Off Air... with Jane and Fi - Let's park Gary Lineker and talk about toasters - with Spencer Matthews
Episode Date: March 14, 2023The dial on the side of the toaster has inspired a critical debate - could this be the most important experiment of our time?Also, Jane and Fi are joined by Made in Chelsea's Spencer Matthews, who's r...eleased a documentary about the journey to find his brother's body on Mount Everest.If you want to contact the show to ask a question and get involved in the conversation then please email us: janeandfi@times.radioAssistant Producer: Kea BrowningTimes Radio Producer: Rosie Cutler Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's very, very warm in the studio.
Yeah, but I like it, actually.
I've got a vest on, so I appreciate it.
Right, it's Tuesday, and here is Off Air, the podcast.
And we had some calamitous events on our show today, didn't we?
People just kept failing to turn up.
Well, yes.
So it did mean that we spent quite a long time talking to each other.
And also discussing whether or not my baby, Lady Cat,
might have been visited by her enormous dad cat,
come to get her just to say hello through the window.
We decided that probably wasn't a thing.
Sometimes, do you ever look up and think,
yeah, we're in a radio studio, people might be listening to this.
What am I doing talking?
No, I don't think.
You mustn't ever let your thoughts go in that direction
because that way lies a certain amount of insanity.
Just don't worry about it.
OK.
I always just think I've got a nice, relatively clean duvet at home.
I'll be bundled up in it soon.
That's what i think
when i sometimes because you start listening to yourself too closely that way madness lies
don't don't ever do it okay yeah i'm just wondering what the relevance of a slightly
clean duvet is well i'm always relatively happy if the sheets have been changed within living
memory okay i did read a whole article the other day
about how frequently you should change your sheets.
Right from the top to the
very bottom and sometimes I can't get through articles
all the way to the very bottom anymore.
But I did on that one.
Were the comments turned off?
I think they were. I'm going to keep
it brief. Your duvet
every two weeks but your
sheet and your pillowcases at least once a
week yes at least at least well yeah that would be about right because of the amount of dead skin
and god knows what comes comes off your head yeah okay anyway let me just deal with uh this one from
sally uh jane i think you're so wrong to criticize gary lineker i'm just so surprised to hear you
say what you did what What did I say today?
I think I just repeated what I said yesterday.
This must be from Sally in response to what I said.
It is, I think, actually,
in response to what I said on the radio today.
Actually, I completely... You can criticise me all you like, Sally.
That's absolutely fine.
My point is that Gary is free indeed to say what he wants,
and I'm not saying I disagree with what he said,
particularly about the government's use of language around migrants.
My point is that he's actually made it really difficult
for a lot of other people at the BBC.
And in fact, over the last couple of days,
the conversation has been all about Gary Lineker.
It could actually have been all about the government's policy
and there could have been a bit more scrutiny of it.
And all we've been talking about is a retired footballer.
So I think we've probably, and V's right,
we've talked enough about him, haven't we, really?
Well, I've felt frustrated with it ever since last Monday
because so much focus has just been on the BBC
and its internal processes.
I think it's an easy conversation to have.
It's an easy thing to have an immediate opinion about.
And it stops us from talking about the reason it's an easy conversation to have. It's an easy thing to have an immediate opinion about.
And it stops us from talking about the reason why he got into all of the bother in the first place.
But I think the bit that people couldn't quite understand,
I think it was you saying that Gary Lineker
might have known exactly what he was doing
when he tweeted that tweet.
I do think that, because he has been warned a number of times before
and he's carried on working for the organisation,
which pays him over a million quid,
and which has now had him back again.
And now there's going to be another review,
which people who've already paid for the licence fee
will have to pay for.
And it's the second one in two years.
So before we completely leave it alone,
Claire has sent a very thoughtful email,
which she has said,
I really, really hope you read this out
because she's going to be listening to the podcast tonight
from her month's interrail trip.
She's currently in Sicily,
which is just such a delightful prospect.
But to her point is,
yes, he earns a lot of money.
Yes, he should have spoken up for equal pay
for women at the BBC.
But I think he has done us all a favour
by generating a discussion about what's happening.
So should we just leave it there?
Yes.
Let's park Gary Lineker.
And talk about toasters.
And talk about toasters.
So this is off the back of Jane having watched a TikTok video.
I think it was probably propaganda put out by the Chinese government
direct from Beijing.
Yes.
So that we all stood by our toasters
and wasted five minutes of our life
seeing whether or not the number five on the toaster tourney bar
was actually to do with toastiness or to do with time.
So nobody has got a five marker that actually means five minutes.
Or if they have, they had to call the fire brigade
and they're no longer talking to us.
Lucinda Quigley is one of many who says,
Fee, Jane, of course it's toastiness, evidence attached.
If it was minutes, it would say minutes.
Well, you would think so.
Yes, all right, clever clogs.
This is from Emily.
It's 3.25 in Vancouver.
I woke up feeling peckish, so I've made a piece of toast. This is from Emily. It's 3.25 in Vancouver.
I woke up feeling peckish, so I've made a piece of toast.
I had the toaster set to seven and I noted the time.
I can assure you that my toast did not take seven minutes.
It took five.
So the number does indeed refer to the level of toastiness and not to the number of minutes.
Of course, I can't be the only listener who is shouting at the radio
during a discussion.
Even if the number did correspond with the number of minutes,
it would also have corresponded with the toastiness level.
More time equals toastier toast.
Right, having resolved the critical and global toastiness debate,
I can go back to sleep.
Emily.
Emily, take care of yourself.
Thank you very much for responding.
And we probably do need to know why you were awake at 3.25.
Do you often wake up at 3.25 and feel hungry?
Or was this just in your mind and you felt a compulsion to take part
in one of the most important experiments of our time?
I wonder how many people stayed with the experiment all the way until five.
Stayed with the experiment.
No, I don't think many.
Bridget, can we just say a very good afternoon, good evening, good night or good morning to you?
You've written in about our adverts.
That is a work in progress, just to say that we've got your email and we have some thoughts on that too
do you have a quick one to do before we go to spencer matthews well no this is from henrietta
who was tickled by yesterday's suggestion of a bath harness um like yourselves i stand no higher
than five foot two and have never understood the concept of a luxurious bath unless i desire full
submersion or run an ankle deep puddle, bath time is a complex procedure of braced limbs, fraught washing and aching stomach muscles as I soap and rinse while keeping my head afloat.
No amount of badidas or the like would soothe my body during that process and certainly makes very few things possible subsequently.
Thank you for your peerless, but we don't normally read these
things that uh combined with the wonderful off-air community the podcast proves to be the perfect
tonic for middle-aged insomnia thoughts of paunchy hedgehogs struggling to ball up or houses everywhere
with hallways cluttered with trainers are a welcome distraction at 3 a.m from my father's
worsening alzheimer's or the the never ending thought loop of will my teenage
children really be okay? Henrietta? Yes, I'm really glad we're providing a little bit of
company in those. There are vexing moments, aren't there? In the wee small hours of the morning when
you want desperately for your thoughts to stop, and they just won't cooperate. It's infuriating.
So thank you. And one of the things that we've enjoyed enormously,
the photographs of your she-spaces or your she-sheds
that you've been sending us.
This one comes from Alex who says,
While I was inking my comics, I listened to your podcast
about having a space to do your own thing.
I spent four months digging out the steep hillside behind our house,
then hauling up the timber and concrete to construct the foundation piles
and the literal tonne of wood that would become the shed.
My partner doesn't like the wonky steps I've built between the house and the shed studio,
so it gives me a space where I can write without him coming in to destroy it.
I do so love my studio.
That's very clever, Alex.
Love your banter too. Most Kiwis don't share the British sense of humour
We're delighted to be
here for you
and I tell you what Alex, if we ever do
Antipodean tour
which we are threatening, quite a long time
spent in Brisbane, we'd love to
come and sample your wonky
steps and your she shed
because it just looks a thing of wonder
and the view just looks extraordinary.
So I'll try and take a picture of this
and pop it up on Twitter actually later on today
because they are inspirational places.
And I made an idiotic comment,
not for the first time, another of my idiotic comments
about Noosa being like Blackpool.
Noosa is in Australia and
a very angry Sally writes to say Noosa is a sub-tropical paradise with almost perfect weather
year-round, white sands and crystal clear water. It has a stunning national park protected for
decades from development by locals and it has some of the most expensive real estate in Australia.
and it has some of the most expensive real estate in Australia.
Australia is a much more cosmopolitan, multicultural and progressive place than you likely expect.
Thank you, Sally. I stand corrected, although Blackpool has its attractions.
I'm sure it does. Actually, I have been to Blackpool, so I know it does,
but only on a political conference jaunt, which I don't think is ever the best way to see it. Do you remember which party it was?
It would have been Labour.
And it was when I was doing
the late night programme at Five Live.
And actually the conference season
when you're doing late night radio is
fantastic. I bet you saw some sights.
Because a lot
of people, let's say
they've been to some fringe events by the time they come to you in the studio and the conversation is always delicious.
Do you ever flirt with a junior minister?
I've never done that, Jane. Have you?
I think it was probably inescapable.
I actually reserve my flirtations for secretaries of state.
Oh, I see. You go slightly up the grading, if you can call it that in political yeah um
quick mention for the irish health service i don't need to mention your name but it's from
somebody who works in the irish health system and they were interested in what we were saying
about recruitment and how difficult it is to get certain staff for the nhs our correspondent says
that they were a recruitment manager for years in Ireland. I've recruited almost every grade.
Medical consultants, surgeons, paediatric neurologists, junior doctors,
psychologists, social workers, physios, admins, speech and language, everything.
Lab staff, many more. The only grade I've never hired is a Felbomist.
Fleb, I think.
Felbomist?
No, I know that one.
That's a blood person, isn't it? Yes. This is
spelt P-H-E-L-B-O-M-I-S-T. Oh, a philbologist. Unless it's a typo. In my years, the hardest
grades to find, to fill, were an orthoptist. Do you know what that is? No, but I'm troubled at
your pronunciations of all these things. Orthoptist.
Do you know what it is? No, what is it? It's a physiotherapist for the eyes.
That's interesting, isn't it? Oh, yeah. My heart would sink when I'd hear people like
orthoptists and audiologists were leaving as it was so difficult to get decent replacements.
It's very interesting, isn't it?
I'd like to know a little bit more about what a physiotherapist for the eyes does.
Yes, if you're an orthoptist, and by the way, we talked about podiatry the other day,
and tomorrow we are interviewing Kate, who was the podiatrist who kindly emailed in,
so she's going to be on later in the week.
Lovely. I think it was Sir Paul McCartney, wasn't it, after his rather majestic appearance at Glastonbury last year,
where everyone went, oh my goodness
he looks so great and he's
really old. And lots
of detail was written about how he
keeps in such good shape and he does eye
exercises every day for ten minutes
where he focuses on
near things, far things, you know, like he's doing
a little eye test for himself.
I'd never thought to do that.
Well, I mean, he has got the time, hasn't he?
I suppose he has.
Our big interview today...
What?
No, I was just thinking.
I mean, it's not to say that I don't appreciate his body of work,
but, you know, he's usually on holiday when he's not at...
You're very, very damning of everybody.
Our big interview today was Spencer Matthews.
Now, this was...
I think it might be easy to look was Spencer Matthews. Now this was, I think it might be easy to look
at Spencer Matthews and think there's a bloke
who's born with a silver canteen
of cutlery in his mouth because
his family are extremely
well off. He's definitely been at
the front of the queue in terms of looks.
I know that people who've watched Maiden Chelsea
would say that he's probably at the front of the queue in terms
of, I don't know,
use of charisma in a slightly odd way.
Yeah, I mean, I think he says himself that his Made in Chelsea years are a long time
ago, actually, now, because I think he started doing that in his very early 20s, didn't he?
And he's now 34.
And he's 34, yeah. Yeah, but he was definitely, I don't quite know how to phrase it without
sounding rather damning. He was one of the leading characters in Made in Chelsea when
it first started.
Yeah, displaying some rather nasty kind of machismo behaviour and stuff,
which he would freely admit to now.
But also there's tragedy in his family because when he was only 10,
his big brother Michael set off to climb Everest.
He became the youngest Briton to summit the mountain,
but he died there just as he'd started his descent. He got lost
somewhere on the south summit which is the smaller peak below the very top of Everest and his body
has never been found and two decades on Spencer and his family were sent a photograph literally
just a photograph on email. It had been taken by another climber. It was of a body in the ice that
they thought might be Michael.
And so Spencer set off to try and bring his brother home. You can see this journey in a
documentary. It's now available on Disney Plus. And Spencer came into the studio today and we
started by asking him how old Michael was when he decided to climb the mountain.
He was 22 when he went to the mountain. So maybe 21.
mountain uh he was he was 22 when he went to the mountain so maybe maybe 21 and was that completely in keeping with who he was was he an adventurer yeah no he he loved that kind of stuff obviously
i was very young so you know i've been i've been told more what what michael was like as a young
man rather than experiencing it for myself but he he climbed akon kagwa and kind of you know
really good time and you know developed a bit of a reputation for being a very strong climber.
And did a number of other peaks as well.
And, you know, had travelled all over Africa and spent plenty of time, you know, travelling.
And he, yeah, he had a very adventurous soul.
Do you remember him going to Everest when you were a young boy?
Yeah, I remember we were staying in a hotel at the time,
just kind of down the road from our house because it was being refurbed.
And I remember saying goodbye to Michael and he left in the lift.
And, you know, I think at that age you're, you know, slightly oblivious.
Well, I certainly was oblivious to the kind of risk involved in what he was doing
because he'd kind of done this kind of thing before
and Everest was just another mountain, you know.
And to me, he was, you know, he was a bit of a hero to me,
as I say in the film, you know.
He was always the strongest and the biggest and the best at stuff, you know.
And so I kind of always admired him
and didn't imagine that anything could get in his way, you know.
But Everest is a dangerous place, isn't it? Which is what Michael then found out. Who sent the photo
to you that started this whole documentary and this whole search for you?
Just a climber. And we don't we don't know them. So it kind of came a bit out of the blue,
came in 2017. And, you know, the summit suit of the person who's lying face
down in the photo looks very similar to my well looks you know identical um to michael's and
that's when you know i began to think about um you know the possibility of of trying to recover his
his body back in 1999 that wasn't a possibility.
At the time, you couldn't fly helicopters into Camp 2,
which is an absolutely essential part
of recovering a body off that mountain.
You would not be able to carry a body
that had taken on that much water
weighing what it would weigh through the Khumbu Icefall.
It'd be a near-, a near impossible task.
So it's something that hasn't really been explored until later on.
So, you know, with that in mind
and with a few body recoveries having been conducted successfully,
you know, my mind just went into a bit of a spin.
What would it feel like to bring him back?
Is this something that the family would really want?
You know, I know that it was something that my parents wanted.
But of course, as you've mentioned, Everest is a dangerous place
and it didn't come without risk.
And so we had to get very comfortable around potential risk to other life.
And, you know, that came through a number of conversations with you know Bear Grylls and
Nims Persia and people who are far more familiar with um climbing at altitude than than me we'll
talk about Nims uh in a moment though but I just wonder how much you as a family had known about
how Michael had died from other climbers because his friend who started the climb with him had to leave the
mountain didn't he because the altitude had got to him so when Michael went on to the summit he
wasn't in the company of people he knew extremely well yeah um he had met a gentleman called Dave
Rodney by that time and and Dave kind of michael's climbing partner he's also in the film um the film
is called finding michael um by the way and and yeah he he you know i meet dave for the first time
really as an adult um dave had we had crossed each other apparently in the home back when i was you
know 10 or 11 um but i i had not had any communication with Dave for over 20 years.
And was Dave the only person who could really tell you and your family what had happened that day on the mountain?
Yeah, Dave was Mike's climbing partner,
apart from the night that they were supposed to attempt to summit.
So they had spent a lot of time together.
They'd become very close.
And Dave had a lot of information around that 1999 expedition that you know we
found um very useful as as a family we weren't told much you know when when michael um went
missing and you know dave was able to to help us um piece together a few a few bits and bobs but
also dave was um when i sent d Dave the photograph when we decided to to document the
journey um I wanted his opinion on whether or not he thought the body could be Michael's and um
he told me that he had footage of Mike you know all the way leading up to moments before uh Mike
died um that I had never seen before and I thought that was uh certainly enough to get me on a on a plane to go and see
him so so I went and met Dave and Dave is a kind of wonderful man who has carried this around with
him for for many years he's still very emotional about it and and you know for me to understand
their relationship a bit better was was quite heartwarming actually and he showed me this
footage and I realized actually that I'd not seen Michael on camera ever before um because you know video cameras and certainly smartphones
didn't exist well video cameras may have existed but we weren't the kind of family that
made kind of home videos we just didn't have any you know so when we came to document the film I
said to my parents you know right I need all footage of michael and they said we haven't got any you know so it was
interesting to me to see michael um joking and conversing with people and and in fact you know
climbing everest going through the kumbu icefall and stuff and um it was a pleasure to to the you
know dave just brought so much to the table with regard to making the film. How prepared did you feel as a young man
to see those videos, though, for the first time?
And it's an, you know, that's a really, really powerful thing
to happen, isn't it?
Yeah, I mean, I think I'm quite, you know,
the reason that I wasn't shown them as a kid is obvious, I think,
and I think the way in which my family, you know,
handled Mike's death was, shown them as a kid is obvious, I think. And I think the way in which my family, you know, handled
Mike's death was, I think they did, you know, as good a job as they could have done with me,
age 10. You know, I think I was shielded from it. But it was not ignored. And it was kind of
presented and described to me in ways that were easier for a young child to understand.
I'm sure they had probably seen this footage,
but I was not shown it because of my age.
And then, of course, Dave and I don't know each other,
so he had no reason to kind of reach out and say...
And you've got cameras on you as well when you meet him and stuff.
I did want to ask you about that, actually,
because obviously a lot of people will know you for being the star,
one of the stars of Maiden Chelsea,
and a person with an understanding
of that kind of constructed reality type of TV.
So did that make it easier to make this documentary
or harder because maybe you felt that you kind of had to perform
as Spencer Matthews sometimes?
I think this documentary was incredibly personal
and very real to me, you know,
and I'm not suggesting that other stuff, you know, isn't real,
but it's certainly not real in the same way as this was.
And taking the decision to document the journey
was the second big decision that we had to take.
You know, firstly, we were thinking, you know,
do we try to recover Mike's body, you know, with and become comfortable with the risks associated with that mission one?
And do we document the journey? And the reason for documenting the journey was something that I pushed for, because I think, you know, it's not bothered me is the wrong way of putting it,
but I've been uncomfortable, I suppose,
with the fact that, you know, Michael died
such a brave young man, age 22,
and he's not, you know, he's not known for any of that.
You know, Bear Grylls became,
or took back the record to be the youngest Brit
to climb the summit,
and not that either of them care about the record,
but he's mentioned around that youthful, energetic character
that managed to climb the mountain.
And I feel that Michael's been kind of brushed under the rug, forgotten,
and that he was the most amazing young man that I certainly looked up to.
And I just felt that by documenting the journey,
I might be able to assist in giving him the legacy
that I feel he deserves.
Can you just tell us about Nims?
Because Fee's mentioned that name already
and he is somebody who actually arguably
should also be much better known.
He is, is it a 14-peaker?
Yes.
Is it a really important title that?
So Nims and his team hold the world record
for having climbed the 14 highest mountains in the world
in seven months.
And he has...
He made a film called 14 Peaks,
which I believe is on Netflix.
And he, you know, is the most...
You know, he's the most amazing climber,
but he's a very interesting person as well,
believes that anything is possible. Was he in the Gurkkhas he was in the gurkhas yeah and he he uh his physiology
is just is just quite different to to kind of western climbers in general but also just just
people his you know his ability to i think if you were to measure it he jumps on that kind of
altitude bike in the altitude center that you can visit here in London. And it monitors your ability to function at a certain altitude,
kind of under duress, I suppose.
Yeah.
And yeah, he's off the charts, as are his whole team.
And actually part of becoming comfortable with the risk,
again, to do this was only if we could have the, you know,
the best people in the world helping us on that mountain.
And that is without a doubt Nim's and his team.
Just before we go to some ad breaks,
do you want to just explain the difficulties of climbing to the peak of Everest?
Because you've mentioned the altitude there,
the need for your physiology to be different or acclimatised.
I mean, it is mind-boggling how little man is meant to be at the top of that mountain, isn't it?
Yes, I mean, I did not summit Everest, just for the record.
Because you couldn't?
Well, I wasn't there for that reason.
My mother would not be in any way happy with me doing that.
But also your wife, you'd just had your third child, hadn't you,
when you set off
on the expedition all of the above wife wife kids it seems a very unnecessary risk for me to put
myself through that to get closer to michael who's dead you know who's kind of it just it felt um
bear grills gave me that advice he just said listen don't go any further than base camp you
know what would be the point of that um but no i mean yeah humans even on oxygen um can't sustain life above 8 000 meters it is just a question of time you know
until until you die at that altitude so just explain for those of us who are never going to
go there what it feels like to be at base camp what does that do to your system the air is very
thin you know you're you're just shy of of the summit of Kilimanjaro at base camp.
I was there for four and a half weeks.
It's just a really long time to be at altitude.
You know, you go slow and steady into base camp.
The hike takes about eight days to get to base camp.
And then once you're there, there's no life or, you know, animals or anything like that.
It's a glacier.
You're on a physical, you know, animals or anything like that. It's a glacier. You're on a physical, you know, moving glacier.
It's, you know, beyond minus 20 at night
and pretty uncomfortable
and the ground is moving all around you
and there's very little comfort.
But also it's more just the air that you breathe
is the biggest difference.
You know, you can't physically put yourself
through anything really.
If you went for a walk, you would be exhausted, you know,
and that is just, you know, unassistedassisted you know with no oxygen living at base camp is um it is uh yeah you know you're pretty high up spencer matthews is our guest this afternoon
talking about his search to find michael his brother's body uh on near the summit of everest
uh one of the things that you do mention a couple of times in
the documentary, Spencer, is how your family is almost defined by a kind of gung-ho spirit. You
know, you're a very get up and go kind of a family. But what does a death in the family like this do
to that spirit? I mean, it certainly dents it for a period.
I think it would be very difficult, you know,
being a parent myself now.
You know, I've thought about this,
I was thinking about it when I was at base camp,
you know, if Theodore or Otto or Gigi, you know,
grow up to say, hey, you know, I want to climb Everest,
what's that going to feel like?
Would you let them?
I just think it's really difficult to stand in the way of,
you know,
your kids' dreams and ambitions.
And if they are adventurous, that's the kind of thing they want to do,
you'd just be thankful, I think, in the case of Everest,
that it is more commercialised now, it is safer, it's more accessible.
But having said that, you know,
seven people lose their life every year on everest and you know natural disasters take
place all of the time up there and kill people every year so you know it's it's um i don't know
i think we'll cross that bridge when and if we come to it to be honest how should i put it to
you it might just be in their genes might it yeah um it's a difficult thing though isn't it i spoke
to to bear about this as well just you know with with you know he has a son who's a base jumper and he just you know constantly what does that mean it's jumping off um uh
buildings with a parachute so you're not jumping out of a plane he jumps off bridges and you know
other static objects static objects yeah which is and it's really dangerous you know and i said to
him you know how does it feel that your son is obviously taking after you?
Yeah, yeah.
You know, doing all this stuff.
And he just said, you've got to let them live, you know.
But does what happened to Michael change your notion of what makes a hero?
Ooh.
I mean, it's a really complicated question, isn't it?
Michael is obviously still a hero to me.
And, you know, whenever I'm putting myself through, you know, physically challenging feasts
in an attempt to raise money, you know,
for the Michael Matthews Foundation,
I have him on my shoulder, you know.
So whether he's kind of alive or dead in a sense,
you know, he is still a hero to me.
So I don't, I don't, it's a very hard thing to answer.
Oh, it's an enormous question.
Yes. So sorry about that. I probably didn't do a great job no don't apologize at all i tell you what a lot of
people who are listening to this spencer might think why aren't we talking more about what
actually happens in the documentary and it is because i think people need to watch the documentary
don't they so if we talked about every single step of the way then that would be taking away some of
the impact of it but it is definitely worth mentioning more about the Sherpas, isn't it? Because nobody would be able to get up the
mountain if they didn't have the help of the Sherpas. And of course, a lot of them have died
on the mountain too, haven't they? I think the Sherpa community is so incredible. And having
spent time, you know, on the mountain mountain and it's almost a you know some it
feels far more spiritual than say a western culture um you know we were blessed in the
tengboche monastery on the way up to to everest um by um uh by some incredible uh uh buddhists and
and and it's it's just such an incredible community and And the Sherpas are, you know, in many ways as skilled as NIMS.
You know, some of them have summited Everest, you know, 16, 17 times.
And, you know, they are truly remarkable, you know, to be around.
And I feel, you know, grateful for having spent time with them.
Well, it's hard for you to tell, I suppose.
And I feel, you know, grateful for having spent time with them.
Well, it's hard for you to tell, I suppose,
but what do you think they make of Western climbers coming over and trying to do it too?
I mean, it's a difficult thing to answer as well.
I mean, for them, it's a job as well as a lifestyle.
They are desperately poor, aren't they, a lot of these people?
We purposefully, you know, went with, you know,
Nims and his elite team who are well paid
in comparison to perhaps some of the rest of the Sherpa community.
I honestly would not be the best person to ask about that,
but Nims looks after his Sherpas very well
and they are rewarded relatively handsomely, I think, compared to other Sherpas very well and they are rewarded
relatively handsomely I think compared to other
Sherpas. We've got a lovely email actually here
Spencer from somebody who has seen the film
and it's from Hannah who says I wanted to tell
Spencer how moving his documentary was
back in 2000 I went on a trip to Antarctica
clutching the diary of my great
great uncle who also died in his 20s
he fell down a crevasse
now I didn't know him but i wanted
to understand his desire to explore the unexplored watching your journey took me back to my own
emotional trip and without giving away any ending i was really in bits by the credits what a story
not just for your own family but for all those who see everest as the final resting place of
their loved ones so um there's clearly a real emotional link there from Hannah,
and I find that really interesting,
that although she obviously didn't know her great-great-uncle,
she still felt that really weird family link to his journey and how it ended.
It's interesting that, isn't it?
I think so, yeah.
I think there's something in the film as well for everyone,
any parents, any sibling, anyone who has suffered loss um i think i
think you know that there may be something um there for you in the film and of course it's it's
again you know one of the main reasons for making the film was so that there could be
some kind of emotional connection to uh michael but also you know, to anyone that has suffered, you know, loss in their family.
Do you think you came back a rather different person?
There were times on the mountain that felt, you know, emotionally quite tough. And I think,
you know, I obviously expected to miss my children and my wife.
But, you know, little things that you take for granted were certainly missed on the mountain.
And, yeah, you know, I think it's an important story that family is everything.
You know, it's a story about, you know know devastating loss but but brotherly love um and
you know i i yeah you know you come back feeling uh i felt emotionally quite quite different you
know but even my my feelings about the the loss had changed you know back when i was a young
teenager dealing with michael's death was um something that I probably didn't do as well as I
could have you know I abused alcohol to excess for for many years and I've never really made the link
between the two but being sober now thinking about it you know there probably was quite a strong link
to not processing the grief at the time and you know I always always just felt this great deal of resentment and kind of almost anger about how Mike came to die.
And, you know, being on the mountain and understanding it a bit more and being amongst climbers who were very fearful of their own journey and kind of understanding it better certainly helped me to process his death differently.
um certainly helped me to process his death differently and you know now i look at photos of mike in the house and when i used to feel um you know a bit a bit of kind of as i said
resentment or a bit upset about it i i now feel uh differently you know i smile at pictures of
mike now there are lovely pictures of you and him actually because there is quite an age gap between
the two of you.
But some of the photographs that you've allowed us to see just as viewers in the documentary
are just really lovely big brother, little brother ones, aren't they?
Yeah, he was, as I understand it,
the sibling that wanted my parents to have another kid the most,
so that he could have a little brother.
He was desperate for a little brother and obviously he got me.
And, you know, we were described as twins separated by time and we we looked very similar
and had you know similar taste despite the age gap and you know mike would always be the one that
tied up my other brother you know so that i could beat him up type thing and like we were always a
little team um that's lovely yeah and uh and yeah you know so so for, I don't know, he was everything I wanted to be.
Yeah.
It is a really amazing documentary.
What next for you?
Oh, my goodness.
I don't know.
I have a business to focus on and grow called Clean Co, which I was doing kind of before this.
But just back to work, I suppose.
Back to work.
You know, podcasting and bits and bobs and we'll see.
Any more made in Chelsea?
I think the answer's no.
30 years on.
Ah, well, you know, I doubt it.
You wouldn't ever do old in Chelsea.
Yeah, because you could have like...
Middle-aged in Chelsea.
Sheltered housing in Chelsea.
Yes, indeed.
No, I think the ship has sailed, I believe.
Yes. Well, there are those of us who have fond-ish memories of you, Spencer.
The ish, I think, is absolutely the case.
Spencer Matthews talking about the documentary that he has made
is called Finding Michael. It's available on Disney+.
And, I mean, it's interesting, isn't it?
Because I'd never, as I said in the interview,
I'd never seen Maiden Chelsea.
So I didn't come to watching Spencer Matthews
with any kind of preconceptions.
So I just saw in that documentary,
actually quite a thoughtful young man
trying to battle with very difficult,
incredibly delayed grief, actually.
But yeah, he does make a point that his family were of the sort of stiff upper lip variety.
I'm not sure whether they've all changed as much as he has.
So I don't actually know whether they are able to talk freely.
I mean, as a parent, I think it's just a plain fact, isn't it,
that I don't see how you can get over the death of a child.
I really don't.
And I suspect most people probably.
And his mum in the film.
So his father's not in the film at all,
but his mum is incredibly circumspect when she's interviewed because she's
obviously just in so much pain whenever she talks about Michael,
even now.
And there isn't a time at which you would stop
grieving your child because you would always see in his contemporaries and in the rest of your
family the shadow of where he would have been how old he would have been it's just a terrible thing
I think it's also very difficult for people as they get older and they have their own children to keep their their late sibling alive to those people who are very dear to them,
who never met them because they were unfortunately they died before they were born.
And they're such a significant factor in your life and in your head, but don't mean anything to people who obviously are very dear to you now.
So it's I don't know, it's just very it's very difficult.
obviously are very dear to you now.
So it's, I don't know, it's just very difficult.
It's a really interesting documentary if, like me,
you've never been to Nepal,
don't know anything about extreme challenges like climbing Everest.
I think there's a sort of individual who wants to do that sort of thing, isn't there?
And I do admire them.
I could never do anything like that.
And there are huge risks
involved in doing so and you take other people along with you of course you need the expertise
of sherpas and people who are closer to being able to live in as spencer said it's it's that the air
it's just very difficult to live in if you're not used to it. It's really challenging. Yeah, it didn't change my mind about anything to do with mountaineering
or that kind of heroic status.
I just think it has always, always brought with it a sense of jeopardy.
The glory doesn't outweigh that jeopardy,
and the tragedy that often ensues is just, I don't know, it's just a very
I mean I'll say, you know
it's very difficult to balance that equation
It is, I was
wittering on earlier about, because I was
thinking about this coronation coming up, that the last
coronation was distinguished by the
announcement that Sir Edmund Hillary had
had summited, as we now say, Everest
for the first time, I know he wasn't British
he was from New Zealand, but he was he was, I think quite weirdly, he was on top of Everest for the first time. I know he wasn't British, he was from New Zealand.
But he was, I think quite weirdly,
he was on top of Everest with a Union flag though, wasn't he?
Do you remember that image?
Yes.
I don't quite know why he didn't fly a New Zealand flag,
thinking about it.
But anyway, perhaps he did, but in the images we saw,
he had a Union Jack.
Anyway, the announcement that they'd climbed Everest. Isn't this weird?
It's like trying to use your Nectar card and waitress.
What's going on?
Somebody listening will know much more about this than we do, clearly.
But, I mean, it was always said that he was the first person,
he and his team, Sherpa Tenzing and the other people who were with him,
were the first people to climb Everest.
But we don't know that, do we?
We can't possibly assume that no one had ever climbed it before, can we?
I don't know. Well, because like you, I haven't been interested enough in that area of mountaineering.
That was the first recorded.
Yes, but I wonder whether any of the local community thought that, you know, that's a very high mountain.
I'm going to see if I can survive at the top of that. I suspect not.
No, we don't know, do we?
No, we don't. But, you you know it would be lovely if somebody's
got expertise and you can fill in all our rather large gaps just a quick one because we have to go
um there is a i think this is the most times letter i've ever seen in the times um there was
a brief flurry of interest in eating squirrels across the nation wasn't there well well this is
because uh according to Russian propaganda,
this great nation is so on its knees with lack of food
and we are just living in such poverty,
we've taken to eating squirrels.
Yeah, so this is from a man called Vernon,
who's in Somerset, and the headline is Squirrel Surprise.
My wife and I served up homemade squirrel pate
for supper years ago, and our guests loved it. One guest asked for the nature of the dish and there was a lull in the
conversation when they learned they'd just eaten grey squirrel until one lady guest piped up,
how wonderful, I haven't had squirrel since we were in Burma. There we are. So just a slice of
life there from the letters page of The Times.
Now, join us tomorrow, why don't you?
There's a tube strike in central London,
so if I don't get a wiggle on,
I'll have to leave round about now in order to get back to where I currently am.
Is it worth me going home?
Yes, it is.
Goodbye.
Beanie.
Well, I'd ask you to come and stay,
but you'd say something nasty about my house,
so I'm not going to.
So I'm going to walk to work tomorrow morning,
so I'll be full of bounce, full of cheer,
and if I see any squirrels along the way,
I'm going to bring them in
and we can have a little bit of squirrel pate.
Do you want to make pate?
Do you want...
You've got to have a lot of squirrels
to make some squirrel pate.
And if you're just making it from a squirrel liver,
then how many squirrel livers do you need?
That's a question I've never, ever thought I'd ask.
We have asked the audience a couple of questions there.
Are we really certain Sir Edmund Hillary was the first person to climb Everest?
And how many squirrel livers would you need for a squirrel pâté?
Over to you 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
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