. I quite like that.

0:39:090:39:11

Round here I'm known as the Arse Admiral.

0:39:110:39:13

Because of what I can navigate.

0:39:130:39:16

No, the answer is:

0:39:160:39:17

There was a real buzz when that happened,

0:39:230:39:25

but mainly because he'd wired up his boat incorrectly. Next:

0:39:250:39:28

Pulls plug on political career as he admits that he's going to spend more

0:39:310:39:34

time with his 16-year-old friends.

0:39:340:39:36

Spend more time in jail!

0:39:380:39:39

CATHY: On attempt to topple the government.

0:39:390:39:41

Yes, quite right, news. News. Let's get back to news.

0:39:410:39:44

You're absolutely right. It is:

0:39:440:39:46

As his political career draws to a close,

0:39:500:39:52

the one thing Berlusconi is desperately hoping for is immunity.

0:39:520:39:55

Not just from prosecution,

0:39:550:39:56

but also from every known sexually transmitted disease.

0:39:560:39:59

And finally:

0:40:000:40:01

DANNY: Eating yellow snow?

0:40:040:40:06

No.

0:40:080:40:09

GROANING

0:40:130:40:14

This, erm... Is that a big problem in Iceland? Well, I imagine...

0:40:140:40:17

There's not many of them there.

0:40:170:40:19

I imagine it's a smaller gene pool than in other countries.

0:40:190:40:22

It is dark a lot of the time, too.

0:40:220:40:24

This is an app which tells you if your date is a relative.

0:40:250:40:28

All you have to do is just press a button and Bob's your uncle.

0:40:280:40:31

So...don't have sex with him!

0:40:310:40:34

APPLAUSE

0:40:340:40:37

So, the final scores are:

0:40:370:40:39

Paul and Danny have six points

0:40:390:40:41

but Ian and Cathy have seven.

0:40:410:40:43

Yeah! Yeah!

0:40:430:40:45

APPLAUSE

0:40:450:40:47

And I leave you with news that in a bid to combat accusations of ageism,

0:40:500:40:55

the BBC re-employ Percy Thrower on Gardeners' World.

0:40:550:40:58

At the studios of Sky TV,

0:41:010:41:02

as the set is constructed for his new Politics Show, Adam Boulton

0:41:020:41:06

is about to regret naming the programme Talk It Through.

0:41:060:41:09

And...

0:41:150:41:17

And following the split in the Church of England over

0:41:170:41:20

same-sex marriage, the Synod meets

0:41:200:41:22

to discuss an even more controversial proposal.

0:41:220:41:25

Good night.

0:41:280:41:30

APPLAUSE

0:41:300:41:32

Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:41:560:41:59

Download Subtitles

SRT

ASS