Off Air... with Jane and Fi - I love a Tuesday - with Alex Edelman
Episode Date: January 19, 2023Jane and Fi chat flexitarians, maternity leave and what is the best day to go to the theatre….They're also joined by American comedian Alex Edelman on his latest show ‘Just For Us’.If you want t...o contact the show to ask a question and get involved in the conversation then please email us: janeandfi@times.radioAssistant Producer: Erin CarneyTimes Radio Producer: Kate LeePodcast Executive Producer: Ben Mitchell Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So it was a busy old show today, wasn't it, Jen? I felt a bit exhausted by it.
We had everything from the King's Wind. I think we did very well not to have any slightly puerile comments
off the back of a long piece about King Charles' Wind.
Actually, can you be honest with me?
I'm having a conversation with myself.
Could you spot a wind farm?
Yes.
They are what I think they are.
Yes, with the great big turbines.
What do you think they might be?
Well, because I've seen them inland and then,
so just off Crosby Beach, where I go quite a lot
because it's near where my folks are,
there is a huge, well, there are loads of wind farms
around that stretch of the Merseyside coast.
Yeah.
They are definitely wind farms, I'm just checking.
I mean, they certainly look like they are.
What might they be if they weren't wind farms?
Well, the beginning of a very stealthy alien invasion, which just seems to have taken root
in the seabed.
Or more art.
We ended up having a conversation about that that was really fascinating with a guy from
a think tank called Commonwealth. And it's just about who owns, who knew? I didn't know
that you could own a bit of the seabed.
No.
I suppose it's stupid of me.
Well, I didn't know that you could sell so much of our seabed.
So he was explaining that a massively high percentage of the wind farms around our coast are owned by other states, notably the Nordic states.
But we don't own any of theirs.
It just is a bit strange.
Interestingly, I think a lot of foreign governments
also have quite large stakes in some of our privatised rail companies.
Well, they do. China has quite a lot of stake everywhere.
It's quite odd that we just seem to have accepted all this.
Well, I think the fault lies with journalists doesn't it
what i can't believe i thought journalists were to blame i mean so although it might sound
magnificently kind of curious and meerkat like on our program for both of us to ask uh you know
surprised questions about wind farms it's quite shocking that we haven't thought to ask those
questions before well it is um i remember a time I think at the beginning of the 21st century,
when the state of Iceland had become excessively rich and was buying loads and loads of British businesses.
And every single time it happened, either me or my then colleague Peter Allen would say,
why are Iceland, how are Iceland doing this? And they just were, and then it all went belly up.
Well, it did because their banking system crashed, didn't it?
Because it put a lot of money into it.
For a time, they were absolutely swimming in dosh.
Well, I mean, this is the kind of geopolitical chat
that everyone has tuned in for, Jane.
It's award-winning.
I'd like to pursue both of those topics, though,
so we will do, and we'll do it quite seriously over the weeks to come.
We were joined by the wonderful Jane Mulkerran's associate editor of the Times magazine today
she's had a very very busy week she's been off to Ireland and that story will be in next week's
magazine all about the lives of some Ukrainian refugees who were taken in over there a year ago
but today she gave us a sneak peek into the magazine you can get tomorrow. It's not tomorrow, is it?
The magazine that you can get on Saturday.
Since we last spoke, because you were here being the Jane on Monday.
Jane on tap.
You have been to Ireland and back.
I have.
The feature, when will that be published?
That will be published very quickly.
That's going to be a week on Saturday's magazine.
So when I'm here next Thursday, we can talk about it yeah it's about ukrainian refugees it is yes about um in ireland um in a hotel which has been taken over um as a residence for ukrainian
refugees in a very small village in rural connemara it's sort sort of like Ballyciss Angel with refugees, yeah. How many refugees has Ireland taken?
Almost 80,000.
Right, which is... Is that about the same as...
It's about the same as here.
But, of course, it's a smaller country.
Yes, there's 5 million people in Ireland as opposed to 70 million.
So, yes, proportionately, it's a lot higher.
Yeah.
And they are struggling to house them now.
They are appealing to people who have, you know, second homes and holiday homes and stuff because they are running to house them now they are appealing to people who have second homes
and holiday homes and stuff because they are running out of space
or they've run out of space
they're accommodating people in sports stadiums
and stuff
so it's yeah
Ireland has done a very good job of hosting
but it doesn't have unlimited resources
I mean nowhere does
so we'll look forward to reading all about that
in next week's magazine but in this week's magazine my my unlimited resources i mean nowhere does no so we'll look forward to reading all about that in
next week's magazine but in this week's magazine my my it's packed it's a bumper issue isn't it
you've got a fantastic interview with helena bonham carter uh interviewed by caitlin moran
uh she reveals that she's got a graphologist i love that but she runs every potential date past not just her graphologist,
but also her aunt and the nannies.
Plural, plural nannies.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What do you mean?
Runs every date.
So if she's got an important event to do.
She gets the handwriting analysed.
No, a love interest.
Yeah.
Or a love interest.
Yeah, she'll get a love interest to write her a note
and then she runs it past all of these people,
including the graphologist,
who has quite often said,
don't go near them with the barge pole.
And she does anyway, as she reveals in the interview.
It's not very spontaneous as a way of dating, but, you know, due diligence.
It's served her well.
I think she has a younger man in attendance at the moment.
She definitely does.
Apparently he's had his handwriting analysed and he got in.
Well, she's doing something right.
If that's what you're into.
I have to say, it's a brilliant interview.
And if you ever wanted to go on a muddy walk of an afternoon
with Catlin Moran and Helena Bonham Carter,
this is basically what you can do in this interview.
Well, I don't want to give it away, but basically,
Catlin very cleverly makes the point that Helena is always talked of
as wildly eccentric and deeply peculiar.
And in fact, she's simply a lively, highly intelligent middle-aged woman.
Yes.
Who is, by the way, I've interviewed her years ago.
She's the most beautiful, most beautiful woman.
She has the most extraordinary skin.
She really does.
I popped along to the shoot, which is our cover image,
and she just looks extraordinary.
She's so beautiful.
Her bone structure, her skin.
Yes. She's, as we say, younger man.
She's doing something right.
And she's got very interesting things to say
about getting through your teenage years
and trying to find your own style as well.
Yes, absolutely.
And just the fantastic detail about why she doesn't wear jeans.
And I will just leave that hanging
because we don't have to tell everybody everything.
No, we want them to read the magazine.
I think you've got some other cracking articles in here,
including some interviews with young men
who are followers and likers of Andrew Tate.
Yeah, I think since Andrew Tate was arrested
at the end of December,
there's obviously been a huge amount written
and discussed about him
and about the misogyny that he punts on social media.
And I think it's very easy, obviously, to condemn it, but it's also very easy to look away
and not really read or listen to anything that he said. And I think that's really dangerous. I think,
you know, that can lead to echo chambers. And as a magazine, mean we interviewed andrew tate last september which was
potentially quite controversial because um many people you know quite rightly condemn what he's
saying and what he's preaching but it's also your 14 year old son knows who he is and knows what
he's saying so i think uh i think as times readers and potential parents of those teenagers,
you know, you need to know who this man is too.
And I think lots of people didn't before his arrest.
My dad asked me over Christmas, who's Andrew Tate?
Because he didn't know.
So in the magazine, we have talked to young men
who have attended Hustler's University,
which obviously isn't a real bricks and mortar university.
It's these online courses that he runs.
And, you know, they say a lot about why they are attracted to the sort of thing that andrew tate is preaching
which i think we need to understand to know why this man gets 500 million views on youtube
so one of the boys that you've spoken to i mean he's a young man uh ellis calmeni who's 19 he's
from romford he describes himself as a boxer.
He's got 200,000 TikTok followers himself.
He says if you watch Andrew Tate in context,
you'll see he's got a lot of respect for women.
His girlfriend has said that he's a respectable man
and I think his arrest is unjustified.
It's made him even more famous.
I actually can't dispute the last comment.
No, that's a worry, isn't it?
Yeah.
I was talking to a teacher the other day, actually.
He said that they are having assemblies in their school
about Andrew Tate and about how wrong he is
about just about everything.
And these assemblies are being filmed by some of the pupils
and then the footage is sent towards Andrew Tate.
I imagine he doesn't receive very much at the moment,
but they are letting him know just how important he's become.
So he is now someone that has to be warned about
in British school assemblies,
which you imagine if you're inside Andrew Tate's head,
it's probably not a bad thing.
He's probably delighted.
But I was just so heartened, Jane,
to see all of these first-person experiences from young from young men because of course if you just tell someone that
they're wrong they're just going to go and find more reasons why they're right especially when
they're that age that's that's what you do isn't it yeah i think we have to ask them why we have
to listen to them yeah and there's a reason for this popularity absolutely what void he's filling yep another thing
that I did like
the trends
that need to end
in 2023
including meal box services
flexitarianism
I did agree
with Ben on this
I think
I think it's just
lacking commitment
to anything
isn't it
it's just nonsense
I'll go on then
I'll have some meat
I'll go on then
and foraging as well
I mean maybe
we could get Hannah
Hannah to talk about this
when she's on in a while
I think
I think foraging who really does foraging well there's I mean, maybe we could get Hannah to talk about this when she's on in a while. I think foraging, who really does foraging?
Well, there's a picture of David Beckham foraging in the magazine.
I've seen it.
Is he foraging or just looking for his dignity?
I don't know.
Oh, Jane, harsh judgement.
That was Jane Mulkerrins,
who is Associate Editor of The Times magazine,
which you'll find with your copy of The Times every Saturday.
Now, on our Times radio show yesterday, we talked to a football fan, Katie Price, who is a big fan of Arsenal, and she'd been
on the receiving end of some very unpleasant anti-Semitic abuse when she was in a pub in North
London watching the Arsenal Spurs game over the course of last weekend. And it is an unfortunate
truth that anti-Semitic incidents do seem to be on the rise in Britain, on British university campuses, apparently, and also in the States.
The US has seen more anti-Semitic incidents between 2018 and 2020 than at any time in the last 40 years.
Now, Alex Edelman is a comedian and his latest show, Just For Us, is sort of an attempt to try to explore why.
He's a stand-up comedian.
He won the 2014 Edinburgh Fringe Newcomer Award.
He's in London doing a show called Just For Us
until the end of February.
Now, the premise of Just For Us
is that Alex decided to go and spend an evening
with people who call themselves white nationalists.
And we asked him if he'd just like to explain
why he made that decision.
I mean, not really, because it's the show, but I will.
Give us a little tease.
She's paid for a ticket, Alex. Come on.
Yeah, no, no.
Yeah, don't give it all away.
The tease is that I saw something on social media
and so I went to this this this thing said, if you're if you're if you have questions about your whiteness, then come to this place at this time.
And I went and there was a group of people who was who had broadly termed to be somewhere between white nationalists and the semites.
You know, I don't want to label anybody. But but so yeah so i i went and uh and i sat there and that's sort of it's sort of a
uh that anecdote is sort of the backbone of a show that more closely examines like you know uh
white nationalism but assimilation more than anything else the the way that we all of us not
just jews the way that all you know that all of us, not just Jews, the way that all, you know, that all of us present
ourselves and represent ourselves and feel about how we have to, you know, fit in to various groups.
And so I think people are surprised and they find, obviously the show has found resonance
with Jewish communities in New York and DC and, and, and here in London, but, but people who are
not Jewish, um, they have been, you know, they resonated with it as well.
And and the show did very well in Edinburgh in front of largely almost exclusively non-Jewish audiences.
And, you know, the show is it's a comedy show. So, you know.
So at the heart of a lot of your comedy seems to lie an ability to really take the mickey out of your family, Alex.
And some of it really, you know, it is it is spot on.
How tell us a little bit about your dad, an extremely intelligent man, but not not in the eyes of your mum.
I think that's so. Yes.
I think. Oh, that's so. Yes. Yeah. Well, my dad is a very my dad's professor and academic and esteemed researcher in Boston. He's a cardiologist and a biomedical engineer. And I say to my mother, he's the dumbest piece of trash he's ever lived.
But hang on. Your mom is a clever woman. She's a lawyer, isn't she?
Yes. My mom's a lawyer. But it doesn't matter how clever how clever my dad is to my mom.
He's just an idiot. And so that's not in this show.
But I've talked about it on television quite a bit.
And people sometimes sometimes come up to my father in synagogue or at work and say, oh, I heard the bit about your wife thinking you're a moron.
And it's it's become my father handles it with a great amount of grace. He's a very graceful guy. But do you know what, I mean, I don't want to make something
incredibly kind of turgid and serious out of out of your comedy, Alex. But, but it's such a thing,
isn't it? If I'm not sure that you could twist that around. I mean, it works, doesn't it? That
your mum kind of belittles your dad. And he's this amazing heart surgeon, he almost won the Nobel
Peace Prize. And and you know i
think it taps into a kind of comedic belittling of men but if you flip that around you know that
it is no longer acceptable to have a comedic belittling of women is it i mean i've thought
of doing it that way so i mean my my mother though i make fun of my mother though, I make fun of my mother for shortcomings.
But no, a comedic belittling.
Yeah, I don't know whether it would work.
I'm just asking a genuine question.
I'm not making a kind of judgment about it.
I think you can, you know, not to get too into the nitty gritty,
although this is one of my favorite subjects,
the vicissitudes of how you make a joke about a difficult topic. I could make a joke about my mother, provided I made it clear
to an audience that I was representing an individual instead of a collective.
So you could, but you'd have to adjust for how society treats and thinks about women. And just
the same way you adjust for a society treats and thinks about men, and just the same way you adjust for
a society treats and thinks about men, you'd be shocked by how many, you know, what people
would deem to be social pitfalls are avoided by inserting one or two clauses into a sentence
in a joke.
And so sometimes people say, you can't joke about this anymore.
You're going to offend people with this.
And in the back of my mind, if I'm being honest, whenever I see a comedian offending people, I honestly feel like
it's mostly a craft failing on the part of the comedian. There are exceptions to the rule,
but most of the time I go, ah, you could have used this four word clause there. Cause I've
used that in the past to avoid offending people. Go on. What's your favorite four word clause?
No, I'm not. Everyone is different.
I'm just saying that all you need to do is make it clear that you are making fun of one person instead of a large group of people.
But you know what? A four-word clause, how about this, is in my personal experience.
Okay.
That's a good four-word clause.
And then no one can accuse you of generalizing.
Like there are so many different ways to get a joke across without, you know, without making people feel belittled.
And I do think that my generation of comedians in particular is much more is very conscious of that.
We are chatting today to the American Jewish comedian Alex Edelman about his latest show on in London until the end of February called Just For Us.
Now, I asked Alex how he sets the tone and how he just actually struts on stage and how does he decide what he's going to say first?
You know, that's so interesting. No one's ever asked me about that. But I think if I had to guess, it's no, no, that's no, that's not I really am.
You know, if I had to guess, it's that first of all, I think a lot of the stuff that you've seen is me being on television.
And so for me, sometimes it's on a talk show in America. And for me, those talk shows are very big deals growing up.
those talk shows were very big deals growing up. And so not to give too much away, but I am quite nervous sometimes when I'm doing those talk shows, when you're performing in front of your favorite
comedians. And in the case of Stephen Colbert and Conan O'Brien, comedians that I grew up idolizing
and are some of the reasons I was comedians. And on those TV shows, they're right there. They're
sitting over your right shoulder. And so when I say gosh or
wow, I think it's me partially acknowledging how crazy it is for me to be doing it and how
wonderful the experience is. And obviously the flip side of being nervous is being excited. And so
all I can remember, the primary emotion that I remember from performing on those shows,
including like Live at the Apollo, is a you know, is a feeling of excitement.
I am ultimately a comedy fan also.
So I think people forget this sometimes about comedians, but it is really cool to do the job that, you know, that most of us loved when we were children.
I always want to be a comedian.
I have the chance to do it now.
It's just a really, really salubrious gig.
It's such a high stakes career, though, isn't it?
With so much kind of jeopardy involved.
Do you have a plan?
Do you set yourself targets?
What's on the horizon?
Well, the show that I'm doing now has been, you know, a wonderful experience in the sense that it's just run and run, and there are offers to do it in many other places.
And I won't do it forever.
I think the show will be done sort of by the end of this year, beginning of next.
It will be in London for a while here, and then it will go to Boston, my hometown, eventually.
And then it will go back to New York York and it'll be filmed as a special. And, uh, and I have some television work lined up and I'm writing a film.
And, and so there is no, I guess, plan. I, all this is just a hobby that got out of hand,
like, uh, winning that, that newcomer prize in Edinburgh turned me from, you know, a waiter and
bad restaurants in New York into a full-time comedian, and that was 2014. And I've always, thank God,
never had to look for work outside of comedy beyond that
and make a very wonderful living doing the thing that I love.
It's an extreme privilege.
All this, and we have still to mention your brother's Olympic career as a...
Now, is it a bobsleigh or a skeleton uh he's he's doing bobsleigh now
yes and he represents israel doesn't he we should say yes i i joke i i joke that my nickname for him
is shul runnings oh very good which is yeah shul means synagogue in yiddish it's my best work
and um and yeah aj aj represented israel inleton in the 2018 Winter Olympics and fell just short of qualifying for 2022.
We were so gutted. They cut two spots because of covid and he would have been in the first of the two spots.
So very sad. But but yeah, AJ is I'm the least impressive member of my family.
I always tell folks and it's true. My mother, my father, my two brothers are all, you know, lavishly accomplished in their various non-entertainment fields.
And so I'm sort of.
Now, do they envy your freedom?
Oh, no.
I mean, I think they realize how I think they realize how isolating it can be.
how isolating it can be.
Look, I love London,
but I'm in a pokey flat near the river
for a few months
while I do my show
and it's a dream come true,
but also I miss my bed
in Los Angeles.
So there's a flip side
to that isolation.
Can I just say,
it's a beautiful day
in London today.
It's cold, admittedly,
but the sun is shining,
the sky is blue,
you are a lucky, lucky man. It is so, admittedly, but the sun is shining. The sky is blue. You are a
lucky, lucky man. It is so cold. Yes, it is cold. Come on, get over it, man. I just wanted to know
how quickly can you tell when you're doing this show or any other that this is a good show,
that you're on form and actually, perhaps more importantly importantly sometimes that the crowd in the house are receptive do you know i sometimes uh sometimes the two are divorced i had a show the other night
where this receptive but i was my tempo was a tiny bit off and so on those nights you sort of take
you sort of take uh what's you sort of play it as it lies, I guess. But but I know I know early on, Stuart Lee says he can tell from the sound of the audio going into the venue how they're going to be.
And I can feel that sometimes, too.
The funny thing is, if if an audience isn't giving you what you want, you never stop trying to get it out of them.
So by the end of the show, at least you've tried and they can see you trying and you're doing, you know, you're
doing your level best. And if the audience is with you, then you're just sort of riding along with
them. So it's sort of a win-win situation if you've got a bit of a level headed outlook, but,
but yeah, every audience can vary. The one thing that's important is my ex-girlfriend,
Catherine Ryan, who's a brilliant standup comic here in the UK, liked to say that you have to let a bad show go by 10 o'clock at night or 10 o'clock the next morning.
And so I sort of try to live my life by that dictum.
If it's a bad show, I mope for a few hours and then by 10 o'clock I let it go.
Have you got a lucky night? Is Tuesday better than Wednesday?
That's a good one.
Wednesday not as good as Thursday?
I love a Tuesday show.
You know why?
It's not quite Monday, but it's not quite Wednesday.
I like Tuesdays.
Tuesdays for me are a lot of fun.
And also I'm always in a good mood on a Tuesday
because most comedians do either Thursday to Saturday
or Wednesday to Sunday,
or sometimes Thursday to Monday in the States. So for me to be performing on a Tuesday as a
reminder that I have work and it's not a time that most comedians get to work, it's usually a day off
for comedians. And so for me, it's a privilege to be able to perform on Tuesday. I know that sounds
so stupid, but it is a thousandth century. We're all a little bit eccentric, Alex,
and I certainly put you in the category of really quite eccentric.
That was the American comic Alex Edelman
reflecting on how Tuesday is a good day for him to work.
I'm seeing him on Thursday.
Oh, well, it won't be any good, will it?
Well, no.
No, it should be all right,
but he's just not going to be enjoying it as much.
It's funny because a comedy show is in a theatre, but it isn't
theatre, is it? And if I'm
honest, I think, oh gosh, I'm going to see a
Shakespeare production next week.
Or you can
compare notes. Well, although I'm absolutely
delighted to be able to say that I'm going,
I think I probably speak for every
single person who'll be in that audience that I'll be
even more excited when it's over.
No, you see, lots of people really love it.
Don't go if you don't like it.
Because I think when I'm in the moment, it's just that Shakespeare,
I hope it'll probably be a truncated version.
Why don't you just go and see comedy?
Just the hits.
Yeah.
Othello.
How quick can that be?
Yes, you see, I have to say I've had some of my best bonding moments
with people
on the planet when you know we've both been able to admit that we don't want to go and sit at the
donmar warehouse nothing against the donmar warehouse because lots of other people absolutely
love it but you can't like everything and uh it's not for me right uh this one's from sandra who
says still loving the show well done sandra that's the kind of spirit we like. Love listening to your podcast before I go to bed each night.
I don't fall asleep.
Well, I mean, that's kind of the point, Sandra,
so we wouldn't mind if you did.
Your guests have been great this week.
I love Griefcast, so hearing your interview with Cariad
was fascinating on Monday.
Her views on Harry's book certainly shine a different light
on the whole thing.
I thought so too, Sandra.
I thought she was very profound about that, actually.
Fred's views on French food have really inspired me to write in.
As I live in France, a small village called Marciac,
renowned for its international jazz festival
in between Toulouse and Lourdes.
This area totally fulfils Fee's ideas of French eating.
This area is well known for duck confit, breast and fat.
Oh, I don't like duck confit.
It's weird, isn't it?
It is just meat and fat.
I find that a very claggy culinary possibility.
If you go out trying to find anything veggie,
it's almost impossible.
Now, you see, Fred denied this,
but we knew it to be true, Sandra.
Chips are cooked in duck fat, lardons are added to veg,
and if you admit to being a veggie, they think you're ill
and then offer you chicken.
You can find meat substitutes in the supermarket,
but restaurants are way behind.
Sandra adds, I hope your parents are OK, Jane.
My husband has recently become a wheelchair user,
which has totally opened our eyes to accessibility, as you mentioned.
Steps are a nightmare, and our village has installed pretty road crossings
using cobbles, which are difficult to roll over and really uncomfortable.
It's definitely something you don't think about until you have to.
Well, Sandra, I really hope that your husband's OK.
I hope you're both coping with that.
And yes, take a little bag of salt out with you.
It'll help with the food, but it'll also help with the slippy roads too.
Yeah, it is true that it's only when you're in that situation,
and I feel for you, and I hope your husband is all right, Sandra,
but you just see danger wherever you go.
And it's just the pavements, I mean, it's a generalisation,
but the pavements in Britain are not in a terrific state.
I tell you what, they're a lot better than they are
in lots of other parts of the world.
Yeah.
I think sometimes our pavements show us in the very best light, Jane.
Really?
Some of them have been levelled up.
Oh, God.
One day you'll laugh openly and joyfully.
Not when you make jokes like that, I won't.
It'll be time for me to go.
Yes, certainly. Right, do you want
to do the very long email? Well, this
is from a listener who wants
to respond to the interview with Jason
Watkins. And they
say that they had their first baby in March of last
year. When he was three weeks old, he
ended up in hospital for ten days
to recover from urosepsis as
a result of a UTI.
Somehow in my sleep-deprived state in the middle of the night,
I sensed something wasn't right when he was pushing my breasts away.
He usually couldn't get enough of them,
and his cries seemed weaker but more distressed than usual.
We rang the equivalent of 911,
and after describing his symptoms to a nurse,
she quickly arranged for an ambulance to take us to the Royal North Shore Hospital.
Now, this is in Sydney, isn't it? Which, to take us to the Royal North Shore Hospital. Now,
this is in Sydney, isn't it? Which fortunately was just a 10 minute drive away. Henry was cared for by a brilliant team of doctors who identified and treated the UTI and sepsis. And even now,
I can't quite bring myself to acknowledge that if we'd taken longer to get him to hospital,
he might not have made it. Unfortunately eight months later we went through
the experience again with another case of urosepsis and after advice from a urologist
we've decided to get him circumcised to help prevent another visit to A&E. Right now there's
a lot there of sort of medical wise that I'm not equipped to comment on and don't fully understand. And I certainly didn't know that circumcision
might prevent a UTI,
which I think is what the email is saying.
But I mean, obviously you've been there
and experienced that horrendous experience.
So you know more about it than I do.
But how wonderful that the hospital staff
were able to react so quickly
and that Henry is okay.
But thank you very much for telling us about it.
And there's a lovely final paragraph as well.
And we really love a very long email.
That's from Julia, by the way.
Yep. We love a long email.
Don't ever feel that you have to cut it down.
Tell us everything that you want to tell us.
If you're ever looking for topics to cover, says Julia,
I'd be very interested to hear your perspectives
on whether working part-time after returning from maternity leave
is a career
dead end. I'm about to return to my job as a lawyer at a suit style international law firm
three days a week and I listened to a rather depressing podcast the other day that essentially
said just that. The women on the podcast also said that if you have a partner with a demanding job
getting back on the career bandwagon in a serious way will be even harder.
My partner is a barrister, the wig and robe kind, which definitely falls into the demanding job category. Right now, I don't feel particularly ambitious career-wise, and I'm mostly just hoping
I can remember my login passwords. Not a chance. But I'd like to think that if and when the appetite
comes back, that door isn't closed. I'd be interested to hear how you've navigated mingling work and family life and any advice you might give your 32 year old selves with the benefit of hindsight.
Well, I would say you've got to get that balance between you and your partner right.
You've got to get that balance between you and your partner right.
And if you don't feel it's right for you to be the one that takes a bit of a back seat for a while,
then I would say if there's a way to work it better for both of you,
you know, so the seesaw is balanced, then that's a good thing to do.
And also, I honestly don't know your profession well enough
to give any advice on going back part-time
and then hoping further down the on going back part-time and
then hoping further down the line to become full-time I think in broadcasting we're quite
lucky really lucky yeah as a presenter you are not sure about production staff no but I think even
as production staff it can be easier to get work on a program you know as opposed to working full
time across a variety of programmes.
Certainly quite a lot of my freelance producer friends
have made series during their early childcare years.
So they've worked on producing 16 podcasts
or going to do something for Radio 4.
So other stations are available and obviously Times Radio now.
So I think that's made it easier.
And certainly I was incapable of going back to work full time.
Actually, after I'd had my second child, I don't really mind admitting that.
I just felt I was juggling an awful lot.
And the one thing that I didn't, I just didn't, I didn't want the family ball to drop.
So I think I cut down my work probably probably a bit too much, looking back on it.
But at the time it felt right.
So that's the only advice I can give, really.
Your career has suffered because otherwise you wouldn't be sitting here now.
Well, I want to answer this properly, Jane.
No, go on.
So I'm eternally grateful that I have now, you know, that I'm now doing this with you, that we did fortunately together, that other opportunities came up.
You know, the Listening Project was great to do in the 10 years when I was largely at home with the kids.
I'm very grateful to all of that.
If I could have stayed working a bit more, I would have done, but I just couldn't.
if I could have stayed working a bit more I would have done but I just couldn't so I think I think the whole culture and I think I'm imagining that in the legal world world which
is Julia's world presenteeism has got to be still a thing so being seen to be in the office
strutting your stuff is probably much more significant than our presenting roles yeah I
agree you could easily do a lot of prep at home. And frankly, you can
waft in if you're relatively experienced half an hour before the programme and probably get away
with it. I'm not saying it'll be the best thing you've ever done, but you can get away with it.
And I if my children were ill, when I was doing women's hour, I used to bring them in with me to
work and it was just ignored or you know, people pretended they hadn't seen it. And I think, I'm not sure that would be possible, well, it isn't possible in 98% of jobs that women do.
So I, but then you wonder whether the pandemic
has changed the idea that in order to be taken seriously,
you have to be in work all the hours, God sends.
I don't know.
I don't know either.
And I think maybe that's just something
that our generation of women might be able
to change a little bit. know either and I think maybe that's just something that our generation of women might be able to
change a little bit the notion that if you largely leave work or you know kind of I don't know a
grade work whatever you want to call it to look after your children when they're small then that
is a dead end maybe it's on us to prove that you can spend some time with your kids and come back
and you actually bring more to the party than before.
But I think it's really, really difficult
if you haven't got that balance right at home,
just between you and your partner.
You know, I think there's so much resentment that can build up
if one person streams ahead.
And also it means that that parent doesn't really have any knowledge
of what bringing up kids is actually like that is very important
no i mean i well that's i could go on now yeah 750 page book which nobody would read but i'd
enjoy getting out of my system um but i think it's also worth saying don't be hard on yourself
if frankly you can't wait to get back to work or if you just find yourself really enjoying
yes sometime at home with small children,
but also loving it precisely because you've got the alternative of, say, three days in the office to go alongside,
because I think we all need a little bit of a little bit of both, if possible.
That isn't to say that women and men who are full time carers for small kids don't actually do a brilliant job and may very well end up being hugely fulfilled
and I would also hope much appreciated by partners
and indeed in time by the children.
Although the latter point I'm not so confident about.
Waiting a very long time for that.
Juno, I don't think we've helped at all,
but those are our experiences.
But we feel better for having a chat about it.
Yes, and it's well worth hearing from our other listeners about
because they might be able to be slightly less verbose
and a little bit more on the money.
Do you really think?
I do, Jane.
Yes.
No.
And by the way, thank you.
It's fantastic to hear from people listening in Australia and New Zealand.
I hope we have one or two listeners in the united kingdom as well but um there's just something still
something quite exciting oh it's so glamorous it's really glamorous who are not in britain
yeah britain is absolutely land of leveling up uh so have a wonderful weekend if such a thing
is possible i've got someone around coming around tomorrow to look at my radiators
uh and we're hoping that it gets a little bit warmer
next week. Yeah, have a lovely
weekend when you get to it and we'll talk to you again
on Monday. Bye.
Bye.
You have been listening to Off Air with Jane Garvey and Fee Glover.
Our Times Radio producer is Rosie Cutler and the podcast executive producer is Ben Mitchell.
Now you can listen to us on the free Times Radio app or you can download every episode from wherever you get your podcasts.
And don't forget that if you like what you heard and thought, hey, I want to listen to this, but live, then you
can, Monday to Thursday, 3 till 5 on Times Radio.
Embrace the live radio jeopardy. Thank you for listening, and hope you can join us off
air very soon. Goodbye.