Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - The Now Show - 15th March
Episode Date: April 12, 2024Steve Punt and Hugh Dennis present the week via topical stand-up and sketches. Featuring Marcus Brigstocke unpacking screen addiction and Ria Lina on the International Women's Day - Oscars overlap, an...d an original song from Ed MacArthur.The show was written by the cast with additional material from David Duncan, Aidan Fitzmaurice, Jade Gebbie and Christina Riggs.Voice Actors: Gemma Arrowsmith and Jason Forbes.Producer: Rajiv Karia Production Coordinator: Caroline BarlowA BBC Studios Production for Radio 4
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Hello, I'm Steve Punt. And I'm Hugh Dennis.
With us are Marcus Brickstock, Ria Leena, Jason Forbes, Gemma Arrowsmith and Ed McArthur.
And this is...
The Now Show!
Thank you. So we are in this weird limbo at the moment. We know there's an election coming up,
so nothing that's said or done can really mean anything,
nothing can be planned ahead, no long-term plans can be made.
So, no wonder we've spent the week obsessing about tiny, tiny details.
Look there, you see? If you look at the photo really carefully,
you can see there's something odd about Kate's middle finger.
What's odd about it? It's pointed upwards and straight at the media.
Now pretty much everything else is all maneuvering ahead of the inevitable election and the thing
is it's not just here in Britain. There's actually a record number of elections being
held all around the world this year. The total population of the country's voting is around 4.2 billion and there are already worries that the global
tiny pencil industry may not be able to cope.
Of course the voting population is much smaller than the total
population except in Russia which has a population of 144 million
but gave Putin a majority last time round of 157 million
156,306.
307.
But it's easier to scoff.
The Russian election is actually this weekend.
It's very difficult to say anything about it
because we have no idea what the result's going to be.
In some ways, of course, a Russian election is much the same as ours.
I have been listening to what the voters are saying on the doorstep. And in other ways
it's not. I have also been listening to what voters are saying in their living rooms, their
kitchens, their places of work and on their voicemails. There are actually three candidates
standing against Putin in this election, though it could be four, depending on what party Lee Anderson ends up in
by the weekend.
Now, Putin, of course, is one of the leaders that Trump most admires
as he prepares for his rematch with Biden.
Yeah, and it's the first time the same two candidates have fought
consecutive elections since Adlai Stevenson opposed Eisenhower
in 1952 and 1956.
And at the ages of 77 and 81, they're the oldest two candidates
in a US election in history.
Trump has very little new to say,
and this time round still only basically has one policy.
I'm going to build a wall and then three more walls at right angles,
and then I'm going to put everyone who's opposed me inside there for life.
And that's not a joke. Trump has made no secret of his authoritarian ambitions.
He's halfway there already having Putin's attitude to Ukraine, Kim Jong-un's
feelings towards opposition and Saddam Hussein's taste in interior decorating.
The main problem at the moment is making sense of anything he says because his
plans are
kind of unclear.
America is a failing nation.
Can you believe the Democrats want to kill all the whales with electric cars?
It's true folks.
And crooked Joe Biden, he's masterminding all these legal cases against me, and he's
also senile and incapable.
Now you may say, how can Biden be senile at the same time masterminding complex legal cases?
And this is why I say, make America logical again.
Now here, of course, 96 MPs have already announced
their standing down at the election,
including 60 conservatives, many of whom
have already booked
places on the Conservative Party's Career Retraining Scheme, or GB News as it's usually
called.
Some MPs are moving across rather than standing down. This week, Lee Anderson has defected
to Reform UK, we assume over immigration, but possibly because he's already been Labour,
Conservative and Independent, and now only needs one more to get a free coffee from the Parliament cafe.
But there's a similar pattern in place across the Atlantic
with a number of Republican Senators not standing in the upcoming US election.
And in some cases not standing anywhere without a handrail for more than a few minutes.
96 MPs standing down might sound like a lot, but actually it's not.
On average, 87 MPs stood down at every election between 79 and 2010.
Yeah, what it does mean though is an enormous number of former MPs simultaneously all heading for the jobs market,
which might prove tougher than they think. I mean, certainly they might struggle with the interview process.
So what skills can you offer in this job?
Well, with all due respect, this, I'm afraid,
is typical of the arrogance of you people, who have, of course,
your own agenda and simply don't want to listen.
What can you offer this organization?
I am trying to answer your question,
but you won't let me get a word in edgeways.
Yes, yes, I will.
Go on.
What was the question again? What skills do you offer?
Oh, skills. Yes, well, I have two.
I can bray like a donkey at things that aren't particularly funny.
Mwahaha!
Also, say something I'll agree with.
Trying to get an answer out of you is absolutely infuriating. Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr It's very little relation to reality. So 2010 election, we will cut the deficit.
Result, debt to GPD ratio more than doubles.
2017 election, Brexit will reduce bureaucracy and red tape.
Result, there are 100,000 more civil servants now
than there were pre-Brexit.
2019 election, with an 80 seat majority,
Boris Johnson could serve three terms as Prime Minister.
You see, it's enough to make you spoil your ballot.
Thank you very much.
APPLAUSE
And now, please welcome the first of a few blasts from the past this series.
Please welcome back to the Now Show, Marcus Briggstock.
APPLAUSE
Now, our beloved Government have announced they are planning to
support teachers in banning children from using phones at school.
And this is good.
Banning phones is a decent idea and should, in my view, be extended
to include adults between the ages of 18 and 97.
LAUGHTER
After that, you're free to look at all the porn and parkour videos you like.
I actually asked the cast earlier what their average daily screen time comes to.
Steve Punt still has a petrol-powered Nokia from 1974 and even he clocked up four hours on his
phone yesterday. I thought he was busy playing Snake but apparently he was trying to type an
eight word text. Hugh Dennis spent six hours on his phone yesterday mostly trying to work out what the message
from Steve Punt meant.
Now if you do know anyone, his relationship with scrolling on their phone is not a cause
of concern to them.
I will assume they don't have thumbs or they're in one of those new relationships where people
still have, um, oh, what's that thing?
Eye contact?
Um, no, but I think that's part of it.
Five a day? No, don't think so.
Sex? That's the one, yes.
Five a day if you're really keen, preferably not with eye contact.
Most of the people I know spend so much time on their phones,
they would struggle to identify their own child in a police line-up
if they went missing.
Take your time, madam. Is one of these boys your son?
Erm, yes, I think so.
That one, maybe, with the hair and the two eyes?
Oh, God, wait, I've dropped my phone. Wait, where's my phone?
Right, it's an iPhone 12 running iOS 10
with a pink glitter effect flip case.
It says Prosecco Princess in red on the back.
There's a small crack in the top left-hand corner
and a sticky patch where I I got soy sauce on it.
And, oh, no, it's okay.
It was in my pocket.
Sorry, false alarm, got it.
With phone time, my family actually staged
an intervention on me.
My wife, my grown-up kids, my brother, two mates,
came and told me face-to-face that they were worried
about how rarely I look up from my phone.
And I want to take this opportunity to thank them.
It was a brave thing to do and it came from a good place. To be fair I
didn't actually know it had happened until they posted about it on Facebook
later on but to be fair to me I clicked like. Loads of people spend more time
than they would like gawping at videos of cats falling off high things, skiers
crashing into trees and of course now footage of conservatives playing that new word game
they like to play on the news where they're not allowed to say that a thing that is racist
is racist.
What I'd say is it was wrong. It was a wrong thing to say. It was a thing that was a comment
that was not right because it was wrong on the basis of being connected
to issues of wrongness based on a person who was wrong.
Not wrong, but look, it was wrong because it was a wrong thing.
Yes, Marcus, you've buzzed.
What's your challenge?
Deviation, Sue.
Yes, deviation from the word racist,
which minister you could have said
because it's on the card for all to see.
It is indeed. Now according to Gov.UK 97 percent of children aged 12 and above have a smartphone
which of course is very very difficult for the other 3 percent of children.
Those poor kids don't even know they're being cyber bullied.
I find the fact that nearly all kids 12 and over have a smartphone frightening.
We gave our now adult kids smartphones at that age and even they would tell you now
it was too young and it damaged their ability to form real world friendships and to be bored
without experiencing feelings of panic.
But my god we were bored by comparison and I think it was good for us.
Periods of extended boredom are restful for the brain and that is why radio 3 is so
important. Boredom was integral to my childhood. I knew a kid in my class at
school who genuinely, this is true, shook head lice out of his hair and watched them
race across a physics textbook. Now that may seem far-fetched to some of you but I
swear to you that is true. How do I know? Because dear reader, it was me!
My worry is that the real world is struggling to compete with the dopamine reward we give ourselves
from scrolling. For the average trip up the high street to come even close to the warm glow of a
thumb-numbing social media binge, it would have to be organised so that we are never ever, even for a
second, allowed to be bored. I mean look, I could give up my smartphone,
in many ways it would do me good. But I would need someone to walk in front of me at all
times with a road atlas every time I leave the house shouting this.
At the end of the road, turn left, email, ignore for now, spout going to Ipswich, turn
right, watch this video.
It's of a deaf child getting a hearing aid and hearing her mummy for the first time.
You may cry now. Forward it to wife.
Turn right, Pret a Monge.
No time, train to Ipswich is £430.
Say no.
Your mum has left a 25-minute voicemail message.
Buy these jazz records now!
Ipswich have upped the money.
Here's a pic of Fergal Sharkey pointing at a turd in a chalk stream.
Here's a video of Donald Trump pretending to be a disabled woman.
Comment, rage, feel sad. Turn right, 25-minute message from your mum is a butt stream. Here's a video of Donald Trump pretending to be a disabled woman. Comment rage. Feel sad. Turn right. 25 minute message from your mum is a butt dial. Oh a funny road
sign. Take picture. Anus Lane. Send to Vinny and your brother saying, I hear you live here
now. Ipswich. Need an answer. Say no. Your mum is calling again. Send to voicemail.
Sorry for the butt dial darling. Oh and your father says someone you don't know has died.
Buy these jazz records now!
Vinnie, reply.
Your mum lives on Anus Lane.
Pics in bio.
I mean, look, obviously, I couldn't live without that.
It's clearly a lot of fun and definitely doing me loads of good.
Incidentally, if anybody would like to buy my iPhone,
a smart tablet, and a recently updated laptop,
please see me at the end of
the show. Thank you very much.
Marker's break stopped there.
Now in the time on the phrase we have some good news and some bad news.
Yes, it tends to work like that with news stories of course. For every heart warmer,
a blood chiller, for every bird flu chicken. There's a skateboarding duck
So for example the good news the UK has come second in the world in a new survey
Mm-hmm the bad news a new survey of the world's most miserable country
If the result is to be believed only Uzbekistan is more miserable than we are
Pretty depressing that we only came second.
We're not even the best at being miserable.
The good news is that there is no real evidence
that this survey is accurate.
For a start, we don't know when and where they gathered their data.
In Glasgow, from people coming out of the Willy Wonka chocolate experience?
This new survey was carried out by the not at all sinister
sounding Sepian Labs whose mission is to understand and enable the human mind.
And on the basis of this and previous survey they drew some general
conclusions. More wealth and economic development do not automatically lead to more happiness.
They also conclude that young people
are generally less happy than older people,
and they put this down, as Marcus pointed out,
to having mobile phones too young,
the endless pressure of social media
to compare your life to other people's,
and the amount of ultra-processed food in the diet,
which can't be good news for McDonald's.
Try our new happy meal. Its name is ironic.
Having said that though, yet another survey, this one from the Resolution Foundation, found
that people are happiest at the ages of 16 and 70.
So for parents of teenagers out there, on their 16th birthday, you have a duty to inform
them.
Happy birthday son, enjoy it. You won't feel happiness like this again for another 54 years.
See if we really are unhappy though, how might that show up in our everyday behaviour? Well,
you may have seen this week the news that more than a fifth of UK adults are not working or
looking for work. So that's around 9.2 million people at a loose end during the day.
That doesn't mean they're not happy.
It does since they cancelled doctors.
We already knew that last year the UK was ranked 12th overall in the worldwide prosperity
rankings so it seems that money really can't buy you happiness or even rudimentary Photoshop
skills.
Although in sufficient quantities, say around £10 million, money can buy you happiness or even rudimentary Photoshop skills. Although insufficient quantities say around 10 million pounds, money can buy you the ability
to be as racist as you want without anyone in the government really calling you out on
it.
Interestingly, in all these surveys, Scandinavian countries always do well. Norway, Sweden,
Denmark and Finland are always in the top 10. In fact, in the UN figures, Finland is
the world's happiest
country and who wouldn't be happy sharing a land border with Russia?
Sweden also has a very high happiness index, probably from that glow of satisfaction that
you get when you finish building an Ikea cabinet and all the draw fronts are facing the same
way. These are also, of course, countries with high tax and high levels of public services and healthcare.
The UK and US, interestingly, are no happier now than we were 50 years ago.
In fact, we're a lot more anxious, depressed and heavily medicated.
So whatever the key to happiness is, upgrading your mobile phone every six months doesn't seem to be it.
But there are other national rankings in which we do exceptionally well.
Yes, for example, the good news is...
We are placed third in the world
for the number of books published every year.
Bad news is...
Most of them are misery memoirs.
Good news?
Our waterways are the 33rd longest in the world.
Bad news?
They're also the most full of poo.
Because we got rid of that Brussels red tape
that stopped us filling our rivers with poo.
So that's good news. Bad news...
Our health service is struggling.
Good news...
We are 24th in the world for growing apples, which means we don't need as many doctors.
That's what Jeremy Hunt intends to argue.
These surveys, of course, are never very significant,
but this misery one could be.
If the government really wants to cut down on immigration
ahead of an election, they need to use this in announcements
at all ports and airports.
BELL DINGS
Attention, all arrivals.
Welcome to the United Kingdom,
the second most miserable country in the world.
For those of you thinking of staying, please remember, Belarus is happier than we are and they're a freezing cold
dictatorship. Thank you and have a bad day. Amidst all this misery and depression
it's good to find the occasional story to cheer you up and at the end of a bad
week for royalty generally comes the happier news that Mattel have made a
Barbie doll of Queen Camilla.
Now this brings up two very important questions. One...
Who on earth is going to buy a Camilla Barbie doll?
And two...
Which other public figure should Mattel turn to doll form?
Well, yes. I personally would favour a series of ex-Chancellors of the Exchequer.
Mainly just so one of them can have a string you can pull and it sings, I'm just Ken Clark.
In fact, I think Mattel are on to a winner here and I think it may make us a much happier
country.
This Christmas you can get your hands on the doll they've all been waiting for, Queen
Consort Camilla with special wave action wrists.
Push down her crown to hear 25 classic Camilla quotes. I really need a gin and tonic. And that's not all we've
also got the number one figure on the market, Action Boris with gripping hands
that can hold a glass of wine in one and your bottom in the other. With classic
untucked shirt and unrealistic hair press down to hear one of his many famous catchphrases.
And coming soon we have the doll that's on nobody's wish list that's right it's the limited edition Liz Trust Prime Minister doll.
Opening up new pork markets that is a disgrace.
Limited edition Liz Trust Prime Minister, available for 50 days only.
And now, here to talk to us about the Oscars and International Women's Day, it's Rhea
Leena.
Last week was not a good week for feminism, but I blame women.
It's our fault.
As women were supposed to be good at organization, multitasking, higher order thinking, so how
in the world did we end up with International Women's Day being on the same weekend as Mothering
Sunday?
Which was, let's be honest, globally eclipsed by the Oscars,
where the most prominent feminist manifesto
in recent movie history, The Barbie Movie,
was resoundingly put in its place
by the most inexcusable celebration
of mankind's most horrendous creation.
And by celebration, I mean Oppenheimer,
and by horrendous creation, I mean the nuclear bomb,
not John Cena naked, whilst being represented
by 50 of the sexiest male dancers
Hollywood has to offer dancing to I'm Just Ken sung by the God that is Ryan Gosling who if it was up to me would
Never ever have to wonder again if he was can off
How
Having our entire years worth of female
Commemoration all in one weekend was a massive calendar fail and we need to do better next year ladies.
In America they have designated all of March Women's History Month which kicks off with a presidential proclamation
issued every year to honor the achievements of American women and in the UK
we give it the attention it deserves by making the week it falls in
National Pie Week
the week it falls in, National Pie Week. That's right, we in the UK considered the pie worthy of six more days of consideration than the women that bake
them. Frustratingly, we need more than a day to solve some of the issues at hand.
People seem to have forgotten that the purpose of International Women's Day is
to try and effect change for the better for women around the world and have instead reduced it to just another Hallmark holiday
where you give a woman in your vicinity a card and wish them Happy International Women's
Day and feel like you've done your bit for the cause.
I mean, if you're going to do that, at least acknowledge the truth of the matter and wish
you're happy you're still only worth 83% of men day.
And let's be honest, if you nail the delivery, you won't need the card.
And this is not to say that men don't deserve days or attention for their issues,
can I just say right off the bat, World Prostate Cancer Day is June 11th,
World Suicide Prevention Day is always September 10th, and National Impotence Day is rather appropriately Valentine's Day.
So you can imagine how horrified mothers up and down the UK were this year when the Oscars
were scheduled for March 10th, our Mothering Sunday.
The last thing we wanted to do was share our day with the 96th Academy Awards ceremony because
we already knew it was also the final showdown between
the Barbie and Oppenheimer movies.
Both released on the same weekend last summer and battling out for ultimate supremacy ever
since as women we had just spent the last eight months supporting and uplifting that
movie dragging our toxic partners and Andrew Tate loving sons to it screaming, if I had
to sit through three hours of Oppenheimer,
you can sit through two hours of this.
And we don't want to do it anymore, okay?
We don't?
No, we don't.
Because I think, and I'm just gonna say it,
because I think you think it too,
the Barbie movie is the worst thing to happen
to feminism in a long time.
Ah!
I'm sorry, but it's true.
The movie is bad.
Really bad.
How can you be by the women and for the women if the best thing to come out of your movie
is Ken?
Talks of a spinoff for sequel?
Ken.
Has someone performed at the Oscars?
I know.
Ken.
Be a role model for millions of young kids looking for inspiration?
Barbie?
No. Still can. It's
an awful movie. I could go on, but you know, it might spoil it if that's even possible.
But I don't think Oppenheimer is any better. While I accept that artistically it might
be the better piece, I still think it is just as deserving of a seat outside the headmistress'
office for letting women down as Barbie is. First of all, why are you all sitting through 180 minutes of a movie
when you already know the ending? Here's a spoiler. If you haven't already seen Oppenheimer,
the bomb goes off twice. Second, if Oppenheimer is what Hollywood can make with the skills of directors like Nolan
and actors like Murphy and Downey Jr. and Blunt and Pugh,
why not use those talents to tell the under-told stories
that we don't already know of,
like that of Rosalind Franklin?
Emily Blunt could have played the scientist
who discovered the double helix of DNA,
and the men from Oppenheimer could play some men.
So there you have it in a nutshell, And the men from Oppenheimer could play some men.
So there you have it in a nutshell.
How feminism blew its entire 2024 load in one weekend.
And it's too late to change the dates, at least for this year.
But it's not too late to fix the problem.
International Women's Day wasn't long enough and Mothering Sunday was truncated by the
Oscars.
But that's fine because from now on to compensate, I want each and every one of you in here today
and listening at home to treat every day
like it's International Women's Day
and appreciate every woman like she's your mother.
Well, what are you waiting for?
Off you go, you've got a lot of cards to write. LAUGHTER APPLAUSE
That was really nice. So, it is Comic Relief Day, and we have asked our audience here
whether they have ever been funny for money.
Have they ever been involved in a stunt or event
to raise money for charity?
Yep, human-sized table football.
Didn't raise much money, but I did kick the shin of my managing director.
I did a sponsored stay-awake for 48 hours.
We forgot to raise money.
Have you ever been involved at school, work or home in a stunt or event to raise money?
Yeah, I thought of and implemented the OULES. LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE
So, there you go. Thank you very much for sharing your charitable
efforts with us and do give any money you can spare to Comic Relief.
So, this week, we found out that former Prime Minister Liz Truss
accepted a £20,000 trip funded by an American lobby group.
Our musical guest has more on the subject.
And as it's Red Nose Day, his song has been sponsored
to raise money for comic relief.
Sponsored by me, Liz Truss.
Please welcome Ed MacArthur.
APPLAUSE
The media tells you it's her fault
she was the shortest ever serving Prime Minister.
But let's be frank, the economy tanked
because of a left-wing cabal that's sinister.
You were told it was due to her unfunded tax cuts, but I'll tell you really how.
It's because the whole damn British establishment is more left-wing than Chairman Mao.
It's all because of the Deep State, baby.
That's the reason for her hasty removal.
Deep State, baby. She's got a minus 60 rating approval cuz of deep state baby the IMF B of E and OBR and
market forces and lefty lawyers and Gary Lineker and electric cars a leader of
lesser character would hide away in shame but not old Liz she's back in the
biz peddling her ideas again you can slag her off for making a fortune on the
global lecture circuit, but
come on mate, with his interest rate she's got no choice but to work it with what? The
Deep State Baby. It funds the BBC and other channels. Deep State Baby. Dodgy deals, vegan
meals, solar panels. Deep State Baby. Hollywood, Facebook, No Go Zones, Justin Welby, Mixed
Recycling, The Now Show, Piano Solos. well-being mixed recycling the now show piano solos
iceberg lettuce lionesses women's tennis deep state comedy songs admitting you
were wrong it's all the workings of the deep state same in in Spain, Germany, Belgium, Denmark, France, I can give you more.
Europe, Africa, Asia, basically everywhere except Singapore is our deep state baby.
List truss was silenced by the blob. Deep state baby.
9-11 was an inside job. Deep state baby.
It's my firmly held belief, the deep state is everywhere.
Especially comic relief
you've been listening to the now show starring steve punch, Hugh Dennis, Marcus Brigstock,
Rhea Leena, Jason Forbes and Gemma Arrowsmith. The song was written and performed by Ed MacArthur.
The show was written by the cast with additional material from Aidan Fitzmorris, Jade Geby, David Duncan and Christina Riggs.
The producer was Rajiv Karia and it was a BBC Studios production for Radio 4.