Off Air... with Jane and Fi - Warning: May contain some politics (with Matt Chorley)
Episode Date: June 11, 2024In case you haven't heard (you must be the only one), Jane is in Redcar on the election bus. Times Radio's Matt Chorley fills in today as a double threat: co-presenter and guest. Fi and Matt chat wrap...-around ads, shy righties and Trump. Our next book club pick has been announced! 'Missing, Presumed' is by Susie Steiner. If you want to contact the show to ask a question and get involved in the conversation then please email us: janeandfi@times.radioFollow us on Instagram! @janeandfiPodcast Producer: Eve SalusburyExecutive Producer: Rosie Cutler Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Are you thinking of David Hasselhoff?
Because I know you often are.
I've tried, I've had therapy for that.
So we've got a surprise performer for you tonight, ladies and gentlemen.
And it is a man.
I am sorry about that.
I just want to make sure that people are aware of this.
So it's a little bit like, you know,
when you choose a film on Netflix,
you have to say what it contains.
So this podcast contains men.
I think we'll be all right, though.
Do you want to introduce yourself
to people who might not be familiar
with the Times Radio schedule?
Yeah.
Or best-selling books in brackets,
political what's whatsits, or
comedy performers touring around
the UK. Regional art centres.
Mainly named after shapes.
Yep, on a Monday night.
Who are you? Sorry, yeah,
I am Matt Chorley. I do the mornings,
the mid-mornings on the
Times Radio.
And we occasionally
share the airways. You come on come on well you've got a coffee
break section yeah which jane and i kind of take it in turns but actually that's turned into a bit
of a kind of um what was that what was the the music show where you used to just play lots of
records and everybody would discuss it round something. Round the horn? No.
No, that's not.
Round news.
Pick of the pops.
Oh, it'll come to me.
Old grey whistle test.
No.
You play a lot of music now on the coffee break,
and sometimes I think that you ask people on just because you want to play a bit of music,
not because you really want to talk about it.
I think times really be better with more records.
I think so.
Yeah.
I've been quite surprised Andrew Neil's music choices have shocked me.
Yes, well they've been very
I think the right term is eclectic.
Yeah, we had Italian rap
last week. And you had a
Lou Reed track, didn't you? Yeah. What did he play
today? I didn't hear that. Oh, we didn't have it
today because of, um,
what's his name? Rishi Sunak. That one.
He was launching the manifesto.
We dropped everything so we could go live to Rishi Sunak. That one. He was launching the manifesto. We dropped everything so he could go live to Rishi Sunak at...
Silverstone.
At Silverstone at 11.30.
And after a lot of faffing about,
and then a bit of Gillian Keegan
and a bit of Ben Houchen,
he finally turned about five to twelve.
So at one point,
I just had to talk for ten minutes
commentating on a room of people
being handed a document
that may or may not ever
produce anything.
So Matt's
show is political and
your catchphrase is
politics without the boring bits, it's turned into
an election
without the boring bits.
So we weren't going to talk about politics
at all on the podcast but because you're here
and we think probably you're here,
and we think probably you're a one-trick pony,
maybe we should.
I don't mean it at all.
How are you finding the election?
Do you know what gets on my wick?
Yes.
Is political journalists who moan about politics.
And they're like, ooh, there's only three more weeks of this.
Ooh, best of luck, everyone.
This is our World Cup.
Why, you know, it's exciting.
Even if the polls suggest it's a foregone conclusion,
stuff happens every day that we will remember.
And if we cannot be excited about it and enthuse people and get people into it, then don't do it,
because loads of other people would like to do it.
That is a very good point, and it's really been noted.
Yeah, thank you.
Well, it has been quite a campaign so far, though.
Yeah.
I mean, it's had some enormous bumps in it, hasn't it?
Yeah, and moments, whether it was the rain when he announced it,
or, you know, the Diane Abbott stuff, Nigel Farage joining the race, D-Day,
unexpected, unplanned moments,
which get people talking and get people interested.
I think that's a good thing.
Yeah, and also we, you know, if you want to be excited by change,
you could be very excited by this election if you chose to be.
So we've been popping everybody into our little election booth on the programme,
so I'm going to do that to you now.
So first political memory.
Yeah.
I think it was a...
I definitely remember budgets in our house.
We had a little telly in the kitchen,
and it didn't come on very often,
but it was to watch the 6 o'clock news
to find out what basically happened to Boothze and fags so there's a bit of
that i think i think i remember the berlin wall coming down possibly but you know i was might be
about 708 then so i'm now 41 okay so i was born in 82 so sort of late 80s. I think I sort of remember the Berlin Wall. Yeah.
Maybe, I think I remember Thatcher leaving.
There was always the news on me.
There was always a paper in the house, the Western Daily Press.
Excellent.
There was a paper of choice in our house.
All the news through the prism of West Country people.
Oh, that's the best prism to have, isn't it?
Yeah.
One of my flatmates, housemates at university,
when the Berlin Wall started to be clawed at and clawed down,
because that's what happened initially,
he was so moved by it and wanted to be part of it,
he got in his quite dilapidated Nissan and he drove to Berlin.
Really?
Yep.
He just said, I've got to see this.
It's so momentous.
And his family was Jewish. He was Jewish.
His family had lived in North London.
And obviously they had a history running through their family
that meant Germany was just such a key part of all of their memories.
And he just couldn't bear to not be there to witness this thing.
So it really, really stuck with me.
I just thought, wow, actually, it's not something from the history books.
You know, this is my friend and he needs to be there to see it.
And he came back, you know, with chunks of it.
Yeah.
Amazing. Absolutely amazing.
Real chunks.
I suppose they probably were, weren't they?
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
I only went to Berlin for the first time last summer.
We went interweaving as a family to tick off as many...
My daughter's got one of those maps where you scratch off the country,
so she was very pleased about the country.
And trying to explain to her what the Berlin Wall was,
and it was just a really weird...
It actually was very moving.
There's a bit where you can go and see where it's still there
in the various sections.
You go up and sort of look down.
It's completely mad
that that happened within my lifetime.
Yeah, it is. And the fact that you could
have a city that had
two such different ways of life
just within spitting distance of each other.
People's front doors were bricked up because
their house suddenly became
the front line. Which is the
Elton John video that features
Checkpoint Charlie?
Is that him standing,
does he stand on the top of the wall?
You don't know, you're testing me.
There's something there,
because Matt is a really, really big Elton John fan.
I'm a huge Elton John fan.
It's not I'm still standing, is it?
Well, I don't know, because then he's in...
No, because that's on Miami Beach, isn't it?
Yeah, then he's in the back of an open-top car,
isn't he, wearing a kind of almost like a...
Like a straw boater.
Yeah, something weird.
We'll find out.
Anyway, look, Matt, it's lovely to have you here.
Are you thinking of David Hasselhoff?
Because I know you often are.
I've tried.
I've had therapy for that.
Is it Nikita?
Yes, it is Nikita.
It might be Nikita, yeah.
So am I linking Nikita to a different world event?
No, no, no, no.
Nikita is his Cold War ballad.
Yeah.
Westerner falls in love with an
East German citizen. Yeah, that's the one.
He's not allowed to cross the Berlin Wall, there we are.
He's a real teller of time,
isn't he, Elton?
He is, though.
Yeah, it's just, I think he's
extraordinary, too. So you've had
a look through our emails.
What do you think of this podcast? Do you ever listen to it?
I do listen to it. Do you?
Well, because I quite often can't listen to your show
because I'm often being tasked with work of my own.
No, no, just because the time that you're on
is normally when I've had a bit of lunch
and then they've got me doing some more work,
a bit of recording or meetings and what else.
So, yeah, I do listen.
I've messaged you before when I've been listening to your podcast
when you've amused me for often being rude about someone.
Okay.
And I have lots of friends who are obsessed.
Oh, well, that's good.
Yeah.
Okay, well, you're very welcome.
One of them is desperate to get hold of one of your cloth bags.
Oh, our tote bags?
Yeah.
Okay, well, I mean, if they've introduced a friend to the podcast,
then, because that's the matrix by which we're awarding well actually so it's my
friend suzy her sister yeah katie yeah was her birthday she wanted a cloth bag so if i said that
katie'd introduced suzy to the podcast would that count no right let's get on with it i tried that's
literally proof that i tried we've got a huge queue for the totes, haven't we, Eve?
Eve's a bit bored of the totes.
Sorry.
Are you making them yourself, personally?
Screen printing, potatoes.
No, she only has to post them.
She doesn't even have to go to the post office and stand in a queue
and buy the stamps.
You have to send emails.
Send emails, it's so complicated, isn't it?
I remember little Callum MacDonald,
when he used to do early breakfast on Times Radio.
He had, I think, 500 COVID masks with the Times Radio logo on
and personally posted each one to listeners.
Take note, Eve.
I think literally in the middle of him doing it,
they announced we didn't have to wear them anymore.
So be glad of that.
Oh, Callum, he's a really hard worker isn't he he's one of those
really weird people as well wherever i go in life somebody knows callum mcdonald do you find that
yeah i did an interview with someone today you knew very well connected somebody in a pub in
hackney you knew him i mean he's just got around right let's do some emails then where do you want
to start now explain to me this issue about wraparound ads which i as i know i now know
having read them all it hadn't really occurred to me before but people listening to the podcast
will be getting different ads depending on where they are yes due to the modern technology yeah
yeah so we were just intrigued as to what is being thrust in a commercial sense of people
whilst they wait for this amazing high quality content, well, Ruth says she's listening in France,
a well-known brand of nappies,
which makes her laugh every time.
You know, I think because...
Well, Jane and I are quite far past
the needing nappies for our babies.
No, but the people who I know listen,
they're younger people.
Are they?
Yeah.
OK, that's good to know.
Sort of in the nappy area.
OK. Right, you pick one. Oh, this was quite Okay, that's good to know. Sort of in the nappy area. Okay.
Right, you pick one.
Oh, this was quite good
because this is an international listener.
Suzanne in Australia.
She says,
I'm a tragic who listens to you every night.
That's not tragic, is it?
While doing lady things,
i.e. peeling the spuds
and throwing prawns on the barbecue.
I think that's really a man job
if you don't mind me saying so, Suzanne.
After busy days of other lady things
like being a lawyer. Love the podcast and your
common sense approach to politics.
In answer to today's question about what wraps around your podcast,
today for Sydney it was a community
service ad for the
North... What's that? North, South?
What's NSW mean in Australia? New South Wales.
New South Wales. North South Wales. Doesn't make any sense.
That'll be the middle. About coercive
control and domestic violence.
And then bizarrely an ad for a show on Apple TV
about what seemed to be a very dysfunctional romance.
Oh, OK.
Well, that's a bit chalk and cheese, that, isn't it?
Something for everyone.
Yeah.
Daughters of a bowist and a florist.
OK.
They've all done very well.
In a nutshell, insurance and Apple TV,
says Sasha, who's in Perth.
As for early memories, I grew up in a very conservative,
big C, town in Essex. I remember
when in the early 90s, the MP
Eric Pickles. He was a large
gentleman, wasn't he, Mr Pickles?
Unfairly bullied by
George Osborne and others.
They used to make jokes about him being fat.
Did they? Yeah.
I didn't realise that. I think David Cameron might have even done it once.
I feel bad for mentioning his size now.
And then he lost loads of weight,
and his diet was no chips, no cheese, no second helpings.
That was it.
Well, that's good.
Yeah.
But his photo was on the front page of the Brentwood Gazette.
My mum commented aloud she couldn't believe he was only 59
as he looked so much older.
The next week, the newspaper published an apology
as they didn't get his age wrong, and he was in fact 39.
Oh, how my mother chortled.
She was a Labour supporter through and through.
It still makes me smile today.
We've been discussing shy Tories.
Yes.
Because it's such a term, isn't it, shy Tories?
And we wondered, and you can actually answer this for us,
at this election, would there be the same squidgy element
who would be shy Labour voters,
people who don't want to admit that they are voting Labour
or even kind of know that they're voting Labour
until they get in the booth?
I think the shyness has been overtaken by technology
because previously polling especially
was done by either knocking on people's doors
or phoning them up.
And people in the early 90s might have been embarrassed
about telling somebody on the phone or on the doorstep
who they were voting for.
Whereas now, most polls are done online,
using a sort of online survey.
So no, you're not telling another person.
So I think the social...
Stigma.
Stigma, were there to be one, probably isn't the same.
That's really interesting.
So we've just got much more accurate polling then as well.
Well, we'll see.
I mean, that's the big question.
I mean, there are a lot of don't knows.
If you dig into the polling, I think it's about one in five people say they don't know.
And interestingly, the last time I looked,
don't knows was much higher amongst older people than younger people,
which you'd think normally the older people,
they know how they're going to vote.
And so there's a feeling,
though particularly the older,
I think it was about 20, 25% I think,
of over 65 say they don't know.
There's a feeling that they probably are going to end up voting Tory,
but they just haven't told themselves yet.
Or they might not vote.
They might just say,
I'm going to sit this one out,
traditional Tory voters.
So my hunch is shyness is less of a thing than it was.
Yeah.
Well, I do hope that the over 65s do bother to vote because it would strike me,
and I'm saying this in an apolitical way, Matt,
that so many of the policies that have been announced
and actually this whole election is, you know,
is facing that demographic.
I think if you're a young person, a first-time voter,
and all the things that you're concerned about,
they're not really featuring very much, are they?
Yeah, you're right, actually.
And it's also partly because Fleet Street focuses on those people
because they're the people still buying newspapers.
So sort of pension quadruple lock gets on the front pages.
First time help to buy and all that sort of stuff, maybe not so much.
But yeah, you're right.
I think the cynicism, particularly the Conservative Party,
and just aiming national services and other parts of that,
we're going to quadruple lock your pension
and we're going to make those lazy kids get out in whatever it was,
clean an ambulance.
Right, so this was about shy righties.
It comes from Kate Clark who says it's simple.
It's because voting in the direction of a party
that favours some redistribution of wealth
away from those who were born into it
and towards people who have to live from their work
is a morally defensible position,
even if you don't agree with it.
Whereas voting to keep the money where it is, especially
in a very classist society like Britain,
is morally questionable,
even shameful. Silence
serves those who are benefiting from the
status quo. Do you know what? I feel better for
just having read that out loud.
I didn't
totally follow it, but it was
important. Very good, Matt. That's all you need to know.
What have you got? Stop bashing Trump.
I liked this one because
I assumed that your
listeners were all
lovely big fans of the
pod. I thought I was the only one who got
a cross. Oh no,
we get some cross ones. Stop bashing...
I was thinking, stop listening.
I don't know, some people like
a little bit of pain.
Stop bashing Trump, says Julie.
You present...
It's a bit annoying.
You present as ill-informed and plain nasty.
Otherwise, love the show.
Yeah, see, that doesn't help.
I find that a little bit difficult
because it's a little bit...
You know, someone's come along and they've slapped you
and then they've just gently rubbed your cheek afterwards.
I don't want to judge Julie, but...
Well, you're going to.
But whenever...
Because I get similar things into the show and our podcast.
It's what Julie basically means.
She agrees with you on everything else
and she disagrees with you on this thing
and therefore you must be ill-informed
rather than just having a difference of opinion.
Well, and I know where it came from.
It was a question to John Ronson
about whether or not Trump creates a Trump-shaped hole
into which somebody, and I think I did did say as dreadful as donald trump will always now be able
to shine or whether he's just a one-off terribly dreadful person so that obviously got julie's uh
go to but he's now being convicted of 34 you know crimes i mean that that by definition does make
him dreadful there was a interesting and we don't like to talk about the bbc on here do we but i think the bbc have changed their style guide
because now he's a convicted felon he's now just trump not mr trump uh because like he is now a
convict and so you know in the same way they're writing up court cases it's he doesn't need the
respect not yes yeah but i've got a feeling as well that, you know,
when we judge history,
we will judge journalism quite badly
in terms of how Trump was first welcomed
onto the national and then international
and then global world domination scale.
Because there was a point at which, you know,
you could have done a piece about him
and, you know, whoever it was who was reading the news
or presenting the programme could just have shrugged
and moved on and not said anything
and people would almost have thought it was a comedy piece.
But we took him seriously right from the very get-go.
But also, I think, particularly American journalism,
the papers, especially Washington Post, New York Times,
went so over the top.
They latched onto every tiny thing.
Actually, I think that's how he's turned
everything to his advantage, because some
of it wasn't, you know, it was exaggerated,
it wasn't true, it was completely
out of proportion. And so he's leaned
into that. It's like, we got that wrong, so
they must be wrong about the big stuff.
And I think
that is the risk where
essentially left-leaning
elite journalists actually became players in the whole thing, essentially, left-leaning elite journalists
actually became players in the whole thing rather than just reporting it.
Yeah, no, I agree.
And because there was something patronising going on as well, wasn't there?
Which is kind of like, he's so stupid, he's so orange, he's so on reality TV,
he couldn't possibly be a threat.
And only a stupid person would fall for it.
So Julie will be spitting feathers by now.
Oh my gosh. So
Eve has just handed me a phone with
some breaking news
and it's that Hunter Biden
has been found guilty of federal gun crimes
and now facing a possible prison
term and that is news indeed but also
what a great photograph you've got on your phone.
Look at that.
Is that you bombing in a swimming pool?
I hope there wasn't
a sign up about no bombing
or heavy petting. Good point,
Matt Chorley. Always stick to the rules.
Yeah, exactly. They're there for a reason.
Something really spooky happened to me
yesterday, Matt. By the way, this is
an email special. There's no guest. In case
you think, oh my god,
when are they going to get to a guest?
There's no guest at all.
Am I not the guest?
You are the guest.
You're doubling up.
Yes.
No, well, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
No, you are.
It sounds so professional when I listen to it, but it's nice.
Don't be silly.
Most people listen to this as a sleep aid,
so we can get away with anything we like.
Can you do that? Can you sleep with an air pod in?
No, no, no.
Or other air? No.
No, can't do that.
I can't even listen to something when I'm going to sleep.
This is about High Country, which is an Australian television series.
And yesterday I asked our Australian contingent
whether or not it was so good
that I should get myself an international VPN
in order to be able to watch it.
And this one comes from Julia in Brisbane.
Hello, Julia, listening at 4am.
Thank you for taking the time to write in
to say yes, you absolutely should
because it's really cracking.
But, Julia, so spooky,
switched on my phone this morning.
The first thing that came up on my prompts
was the fact that the bbc bought high country
that's interesting it's going to be available on the bbc4 we've been watching a lot of australian
comedy fisk fisk we enjoyed fisk we watched uh well mania that was very good oh that's the woman
who tries out every type of yeah which i think it's And it felt a bit like it had been pitched
as one thing and then it became something else.
So she's Australian, she lives in New York
and I think she's a food
writer and she's landed
a big job on a
foodie TV show, sort of X Factor for food.
She pops home to Australia to
go to her brother's wedding and then
loses her passport so then she's stuck there
and she needs to basically sort her life out.
So she tries all these
wellness things
but it's not really
what it's about.
It's just a funny,
you know,
somebody going a bit off
the rails.
But that was great
and there's another one.
Oh, the dog one.
Colin from Accounts.
Oh, Colin from Accounts.
That's also really good.
Oh, I love Colin from Accounts.
Yeah.
But it's weird
because obviously
they're quite a long way away
but the sensibility
of the comedy
is more British, I think,
than a lot of American sitcoms.
Very much so.
I would agree.
And also just a little bit cleverer.
Dryer.
Very dry, yeah.
I just really love all of their dramas as well.
I can't think of any Australian dramas.
Mystery Road is a really, really good one.
I'm going to write that down.
Yeah, you should.
Starring Aaron Pedersen, I think I've got that right.
I've watched Australian dramas since Neighbours.
OK, well, you should definitely dig into Mystery Road.
It's very good.
Mrs Mangle fell off a ladder, do you remember?
Mrs Mangle.
Good God.
Right, people not listening to the news.
This is in from Sue McMahon.
You were talking recently about people missing out
by not listening to the news.
My daughter refuses to have any news on her phone.
She doesn't watch it on TV.
Three years ago, she picked up her son from primary school,
and he asked her if she'd seen that a plane had flown into a tall building in America.
She was dumbstruck and decided she had to look at the news
because she hadn't realised that it had happened again.
But actually what he was watching was the 20th anniversary of 9-11.
He'd been watching Newsround at school
and Sue says, I've checked and she does know
there's an election coming up.
When the Queen died, I sent her a message as she
was teaching and I didn't want her to go into school the next
morning not knowing. Now that was the bit that alarmed
me. I sent her a message
as she was teaching. I think it'd be quite good
if teachers were a bit across what was going
on in the world, wouldn't it?
Well, I don't know what age she's teaching,
because actually if you're teaching tiny, tiny kids, you don't, do you?
But they might ask a question.
They might, yeah.
That alarmed me.
Do you think you could live without the news?
Because you are a political junkie.
No, I couldn't live without the news.? Because you are a political junkie. No, I couldn't live without the news.
I'm not really a political junkie.
I sort of blow a bit hot and cold with it all.
I had a week off after the election was called.
I had a week off and quite enjoyed consuming it
like a normal member of the public.
It was basically a bit of Diane Abbott and a lot of Ed Davey.
That was my consumption of the election.
But if you weren't doing the job, if you weren't doing the day job,
then you would have a hunger for it, wouldn't you?
Yeah.
I mean, I can understand you might sometimes get to saturation point here.
That's basically what it is.
Every sort of you do a little break.
But yeah, I can't imagine not having the news.
What does alternative Matt Chorley do,
the one who didn't make it to the starry heights of political punditry and presenting?
Good question.
They did ask me once when I was working in H Samuel
if I wanted to join the management ladder.
It was when they asked me if I wanted training in piercing ears that I resigned.
I thought, that's not a...
Not for you?
Not for me.
I quite liked working in a shop, though.
OK.
Walking up and down the H Samuel, swinging my keys.
H Samuel has always struck me as it would be a frustrating place to work,
though, don't you think?
Because there's just so much dusting to do.
You've got to take out all of the little individual things every night.
That would just feel a little bit like home from home.
In fact, talking of 9-11,
I was working at H Samuel on 9-11
in the Taunton branch
and we had a phone call from the Yeovil branch
to say someone had flown a plane
into one of the towers at Wembley.
The twin towers of Wembley.
Oh, right.
Gosh, well, that's not a lot.
Crossed wires.
It wasn't until I got home
that I discovered that Wembley was still standing.
Yes, good. Well, I don't know what to say. I discovered that Wembley was still standing. Yes, good.
Well, I don't know what to say.
No, I'm just not going to say anything.
Well, it's different because, you know, coming back to news,
you know, you're getting your buzzy things on your phone and all that.
That's how you found out the news.
Yeah, that's very true.
People phoned you up and gave it to you incorrectly.
Yeah.
You know, with the ear piercing thing, I wouldn't be able to do that either
because there's also a very weird sound that is specific to the ear piercing when the earring goes through a lobe.
I mean, it's not a...
But it's something different going on,
and I wouldn't be able to hear that every day.
But don't you sometimes wonder about how people train to be tattooists?
Because when is the time at which you go,
yes, I can do this, off we toddle?
Do they do it on pigs?
I don't know.
I honestly don't know know I'd like to know
yeah
because you must have
a couple of really dodgy
ear piercing sessions
but it doesn't matter
because the person
it doesn't matter
if your ear
slightly off
I went and
had a free haircut
once from a
you know
for the students
but it wasn't
it wasn't perfect
but it was fine
it was going to grow back
I was stuck with it
for the rest of my life.
The tattooing.
Yeah, could you draw a joint of meat?
Maybe.
Our lovely listeners will know,
we've had quite a funny theme recently, haven't we,
about tattoos that don't match.
And somebody had on their torso,
I can't remember what the first thing was,
but it was like an eagle, a golden eagle or something, and then on the other
side of their torso they had Anne Hathaway's
cottage.
That is what makes...
What's Anne Hathaway's cottage?
Anne Hathaway's cottage. Oh, as in
Anne Hathaway's William Shakespeare? Yes.
Oh, I thought you meant the actress.
They've been on Mike Move and downloaded that.
Actually, it might have been that.
It's even stranger.
Well, look, it's been absolutely lovely to have you.
We've got to go because there are queues of people outside the studio.
But do you want to say anything else before you go?
Yes, so it turns out, while we've been talking,
it turns out I've completely missed Katie's birthday anyway,
so don't worry about it, it's fine.
Who wanted a bag?
So she's a super fan.
Don't worry, she says.
Oh, OK.
Right, well.
So it's fine. I'm sorry to hear that. Anyway, I've enjoyed it. she says oh okay right well so it's fine
I'm sorry to hear that
I've enjoyed it
it's been nice
yes it's been very nice
and now you'll have to
come and be me
when I'm away
so it's fair for Jane
are you going on the bus
no I'm not on the bus
because I've got these
children at home
doing their A levels
and GCSEs
and I don't want to sound
too creepy
but times have already
been really nice actually about
the fact that the election was called
and so many people had
plans Matt didn't they?
How is it? It's fine.
Not the election, how's the exams?
The exams, they're absolutely fine and they finish on Friday
but it does mean that I couldn't go on the bus.
Have you got post-it notes all over the kitchen and the bathroom?
No, they've kept it quite
contained to their own rooms but they
very seldom have come out of their rooms and they really, but they very seldom have come out of their rooms
and they really, really, really need to come out of their rooms.
A bit fusty.
Yes, very, very fusty.
And actually, I'll tell you what,
I'm going to save Ruth's lovely email
about a tick crawling up her leg
for maybe we'll do an infestation special.
Trailing ahead, lovely.
Yeah, so much to look forward to.
Do you know, they thought there was bedbugs in the studio.
Oh, no, don't...
But it turned out it wasn't. It turned out it wasn't.'t no don't start that again don't start that again please because we were
told really really told it was like one of the biggest ndas that jade and i've ever had to sign
we could not ever say that somebody found a bed bug in here but they didn't oh it was um fruit gnats
and on that bombshell we say say goodbye, Matt Chorley.
It's been lovely.
Thank you very much indeed.
Jane is back from Redcar tomorrow.
So normal service resumes.
And we need to know things about being a beginner tattooist
and any other Australian documentary, drama, comedy suggestions
will be gratefully received.
Good night.
Well done for getting to the end of another episode
of Off Air with Jane Garvey and Fee Glover.
Our Times Radio producer is Rosie Cutler and the podcast executive producer is Henry Tribe.
And don't forget, there is even more of us every afternoon on Times Radio.
It's Monday to Thursday, three till five.
You can pop us on when you're pottering around the house or heading out in the car on the school run or running a bank.
Thank you for joining us and we hope you can join us again on off air very soon don't be so silly running a bank
i know lady listener sorry