Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - News Quiz 3rd September 2021
Episode Date: September 3, 2021Andy Zaltzman is joined by Rachel Fairburn, Hugo Rifkind, Helen Lewis and Ian Smith....
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Hello. Welcome to the News Quiz Greatest Year of This Decade So Far Award.
And the nominations are...
..2020 and 2021.
Yes, bit of a disappointing shortlist.
And before we announce the winner, which we'll do at the end of December,
let's find out more about 2021
by talking about it over the next eight weeks
in this new series of The News Quiz.
Thank you. Happy new News Quiz series, everyone.
I'm Andy Zoltz and we are back from our summer break.
And if you told me when we finished the last series
at the start of June that COVID would still be circulating
at alarming levels, Afghanistan would not have worked out
absolutely brilliantly, much of the world would be
literally on fire and England's batting would still be
overly dependent on Joe Root, well, I would never have...
Obviously, I would have definitely have believed you.
I would have believed you as much as if you'd said,
in the hypothetical event of photos of Michael Gove dancing in a nightclub
were to be circulated in the media,
your retinas would never truly recover.
We are joined once again for this series
by our live virtual remote audience,
hand-picked from the top 7.5 billion best people in the world.
And our teams this week.
Firstly, we have Team Glass One Tenth Full,
who are Rachel Fairburn and Hugo Rifkin.
And on Team Glass 90% Empty, it's Ian Smith and Helen Lewis.
CHEERING
So only one place to start for our first show after the summer hiatus,
after what's been in the news recently,
and this question will go to Team One Tenthful, to Rachel and Hugo.
What prolonged campaign, obviously doomed to failure,
that has divided the nation for years
and was clearly never going to reach a satisfactory conclusion for everyone,
did inevitably end in failure this week?
Was it Geronimo?
Correct. Yes, it was.
That was the correct answer, straight off the mark with two points.
I mean, it's been a story that's really touched the nation,
Geronimo the alpaca.
What did he mean to you personally?
I was a fan of his hair.
I thought he was...
You don't often see the kind of Bobby Ewing from Dallas look these days.
The full kind of Graham Sooners, if you will.
And Geronimo the alpaca was rocking it well.
I assume he's rocking it less well now.
There's probably a hole in it right about there.
was rocking it well.
I assume it's rocking it less well now.
There's probably a hole in it right about there.
But the good thing about this is we've all learnt what an alpaca is.
So I reckon we are on a plus.
I appreciated the delightful consistency of the British people who are totally resistant to any suggestion
we might all go vegetarian or vegan to save the planet.
But one disease-ridden alpaca
and we're practically marching on Downing Street.
It was very moving to see.
Can one eat the alpaca?
You can eat anything once.
I feel he was the pet that we deserved as a nation,
you know, like a diseased animal.
I just feel they could have been a bit kinder
about the way they executed him.
You know, it was all very dramatic, wasn't it?
But I just feel like I'd like to have been lied to about it.
You know when your parents used to say,
oh, the dog's gone to live on a farm?
You know, all right, it was living on a farm already,
but they could have said, oh, Geronimo's gone to live on a farm
with other animals with TB.
You know, he's there with the badgers.
He's there with Tony Blair.
He's there by accident because of his initials.
I just feel it would have been a lot kinder for us
because we've been through a lot, you know.
I think the word destroyed as well makes it sound a lot...
Destroyed seems like such an excessive word for killing an animal.
Because if you went to the hospital and a doctor came out and said,
your grandma's surgery hasn't gone very well
and we've had to destroy her...
LAUGHTER
It just seems like a lot.
I think whenever I hear the word destroyed, and Geronimo, I feel like something's been launched out like a lot. I think whenever I hear the word destroyed and Geronimo,
I feel like something's been launched out of a cannon.
The way he would have wanted to go.
It's all because Geronimo didn't get his BCG, isn't it?
If he'd got his BCG in his arm, then it all would have been fine.
But Paul Lee's had tuberculosis twice,
so there's something like 30,000 cows
and hundreds of llamas and alpacas put down all the time.
He's had TB twice and has lived to see a new album from Lorde.
He's done pretty well.
LAUGHTER see a new album from Lorde. It's done pretty well.
People claim that the positive tests for the bovine tuberculosis were inaccurate,
very much a kind of Shakespearean TB or
not TB confusion.
I'm getting worried this series
has peaked too early.
If you mention the RCU,
it's like hypocrisy of our attitude towards animals.
I mean, we are a nation that eats an estimated
2.3 trillion tonnes of doner kebab meat every year.
That's an estimate that I've done
based on the amount I've eaten in the last 24 hours,
extrapolated across the whole population.
Rachel, why do you think there was so much fuss
about this one particular animal rather than all the others?
Because it's cute. That's it, innit? It's cute.
And also, we don't eat alpacas, as far as I know.
As we've just discussed, we don't eat it.
That's why I think, you know, you see it as like a cute little pet
rather than... I mean, God, if he was a dog, can you imagine?
Oh, my God, people would be out on the streets rioting.
We'd never hear the end of it.
People are obsessed with the dogs, aren't they?
Some people use them as personalities.
Yes, and in fact, this woolly-faced Robin Hood de Nogere,
he did score an unprecedented 9.5 fluffs
on the Cute Woolly Animal Monthly magazine's
Cuddlability Index.
I think the whole thing's quite
hypocritical because there's loads of
unattended suitcases that
get destroyed every year that no one says
anything about.
I'm just awaiting the
75-part Netflix series about it.
Anything that you can tell somebody in less than three minutes,
beginning, middle and end, is now a Netflix series.
So we're going to have Geronimo, 100%.
You say that, and I'm just hearing rumours, actually,
that Netflix have cast Brad Pitt and Chris Hemsworth
as respectively the front and back halves of Geronimo.
Are we all done on the alpaca?
I'll pack it in, then.
Yes, this is the...
This is the tragic story of Geronimo the alpaca,
who involuntarily passed away at the age of eight
after a long battle against the system.
The three-foot, two-inch former quadruped and woolly neckwear model,
man, could he rock an alpaca wool snood,
has been described in the media as Britain's most divisive alpaca,
which probably is byline in his Daily Express column.
Following a four-year legal battle
after testing positive for bovine tuberculosis,
Geronimo was, delete according to preference,
put down for scientifically justifiable reasons,
stroke, executed for a crime he didn't commit,
stroke, obviously taken to an MI5 dark side
and interrogated about his role in the Georgie Markov murder,
stroke, taken to a happier, simpler place
in this too-too troubled world.
He died as he lived, with a surprised look on his face.
People also claim that the positive tests for bovine tuberculosis are inaccurate.
We can all relate to that.
Look, I'm not saying these home tests are completely unreliable,
but I've been pinged three times in the last fortnight
for myxomatosis, Dutch elm disease and Saturday night fever.
pinged three times in the last fortnight for myxomatosis, Dutch elm disease and
Saturday night fever.
At the end of our first round, it's two points
to Team 110th Full. No points to
Team 90% Empty who get
our next question, which is our special
heartbreakingly inevitable and irredeemably
tragic geopolitical failure round.
So please listen carefully.
This goes to Helen and Ian. I am
a landlocked mountainous nation in
Central Asia with a history of disastrous
foreign interventions that now, after
a 20-year campaign, finds itself back in the
hands of a gun-toting, misogynist, medieval
themed misery cult. What
am I?
A chance to do a little light material about Azerbaijan,
which, frankly, hasn't had a good press recently.
It must be Afghanistan.
Correct, yes, correct, two points.
I mean, it was just an incredibly depressing story from start to finish,
and I therefore commend Dominic Raab for taking the edge off it
by being an absolute clown show from start to finish.
Beginning with saying that he couldn't go in the sea
because the sea was closed.
That was a new adventure for him.
There's been a very different approach
to basically how this failure is addressed
in, like, Britain and in America.
Because America's doing this thing where they're kind of like,
yep, we pulled out, it's a shit show, we don't care.
20 years, we don't care anymore.
I mean, Joe Biden doesn't care.
Joe Biden doesn't have to talk about whether or not he was on holiday.
He's just like, yeah, we did what we were going to do. And it was always going
to be awful. Whereas here in Britain, we're doing this really, really weird thing. I mean,
Dominic Raab's kind of like, obviously, all over the place. But he's also kind of doing this thing
of going, well, we knew they'd take over, but we didn't know it would happen so quickly. And it's
like, well, that's not better. I mean, it was still going to happen. So you were going to have
like a sort of a six month disaster rather than a one week disaster. You know well, that's not better. I mean, it was still going to happen. So you were going to have, like, a sort of a six-month disaster
rather than a one-week disaster, you know,
and that's your best defence here,
is that we thought it was going to turn into hell, but more slowly.
It does seem like some of the worst spin attempts...
Like, America said, like, no-one has done more
to evacuate people from somewhere than we have,
and you think, yeah, but you've created a situation
where people need to be evacuated from somewhere.
It's like a chef bragging,
no-one has put out more fires in this kitchen than I have.
I actually found Joe Biden's speech quite refreshing
because, you know, I'm a woman of the world
and it was quite interesting to hear a man
deliver a speech defending pulling
out rather than why they hadn't.
Hugo, are there any silver linings
in this? Oh, yes. I mean, of course, because
look, they're a new Taliban.
They're not like the old Taliban. They're a
new, inclusive, quite cuddly Taliban, they would claim.
For example, they did say, yes, they have banned women from working,
but only while they get training, they have said,
in how to speak to women, which I think is a very, very positive sign.
They'll learn how to do things like say, do you come here often?
And the women they're speaking to will say things like,
well, it's my office, so I I did until you banned me from working.
The Taliban, I mean it's got to be said
it's been a messy transfer window in Afghanistan
and the Taliban have claimed to be a more moderate Taliban
which I guess is like being a more luxurious endoscopy
or a more relaxing barrage of javelins through the
windscreen on the A303.
It's not much to clinch, is it?
It is crazy how
they've sort of presented themselves
as more mainstream.
Like, the weirdest thing is waking
up and hearing that the Taliban were on
Good Morning Britain.
Like,
even Piers Morgan would probably look and go,
you can't replace me with them, that's too much.
I was interested in, like, all the stuff that the Americans have left behind.
So they've left, I think it's $61 billion worth of various items for them. I think a real sort of forward thinking approach to
show the Taliban have changed and they're a Taliban
for the 21st century
is maybe if they started doing like
unboxing videos
on social media.
They could be opening it. Oh, look at this. It's an
assault rifle. Oh, night vision
goggles. Oh, night vision goggles.
Ooh, Twinkies, no thank you, we're not that bad,
we wouldn't eat that rubbish.
It's even worse because one report said that they've seen the Taliban wearing new camouflage uniforms,
which I think means it isn't good camouflage.
which I think means it isn't good camouflage.
If that's the report, they're going,
oh, the Taliban are going to be a formidable force now with all this new camouflage we can see them wearing over there.
It would be much better if they said
the US Army left a lot of camouflage
and we haven't seen the Taliban since.
The US Army left a lot of camouflage,
and we haven't seen the Taliban since.
I've decided, though, to become an Afghan animal truther.
Don't you think it's really strange that we haven't seen any of these animals that got rescued
from the improbably named Penn Farthings Animal Shelter?
I mean, I would have thought we'd be drowning in photos
of cute saved dogs. Where are they?
I'm just really worried they're all going to have tuberculosis
under them.
That is the news story that ends
Britain. We just have to kind of call it a night at that point.
I think that story did tap
into all our concerns about
long-haul flying. What would you
find most annoying?
Being sat next to
a crying baby or being sat in front of a five-year-old who keeps kicking your seat or being sat next to a crying baby, or being sat
in front of a five-year-old who keeps kicking
your seat, or being sat next to someone who's
brought 250 cats
and dogs on the flight?
It was the way they kind of, I mean,
when they brought all the animals back,
I mean, which was, I don't know, people
will disagree, but I think was just the sort of
colossally immoral act
that you have the ability to bring living creatures back from Afghanistan
and you choose dogs and cats.
I like dogs and cats, but I'm sort of more fond of people.
But it was the way the defence of it was,
well, no, they went in the hold, and you can't put people in the hold.
Because putting someone for whom the alternative
is getting shot in the head against a wall in the hold would be cruel.
It seemed to be the logic.
I mean, it's just the most morally vacuous situation
that I wish I could be more funny about,
but it just does really make me quite cross.
I think it's weird, because he called it,
it was sort of trending as Operation Ark,
but, I mean, anyone with sort of basic Ark knowledge
knows you only need two dogs and two cats.
Sort of unforgivable amount of dogs
really.
Yes, this is the end of
the Western involvement in
Afghanistan. Joe Biden said in a
speech this week that the war in Afghanistan
is now over, which is true
unless you are, for example,
still living in Afghanistan. Biden said he will, quote, turn the page on American foreign policy.
But turning the page is not always a recipe for improvement, as we've all experienced recently.
Why, just last week, I was reading my newspaper thinking, oh, jeepers, the world is doomed, I'm going to turn the page.
I turn the page, Michael Gove dancing in a nightclub!
The Biden also said the withdrawal marks the moment
when America stops policing the world,
which, given how America polices America,
might not be that much of a concern.
America pleases America might not be that much of a concern.
And I'm just hearing some breaking news. The Chinese
government has just issued a statement
saying, thank you America, this is turning
out to be way, way easier than we thought it
was going to be.
This question goes to both
sides. A group of 60 NGOs
has called on the UK government
to use its £11 billion climate fund to pay for what?
Stopping people having kids.
Correct, Ian.
Basically, sort of crazily,
the sort of solution that they've found to a slashed foreign aid budget
is just to try and make less foreign people.
That's their plan.
They're trying to advocate for sort of more contraception
and stuff like that, which...
Who'd have thought condoms would save the environment
when they're the definition of a single-use plastic?
Everyone bangs on about straws,
but no-one's been advocating for paper condoms...
..until now.
Lovely bit of origami foreplay.
Won the Grand National in 1978, I was on the show.
When I first read this story,
and it said the UK government has been urged
to use £11 billion of its climate funding for contraception,
I thought, for the Prime Minister?
A bit late.
I think the real problem with this is it's just wrong.
This isn't how you save the climate,
because we all know that basically men who hit 50 and don't have kids
always buy a sports car.
Ellen, it does seem to open the way for a new form of emissions trading
around the world, those emissions being children.
Do you see this being a viable plan for saving the planet?
I mean, that is the problem.
Basically, the problem with climate change is people.
If only we could get rid of people,
in many ways the problem with climate change would be solved.
It's an elegant solution,
but there are one or two downsides about it.
The problem is that it's not that...
The average person born in the developing world,
they are so much less an emitter of pollutants than one of us.
Basically, everyone's sort of casting round for ways
that avoid us ever having to look at the idea
that I might not be able to eat burgers or take flights.
And I just think that's the sort of odd paradox of all of this stuff.
So you're saying that children from developing countries,
they're much less responsible for carbon emissions
so if we were to
go overseas and have our children
in a developing country and then bring them back
would they then
emit less carbon
as adults?
I'm not a scientist.
I think you've sort of just proposed the gap
here as a solution to carbon change.
I don't know where anyone was going with that.
Yes, the government has been urged to crack open
its £11 billion climate funding piggy bank
to fund contraception in developing countries,
as research from low-income nations shows a link
between poor access to reproductive health services
and environmental damage.
And indeed, the Taliban, they are leading the fight
against climate change by pledging that Afghanistan
will be pre-industrial
by the end of October.
The score is now four all.
What caused two-time Wimbledon men's singles champion Andy Murray
to rail against the injustice of the universe this week?
Toilet breaks.
Correct. Yes. Well done, Helen.
Or were you just calling for a toilet break
at this key point in the quiz?
I have got the bladder of a moth, it's true.
Yeah, he said that his opponent was deliberately going to the toilet
for eight minutes at a time, and then he did an amazing tweet
that said that's longer than it took Jeff Bezos to get into space
than it takes him to go to the toilet.
Which I have to say, now, whenever you next go to the toilet,
I want you to think about whether or not you're taking longer or shorter a time
than it takes Jeff Bezos to get to space.
All of this happened as well at a venue that is called Flushing Meadows.
Yes, it's not just the Western military-industrial complex
that has been losing respect this week.
It's Greek tennis star Stefanos Tsitsipas as well.
At two sets all in his US Open match with Andy Murray,
the luxuriantly locked, racket-wielding Adonis
toddled off to the toilet and emerged eight minutes later.
A toilet break, or as parents of young children call it,
the closest thing you get to a holiday these days.
But he did then break Murray's
serve and proceed. You have
to say, the fact that Greek subterfuge
has declined from building a giant horse
and hiding an army inside it, to taking
an eight-minute WAS break, well, that
tells a sorry story of national decline
over 3,000 years.
Andy Murray got vocally very
stroppy about it.
I'm not sure this was the right response.
We all know the correct way to hurry up a toilet hog is to stand outside the cubicle,
clearing your throat passive-aggressively and occasionally waggling the handle while saying,
Are you all right in there?
This question goes to Helen and Ian on Team Glass 90% Empty.
Why are little piggies no longer going to market?
Oh, there's too many.
Apparently we have too many pigs, which spoils the broth, I think.
That's a problem.
So we have an excess of pigs
and not enough people working in the industry of killing pigs.
And I think the two are linked.
I think basically there's not a lot of people working in abattoirs.
And I think the reason is you don't really see that sort of job advertised very well.
And I think they should do it how they do those
royal navy engineering adverts where they say if you can kill a fly then you can kill a rat
and if you can kill a rat then you can kill a dog and if you can kill a dog then you can kill a pig
and if you can kill a pig you can work in any of the UK's abattoirs.
If you've got too many pigs on farms
and not enough people on the farms looking after the pigs,
couldn't we just train the pigs to walk on their hind legs
and run the farm, as George Orwell showed us this morning?
If it works out the way you want it to.
Rachel, why do you think it is that slaughtering pigs for a living
is not a career choice for young Britons these days?
What do you think might be putting them off?
Well, it's not something you can Instagram, is it?
I mean, it's not very palatable, is it?
All the squealing and the blood and the wellies.
No-one wants to do that.
You'd have to pay me about £1 million per pig to kill the pigs.
I couldn't do it.
I'd be happy to undercut you, though, if that's currently the best option.
I'd be happy to undercut you, though, if that's currently the best option.
If they're really looking for people, I'll do it half a million.
Half a million, I'll do it with my bare hands.
Yes, this is news that young people have found a new way to ruin Britain this week by not taking jobs in abattoirs.
The shortage of workers at abattoirs has caused an oversupply of pigs,
who, much like many of us over lockdown,
have been growing at a rate of a kilogram a week
and have become too, well, porky to slaughter.
The shortage has been attributed to a lack of workers
due to the pandemic, Brexit and generation snowflakes,
lily-livered reluctance to spend their time slaughtering piggies
for little more than minimum wage
and the sheer bare-knuckle excitement.
I blame pepper.
Hopelessly unrealistic propaganda.
Moving on to our final question.
If you go down to the woods today, why might you get a big surprise?
All the trees are dying.
Correct, yes. Correct, Rachel, well done.
There's going to be no trees. As if things
aren't bad enough
and now trees are going to become extinct.
Not all of them, don't worry. I think it's
like 30% of the world's trees
species are going to become extinct,
which is a lot. It's as if
the planet wants us to die out, isn't it?
Oh, we're blaming the planet now.
I mean, there's 60,000 species of trees, Hugo.
That's too many.
Exactly.
I mean, how many do we actually use on a daily basis?
I reckon we need very few trees.
Very few.
Christmas trees, they're good.
Yeah, that's one tree.
We need conkers.
Keep the one that does conkers.
That's good. The one that does conkers. Er, that's good.
The one that does all IKEA furniture.
Right.
Willow.
Apple trees.
Apple trees.
Willow, so someone shamelessly kind of pandered to Andy's interests.
Yeah, how well we take cricket without Willow.
Someone else in the audience shouted apple trees,
but that's just stupid because we don't need apple trees.
We can get them in supermarkets.
Yes, apparently 30% of the world's tree species
are facing extinction in the wild,
according to a new assessment.
Experts say that 17,500 tree species are at risk,
which is good news if you hate trees
and think they deserve to
die for their pathetic refusal
to evolve the ability to move.
Even rocks did that. They became tortoises.
That is a fact.
I mean, what is a tree
except a jumped-up, egocentric
mega-weed that is too big for a strimmer?
Look, I'm not a botanist, but...
Trees do
remain under threat from human phenomena such as
deforestation, logging, climate change,
woodpecker fetishists living out their warped
fantasies, and people writing books
or articles for newspapers and magazines.
Helen and Hugo, this is
all your fault.
That brings us to the
end of our first news quiz of the series,
and it's a triumphant win for Helen Lewis and Ian Smith
on Team Glass, 90% empty,
over Rachel Fairburn and Hugo Rifkin.
Just before we leave some breaking news just reaching us,
David Cameron has just offered to rehouse as many oversized pigs
as are currently necessary.
Thank you very much for listening to the News Quiz.
I've been Andy Zaltzman. Goodbye.
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