Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - The News Quiz - Friday 30th April 2021
Episode Date: April 30, 2021Andy Zaltzman presents a look back at the week's headlines with Simon Evans, Helen Lewis, Elis James and Ria Lina.This week decorating, vaccinating and electioneering are subject to scrutiny by our te...ams.Written by Andy Zaltzman with additional material from Alice Fraser, Mike Shephard, Tasha Dhanraj and Tom Mayhew.Producer: Richard Morris and Gwyn Rhys Davies A BBC Studios Production
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This episode of the News Quiz was recorded before the news broke this morning
that the third millennium has been cancelled.
The renowned thousand-year-long time span will be reset to begin again for another go
to see if it can do better this time on Monday, which now becomes the 1st of January 2000. Or 2001, if you're a pedant.
Happy New Year, and welcome to the News Quiz.
Hello, I'm Andy Zaltzman, and welcome to the News Quiz. In the spirit of the week, all panellists this week
are entitled to listen to my questions, ignore them,
and then answer a completely different question
that exists only in their own heads.
It's time to meet this week's teams.
Our teams, sir, for this week, it's team,
oh, no, he didn't, versus team, oh, yes, he did,
versus team, oh, well, I guess he might have done,
but there's no proof, so we're still saying, oh, no, he didn't, versus team, oh yes he did, versus team, oh well I guess he might have done, but there's no proof, so we're still
saying, oh no he didn't, versus team
look, we appreciate that whether he did or he
didn't, there are more important things that he both did
and didn't do, but still, oh yes he did.
Four teams this week, let's pair
them up for simplicity into the no's
and yes's, so I think that averages out to
team now, whatever, against team
yeah right. So on Team Now
Whatever, it's Helen Lewis and Ellis James.
And on Team Yeah Right, it's
Ria Lina and Simon Evans.
And question one this week goes to both
teams. Who has been accused of
being out of order in his attempt to get his house in order?
This sounds like it might be your lead story
about Boris Johnson and his flat refurbishment.
Correct.
Or possibly Carrie Simmons' flat refurbishment
and the scandal that this has created about a nation outraged
that on top of everything else they've had to endure,
they've now had to see John Lewis bad-mouthed in public.
Since the death of the Queen Mother, there have been very few really genuinely sacred
institutions in this country, but I think it's fair to say that calling John Lewis a
nightmare is just a step too far and probably will bring down this government.
Most of us, I think, seeing the whole story, have been largely baffled,
having previously assumed that Boris slept in a basket most nights.
Yeah, by the next thing, an expensive basket.
I think if we're going to spend this sort of money on a governmental flat, a residence of that kind,
we should be allowed to see it a bit more often,
and I'm suggesting Westminster Gogglebox
as the ideal TV format in which we can
enjoy good value for money as we see Boris and Carrie you know watching their favourite soaps
and so on. I think that was his nickname at the Foreign Office wasn't it the Westminster Gogglebox?
The highlight of the week for me was the Prime Minister having to come out and say
quote I have nothing against John Lewis. I mean I just want to sort of run through a list of other great high street brands
and find out which one he absolutely despises.
It's revealed a third strata in British society that I didn't realise existed.
There were either people who thought that John Lewis was nice
or people who thought that John Lewis was too expensive.
I didn't know there was a version above where they're like, thought that John Lewis was nice or people who thought that John Lewis was too expensive.
I didn't know there was a version above where they're like, oh, I couldn't possibly,
I could not possibly live in a house with John Lewis furniture.
I do have a friend that works in Westminster and I've heard off the record that most of the money has actually been spent on a fridge that's large enough for Boris to hide in whenever he and Carrie
have a fight.
They've paid almost £10,000
for a sofa. For that price, could they
not have just paid an NHS nurse to
lie on the floor in the middle of the room for
four months?
Use them as a sofa instead? It would have been a useful
reminder to focus at work.
I guess a question we have to ask
is this just petty Westminster
bickering of no real relevance to the population
as a whole or is it a fundamental
issue of trust and honesty that gets
to the very heart of our politics, democracy and identity
as a nation? It's incredibly
petty.
But isn't it
the whole point is that it's incredibly petty.
We've been starved of incredibly petty
news for over a year now. I've never
seen people jump on this with the relief
of being able to go, what,
what is £800 wallpaper?
I just, I want to see it. I want to see it with
my own eyes. The correct answer, by the
way, to that question was, it's both, so no
points to either team there. It's both.
Petty bickering and the fundamental issue of trust but what helen said is right so when i first heard this story after the year we've had i thought oh thank god it's just corruption
that's such a relief
you know and i i can't catch corruption.
I can't catch sleaze.
I don't have to worry about getting long sleaze.
You can catch it.
You've just got to go to the right school.
I think the reason that we're so interested is because they were originally floating the idea of this being a charity.
That's what really got our goats, wasn't it?
They said, well, what if we get a charity to pay for it?
Because nothing screams charity these days, does it?
More than having to take a pay cut
because you were elected prime minister
of the sixth largest economy in the world
and forced to live in a four bedroom
George enlisted building
instead of your cosy townhouse
that costs 1.3 million, you know.
Nothing screams charity like that, does it?
Oh, the poor man.
The poor man.
He already gets 3030,000 of an allowance per annum to spend on his flat, as it is.
Now, if £30,000 is not enough for you, that is when you start using your nectar points.
They went through some of the previous prime ministers and what they spent.
I think a BBC media correspondent said it was no surprise to see that Gordon Brown hadn't spent any money on the flat at all.
And then they went back and created a go,
no, actually, he spent his £30,000 allowance exactly...
He spent, like, £87,940 over the three years.
It was, like, so precisely the correct amount of money.
I found that more psychopathic than going wildly over the top,
to be honest.
There's been a lot of talk about the role of the Prime Minister's
fiancée, Carrie Simmons, in this.
I mean, have we reached a point now where the position
of the Prime Minister's spouse should be an elected role?
And should we, the people, have some say in it?
It should be like national service.
Everyone should do it for them.
I was going to say, he's doing it more like Athenian democracy, isn't he?
That you get selected for it whether you want it or not.
I was thinking actually quite...
Oh, do you want to get that?
No? OK. Sorry, I was thinking... You're being, do you want to get that? No? OK.
Sorry, I was thinking...
You're being called up for service, Ria.
LAUGHTER
If I don't get a peerage out of this...
LAUGHTER
And there's been this other scandal over whether or not
Boris Johnson used the words, let the bodies pile high,
which, of course, he either did or didn't say,
depending on your side of the political
spectrum. But if he, or indeed
anyone else said it, what do we think he meant
by it, let the bodies pile? Because he
obviously couldn't have meant what it appears to mean
in the meaning of the words. So what's the
hidden meaning of those words, do we think?
Well...
That's the correct answer, yes.
Simon, do you think, because it's not really impacted on the polls
with local elections next week and elections in Scotland and Wales,
do people care?
Well, I don't know about not impacted on the polls.
The ones I've seen, Boris has had a huge surge off the back of it.
I think he's gone up by about 5%.
I'm afraid it does come down slightly to nobody likes a smart-arse,
which is something Keir Starmer is going to have to understand
if he's going to get ahead in politics.
Most people have had an encounter with a lawyer
that was cleverer than them at some point in their lives,
and they very rarely remember it with fondness.
And watching a bumbling buffoon get tied up in knots
by the slick-suit-wearing bastard?
It doesn't play well, you know.
He should get a bit of gravy on his tie and join in with the muck.
Yes, this is, of course, the Boris Johnson flat refurbishment schmuzzle.
This week, the Electoral Commission launched an investigation
into the funding of works in Johnson's Downing Street flat.
The spending watchdog said there were reasonable grounds
to suspect an offence or offences may have occurred.
Incidentally, reasonable grounds is, for the average Tory donor,
about 600 acres plus a fishing lake.
Green Party MP Caroline Lucas accused the Prime Minister
of, quotes, lying on an industrial
scale. Come on, Caroline.
Lying is one of the few growth industries
in this country. Can we not celebrate a
British success story for once?
It's a low-carbon industry as well.
You should like it.
With Labour struggling to make much of an impression on the
Conservatives' poll lead, the opposition have cranked up calls for inquiries
to a record 2.3 calls for inquiries per hour.
And as we record, have just called for an inquiry
into the lack of inquiries.
The Prime Minister has committed to a fully independent investigation
of the alleged allegations
and announced that it will be headed up by Sir Dylan Johnson Russell,
his dog.
In terms of how important it appears to be,
well, I mean, in the grand scheme of things,
a bit of money for refurbishment might not seem that important,
but we all know what can happen after that final wafer-thin mint
after a very, very big meal.
For the sake of balance as we close this first question,
I should point out that it was entirely possible
for the Prime Minister not to have landed himself in this mess.
Now, following complaints about how I've allocated points
in recent episodes of the News Quiz,
I have appointed an independent standard advisor
to oversee how this week's programme is scored.
That advisor is me.
It's fine. I'm telling you the score is scored. That, advisor, is me. It's fine.
I'm telling you the score is 8-6,
but I'm not telling you who to.
Which moves us elegantly on to question two.
This goes to Team Yeah Right, Ria and Simon.
Who or what is the people's vaccine?
This is a group of religious leaders have come together and they've all signed a press release from across a wide range of religions to go,
we need a people's vaccine to cure the pandemic.
And the whole world has gone, what do you think we've been doing all this time?
Where have you been? You've been praying and you've just realized that a vaccine
is the answer. Yeah. Yes, we know that. But it's weird that they've specifically called it the
people's vaccine. And I'm like, what is that? Is that like the people's princess? Because it's not
like it needs to do a publicity tour and raise awareness about COVID. Everybody knows. And how
are we going to choose the people's vaccine? Are we going to choose it
like the People's Choice Awards? Because, you know, like, how is that going to work?
I mean, the Lifetime Award has to go to the measles vaccine. It's the only one that you
don't need a booster for. And which vaccines are we putting forward for this? That's what I want
to know. Is it going to be like the Golden Globes debacle and the chickenpox vaccine is up for nomination when really there's a new malaria vaccine
that should really be getting spotlight? Huh? You know, because let's be honest, chickenpox
just scratches the surface and is irritating, whereas malaria may destroy you.
I feel sorry for the people behind the malaria vaccine
because it's a genuine good news story.
It could save millions of lives.
They've been trying to sort out a malaria vaccine for decades.
But because it's happened this year,
it's not even going to get on the front cover of Vaccine Today.
What a time to come up with a great new malaria vaccine.
I forgot page six! Come on!
World religion leaders always feel they have something useful to contribute
and don't.
But...
LAUGHTER
There's like about 80 of them.
And this must have annoyed some of them as well.
They're ranked alphabetically,
which was obviously the most democratic and sensible way to do it,
all the signatories.
But they were ranked alphabetically by first name,
which I think must have really kicked off a few rows, I would imagine.
There's a chap called Zahid Bukhari
who must have thought he was going to get well into the top five.
And instead... It's like, what? Dr. Zahid Bukhari? You cannot be serious. You put me last. Yeah,
Zahid. No, Bukhari. Come on, surely. I would love to have been there for that meeting.
There's a lot of concern about vaccine nationalism. Earlier in the year
the head of the World Health Organisation, Tedros
Ghebreyesus, warned the world of a
catastrophic moral failure
if the poorer nations and peoples of the world
were left behind in the vaccine race.
I mean, that's slightly worrying, isn't it?
Because global economics has shown itself to be
entirely comfortable with
catastrophic moral failures. I mean, it's
borderline addictive behaviour, isn't it?
Yeah, but this time people could come back from the developing world
and reinfect us, right, which doesn't happen with poverty.
So we might actually care for once.
Here's a related question.
Which of the following is the odd one out?
The karaoke machine, the AK-47 and Covid vaccines?
Well, they'll all give you a headache.
Some of which last longer than others, yes.
Well, the answer is Covid vaccines
because the karaoke machine and the AK-47 were not patented,
whereas COVID vaccines, there's an awful lot of issues
caused by the patenting of COVID vaccines,
which could prevent pain and suffering on a global scale,
whereas the karaoke machine and the AK-47 not patented
and have caused pain and suffering on a global scale.
So...
LAUGHTER That's the different... and have caused pain and suffering on a global scale. So... LAUGHTER
That's the difference.
Helen, have you been following the patent debate?
I think of little Ls.
Oh, good.
LAUGHTER
No, I mean, my feeling about it is I feel incredibly sorry
for Oxford AstraZeneca, who took this view
that they would distribute everything at cost price throughout the entire pandemic.
And the European Union has just decided to wail on them repeatedly, threatening to sue them, whilst also saying, can we have some more?
I just don't know why anyone would act altruistically ever again.
It's true. If there is a principle that if you if you are slightly altruistic, people are far more likely to pounce on you for not being entirely altruistic if you're just obviously a capitalist shark then people go well that's just them
obviously we can't expect any better but oxford astrazeneca presenting themselves as a vaguely
humanitarian movement we're going to hold them to very much higher standards of account it's a weird
phenomenon in life and it is you know as homer simpson said don't try you know because
if you try and be a good person they will hold you to this standard of course the eu does still
operate under the traditional european law of finance which is that something should be
reassuringly expensive the uh stellar artois regulation dates back to the early days of the EU. Here's another question.
Which national leader and non-cricketer
who recently renamed a
130,000 capacity cricket stadium
after himself, built a 200 metre
high statue for no reason other than that it's massive
and counts suppressing political dissent
amongst his favourite hobbies, has turned out
not to have the ideal character profile
for putting the health and well-being of his people
first?
It's not back to Boris again. It's not Boris,
no.
Mark Drakeford. Not
Mark Drakeford.
You said non-cricketer,
so that narrows it down to Modi
from India. Correct, yes.
I'll give you
six runs for that.
How's that?
Yes, this is Narendra Modi,
India in the grip of a devastating second wave of COVID-19.
Its hospitals unable to cope, oxygen supplies inefficient
and chaos spreading across the nation.
Modi himself described the current wave of coronavirus
sweeping India as like being hit by a storm.
Now, keen students of meteorology may not be familiar
with the kind of storm that calls a year in advance
to warn you that it's coming
by first blowing through every other country on earth
whilst you refuse to even put on a slightly thicker scarf
and declare yourself to be victorious over all weather events.
One final COVID story.
What does getting a COVID jab have in common
with having your elbow savaged by a crocodile?
It leaves you with a sore arm.
Correct. Yes, well done.
That is the correct answer.
The most common side effect of both of those is a sore arm. Correct. Yes, well done. That is the correct answer. The most common side effect of both of those is a sore arm.
Is that regarded as a side effect, then,
if you're savaged by a crocodile?
Yes, it is.
I think that the COVID vaccine rollout
has given those of us in our late 30s
a wonderful, wonderful feeling.
I've never been so excited to be getting older,
as I have since I was 18,
and I thought I was going to be able to drink booze,
like finally going to stop getting ID'd in pubs.
Now I watch the thing ticking down, it's like 42.
Come on, I'm so close.
I'm so close I can almost taste it.
I haven't been vaccinated for anything since I had the BCG
when I was about 13 or 14.
But social distancing means no one's given me a dead arm
on my injection site, so... It's's a more civilised process this time round.
A study by scientists, always with their studies,
revealed that the most common side effect of the Covid vaccines
is pain or tenderness at the place on your arm
where something has just been jabbed into you
like a miniature benevolent javelin of hope.
A sore arm is not, of course, the most debilitating of side effects, really.
Complaining about a sore arm after a potentially life-saving vaccine
is like being rescued from the ICCs
after your Titanic Recreation Society AGM got a little bit too realistic
and complaining that the life vest you were given
didn't go well with your shirt.
The score
is now, let's say, 10-7
and we'll reveal who's winning at the end.
A question now
for Ellis. Which
election campaign will not
drag on much longer?
What I'm just making reference to is the big Welsh election for the Senedd on the 6th of May.
The Welsh Parliament's actually done an awful lot of great things for the rest of the UK.
For example, it took Neil Hamilton off your hands.
He's been a member of the Senedd since 2016, so you haven't heard of him in four years.
You're welcome.
16-year-olds have got the vote in Wales,
so nearly every party, they're all preparing their excuses
for how, if things don't work out in their favour,
you're going to be getting people saying things like,
oh, God, 16-year-olds don't espouse traditional conservative values
because they're too busy on TikTok.
They're all playing Fortnite on Twitch
to espouse traditional Conservative values,
and that's why we did very badly on the 6th of May,
and it's not our fault.
A bit like Joe Wick's,
Welsh Independence has had a good lockdown.
So support for Yes Cymru has grown over the last year,
so it started off in January 2020 with about 2,000 members.
Now it's got over 17,000 members.
On the other hand, Abolish, the Welsh Assembly,
their support is apparently growing.
They're an interesting party, obviously,
because they want to stand in a parliament that they also want to abolish.
I looked at their manifesto and I thought to myself, this isn't a manifesto to govern
before thinking, well of course it isn't
they have got a couple of manifesto points
they want to build an M4 relief road
and they want to abolish the Welsh Assembly
you've got to get those things the right way round.
I think this illustrates what Welsh politics is like.
Mark Drakeford, leader of Welsh Labour,
he was at the Carmarthen Boys' Gram the same time my mum was at the Carmarthen Girls' Gram.
So you can imagine it.
They're hanging around in Carmarthen.
It's a swing in the 60s.
It's just young people listening to cool music,
discussing whether the fledgling Welsh office
should be responsible for agricultural subsidies
in light of impending EEC membership.
It's just a different time.
And then you've got Andrew R.T. Davies,
leader of the Welsh Conservatives.
Andrew R.T. Davies, a man who looks like he's trying to retweet his own name.
a man who looks like he's trying to retweet his own name.
He's a farmer and he describes himself as 19 stone of prime Welsh beef,
which sounds like a really horrendous Tinder profile, isn't it?
19 stone.
More a bit of 1980s rugby commentary, to be fair.
Yes, the elections for the Welsh Senate will take place on the 6th of May. The parliamentary leaders went head-to-head in a televised debate this week
in an attempt to be more presidential, but if anything, I'd go the other way.
I think presidential debates should try to be a bit more Welsh.
It would have been far, far easier to sit through Trump and Biden bleating at each other
if they'd both said please and thank you a bit more,
discussed the relative merits of great fly halves
and saluted a flag with a massive dragon on it.
And this is a question for team Now Whatever, Helen and Ellis.
Who has jumped before she could finish being pushed?
This must be Arlene Foster of the DUP.
Correct. She was subject to a Foster of the DUP? Correct.
She was subject to a letter of no confidence
by the majority of people in her party,
and so she's resigned.
And now the best competition in British politics
to be the successor to her is on,
chosen by MLAs and MPs from the DUP.
So quite a niche electorate, shall we say.
And also a slightly niche candidate, Paul,
which includes the frontrunner,
a guy who started his political career working for Enoch Powell
and another one who is a young Earth creationist
who doesn't believe in evolution.
And the best quote came from here, a guy called Edwin Poots,
who doesn't believe the universe started with a big bang,
and he said in a radio debate,
we've had lots of explosions in Northern Ireland
and I've never seen anything good come out of them.
And so that's why he doesn't believe in a big thing.
You know, I don't know an enormous amount about the DUP or Northern Irish politics,
but whenever I read about the DUP, they just seem so chilled.
Yeah, no, Arlene Foster was in many ways the voice of moderation,
so that's going to be quite interesting.
And also has huge implications for Brexit,
because the Northern Ireland Protocol,
which treats Northern Ireland differently to the rest of the UK,
is now the thing that the candidates will be running against.
So, hooray!
Simon, are you excited about the eruptions in Northern Irish politics?
You could tell that, could you, looking at me?
My general sense has been over the last 30 years or so
that everyone's been expecting it, you know, the whole border,
the whole existence of Northern Ireland to sort of wither away.
You know, there's this expectation that the Good Friday Agreement
was essentially put in place as a sort of like that early stage in a magician's trick
where you erect the blanket or the sheet or whatever. And meanwhile, everything behind it
changes, you know, and then woof, it's gone. And the whole point of that really was that sufficient
demographic change would make a unified Ireland inevitable. And the Catholics have really let us
down. They've stopped breeding.
You know, they were at like...
They used to go at it like hammer and tongs, the Catholics.
Like they were knocking them out,
like Gary Sobers, you know, on a sunny day.
Can you just do that bit again, Simon?
Because you said Garfield Sobers was from Trinidad and Tobago.
He's from Barbados, of course.
He was playing away.
I can't help but feel sorry for her, really, because they've obviously lost confidence in her.
But the job she had was impossible.
She was supposed to keep together what isn't and has never been ideologically whole and separate without separating what is physically contiguous land while keeping the unionists who if i'm right and correct me if i'm wrong wish to
stay separate and the nationalists who wish to rejoin a country they aren't currently members
of happy while allowing goods that can pass without tariffs through easily and quickly but
making sure there's a customs check for everything else without checking everything but without
missing anything either like if only she'd kept her mouth shut about gay marriage, she would have been fine, right?
Yes, this Arlene Foster, leader of the DUP, has announced
she will step down following a vote of no confidence.
The rebellion against Foster was sparked
in part by loyalist anger over the party
leadership's handling of Brexit
with the introduction of Irish Sea Border Checks
and, well, the situation is both a test and an opportunity for Boris Johnson.
I mean, it's so difficult to know which gimmicky transport project
is going to be most likely to bring the two sides together.
A logistically improbable tunnel, an economically unjustifiable bridge,
a catapult trampoline sandpit network
so you can go from Liverpool to Belfast via the Isle of Man
in just two giant leaps.
The Katwang-Boeing-Splat line
could be the most viable of all the schemes yet suggested.
Maybe even a unicycle and
clown wig hire scheme, just to lighten the mood.
Or an omni-denominational bobsled
run. Triple-decker pogo sticks, why not?
Let's give them all a go.
And that brings us to the end of this week's
news quiz, and the final scores, Team Now Whatever have won
and Team Yeah Right have 12.
It's a cruel, but precious universe.
Just some breaking news reaching us.
Alan Titchmarsh has revealed that after 40 years of trying,
he has finally learned how to photosynthesise.
LAUGHTER revealed that after 40 years of trying, he has finally learned how to photosynthesise. The former Gardeners World presenter said he was thrilled
to finally be able to oxygenate a room
and could now survive solely on the sunlight.
Thank you very much for listening.
Thank you to our guests this week,
Ria Lena and Simon Evans,
Helen Lewis and Ellis James. I've been Andy Zaltzman. Thank you for much for listening. Thank you to our guests this week, Ria Lina and Simon Evans, Helen Lewis and Ellis James.
I've been Andy Zaltzman.
Thank you for listening.
Goodbye.
Taking part in the news quiz were Ellis James,
Helen Lewis, Ria Lina and Simon Evans.
In the chair was Andy Zaltzman
and additional material was written by Alice Fraser,
Mike Sheppard, Tasha Dunraj,
and Tom Mayhew. The producer
was Gwynry Stavis, and it was a
BBC Studios production.