Episode 7 Live at the Apollo


Episode 7

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Transcript


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Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome your host for tonight,

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Jason Manford.

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Hello.

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Good evening.

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Oh, wow. Hello.

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Welcome to Live At The Apollo.

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Hello, how are ya?

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OK. God bless ya.

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So, how does this work then, you all signed up for tickets and then they told you to come along?

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That's pretty good, that's pretty good.

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Did you reserve where you sat, you wanted front row?

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No? You just turned up at, what, three o'clock or something

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and just went front row centre?

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I think I've seen you in my garden, mate.

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That is pretty eager.

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It's weird reserve seating, you've done well here.

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Reserved seating can backfire, I think, in this country.

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I think we are too reserved, we're too nice, too reserved for reserved seating.

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I get on the train quite a lot,

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there's always someone sat in my seat.

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Rather than say anything, I just end up standing near them.

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Like, looking at the seat number on my ticket.

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Then looking at them in my seat, confused.

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I can do that for 40 minutes, I'm not bothered.

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Almost like there's an internal monologue going on.

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I definitely booked a seat, but I definitely didn't book a knob-head sat in it.

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I definitely didn't check that box on the website.

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I went up to the Edinburgh Festival, a couple of years ago.

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Anyone been up to the Edinburgh Festival? It's great fun.

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I went up to the Edinburgh Festival to see a mate of mine in a show, another comic, called Jason Cook,

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who lives up near me in Manchester.

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And he's only in a little room, a little 40-seater room, and me and my brother have turned up

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and there's only two seats left.

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One of them had a reserved sticker, one of them didn't.

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So, I said to me brother, "Right, come on, we'll have to sit here.

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"You have the reserved one, because I booked the seat, so you can take the risk."

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He's a bit nervous about it, five minutes into the show, he's checking the door, you know.

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Half an hour into the show, he's starting to grow in confidence,

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you know, that sort of squatters' rights, you know what I mean?

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You're like, if anyone comes now, I will fight for this seat.

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Five minutes before the end of the show, we've both forgot

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it was ever a reserved seat in the first place,

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until the comic says, on stage, he says,

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"Ladies and gentlemen, that's the end of my show," he says,

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"before I go, I would like to dedicate tonight's performance to my dad."

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AUDIENCE: Ooh!

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Yes, strap yourselves in, this gets worse, right?

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He says, "I'd like to dedicate tonight's performance to my dad."

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He said, "He passed away six months ago,

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"and the last show he ever came to see was in this very room, so..."

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Honestly, he's proper crying and everything, it was awful.

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He says, "As a mark of respect, I like to keep the seat that he was sat in that night...

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.."reserved."

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And a hush fell over the audience,

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a real silence, you couldn't hear anything.

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Obviously, I could hear my brother's arse going,

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you know, but apart from that, apart from that...

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And then a little light came on to show everybody which seat it was.

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It was all darkness, apart from my brother just sat there like that.

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As I'm edging away like, "You lousy bastard,

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"I can't believe you sat in a dead man's seat."

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So, who is from London then? Give us a cheer. Where are you, guys?

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CHEERING Not many of you.

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Who's not from London? Where are you?

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LOUDER CHEERING

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OK, good. That's fine.

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That's fine. I was down there the other week.

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I went to see a film in town.

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And, that's expensive, when you go and see a film in town.

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You go, "Just a ticket, please." "£12."

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"No, it's just me. Just one person."

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I went to watch a film, a British film called The Kill List.

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Very violent. Very violent film, not my cup of tea at all.

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I went to see it with a mate of mine who suggested it.

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He said, "It'll be all right." We got in there, it's packed.

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I've ended up sitting in the front row.

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You know when you're too close. You feel like you're an extra in it.

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It was so violent. There was a bit where this bloke's got a house brick

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and he's walloping someone over the head.

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I can't help making noises in violent situations.

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I was going, "Oh, oh God! Agh!

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"Oh, God, stop it!" And I wasn't alone.

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There was hundreds of people doing the same thing.

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Then I looked over, and there was a bloke on the front row sat by himself,

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which is always weird,

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sat by himself just eating his Revel's not bothered.

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It's like, what has got to happen on the screen for you to be shocked?!

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"Coffee, coffee.

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There's something wrong when you're watching Saw V eating a pick-and-mix.

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Something's gone wrong there.

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I have been on tour quite a lot for the last 18 months or so.

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It's good fun. But you end up playing games in the car by yourself.

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You're doing 40-50,000 miles a year, it's boring.

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You play games like Beat the SatNav.

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I don't know if you've ever played this game.

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This is where a SatNav gives you an arrival time using GPS technology

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devised by the American military,

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and do you take that time as a fact?

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No, it's a challenge. It's a challenge.

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"The arrival time is 6.22." Oh, yes. We'll see about that.

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Every minute you shave off, you're like, "Come on!"

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The other game that's very popular is trying to get the petrol

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bang on the zeros.

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I don't know if you play this. You pop in and think,

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"I'll stick a tenner in. Just stick a tenner in."

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Difficult game. Anyone over 50 is brilliant at this game.

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They've been playing longer than the rest of us.

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My dad can be having a chat, not even looking at it going round,

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"So anyway I said to Barbara..."

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1000!

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Is he doing it by sonar? How is that possible?

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I'm still at the nervous stage, that sort of...

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£9.94.

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£9.97.

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9.98.

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Sweat pouring down me face. Heartbeat in me ears.

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Look behind the glass, the bloke's like, "You're not going to do it, mate.

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"You're not going to do it."

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"I did it somewhere else once."

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£9.99.

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HE EXHALES DEEPLY

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1020! You bastard!

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I'll have to put £11 in now.

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It is weird, isn't it?

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It's like the one bit of OCD we all share, trying to get it on the zeros.

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You spend all that time getting it on the zeros,

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then you going to the shop and spend £1.84 on crisps.

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What did I do that for? I'm taking my brother on tour with me.

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My brother's a laugh. Not the brightest, not the brightest.

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We were playing football once, he opened up a new pair of shin pads, looked dead disappointed.

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I said, "What's up with you?" He said, "I've just bought these."

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He said, "One's a large, one's a regular."

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I said, "I think that's left and right, mate,

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"I don't think they would sell 'em like that."

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His wife is a teacher and...

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primary school teacher, and he come home the other week

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and he said to me, "Have you heard what's going on at her school?"

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I said, "No." He says, "They've got this new thing, it's called two stars and a wish,

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"or sandwich punishment."

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I said, "Sandwich punishment, I don't understand what this is."

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"You can't just tell a kid off any more,

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"you've got to give him a compliment either side of the negative,

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"so he doesn't go away feeling bad about himself."

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That's true, that's a real thing,

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and you wonder why the country's on its arse.

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All these people rioting,

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"Oi, put that telly down, you little bastard!"

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"Although it is one of the top brands, so good choice."

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Anyway, I said, "I don't really understand, what do you mean?

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"Give us an example."

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I did understand, I just know he's not very good at examples, so...

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So he says, "Well, you get the kid and you go right, you,

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"you're good at colouring in, I'll give you that...

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"..but you're a little shit."

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There was a bit of a pause and he went,

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"But your mum's quite fit, so..."

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I don't think that's come down from OFSTED, do you?

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They're the things that help comics, having a funny family,

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those sort of things help comics.

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The other thing that helps is the Comedy Gods.

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You don't know about the Comedy Gods if you're not a comedian, but the Comedy Gods,

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they float around all theatres, helping us out when we get ourselves in a jam.

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Sometimes, you'll get a heckle, and the Comedy Gods help us out.

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What they do is they plant an idea, a little thing in your brain.

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It goes past that little filter - you know the filter that says,

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"Should I say this out loud to a load of strangers?" -

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then comes straight out of your mouth.

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The first time you hear it is the first time you hear it.

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I've got in trouble loads of times, I remember getting in,

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I was doing a gig in Liverpool... A GIRL SCREAMS

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Yeah, that's right.

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You don't come out of this very well, to be honest, love.

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I was doing a gig in Liverpool, and it's a great city.

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It is a great city, it's really fun,

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but early on, it's a hard place to play.

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And I was 17 when I first started stand-up,

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all fresh faced, not even shaving, and I've walked out onto the stage,

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there's only seven people in the audience.

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And one of them decided to heckle.

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I've gone onto the stage and a bloke goes, "Where's your pubic hair?"

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I crumbled, I crumbled.

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I don't know if anyone's been heckled at work, it's not nice.

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I could feel tears welling up in my eyes, on stage.

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And all of a sudden, I heard my voice.

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And the first time I heard my voice, I thought, "I know that voice.

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"Oh, shit, it's mine," that was the first thought I had.

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He went, "Where's your pubic hair?"

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And I heard myself just say, "In your wife's teeth." Right?

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Now, I don't know where it came from.

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I tell you something...

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..you're laughing more than they did.

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I've still not been paid, that was a tough night, man, a tough night.

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I remember looking out...

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I was in Dudley another time, I was stuck in Dudley one night, and I was...

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Oh, we get to all the great places.

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..and I was looking down...

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Dudley's one of my most favourite places.

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About four years ago, in Dudley, there was a front-page news, right,

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that Dudley was the UFO hotspot of the UK.

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They interviewed this woman,

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who said the best thing I've ever read in my life.

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This is what she said, word for word, she went, "I was looking out the window..."

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She wasn't very good at the accent either, right!

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She goes, "I was looking out the window and I saw,

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"a Dorito-shaped object in the sky."

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Just think about that for a second.

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A Dorito-shaped object in the sky.

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I thought to myself, who, right, when describing shapes, right...

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..whose brain gets to Dorito, before it gets to triangle?

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Who is that, what's going on there?

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That's someone who's seen more Doritos than triangles.

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I was in Dublin recently and a woman came up to me at the airport,

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she went, "Oh, my God, it's you!" I said, "What?"

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She went, "I can't believe it's you off the telly."

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I said, "Oh, right."

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She went, "Me mammy's a massive fan of you." I said, "Oh, I love it."

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"Do you mind if I ring her?" I went, "No, of course."

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"Mammy, you'll never guess who's here,

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"it's only Tyrone from Coronation Street..."

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I still signed the autograph and that, but...it just felt wrong.

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We've got some proper famous people in,

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we've got Downton Abbey, where's the Downton Abbey folks?

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There they are, hello, Downton Abbey.

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Which did very well in America,

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of course, winning lots of Emmys and stuff.

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Did you go over and collect those awards?

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No, you weren't invited.

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That's fair enough, just Hugh Bonneville by himself.

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"I'll get this, you're all right."

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What I enjoyed was the fact that America loves it so much.

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Of course America loves Downton Abbey,

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it's because that's what they think England is like all the time.

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They think it's a documentary.

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I'd love to...

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A few months ago, American tourists were coming over to try and meet Hugh Bonneville,

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and they're expecting some gentleman to put his coat over a puddle,

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and actually, they just witnessed a bloke being sick in his own shoes

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and an eight year old petrol bombing Footlocker.

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You know, it's very different!

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Oh, it's very different off the telly, isn't it?

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We've got, McFly. God bless ya. God bless ya, McFly.

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And, of course, you've got two front men, two lead singers.

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Danny and Tom are the two lead singers.

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Yeah, high five, I love it. Come on now, you're 30, stop it.

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Can't do high fives any more.

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Danny, of course, going out with Miss England. Yeah?

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I love that, there she is, Miss England right there.

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WOLF-WHISTLES

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People just presuming she's pretty, that's a fair presumption.

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There's hundreds of men in this room who've told their girlfriend they're the prettiest woman in the country,

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Danny's the only one who's got a certificate. It's official.

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Who else have we got?

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We've got Sarah Beeny, everybody, Sarah Beeny. God bless ya.

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Who, of course, runs a dating website.

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It's a dating website for single people, of course,

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and their friends put them on there.

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Now, that works for women, doesn't it?

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That works for women, because women are nice, aren't they?

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Yeah.

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They go, "Ah, Rachel, she's dead funny, she's dead pretty,

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"and you'll have a lovely time.

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"She just wants to go for walks and strolls,

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"and occasionally cry herself to sleep."

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But...

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..that's not going to work for blokes, is it?

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Imagine a bloke putting his single mate on this website of Sarah's.

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"Yeah, Jeff, yeah, he's a bit of a knob-head.

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"He's a big fella, you know, built for comfort, all that.

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"You know that bloke from the Go Compare advert?

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"Well, if you like him, you are going to love Jeff."

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Like Sarah, I've got loads of kids as well.

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You've got four, is it? Four boys?

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I've got twin girls who are two years old,

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and I've got another one who's eight months, another girl, she's all right.

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Well, you know, I've not known her as long. But...

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It's hard, because they let you go home the next day.

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I think that's too soon. They let you go the next day,

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and you're like, "I'd rather stay here surrounded by professionals,

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"and machines and that, know what they're doing."

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They let you go with this human child,

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and you think, have I strapped 'em into the car seat OK?

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You're going about four mile an hour crying, driving home,

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tractors overtaking you, people walking past you on the pavement.

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Every time you go round a corner, you can hear the baby moving about in the boot.

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It's a nightmare. It's a nightmare from day one.

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And nappies, of course. I went into ASDA one night.

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I said, "Excuse me, love, where are your nappies?"

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She said, "Babies nappies?" I was like, "Yeah!"

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I would have asked where the toilets were, wouldn't I?

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I don't want to see that, at the supermarket, some bloke coming out of ASDA George changing room,

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"Have you got these Huggies in a 38, love? "They're chaffing me."

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There was this one night, where one of my daughters,

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she'd not had a poo for five days, right?

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I know, awful, nobody wanted to hold her.

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You know, when it gets to that point? It's like a dirty game of Buckaroo.

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You're like, "Oh, no, you have her."

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Anyway, one night, I'm lying in bed,

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it's about three o'clock in the morning,

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and a noise comes over the baby monitor.

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And it wasn't a cry, I would have been expecting that.

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It was like this, imagine this. Pitch black...

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LONG RUMBLING

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Now, my first thought was that Predator had just walked past my window, like,

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kind of had a weird dream, like.

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Anyway, I dropped back off.

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I thought, there's no point us both being awake,

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so I dropped back off...

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She'll still be there in the morning.

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I dropped back off, about ten minutes later...

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LONG RUMBLING

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Now, that's a terrifying noise to hear,

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but not as scary as two words from my wife,

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"You go." I was like...

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I tell you what now, Apollo, I went in that room...

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I never changed that nappy, that nappy changed me.

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Do you know what I mean?

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I've not been the same since, man.

0:17:340:17:36

Are you ready for your first act of the night, folks?

0:17:410:17:45

Please welcome one of my favourite acts in the world,

0:17:450:17:48

please welcome Jimeoin.

0:17:480:17:50

Thank you.

0:18:070:18:08

Not a bad entrance.

0:18:080:18:10

Best entrance I ever seen was a swan coming to land on a piece of water, on a lake,

0:18:110:18:18

and, er...

0:18:180:18:21

as he hit the water, his two feet left off a spray either side,

0:18:210:18:27

and as he slowed down, he just showed off his wings before folding 'em away.

0:18:270:18:32

He did that...

0:18:320:18:34

Oh, yeah, he knew it was good.

0:18:390:18:42

Other birds don't have such a good entrance.

0:18:450:18:47

Pigeons don't make a big fuss when they arrive, do they?

0:18:470:18:50

Any messages?

0:19:040:19:07

Stupid walk, isn't it?

0:19:090:19:11

All birds have got stupid walks.

0:19:110:19:13

Chickens, why do chickens walk like they're in a minefield?

0:19:130:19:17

It was one step too many there, wasn't it?

0:19:420:19:44

So, one chicken just walking round like this here,

0:19:440:19:47

he didn't care where he was going.

0:19:470:19:49

Next thing, he blew up.

0:19:490:19:51

I saw two pigeons... Last pigeon joke, I swear.

0:19:530:19:56

I saw two pigeons in a park, male pigeon, female pigeon.

0:19:560:20:00

Male pigeon's making a move on the female pigeon,

0:20:000:20:03

doing that thing where he's got his neck all fluffed up,

0:20:030:20:06

you know, doing that, and he had a little bit of a purple two-tone band,

0:20:060:20:10

I'd never really noticed it before.

0:20:100:20:12

But it was working for him, subtle, but, you know...

0:20:120:20:15

I thought, that's nice.

0:20:150:20:16

And he was doing that, "Brrr!"

0:20:170:20:20

I don't know what he was saying to the female pigeon,

0:20:220:20:25

but whatever it was, it was pure filth.

0:20:250:20:27

Cos the female pigeon was going...

0:20:300:20:32

..get him away from me.

0:20:370:20:39

And he was doing that, he had that neck, he was doing that...

0:20:390:20:43

That's always filth, isn't it?

0:20:470:20:49

Do you ever talk filth to a girl and go too far,

0:20:490:20:52

and then you can't back up?

0:20:520:20:54

"Sorry, love, that was a bit much, wasn't it?

0:20:550:20:58

"Let's start again.

0:20:580:21:00

"What's your name?"

0:21:000:21:03

Trick to talking filth is...

0:21:070:21:10

you've got to get them talking filth.

0:21:100:21:13

And the trick to that is just mumble the last bit.

0:21:130:21:16

That's all you have to do.

0:21:160:21:18

You go, "When I get you home, I'm going to..."

0:21:180:21:22

And they know what you're up to, and if they're not up for it,

0:21:250:21:27

they always go, "No, no, no, no, no, no."

0:21:270:21:29

But if they're up for it, they always go, "What did you just say?"

0:21:290:21:33

And then you can go, "What do you want me to do?"

0:21:330:21:35

And then you've got them talking filth and you've said nothing.

0:21:350:21:39

And then you can go, "No, no, no, I'm not having that."

0:21:390:21:43

I don't talk filth to my wife, I talk clean to my wife.

0:21:460:21:49

I go, "When I get you home... I'm going to...

0:21:490:21:53

"put the bins out.

0:21:530:21:56

"You slip into bed and I'll...

0:21:570:22:00

"stick the dishwasher on.

0:22:000:22:02

"Read your book, fall asleep, I'll slip in beside you...

0:22:040:22:07

"..and leave you alone."

0:22:090:22:11

"You promise?" "Tonight's the night."

0:22:130:22:15

So, my name's Jimeoin, I'm Irish.

0:22:180:22:22

Any Irish people in?

0:22:220:22:24

CHEERING

0:22:240:22:27

Good to hear. I'm from Northern Ireland.

0:22:270:22:30

But I'm Irish.

0:22:310:22:33

There's a difference, yeah.

0:22:340:22:37

I was actually born on an island off the coast of Ireland

0:22:370:22:41

called England.

0:22:410:22:43

English people called Irish people stupid.

0:22:520:22:55

We didn't like that.

0:22:550:22:57

But we didn't really have a good comeback.

0:22:570:23:00

Wasn't till I went to Australia

0:23:030:23:05

and they called English people whinging poms.

0:23:050:23:09

I thought, that's fantastic.

0:23:090:23:11

I thought, why didn't we think of that?

0:23:110:23:14

Must be stupid or something.

0:23:160:23:18

Any Australians in?

0:23:210:23:23

CHEERING

0:23:230:23:24

Good to see. Any New Zealanders?

0:23:240:23:28

CHEERING

0:23:280:23:29

Oh, God.

0:23:290:23:31

Cheap tickets.

0:23:310:23:32

Any Tibetans?

0:23:340:23:35

I hate Tibetans... No.

0:23:390:23:41

I don't care who hears this, I'm going to tell it as it is.

0:23:420:23:45

I was in New Zealand, I went to a rugby match.

0:23:500:23:53

And I was sitting in the stand and they all got up,

0:23:530:23:55

all these school kids got up and started doing the Haka round me,

0:23:550:23:58

doing that, you know, that...

0:23:580:23:59

That's the way they do it too, you know, they give it everything,

0:24:030:24:07

they fully commit to it.

0:24:070:24:08

You never see anyone doing a half-hearted Haka.

0:24:080:24:11

You never see that.

0:24:110:24:12

I'd love to see England play New Zealand in the rugby in the finals.

0:24:300:24:34

And while the All Blacks are doing the Haka,

0:24:340:24:36

the English team just doing a little bit of Morris dancing.

0:24:360:24:40

Hankies and ribbons.

0:24:420:24:44

"Go under - you go under!"

0:24:540:24:55

Didn't look at my watch when I came on,

0:25:060:25:07

pretty stupid to be looking at it now.

0:25:070:25:10

Need your eyebrows up to read your watch.

0:25:110:25:13

Otherwise, you don't take in the time, do you?

0:25:130:25:15

My...my watch

0:25:260:25:28

has got the date on it and some months have got 30 days,

0:25:280:25:31

and others have got 31.

0:25:310:25:33

The ones that have got 30, you have to do the extra day yourself.

0:25:330:25:37

But before you do it, you do that rhyme in your head,

0:25:370:25:40

30 days has September...

0:25:400:25:43

you always do the rhyme twice, cos you get to the end

0:25:430:25:45

of the rhyme the first time and then you're thinking,

0:25:450:25:48

hang on, I wasn't listening to myself then!

0:25:480:25:50

I was trying to see how fast I could go!

0:25:550:25:57

You never get to the end of the rhyme,

0:25:590:26:00

you only get to the month you need to know and you think,

0:26:000:26:03

there is no point in doing the whole rhyme, that's all I need to know.

0:26:030:26:06

Some months are easier than other months.

0:26:060:26:09

September is very easy.

0:26:090:26:11

30 days has September...

0:26:110:26:13

Right.

0:26:130:26:14

It's not a good rhyme, though, is it? Start out good.

0:26:190:26:24

Just drops off towards the end.

0:26:240:26:26

This is what we learned at school.

0:26:280:26:29

30 days hath September, April, June and November.

0:26:290:26:32

All the rest have 31, except for February, which has 28.

0:26:320:26:36

Except in a leap year, it has 29.

0:26:360:26:38

Whoever got that job to make that rhyme

0:26:430:26:45

obviously got bored halfway through.

0:26:450:26:47

Duh duh duh duh duh duh duh...

0:26:470:26:51

"I haven't time for this.

0:26:540:26:56

"I have other rhymes to be working on. I'm a busy boy."

0:26:560:26:59

So... Life's good.

0:27:060:27:08

But tedious.

0:27:080:27:10

It is, isn't it?

0:27:120:27:14

It's just the same shit, over and over again.

0:27:140:27:17

Putting the bins out, that's a real reminder of how tedious life is.

0:27:190:27:23

I've been here before, I hate this.

0:27:230:27:26

Sneaking rubbish into other people's bins, I enjoy THAT.

0:27:290:27:31

Balaclava on...

0:27:340:27:36

Never been caught.

0:27:360:27:38

I hate it when I'm in bed and I realise I haven't put the bins out.

0:27:380:27:41

You know when you're lying in... "Bin night!"

0:27:410:27:44

Or, bin morning, when you're in a deep sleep

0:27:490:27:51

-and you can hear the bin truck.

-HOOTS

0:27:510:27:53

Running down the path naked with two bins behind you.

0:27:540:27:57

That's no way to start the day, is it?

0:28:020:28:04

Do you ever worry about something and then forget what it is

0:28:070:28:10

that you are worrying about?

0:28:100:28:11

And then you're thinking, I should be worrying about something

0:28:110:28:15

but for the life of me, I can't remember what it is.

0:28:150:28:17

And then you remember, that you go, ah, yes.

0:28:170:28:20

But I'm at that age where I just forget what I'm doing

0:28:260:28:29

a lot of the time.

0:28:290:28:31

I walk into rooms, go, "What did I come in here for? Oh, yeah."

0:28:310:28:34

Open the fridge, go into soft focus.

0:28:350:28:38

Driving my car going, where am I going?

0:28:410:28:44

I was looking for something in the fridge....

0:28:440:28:48

It's amazing what you can find in the fridge, when you're pissed.

0:28:510:28:54

You open up the fridge when you're sober, you go, "Nothing in there."

0:28:550:28:58

You open up the same fridge when you're pissed, and you go, "Aha!"

0:29:000:29:04

"My favourite! Lettuce and yoghurt.

0:29:070:29:11

"I'll just fry that up in a pan..."

0:29:140:29:17

You always fry things up in a pan, even if they're fried already.

0:29:190:29:22

You think, fry it again.

0:29:220:29:23

Cover it with dirty stinking grease, that's what I need when I'm pissed.

0:29:230:29:27

Healthy food never has a look-in, does it?

0:29:280:29:32

Never come out of a pub and think to yourself, I'd love an apple!

0:29:320:29:36

Suddenly you get an apple, you think, right! Fry it up in a pan.

0:29:390:29:42

Anyway, that's all from me. Thank you very much, and...

0:29:430:29:46

Good night, thank you.

0:29:460:29:48

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:29:480:29:49

-Jimeoin, everyone!

-Thank you.

0:29:520:29:55

Jimeoin!

0:29:550:29:57

Are you ready for another act, folks?

0:29:590:30:03

Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Tom Stade!

0:30:030:30:08

All right...

0:30:200:30:22

Wow, all right.

0:30:220:30:23

Good evening, Apollo!

0:30:230:30:25

WHOOPING

0:30:250:30:27

Very happy to be here.

0:30:270:30:30

I know a lot a people tonight, you're going to be thinking to yourself,

0:30:300:30:33

you're going to be going, "Tom...

0:30:330:30:36

"Tom, you're not from around these parts."

0:30:360:30:39

And you're going to be thinking to yourself, you're going to be going, "Tom...

0:30:390:30:43

"where is that funky accent from?"

0:30:430:30:48

And I'm here to tell ya,

0:30:480:30:51

it's from smoking dope for 20 years.

0:30:510:30:55

This ain't a regional thing, ladies and gentlemen.

0:30:570:31:02

This is what the doctor likes to call "damage".

0:31:020:31:07

I've actually been married for about 16 years now.

0:31:080:31:11

Any married people?

0:31:110:31:13

I love being married, because I get to do things that, like...

0:31:130:31:17

I go on what I call married dates, man.

0:31:170:31:20

And I love married dates, because you can say stuff on a married date

0:31:200:31:25

that you can't say on no first date.

0:31:250:31:28

You get to say stuff like, "I'm going to go take a shit,

0:31:280:31:31

"you order something cheap."

0:31:310:31:33

Yeah, man, I've got to go on married dates,

0:31:410:31:44

because I don't have any friends any more.

0:31:440:31:47

All my friends became assholes.

0:31:470:31:50

And do you want to know why my friends became assholes?

0:31:500:31:53

Cos she told me they were assholes.

0:31:530:31:58

Yeah. I used to get this from my gal all the time.

0:31:580:32:02

She used to walk up to me and go,

0:32:020:32:04

"So, er, why do you hang out with that Dave guy, anyways?

0:32:040:32:10

"I mean, Jesus Christ, all he does is smoke pot and get drunk all day."

0:32:100:32:15

And no man can answer that honestly, you know.

0:32:150:32:18

No man... What are you going to say?

0:32:180:32:21

"No, baby, I'd rather argue with you for ten hours.

0:32:210:32:24

"Or maybe we can hang around the kitchen table

0:32:240:32:27

"and talk about the finances some more?"

0:32:270:32:29

But you ever pull that on your gal,

0:32:310:32:33

you ever walk up to your gal and go,

0:32:330:32:36

"Oh, yeah, well, what about your friend Cindy?

0:32:360:32:41

"She does the same damn thing."

0:32:410:32:45

You want to know what you get?

0:32:450:32:46

You get this...

0:32:460:32:48

Now, you see that little arm cross there?

0:32:520:32:54

Not a lot of people know it, but when a woman crosses her arms,

0:32:540:32:58

it means, "Fight's on, dickhead."

0:32:580:33:01

And do you want to know what I hate worse than the arm cross?

0:33:030:33:07

Is there's this little laugh that women give you after the arm cross.

0:33:070:33:11

And I've heard this laugh 1,000 times, from 1,000 different women,

0:33:110:33:16

it's like cave women have passed this laugh on.

0:33:160:33:20

Cos they just look at you and they're like... "Ho-ho-ho."

0:33:200:33:24

Like they've just witnessed a car accident.

0:33:260:33:30

Yeah, because once you hear that laugh,

0:33:300:33:32

the gates of hell have closed behind you. Then they're into it.

0:33:320:33:37

Then they're like, "Don't. You. Talk. About. Cindy. Like. That!"

0:33:370:33:44

And I'll tell you why,

0:33:440:33:46

and every single one of you women in this room know why you don't talk about Cindy like that.

0:33:460:33:53

-SOBBING

-Because she is going through a really rough...time.

0:33:530:33:59

APPLAUSE

0:33:590:34:03

So, Cindy's going through a rough time?

0:34:070:34:10

Well, at least Dave was never a hooker.

0:34:100:34:13

Cos I used to know stuff, man.

0:34:160:34:20

I used to know stuff. Before I was married, I knew stuff.

0:34:200:34:23

I used to know all the new rock 'n' roll bands.

0:34:230:34:26

I used to be into it. McFly and stuff.

0:34:260:34:29

Now, I don't know...

0:34:310:34:33

I don't know any new rock 'n' roll bands any more

0:34:330:34:36

because nobody sings songs for married people.

0:34:360:34:40

All the songs nowadays is stuff like...

0:34:400:34:43

# I met you today And I want to shag you right now. #

0:34:430:34:46

And that don't speak to me.

0:34:480:34:50

And if it did, I'd be in a lot of trouble.

0:34:510:34:54

Nobody rocks out to marriage,

0:34:550:34:57

nobody's in the garage singing about love that never ends and goes on until you die.

0:34:570:35:02

Nobody sitting there going...

0:35:050:35:07

# We've been together for 16 years And we've got our health

0:35:070:35:12

# I can't afford to leave ya now!

0:35:220:35:25

# Compromise

0:35:310:35:34

# Killed my dreams. #

0:35:340:35:37

See, some people can laugh at that.

0:35:410:35:44

A lot of people right now are looking at me going,

0:35:440:35:47

"That's a little close to the bone, Tom.

0:35:470:35:49

"Now you're talking about us."

0:35:500:35:53

And I know there's a woman in this room now

0:35:530:35:55

probably looking at her man going,

0:35:550:35:57

"You don't feel that way about me, do ya?

0:35:570:36:00

"I didn't compromise your dreams...

0:36:000:36:03

"did I?"

0:36:030:36:07

Your dreams get compromised.

0:36:070:36:10

As soon as you have kids.

0:36:100:36:12

I had two kids, that's when my dreams went out the window.

0:36:120:36:15

I had to give my dreams to them.

0:36:150:36:17

I had two kids, man, it's weird.

0:36:170:36:20

I only thought I'd have one.

0:36:200:36:22

So, we had the first one, and then we thought,

0:36:220:36:25

"OK, we'll have another one, and we'll be creating a playmate for the first one."

0:36:250:36:31

But really, what we did is created the first kid's arch-nemesis.

0:36:310:36:36

Superman, I'd like to introduce you to Lex Luthor.

0:36:410:36:44

You just get dumber.

0:36:470:36:50

My kid makes me feel stupid.

0:36:500:36:53

My kid's always asking me questions I don't know.

0:36:530:36:59

My kid's always coming up to me going,

0:36:590:37:00

"Hey, dad, why's the sky blue?"

0:37:000:37:02

I'm like, "Why don't you go to school and learn something, dickhead?

0:37:020:37:06

"Why are you embarrassing me in front of all my friends?

0:37:100:37:13

"How did you get into this strip club, anyways?

0:37:160:37:20

"Why don't you ask me questions I know?

0:37:220:37:25

"Like, why is your mom crying in the bathroom?

0:37:250:37:29

"Cos she likes to play the victim, son."

0:37:290:37:32

I don't get to do anything I want to do any more.

0:37:380:37:42

I do women things, man. I gotta go out shopping now.

0:37:420:37:46

I go shopping.

0:37:460:37:49

I've been to a lot of your stores here.

0:37:490:37:51

You know one of my favourite stores since I've been here, that she's taken me to?

0:37:510:37:56

Is a little place called Primark.

0:37:560:37:58

Yeah.

0:37:580:37:59

I'm convinced, I'm convinced nobody goes there to buy anything,

0:37:590:38:04

but just to mess the place up, man!

0:38:040:38:06

The only store I've ever seen where people go, "These jeans are shit!"

0:38:080:38:12

You've got to be a...

0:38:210:38:22

I'd hate to be the guy that folded clothes at Primark.

0:38:220:38:25

You gotta be a ninja.

0:38:250:38:26

Just cos stuff is cheap, English people,

0:38:380:38:42

doesn't mean you gotta chuck it around.

0:38:420:38:45

That's why Argos keeps all their stuff in the back.

0:38:460:38:50

They don't trust you.

0:39:000:39:02

They're like, just show them pictures of the shit...

0:39:020:39:05

Make sure it's laminated.

0:39:070:39:08

I love Argos, man. My woman took me there. I freaked out about Argos.

0:39:210:39:26

You English people do stuff different.

0:39:260:39:28

You got that catalogue shopping at Argos.

0:39:280:39:31

The only store where you keep the catalogue at the store.

0:39:310:39:35

Like people go, hey, do you want to go down to Argos and check out the catalogue?

0:39:360:39:41

"Why don't we bring it here?" "Cos that's not what you do here.

0:39:420:39:45

"We are going to go down there and check this stuff is in stock or out of stock.

0:39:460:39:50

"Spend the day there."

0:39:510:39:53

I'll tell you something, Argos freaks me out.

0:39:550:39:58

First time I walked into Argos, they made me feel like I was a spy.

0:39:580:40:05

Because I walked up to that teller

0:40:050:40:07

and I handed her this little piece of paper.

0:40:070:40:11

And she just looked at me and went, "OK."

0:40:130:40:16

"Go to checkpoint B."

0:40:190:40:21

I went to checkpoint B. They didn't even know who I was.

0:40:290:40:34

I was like, "You don't know me?"

0:40:340:40:36

"I'm 376."

0:40:360:40:40

"I think you have a package for me."

0:40:420:40:45

My woman, she loves Argos, man.

0:40:490:40:53

My woman loves Argos cos of that catalogue.

0:40:530:40:56

Women love catalogues.

0:40:560:40:59

A catalogue to a woman is like the Bible.

0:40:590:41:03

Except real.

0:41:030:41:05

Yeah.

0:41:050:41:07

Yeah, stuff actually happens in the catalogue.

0:41:090:41:11

My woman doesn't even need to look at the index

0:41:130:41:17

to know what page the stuff she wants is on.

0:41:170:41:22

My woman walk into Argos, just kick those doors open...

0:41:220:41:25

Grab her little red gambler pen...

0:41:260:41:28

"I feel lucky, Tom."

0:41:310:41:33

And she'll flip through that catalogue like she was a Jedi Knight.

0:41:330:41:37

-She'll be like...

-HE IMITATES LIGHTSABER

0:41:380:41:41

That's what I want, Tom.

0:41:410:41:43

And I'm always amazed, I'm like, "Wow! How do you do that?"

0:41:450:41:48

-She goes, "I'll show you something else, Tom."

-HE IMITATES LIGHTSABER

0:41:480:41:52

That's what you want.

0:41:520:41:54

And I'm standing there looking at it, going,

0:41:560:41:58

"I don't even know what I want."

0:41:580:42:01

And then I look at it and I go, "Holy...shit, that IS what I want!"

0:42:010:42:05

A trampoline!

0:42:060:42:09

Cos I didn't want a trampoline for £129.95.

0:42:130:42:21

But for £79.95,

0:42:210:42:24

I needed a trampoline.

0:42:240:42:26

And I'll tell you something, you can't just buy no trampoline.

0:42:290:42:32

You got to get all your trampoline trimmings.

0:42:320:42:35

Got to get that safety cage.

0:42:370:42:39

In case you don't know how to bounce up and down.

0:42:390:42:42

One of these sideways bouncers.

0:42:480:42:50

Turns out, I'm a sideway bouncer.

0:42:520:42:55

Bouncing from side to side, I smash my head against that safety bar

0:42:560:43:00

and I'm bleeding in the safety cage.

0:43:000:43:03

Thank God that safety bar was there

0:43:040:43:07

to stop me from landing on that soft grass!

0:43:070:43:09

Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen!

0:43:110:43:13

You've been...

0:43:130:43:15

excellent!

0:43:150:43:17

Tom Stade, everybody!

0:43:230:43:25

Have you had a good night, folks?

0:43:290:43:31

So, please show your appreciation for the acts you saw tonight.

0:43:310:43:33

You saw Jimeoin!

0:43:330:43:35

And Tom Stade!

0:43:350:43:38

I've been Jason Manford.

0:43:380:43:40

Good night. God bless. Thank you very much.

0:43:400:43:43

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0:43:570:44:00

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