Episode 7 Have I Got a Bit More News for You


Episode 7

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CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

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This programme contains some strong language

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Good evening. Welcome to Have I Got News For You.

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I'm Jo Brand.

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In the news this week,

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in Moscow on his drive-past at an anti-gay parade,

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Vladimir Putin wears a dangerously fetching cologne.

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LAUGHTER

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At a local laundry, Vince Cable suspects that staff

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may not be taking sufficient care of his underpants.

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LAUGHTER

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And as England's training for the World Cup begins,

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Roy Hodgson denies he's petrified of losing key players through injury.

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LAUGHTER

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On Ian's team tonight is a Tory MP who's supported

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the Conservative Party since the age of five.

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Indeed, one of the proudest moments of his childhood

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was getting a Panini sticker of Willie Whitelaw.

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Please welcome Jacob Rees-Mogg.

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APPLAUSE

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And with Paul tonight is a Scottish comedian

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who recently did a gig in a prison.

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Still, the state of showbiz these days,

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that's just networking.

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Please welcome Kevin Bridges.

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APPLAUSE

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And we start with the bigger stories of the week.

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Paul and Kevin, take a look at this.

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Ah, yes, that's Gary Barlow a long time ago, when he was really poor,

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and this is about tax, isn't it?

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He's had to pay tax which he hadn't paid before.

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That's his accountant, by the look of it.

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True, so it was true, it was his accountant.

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Yes, it's about Gary Barlow... What's the polite way of putting it?

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-..not paying tax.

-Absolutely.

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Along with Gary Barlow, anybody else related to...?

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Other people in Take That, there were.

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-Indeed. Not all of them - Mark Owen and Howard Donald.

-Yes.

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-Jason Orange didn't.

-Oh, I'm glad,

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cos he was the one I liked.

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LAUGHTER

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Plus their manager. Any idea who Take That's manager is?

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Jacob.

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-I'm afraid I don't know the answer to that question.

-No.

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No, that's rather stumped me.

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His name's Jonathan Wild.

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Together, they put 66 million into a music investment scheme.

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Anyone know what it was called?

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-Iceberg?

-Icebreaker.

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It's Icebreaker 2, The Taxman Cometh.

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Ian, you're quite intelligent - how does the scheme work, do you know?

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It's very, very complex.

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You decide you're very rich and you don't want to pay any tax,

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and then you decide not to.

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LAUGHTER

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It was investing in young musicians, and they lost 25.2 million.

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So who knows what they were teaching the young musicians?

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How to play a Steinway piano with a sledgehammer.

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It's got to arouse some suspicion.

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I think you back bands a bit like you

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and then they don't make any money

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-and then you get to keep the profit.

-Oh, I see.

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-So Take That might be investing in somebody called Take This?

-Yeah.

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Or Don't Take This, it should be.

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Anyone know who else signed up to the tax avoidance scheme?

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Terry Venables?

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-Indeed.

-At least he's always presented himself as a bit dodgy,

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so...

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And Colin Jackson? How could he have made that kind of money...

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hurdling?

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Maybe he just invested a bit less,

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like 40 quid or something.

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He's just seen it as being at the bookies,

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-thought he would...

-Absolutely.

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That's probably sounder financial advice - 66 million?

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Just stick it on a greyhound, and if it comes in,

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you can pay your tax bill.

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If you won, it would be tax exempt,

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because gambling winnings are exempt from tax,

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so perhaps you've just designed a new tax avoidance scheme

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on Have I Got News For You. - Yes.

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I would just like to say, a very high-risk tax avoidance scheme.

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It could be a money avoidance scheme.

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The Prime Minister said that we shouldn't judge Mr Barlow

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too harshly and he shouldn't have to give back his OBE.

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-I completely agree with the Prime Minister.

-Do you?

-Yes.

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LAUGHTER

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I find that hugely surprising.

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I...I... I always completely agree with the Prime Minister.

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He always says wise and good things and I think this was

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a particularly wise and good thing for him to say.

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But Gary Barlow was actually by far the biggest investor and apparently,

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when you've managed to avoid 20 million in tax, you do get a medal.

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Oh, all right, it is his OBE,

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and David Cameron doesn't think he should give it back. He said:

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LAUGHTER

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True, especially when it comes to not paying for its care homes,

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hospitals and schools.

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Mr Barlow will have to pay all his tax, because the scheme didn't work.

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Actually, for once, the tax system is working.

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This scheme fails and the tax is all due

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and now there's going to be tax paid of tens of millions of pounds on it,

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unlike the Jimmy Carr scheme, where no tax seems to have been collected.

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So, actually, for once, the tax system has worked efficiently.

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Inadvertently.

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No! LAUGHTER

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I have to say, David Cameron went on:

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So was Jimmy Savile's.

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AUDIENCE GROANS

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The Royal Variety Show must have a pretty impressive alumni

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of tax dodgers and paedophiles by now.

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So does this show, if we're honest!

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LAUGHTER

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David Cameron in PMQs cleverly used some Take That lyrics

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when asked about Gary Barlow.

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I should really be doing Gilbert and Sullivan lyrics with you.

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-It's a bit modern for me.

-Oh, I do beg your pardon.

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If you did Greensleeves, that might be...

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OK. David Cameron actually said:

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-Do you know that song, Back For Good?

-Yes.

-No.

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Whenever I'm wrong, just tell me the song and I'll sing it.

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-Yes.

-SMATTERING OF APPLAUSE

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It continues. Thank you. A woman up the back there

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that couldn't get into Graham Norton this evening.

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LAUGHTER

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APPLAUSE

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Hardly a unique experience.

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What has David Cameron failed to do himself after more than two years?

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He hasn't paid any tax for two years? That can't be right.

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-He's the Prime Minister.

-He hasn't published his own tax returns,

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despite a promise that he would.

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According to the Independent, his official spokesman said:

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Yeah, and I'm committed to the principle

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of not eating three chunky Kit Kats in a row.

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LAUGHTER

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Don't mean it's going to happen, though, does it?

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Have a little patience.

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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-Patience, that's a...

-Card game?

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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Well, it is a card game, but it's also a Take That song as well.

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-Oh, I had no idea.

-It's a Gilbert and Sullivan opera, too!

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LAUGHTER

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Let's move to other tax issues. What's wrong with this Labour poster?

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Oh, none of the things pay VAT, or the majority of them don't.

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-That's right.

-And it's the weekly shopping of an alcoholic

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OCD sufferer on a juicing duet.

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Well, it's claiming the Government is increasing VAT

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and it's costing the average family £450 extra.

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But you'd have to spend £21,600 a year on VAT taxed goods

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for it to cost you an extra 450 quid.

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As you said, healthy items shown aren't subject to VAT,

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including peas, oil and the chocolate chip cookies.

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According to VAT rules:

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Our VAT regulations all derive from the European Union.

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So is there some sort of plot?

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Is it a Belgian chocolate scam?

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I don't want to come over all Farage-y, but, er...

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You don't buy Jaffa Cakes as well - Jaffa Cakes are not biscuits,

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they are cakes, and therefore exempt from VAT.

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-So what is it? Biscuits go soft, cakes go hard.

-Absolutely.

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My husband's a biscuit.

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Does anyone want to hear the exciting news on Cilla Black?

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-Yes!

-What's happened?

-Well, have a look.

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The TV presenter Cilla Black is to be honoured with the TV bastard...

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the TV BAFTAs in recognition of her outstanding contribution to entertainment.

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A TV bastard.

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This is the row over Gary Barlow,

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which has confirmed his status as a national treasure...

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thief.

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Since his tax avoidance was revealed,

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there have been calls for Gary Barlow to return his OBE

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to the Queen. Quite right.

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After all, she's been dutifully paying her tax

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ever since she was 67.

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According to the Telegraph, for Take That to pay off their tax bill:

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Well, I say "world tour",

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it's 14 nights at the Cayman Islands Arena.

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Some of the figures... It's, like, £4 billion goes offshore in the UK.

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Just as well we brought in the bedroom tax,

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or the country could have been in a pretty bad way.

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HE TUTS

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LAUGHTER

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-I'm obviously trying to be ironic there, I'm not...

-Of course.

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Jacob's sitting there nodding.

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Ian and Jacob, take a look at this.

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Well, these are zombies. It's the zombie Cabinet!

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JACOB: The zombie Parliament.

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The zombie Parliament - how rude of me, sorry!

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Because Parliament was probed yesterday

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and will be back on 4th June,

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-and then we will have a... IAN:

-Is this you?!

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No, that's certainly not me! The Conservatives

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and the Lib Dems have run out of things that they agree on.

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And so actually, they...they... Events are running into the sand.

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-Haven't you agreed on the fact you hate each other?

-No!

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They're delightful, charming people. LAUGHTER

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You're being silly now, Jacob.

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No, no. In a social context. Um, their...

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LAUGHTER

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Their views on public policy leave something to be desired.

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So, what happens? Do you just do nothing for the next year?

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We'll pass some legislation. There won't be a great deal.

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Parliaments pass law after law, half of them

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repeating or contradicting what they passed a few years before.

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It's better to let the law settle down

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and for people to get on with their lives without politicians interfering.

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OK. How about you don't come back for five years, any of you?

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Well, Belgium didn't have a government for 14 months or something

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and nobody really noticed.

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LAUGHTER

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I don't think we want as a country to be over-governed.

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I think we want Parliament to be there to hold the Government to account,

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but not an endless sausage machine of legislation.

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That doesn't actually do any good for the country.

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Right, well, that's a sort of campaign speech for the No Government Party!

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Even if they haven't got any ideas left or laws to make,

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what is Parliament for?

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It's to hold the Government to account and seek redress of grievance

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-for one's constituents.

-Correct. Er, would...?

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LAUGHTER

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Jacob, would you like to be held to account?

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Because we could do some holding to account now.

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For example, didn't you say

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that the Tories should merge with UKIP?

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I said we should do a deal with UKIP, yes.

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And possibly have a coupon election.

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OK. And that Nigel Farage

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should replace Nick Clegg as Deputy Prime Minister.

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Oh, I think there would be joy in heaven if that were to happen.

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LAUGHTER

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What about here on Earth?

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LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

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-Do you get on well with Mr Farage?

-Yeah, I think he's a very good egg.

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LAUGHTER

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What was the good news, though, for Nick Clegg this week?

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-He won a prize for his radio phone-in programme, didn't he?

-He did.

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He won a prize for Call Clegg. You can phone him up

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and he'll get you a minicab. It's brilliant.

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Also, didn't you make a speech at a dinner

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hosted by the Traditional Britain Group,

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who've declared on their website that:

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And less amusingly, that:

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Yes. They did that after I had been to dinner with them,

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so I couldn't know what they were going to say after I'd been to them.

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Had I known they would say these things, I would certainly not have gone to them.

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I think they are a disreputable and unpleasant organisation.

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Fair dos. Thank you.

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Um...what has the famous Liberal lefty David Cameron been doing this week?

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He's been out and about with Boris Johnson,

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-and what did they do? They...

-They rescued a lady

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who had collapsed, and held her hand until the emergency services arrived.

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Was it Boris holding her hand?

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-I wouldn't know.

-I think it was.

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Was it he who knocked her over?

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In his mad lust.

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They do say that there was:

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Although we can't vouch for Boris, I'm sorry.

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Yeah. Where else has David Cameron been?

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-Nando's. The piri piri chicken place.

-He was in Nando's.

-Ah, yes.

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Posing for selfies with the electorate. Here we go.

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KEVIN: See, imagine that guy holding your hand until an ambulance came.

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Have you been to Nando's, Ian?

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Do you know, I think I've missed out.

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-Jacob?

-I've modelled myself on Ian in this respect.

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Oh, right, OK.

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He knows how to hurt!

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-I've done a corporate for Nando's.

-Have you?

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They gave me a card for free chicken.

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I would have preferred the vegetarian option of cash,

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but they gave me it.

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That is Becky Smith.

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How did she describe the encounter with Mr Cameron?

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JACOB: She said it was a great honour and a privilege

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to meet the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom...

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and that from now on, she would always vote Conservative.

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-LAUGHTER

-No.

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She said:

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Well, he'd had the piri piri sauce, I presume.

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What did she actually say to him?

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"Can we get some service over here?"

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She said that:

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What happened to George Osborne when he tried to pull a similar stunt in Bolton?

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Was he tarred and feathered?

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He was refused a table at the Thyme Deli and Cafe.

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Owner Amanda Biggs said there just wasn't enough room

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and told the Daily Star:

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And the last thing we want to do is give

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any free publicity to the Thyme Deli and Cafe...

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-And here's the owner.

-Doesn't look that busy, does it?

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Now, going back to the business of government, if the

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politicians haven't been doing any work, what have they been doing?

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-Well, they've been scrapping.

-Who's been scrapping?

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Well, I think it's Michael Gove and David Laws, is that right?

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There was an article in The Times written by them jointly

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that they all agree on absolutely everything.

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An outbreak of most remarkable unity.

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But you laughed when you read the piece, didn't you?

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I...I... I was amused to see that this unity was breaking out.

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While, apparently, Michael Gove, David Laws

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and Nick Clegg have been scrapping and leaking on each other,

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which sounds slightly unpleasant, but do you know what it's all about?

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It's about free schools and free school meals,

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and which budget has pinched which part of the other budget.

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How much has Michael Gove taken from a fund to create new school places,

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-do you know?

-Apparently, it's 400 million.

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400 million was for new school places, and it's a question of

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-whether the money is spent by local authorities...

-But what is he using the money for?

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-For free schools.

-To pay off an 800 million deficit.

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-Well, there's...

-Now, my maths isn't very good, but...

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There's 400 million that has come from a departmental underspend.

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-Yeah.

-And there is 400 million that is coming from

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the budget for additional school places,

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so its 800 million in total, which has been funded in

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a perfectly proper way for any government to fund its operations.

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LAUGHTER

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I mean, it's not necessarily funny, and it is statistically reasonable.

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It is, the way you tell it.

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The budget went up from 400 to 1.2, didn't it? So they had to find 800.

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They had to find 800 million because free schools have been so popular.

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It's a huge success.

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The people in this country,

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if they think the education for their children isn't good enough,

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go and get together and build schools themselves.

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I was thinking of building a hospital.

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Gove is coming out fighting.

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What did he say to Shadow Education Minister Tristram Hunt

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in Parliament the other day?

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"I'll cut you."

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No, he said something about Mr Hunt's bedtime reading.

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I can't remember what, and I'm not sure it's proper for broadcast...

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-For a lady to talk about it?

-No.

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Oh, bollocks, I have to.

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Gove said:

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Oh, it does make you feel a bit queasy, doesn't it?

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One government department has been doing a bit of work.

0:18:280:18:32

How did a Home Office estimate cause a stir this week?

0:18:320:18:36

-Is it about England and the World Cup?

-It certainly is.

0:18:360:18:39

-It's to do with the licensing laws.

-Yeah.

0:18:390:18:42

-There's only late licensing until the group stages.

-That's right.

0:18:420:18:45

As soon as it goes to the knockout stage,

0:18:450:18:48

the licence... Implying that England would get any further than

0:18:480:18:51

the second round in the World Cup. Is that right?

0:18:510:18:53

It's absolutely right.

0:18:530:18:56

The Home Office estimate caused a stir

0:18:560:18:57

because in deciding whether to grant a blanket extension to

0:18:570:19:00

England pub licensing hours, the Home Office estimated

0:19:000:19:03

that England's chances of progressing from the group stage of the World Cup were:

0:19:030:19:07

The Home Office took it from a betting website.

0:19:100:19:13

-That's where they got their figure from.

-Did they?

-Yes.

0:19:130:19:16

Is that where they get all their information?

0:19:160:19:19

It didn't seem to me the most scientific approach.

0:19:190:19:21

Well, as you're sort of the posh boys' side, let's start with you.

0:19:210:19:24

-How do you rate England's chances?

-Pretty...pretty good.

0:19:240:19:28

-Shall we have a look at a picture of the friendly face that awaits the England fans in Brazil?

-Yes.

0:19:300:19:36

-Blimey.

-Is that real?

-That is real, yes.

0:19:370:19:41

But I wonder what's he doing in an art gallery?

0:19:410:19:44

So, this is the news that Parliament is shutting down early.

0:19:470:19:50

Apparently, MPs have run out of bills to debate.

0:19:500:19:54

One of the last bills to be debated

0:19:540:19:56

was an attempt by Keith Vaz to enact:

0:19:560:19:58

Too right. If there's not enough, I'm not buying it.

0:20:010:20:05

This week, the coalition is beginning to fracture.

0:20:050:20:08

According to the Daily Mail:

0:20:080:20:10

Yeah, I've been to that nightclub. It's rubbish.

0:20:140:20:16

In a joint statement, Michael Gove and David Laws

0:20:170:20:20

denied falling out over free school meals. They also said:

0:20:200:20:24

Yeah, good luck with the PE teachers!

0:20:330:20:35

Now, this, Jacob, is an iPod.

0:20:380:20:40

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:20:400:20:44

And so to round two.

0:20:460:20:48

It's a misjudged return for the Gramophone of News.

0:20:480:20:51

Er, I'm going to give you some sound clues

0:20:510:20:54

using this antique horn.

0:20:540:20:56

Fingers on buzzers, here's the first one.

0:20:560:20:58

# The sun has got his hat on... #

0:21:000:21:02

BUZZER

0:21:020:21:03

# The sun has got his hat on and he's coming out today

0:21:030:21:07

# Now we'll all be happy... #

0:21:070:21:09

How far are you going to play this tune?

0:21:090:21:11

Yeah, I think we should... I think we should stop it now.

0:21:110:21:14

-Can you stop it now?

-Here it comes!

0:21:140:21:16

RECORD SCRATCHES TO HALT

0:21:160:21:18

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:21:180:21:21

A BBC radio DJ has lost his job.

0:21:210:21:24

He hosted a show dealing in sort of vintage songs,

0:21:240:21:27

vintage tunes, and The Sun Has Got His Hat On, written by Noel Gay,

0:21:270:21:31

some time in the 1930s, I think,

0:21:310:21:33

has a sort of...the N-word in it,

0:21:330:21:36

and he didn't know this, apparently, and somebody complained.

0:21:360:21:39

And he lost his job, then the BBC said, "Oh, you can have it back,"

0:21:390:21:42

and he said, "I don't want it back."

0:21:420:21:44

They said, "You've got to!" and he said, "No, I don't want it!"

0:21:440:21:46

"Well, come in tomorrow!" "I won't be there."

0:21:460:21:48

-One person complained.

-One person complained.

-One person complained.

0:21:480:21:52

BBC Radio Devon, 10pm on a Sunday night.

0:21:520:21:54

Although Devon has only recently been connected to the phone network.

0:21:540:21:58

This guy, his name was David Lowe,

0:21:580:22:02

and what was ironic about him losing his job?

0:22:020:22:05

Didn't he play that song because he thought another song was racist

0:22:050:22:08

and he didn't play that, he played this one to replace the racist song

0:22:080:22:11

and unfortunately...along came 1932.

0:22:110:22:14

-Yeah. Do you know what the song he didn't play was?

-JACOB: Yes.

0:22:140:22:18

-It was Abdul Abulbul Amir.

-Correct. It was the 1927 version...

0:22:180:22:21

I think so that he could decide, he went, "Eeny meeny m... No."

0:22:230:22:27

Any other controversies in the West Country this week?

0:22:300:22:34

-I'd imagine so.

-In Frome.

0:22:340:22:36

Is it the fence that's been put alongside...

0:22:380:22:41

right of way and, therefore, people are completely channelled in?

0:22:410:22:45

That's right. Near your constituency, I believe.

0:22:450:22:48

-It is, but not IN my constituency.

-No.

0:22:480:22:51

People in my constituency are much behaved and more gentlemanly than that.

0:22:510:22:54

-What, even the women?

-Even the women.

0:22:540:22:57

This farmer has bought a beautiful green meadow

0:22:570:22:59

and he wants to stop people roaming off the footpath

0:22:590:23:03

with their dogs, so this is what he's done.

0:23:030:23:05

He's got no more problems with dog mess,

0:23:060:23:09

but he does now have Jewish settlers on one side of the meadow...

0:23:090:23:13

and angry Palestinians on the other.

0:23:130:23:17

This is the BBC Radio Devon DJ who was fired

0:23:170:23:20

for playing a 1932 version of The Sun Has Got His Hat On.

0:23:200:23:24

The BBC have been condemned for overreacting,

0:23:240:23:28

but I'm actually on the BBC's side.

0:23:280:23:31

Casual racism is nothing to snigger about.

0:23:310:23:34

No. No, I said... No, sn... No, I said "snigger".

0:23:360:23:39

No, it's a word. Look it up. Yep. Yep.

0:23:390:23:42

All right, I'll get my coat.

0:23:420:23:44

LAUGHTER

0:23:440:23:46

The BBC has actually been accused of double standards

0:23:460:23:50

for playing rap songs which feature the N-word.

0:23:500:23:53

The word is allowed when it is...

0:23:530:23:56

..said a BBC wanka!

0:24:020:24:04

APPLAUSE

0:24:070:24:09

OK, fingers on buzzers, teams.

0:24:100:24:13

LORRY-REVERSE BEEPING

0:24:130:24:15

BUZZER

0:24:150:24:17

The guy who invented that noise,

0:24:170:24:19

-which is the sound of a lorry reversing...

-Mm.

0:24:190:24:22

..has come out and said that he regrets his invention.

0:24:220:24:25

Do you know what the inventor's name is?

0:24:250:24:27

Is it George Reversing-Beep?

0:24:270:24:30

-Hyphenated.

-It is hyphenated, but not that. It's Chris Hanson-Abbott.

0:24:300:24:34

Now, he doesn't like his noise.

0:24:340:24:36

But isn't that the point of an alarm, though, isn't it,

0:24:360:24:39

to sort of be, you know, slightly annoying,

0:24:390:24:41

to notice it, rather than somebody going...

0:24:410:24:43

-GENTLE VOICE:

-.."Hello."

0:24:430:24:45

-Anyone got any better suggestions?

-What about the Countdown theme?

0:24:450:24:49

-KEVIN HUMS THEME

-Oh, that's a good idea.

0:24:490:24:51

As it gets closer and closer.

0:24:510:24:53

-And you need to get out the way before it goes, "Daow".

-Dzzchw.

0:24:550:24:58

-Or celebrities could do it.

-Yeah, celebrity.

0:24:590:25:02

-Humphrey Bogart saying, "Get out of the way."

-Yeah.

0:25:020:25:04

-Stephen Hawking would be good.

-Yeah.

0:25:040:25:06

MONOTONE: Get out of the way.

0:25:060:25:07

Alan Bennett.

0:25:070:25:09

-AS ALAN BENNETT:

-Oh, get out of the way.

0:25:090:25:11

-Brian Walden.

-That's going back a bit, isn't it? Brian Walden?

0:25:110:25:15

-That's the only impression I can do.

-Oh, right.

0:25:150:25:18

-AS BRIAN WALDEN:

-Hello, it's Brian Walden here. Get out of the way.

0:25:180:25:22

Um... So, can anyone do the beeping noise?

0:25:230:25:27

Is it as easy as I think it is?

0:25:270:25:29

Beep. Beep. Beep - that's it.

0:25:300:25:34

Here's a man who CAN do it.

0:25:340:25:36

HE MIMICS LORRY-REVERSE BEEP

0:25:360:25:39

-He can do the noise, but he's just struggling with the reversing.

-Yeah.

0:25:420:25:46

I like that guy.

0:25:480:25:50

Here's a rather leftfield question.

0:25:510:25:54

What do monks think of beeping?

0:25:540:25:57

-They like it.

-Who asked the monks?

0:25:570:26:00

Well, luckily, the BBC asked A monk,

0:26:000:26:03

so obviously it's not a particularly comprehensive survey.

0:26:030:26:07

They asked Father Alexander De Costa Fernandes, who said:

0:26:070:26:10

And added, "Bollocks, there goes my vow of silence."

0:26:140:26:17

Here's the next one.

0:26:190:26:21

CLOCK TICKS, ALARM RINGS

0:26:220:26:23

BELL

0:26:230:26:24

This is that we're not getting enough sleep

0:26:240:26:27

because we use artificial light and we watch too much television,

0:26:270:26:31

-and therefore we don't go to bed on time.

-That's right. Do you do that?

0:26:310:26:34

-Yes.

-Yeah.

0:26:340:26:36

Do you count candles as artificial light?

0:26:360:26:38

LAUGHTER

0:26:390:26:41

SMATTERING OF APPLAUSE

0:26:410:26:44

Do you wear one of those hats in bed, those big...

0:26:480:26:52

I can kind of see you in one of those, in a nightgown. Yes.

0:26:520:26:56

I'll consider it.

0:26:560:26:58

What's wrong with blue light before bed?

0:26:580:27:01

It does something to the melatonin

0:27:010:27:03

that means you're not ready to go to sleep

0:27:030:27:05

and puts your body clock out.

0:27:050:27:07

It makes our body clock think it's earlier than it is, so...

0:27:070:27:10

-What is it? Blue light?

-Blue light.

0:27:100:27:12

It's like light that comes off gadgets and things.

0:27:120:27:15

-Or off police cars outside your house.

-Indeed.

0:27:150:27:18

-Indeed.

-That keeps you awake. A lot of those where I live.

0:27:180:27:21

Crackhouse next door, Jacob.

0:27:210:27:22

-You've got a crackhouse next door to where you live?

-Yeah.

0:27:260:27:30

At least you haven't got to go far. Um...

0:27:300:27:33

Apparently, Dr Charles Czeisler of Harvard University says...

0:27:340:27:38

I need more than blue light to hit my sweet spot,

0:27:420:27:45

thank you, Charles.

0:27:450:27:47

Um... Meanwhile, what have Richard and Judy agreed to do to each other?

0:27:470:27:51

-Kill each other.

-JACOB: Kill each other.

0:27:510:27:53

-Kill each other.

-Kill each other.

-Yeah.

0:27:530:27:55

-They've agreed upon a suicide pact.

-That's love.

0:27:550:27:59

It's also potentially murder, but...

0:27:590:28:02

Yes, in one of the most romantic declarations of true love,

0:28:020:28:05

Richard told the Telegraph...

0:28:050:28:07

Oh, no, sorry. He went on a bit more. Um...

0:28:170:28:20

He should write Valentine's cards, shouldn't he?

0:28:230:28:25

Type of stamp. Could be very rare.

0:28:270:28:30

"Have you got a tuppenny fuck? "Yes, I've got one here."

0:28:300:28:34

Um... Does anyone know how Richard Madeley intends to kill himself?

0:28:340:28:39

-Yes. There was booze involved.

-That's right.

0:28:390:28:41

Or if Judy's still about, just the locked room and the revolver.

0:28:430:28:46

Um...

0:28:460:28:48

He wants to die in a game of Cluedo.

0:28:480:28:50

This is the research that shows

0:28:520:28:55

that a lack of sleep is bad for your health.

0:28:550:28:57

There are a number of top tips for ensuring a good night's sleep.

0:28:570:29:00

For instance...

0:29:000:29:02

Tick! Um...

0:29:050:29:07

Time now for the odd one out round. It's just one between you this week.

0:29:090:29:13

Fingers on buzzers, teams. Your four are...

0:29:130:29:16

Marcus Trescothick.

0:29:160:29:18

The Queen.

0:29:180:29:19

Chris the Rhea. And Conchita Wurst.

0:29:190:29:21

Conchita's in a studio up there somewhere, I think.

0:29:210:29:25

I waved, she waved back - it was incredibly exciting!

0:29:250:29:28

There's a lookalike as well, so I don't know if it was

0:29:280:29:32

-the lookalike or the genuine.

-Oh!

0:29:320:29:33

-I've seen that as well but I've just seen the lookalike.

-Oh, I've been fooled!

0:29:330:29:37

No, I'm just saying be vigilant.

0:29:370:29:40

JACOB: Marcus Trescothick is a very distinguished Somerset cricketer.

0:29:420:29:45

I don't really see how that relates to anything else, unfortunately.

0:29:450:29:48

Have three of them been shot down by veterinaries with rifles?

0:29:480:29:53

They practise with umbrella stands.

0:29:530:29:56

The bird escaped.

0:29:590:30:00

-JACOB: The bird escaped?

-It did escape.

0:30:000:30:02

-And they actually shot it.

-They did. They couldn't catch it.

0:30:020:30:05

JACOB: And it's been turned into sausages.

0:30:050:30:06

-Ta-da!

-Ah!

0:30:060:30:08

-Ah. "Wurst" means "sausage".

-Trescothick was known as "Banger".

0:30:080:30:11

The thing was turned into a sausage. "Wurst" is "sausage".

0:30:110:30:13

So, Her Majesty - nobody would dare call Her Majesty anything so rude -

0:30:130:30:17

is, um, not the...

0:30:170:30:19

-The odd one out.

-Yes, but I don't wish to call Her Majesty odd.

0:30:190:30:22

That seems a bit...

0:30:220:30:24

LAUGHTER DROWNS SPEECH

0:30:240:30:27

Her Majesty is not in line with the other three in this case.

0:30:270:30:31

KEVIN: What is that she's holding?

0:30:310:30:33

It looks like a sort of baseball bat shaped...

0:30:330:30:34

She looks like she could return that ball, anyway.

0:30:340:30:38

Is she being called Sausage by the Duke of Edinburgh?

0:30:380:30:40

-Is it a pet name?

-Mm!

-I think it is.

-It is.

-"Oh, Sausage!"

0:30:400:30:44

Is there any reasons why?

0:30:470:30:49

Perhaps he likes stabbing her with a fork from time to time.

0:30:490:30:52

It's a term of affection

0:30:530:30:55

based on the fact that her ancestry is German.

0:30:550:30:58

It was a sort of Wurst joke. He calls her Conchita Sausage.

0:30:580:31:02

Does she call him "Kebab"?

0:31:020:31:04

-APPLAUSE

-Might do.

0:31:070:31:11

Is it they're all called sausage

0:31:110:31:13

except one who's been turned into sausage?

0:31:130:31:15

Correct!

0:31:150:31:16

APPLAUSE

0:31:160:31:19

As you said, Chris the runaway rhea was finally found - hurrah! -

0:31:210:31:25

shot in the head - boo! -

0:31:250:31:27

turned into sausages - hurrah!

0:31:270:31:29

Has anyone ever enjoyed a rhea sausage?

0:31:310:31:35

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:31:350:31:39

-I'm only asking!

-Does it count if you're on holiday?

0:31:420:31:45

Why might this not be the last we hear of these birds we'd never heard of a month ago?

0:31:470:31:52

-There's more than one of them.

-Indeed.

0:31:520:31:55

According to the Telegraph, there are rumours of:

0:31:550:31:58

So if you want to see one of those magnificent birds,

0:32:010:32:03

just pop to the butchers in a few weeks' time.

0:32:030:32:08

I thought you were going to say people were rearing them.

0:32:080:32:11

GROANS

0:32:110:32:13

You should have your own stand-up show.

0:32:130:32:15

-But not for long.

-No.

0:32:150:32:18

Now, as far as Conchita Wurst is concerned,

0:32:190:32:22

the Eurovision-winning bearded lady of Austria

0:32:220:32:24

got her stage name from the German expression:

0:32:240:32:27

It literally means:

0:32:290:32:31

-So it doesn't make any sense in German or English?

-Not really.

0:32:340:32:39

Now, everyone has a theory on who Conchita looks like.

0:32:390:32:42

I think she looks like George Best.

0:32:420:32:45

Britain actually awarded the maximum 12 points to Conchita,

0:32:470:32:50

but when the judges' votes were taken out of the equation,

0:32:500:32:53

-the public preferred the Polish entry.

-They did.

0:32:530:32:56

A charming entry.

0:32:560:32:58

Must have been a really, really good song.

0:32:580:33:00

Let's see why it was so popular, shall we?

0:33:000:33:03

UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYS

0:33:030:33:05

LAUGHTER

0:33:050:33:07

A lot of Poles living in the country

0:33:100:33:12

-who probably voted for the Polish entry.

-Do you think so?

0:33:120:33:14

I should think there's a lot of lorry drivers an' all.

0:33:140:33:17

Has anyone heard of the sausage that's named after a comedian?

0:33:200:33:25

-No.

-The Lorne sausage. That is a square sausage,

0:33:250:33:29

thought to be named after a Glasgow music hall star, Tommy Lorne.

0:33:290:33:33

-There he is.

-KEVIN: That's him.

0:33:330:33:36

You don't need me to point him out, surely?

0:33:360:33:39

Don't suppose you know what his famous catchphrase was, do you?

0:33:390:33:43

Well, obviously I know, but I'll chuck that to the...

0:33:430:33:47

It was:

0:33:470:33:49

I've actually got that tattooed.

0:33:510:33:53

They are all affectionately known by sausage-based names,

0:33:540:33:58

apart from Chris the rhea, who's been shot and turned into sausages.

0:33:580:34:02

The Telegraph reported that:

0:34:020:34:04

Well, it had to go, as according to club rules, birds have no place on a golf course.

0:34:090:34:14

The Russians organised a petition condemning Conchita Wurst,

0:34:140:34:19

claiming her performance would:

0:34:190:34:21

I think that ship's already sailed.

0:34:260:34:28

Time now for the Missing Words Round,

0:34:320:34:34

which this week features as its guest publication:

0:34:340:34:37

Easy to spot in the newsagents

0:34:390:34:42

as all the car magazines have moved over to make way for it.

0:34:420:34:45

And we start with:

0:34:460:34:48

JACOB: It's not the Liberal Democrats, is it? No?

0:34:550:34:59

The humour of emergency services workers.

0:34:590:35:04

Described as:

0:35:040:35:06

This is from Ambulance Today,

0:35:070:35:09

being what you rather optimistically shout down the phone

0:35:090:35:12

when you need one.

0:35:120:35:15

Next:

0:35:170:35:18

Housed in a new ambulance museum in Hull.

0:35:210:35:24

No?

0:35:260:35:28

Those electric foxes get everywhere, don't they?

0:35:320:35:35

Fzzzt!

0:35:350:35:38

Does anyone know who Squiddly and Diddly are?

0:35:380:35:40

-Yeah.

-They're hens.

-WOMAN: Simon Cowell's dogs.

0:35:400:35:43

They're Simon Cowell's Yorkshire terriers.

0:35:430:35:45

You should be ashamed of yourself!

0:35:450:35:48

LAUGHTER

0:35:480:35:51

-These are...

-They are things that are embarrassing to know!

0:35:510:35:54

These are Simon Cowell's Yorkshire terriers, which are now protected by a massive fox-proof fence.

0:35:540:36:01

According to the Sun,

0:36:010:36:02

last year Diddly wee'd on the floor of a posh store in Beverly Hills.

0:36:020:36:06

When the enraged manager asked customers

0:36:060:36:08

if they'd witnessed anything, they all agreed they saw Diddly squat.

0:36:080:36:12

So he's put up a fence around...?

0:36:130:36:16

-Yes, a fox-proof fence.

-Some wimpy dogs.

0:36:160:36:19

Aren't Yorkshire terriers those really little tiny things

0:36:190:36:22

that tend to have bows in their hair?

0:36:220:36:24

They're, like, really...

0:36:240:36:26

-They should take on a fox, surely.

-You could just get a proper dog.

0:36:260:36:28

LAUGHTER

0:36:280:36:30

Yeah.

0:36:320:36:33

Next:

0:36:350:36:37

KEVIN: I thought it was an illuminated ground floor button.

0:36:390:36:42

JACOB: I saw this, it was in the Daily Mail...

0:36:430:36:46

LAUGHTER

0:36:460:36:48

It's "Beyonce's sister hit her husband"

0:36:480:36:51

in a lift in New York

0:36:510:36:52

-and that's what it is.

-Crikey, Jacob!

0:36:520:36:54

Whay!

0:36:540:36:56

APPLAUSE

0:36:560:36:59

I was going to say - "Respect!"

0:36:590:37:02

The rapper Jay Z, who is married to Beyonce,

0:37:040:37:08

was attacked by his sister-in-law, Solange, in a lift.

0:37:080:37:11

The Daily Star speculated as to what the attack was about.

0:37:110:37:15

Theories included:

0:37:150:37:16

Or Jay Z is a typical bloke and he dropped one in the lift.

0:37:230:37:29

Next:

0:37:290:37:31

I know this one too.

0:37:340:37:35

SHE GASPS

0:37:350:37:37

It was also in the Daily Mail, the fount of all knowledge.

0:37:370:37:40

She had some problem with make-up.

0:37:400:37:42

She had a great white splodge on her face.

0:37:420:37:44

It's...well, actually,

0:37:440:37:45

"Angelina has make-up malfunction on red carpet".

0:37:450:37:49

Here she is.

0:37:490:37:50

I've had the same problem, but in my case, it was cocaine.

0:37:500:37:54

Next:

0:37:560:37:57

Thank you.

0:37:590:38:01

"Give tomatoes aspirin and they won't turn to mush."

0:38:020:38:05

According to professor of plant sciences

0:38:050:38:07

at the University of Rhode Island,

0:38:070:38:09

if you want to perk up your tomatoes,

0:38:090:38:11

you should give them plenty of aspirin and water.

0:38:110:38:13

Or better still, don't let them go out on the piss in the first place.

0:38:130:38:17

Next:

0:38:190:38:20

Take her top off for 30 quid.

0:38:240:38:26

KEVIN: Won't write him an expenses receipt?

0:38:280:38:31

Won't work over here.

0:38:330:38:35

That's right, well done.

0:38:350:38:38

This is from Ambulance Today.

0:38:380:38:40

No, we don't want a Danish ambulance service.

0:38:400:38:42

After all, it takes the Danish police a whole 20-hour box set

0:38:420:38:46

just to solve one murder.

0:38:460:38:48

Next:

0:38:480:38:50

Mould!

0:38:530:38:55

Mould is normal on aged beef.

0:38:550:38:57

They were hanging beef up for 28 days, and somebody came,

0:38:570:39:00

"Oh, there's a bit of mould".

0:39:000:39:01

No, that's quite normal for beef that's been hung.

0:39:010:39:03

Absolutely correct.

0:39:030:39:04

"A mouldy carcass is normal, insists Jamie Oliver's butcher."

0:39:040:39:08

Jamie Oliver's butcher was criticised

0:39:080:39:10

after mould was found on his meat.

0:39:100:39:12

According to health experts:

0:39:120:39:13

Sorry, I just don't understand that sentence at all.

0:39:170:39:21

Um...

0:39:210:39:22

And finally:

0:39:250:39:26

KEVIN: Sitting crying in the shower.

0:39:300:39:31

No, think our selected magazine.

0:39:350:39:38

-Think Ambulance...

-Chasing one!

0:39:380:39:41

KEVIN: Trying to find the phone number?

0:39:410:39:43

LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE

0:39:430:39:46

According to Ambulance Today, Nick Clegg was:

0:39:540:39:57

They're exactly the same as ambulances

0:40:030:40:05

in the rest of the country, only they have a sign on the back saying,

0:40:050:40:08

"There's owt wrong with thee. Get the bus."

0:40:080:40:11

So, the final scores are...

0:40:130:40:17

Paul and Kevin have 6,

0:40:170:40:19

but Ian and Jacob have 7.

0:40:190:40:21

APPLAUSE

0:40:210:40:26

But before we go, there's just time for the Caption Competition.

0:40:260:40:30

Here's one:

0:40:300:40:32

"Whose idea was it to book us for Cats?"

0:40:320:40:35

And here's another:

0:40:390:40:41

"You're talking out of your arse, Mr Farage."

0:40:410:40:44

APPLAUSE

0:40:440:40:49

On which note we say thank you to our panellists,

0:40:500:40:53

Ian Hislop and Jacob Rees-Mogg,

0:40:530:40:55

Paul Merton and Kevin Bridges.

0:40:550:40:57

And I leave you with news that photographers arrive

0:40:570:41:00

at Nigel Evans' garden party a day earlier than expected.

0:41:000:41:05

Despite Radio 3's move to digital only,

0:41:090:41:13

Jacob Rees-Mogg is reluctant to abandon his analogue set.

0:41:130:41:16

And amidst reports it's possible to see across into people's bedrooms

0:41:200:41:24

in London's Shard hotel,

0:41:240:41:25

a local man is drawn to the scene...

0:41:250:41:28

Good night.

0:41:310:41:32

APPLAUSE

0:41:320:41:34

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