Table Manners with Jessie and Lennie Ware - Ep 4: Annie Mac
Episode Date: November 29, 2017Businesswoman, tastemaker, mother, and champion of the sorority; this week we chat to Annie Mac about veganism, taking your kids on tour, and the time her mother punched someone on a plane. Hosted on ...Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi, I'm Jessie Ware and this is my mum Lenny. Hi. And this is Table Manners.
as table manners so we're back for another episode and if you haven't tuned in to us before this is a podcast about food family and the art of conversation and i host it with my mother
who is usually the chef um every week um but not. I've been given the task of creating a brunch for Annie Mack.
Who's vegan.
Yeah, mum's really excited about this.
You're also a bit late, a bit tardy, mum.
Sorry, I was up early finishing a report before I came.
There you go.
No, no, it's...
It's not usually in the morning, darling.
No, this is a special one because i guess
well annie mack is on radio every evening on radio one doing this specialist radio show so
we've managed to get her for a brunch um which actually is my favorite meal of the day i think
i love a brunch i like brunch too but with smoked salmon i know alas mum there is no smoked salmon
today sorry i think we'll be allowed to have some butter no annie won't mean you can have what does
she what does she have if she doesn't have dry toast it's fun being a vegan isn't it is that
gender neutral as well because i've told everyone about what you told me.
What did I tell you?
You told me that I had to buy the baby gender neutral toys from now on.
Yeah, because she likes a car.
Yeah.
I bought her a car for her birthday.
Gender neutral enough?
Yes, thank you.
She's going to have a lovely boy doll for Christmas.
Yeah, brilliant. Thank you. Yeah. Gentle neutral enough Yes thank you She's going to have a lovely boy doll for Christmas Yeah brilliant thank you
Yeah
God why did I decide to do this with you
You're a nightmare
I first heard of Annie Mac through my friend Subtract
Who used to send Annie Mac songs of his
And I featured on one of Subtract's songs
And she played us which
I was really thankful for so we kind of met through her playing my music but became friends
she's always always been such a big advocate of women in music and has really really helped my
career I feel and has always been really really. And I think she's really inspiring. She's a businesswoman.
She's a DJ.
She's a mother.
She's a tastemaker.
She's a festival maker.
She's kind of everything.
She can do anything she puts her hand to.
Yeah, I noticed that her new amp that Annie Mack presents,
her crew are women, all women.
Yeah, they are.
It's fantastic. Her managers are women. Her her crew are women, all women. Yeah, they are. It's fantastic.
Her managers are women, her creative directors are women.
Yeah, she really believes in the kind of sorority and like female sorority.
Well, she gives you the confidence as a woman to go out there and get what you want, I think.
Totally.
Because she's proof of that.
Yeah, absolutely.
And she should be here any second.
So I must go and deal with my
silken tofu scramble
apparently she loves potatoes so i've just basically done a load of breakfast potatoes
and the tofu scramble and you're gonna have to deal with it mom it's fine it's fine. Okay. It's fine. Hi, Annie.
How are you?
I'm all right.
Nice to see you.
Can I get you coffee or tea?
Look how gorgeous you look.
I've got...
Eat your breakfast.
Fine.
The real deal.
Done.
The real deal.
That's a tofu scramble.
Wait until my mum eats it.
She's going to have an opinion.
I'm so sorry I'm vegan.
How long have you been vegan?
I'm sorry for you.
How long have you been vegan? Kind of on and off. I stopped when I was pregnant. I just couldn I'm vegan. How long have you been vegan?
Kind of on and off.
I stopped when I was pregnant.
I just couldn't do it.
I was stuffing my face with smoked salmon.
And now that I'm doing it,
what, like, I don't know, three or four months, maybe.
Do you like being vegan?
Yeah, I do most of the time.
And is it because you have, because you think about...
It's the animals.
Weren't you brought up in Ireland, in the city.
Oh, in the city, not in the country.
And my mum was brought up on a pig farm.
So she was vegetarian all my life.
You're kidding.
And my sister was too.
So we were brought up as vegetarian.
Not like strict, it was just my mum cooked.
So she was like, well, you've got to get vegetarian food
because that's what I'm cooking for you.
So whenever she went away, my dad would give us sausages and mash and stuff it was
a real treat and then when I left home I was like give me all the meat because it felt it was like
a novelty and I ate meat for years and then uh thank you darling pleasure kind of stopped
in my 30s you don't even eat fish I do when I'm not vegan i'm pescatarian okay i'm all over the place i i made
a declaration on online which was a really stupid thing to do be like i've decided to go vegan for
a month and it's gonna be really hard okay because a month is up i didn't even do a month i did two
weeks i remember this yeah and you were like babe welcome to the club stay strong yeah but you know
what you did wrong you were you were like You were like trying to completely change your diet.
I know.
I'm going to,
everything's going to be like super,
like extreme vegan.
Totally.
And I was also like kind of obsessed
with making the best kind of vegan food.
So like I was cooking constantly.
It's not realistic.
Yeah.
And I feel like I had the least amount of raw vegetables
in those two weeks
because I was busy making bean
stews and sweet potato burgers and like oh it's exhausting i felt like shit i did that as well i
ate all i read all the books there's so many books with like obscenely healthy skinny looking people
talking about you know making cow cow cow cow cocoa cacao cacao cacao cacao yeah isn't it the same as cocoa yes but yeah it was exhausting but like
I um yeah now I'm I don't know I'm a bit more realistic about it I'm also not so extremely
hard on myself about it so if I go like out to someone's house and they have normal milk I'm
not gonna be like well I only drink because I hate being that person I don't want to like do
that so it's just kind of my personal choices and wherever i can which is like 98%
of the time i will do it i'm not going to eat a steak but you know if i'm out at the weekend and
you know so there's nothing to eat apart from a salad with feta in it then i'll be like fuck it
yeah yeah but so how does it work with the boys are they
being the boys are pescatarian okay fine they've never eaten meat just because we don't really
have meat in our house yeah it wasn't like you're not you know it was just like it just worked out
naturally ashin my oldest is four he loves fish he eats like tuna and he eats salmon and stuff
now and again but mainly he's a vegetarian he will call himself a vegetarian because he doesn't really understand pescatarian and like but like but he'll eat fish
like he'll have yeah he'll have fish yeah he doesn't like he'd have like a fish finger okay
yeah you know the best yeah yeah yeah and what like tea is he kind of pescatarian he's fully
carnivore but so he just eats it outside he just eats outside the house but because there's no meat
in the house he will make himself spag bol with corn because you don't really see the difference
in it the thing with spag bol with corn i always feel like you have to over season like to season
it so much yeah yeah it's not great is it i don't mind do you not for someone who isn't vegetarian
at all you don't mind corn no they have corn pieces now they're trying to do new chicken pieces
yeah I've had them
so it's cool
like I like it
what I eat a lot of
is um
can you eat corn
because it's got egg in it
you can have vegan corn
they've just started
okay they've just started
oh what
I didn't know
I know
the amount of stuff
that's got animal products
in it is like
once you try and be really
probably vegan
it's kind of scary
but I eat a lot of
sesame and almond encrusted tofu,
which is like really nutty and really flavourous.
I love them.
And I chop that up and put it in salads,
and I chop that up and put it in everything.
Stews, everything.
But the real talk is,
I don't cook because I'm at work every night.
So I, because I work in town,
I go to Leon, I go to Pret,
I go to Itzu,
and there's enough.
You're pretty good now.
I'm very lucky to live in London. There's enough stuff. Or I go to the can I go to Itzu and there's enough I'm very lucky to live in London there's enough
stuff or I go to the canteen
the BBC canteen we just hit or miss sometimes
you just kind of if they're having a roast
you just have the roast vegetables the roast potatoes
and then some salad. I love it when I see you getting just a box
of roast potatoes that's basically
what you end up with. Yeah
so yeah I mean
I started off extreme I did it for like
quite a while and then I got pregnant and was just like, ah, I can't handle this.
And now I'm just being a little bit more adult about it.
What do you miss?
What do you miss the most out of?
Halloumi and smoked salmon.
Smoked salmon is the best thing I love.
Me too.
Yeah.
And the thing is with me is because I grew up with, my dad's really into fishing.
So I grew up going fishing with my dad i was a proper little tomboy played football went fishing caught loads of fish all
the time was a really good fish we'd go out on boats and i'd have like seven mackerel on my line
and my dad would have like one and be like what is it with you um so i used to love catching fish
and i've like done stuff on telly about fishing and why are there no women fisher like people
and the culture show so i think you know people say with animals like if you know if you are And I've like done stuff on telly about fishing and why there are no women fisher people. Oh, I remember that.
And the culture show.
So I think, you know, people say with animals, like if you know, if you are comfortable with hunting and catching an animal and, you know, knowing how to prepare it for a meal, then I think that's, you know, if you are morally OK with that, then that's fine.
But a lot of people, I think, don't understand where their food's from.
They don't understand.
They don't think about factory farming, that kind of thing.
So for me, with fish, because I've done it, and I've killed a fish, and I've gutted a fish,
and I've fried a fish, and eaten a fish, for me, the process isn't, you know, horrific,
but my problem is kind of the, I guess...
Sustainability.
The sustainability, and the factory farming element, where it's just kind of like fish being bred to be killed
to be eaten, anything like that
animals being bred to be eaten
so potentially, say you were an island
and you were going out fishing
and you'd eat it
because it wouldn't have necessarily been
it hasn't happened for years but maybe I would
maybe you'd want to take the boys out
I think you're like the so okay so like I think
you're like the best kind of vegan I think it's about moderation I think everything is about
moderation yeah and I read a really good article about it about this guy who was you know just
saying that you know there's there's extremes and I the main thing is just I just don't judge anyone
for how they want to eat that's fine but for me it makes me be vegan longer if i have small exceptions every now and again and i'm not
too strict on myself because if you're too strict then you're just like this is ridiculous so you
just have to be a little easier on yourself sometimes sorry i've given been given the task
today of cooking not a task it was complete pleasure so it's going to be a vegan brunch
a vegan brunch yes and it's you know we we have in there i mean
you've gone in babe from what i can see you've like a vegan brunch for me is like baked beans
and toast with some avocado smash i mean we have got some avocado smash yeah we've got some roasted
vine tomatoes we have a tofu scramble which is supposed to be like a southwestern like tofu
scramble but i feel like it's just a bit miserable.
I know my mother is going to have...
Look, she's already giving me cider.
I'm not doing anything.
I would have cooked...
I'll poach you an egg if you need to.
I don't need a poached egg.
But I wouldn't...
I don't really know how to cook vegan food.
I need to probably try.
Hey, McDonald's are going vegan.
Shut up.
You're joking.
I swear to Jesus.
What are they going to do?
McDonald's are going...
They made a vegan burger.
Yeah. They're rolling it out in finland for three weeks why in finland are there a big i don't know i don't know yeah it's a real thing they're making a vegan burger which is pretty
major actually when you think about like have they always had bean burgers though yeah they yeah
they've had bean i've had i love their veggie burgers sam Sam is peering, my husband is peering round the corner.
Come here.
You fancy a McDonald's, a McVegan?
Sam, Sam, listen.
No, no, I believe, right?
Nick, can you get near the mic please, please?
I'm so cold here.
Shut up, get in.
If I was to become vegan, right?
Yeah, so what are you?
I'm kind of vegetarian at the moment
until Jessie puts the shepherd's pie in my mouth.
His spirit animal is like a vegan person.
I feel like I'm vegetarian in heart,
but my gut's like,
Your gut's a carnivore.
Miss a bit of meat.
Miss a bit of meat.
But if you're vegan,
You're the laziest vegan.
Then your ideologies are like,
save the planet, look after the animals.
Then you shouldn't be eating McDonald's.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, full stop.
Even if it's a vegan burger.
Yeah, yeah.
So I guess I kind of want to go back to you
talking about your family
because you're...
Are you from a big family?
I'm the youngest of four.
I was brought up in Dublin
and yeah, I had a really nice upbringing.
I was brought up in the suburbs of Dublin,
kind of four miles out of the city centre.
You could see the Dublin mountains from our back garden.
Dublin reminds me loads of Sheffield.
I don't know if you've ever been there,
but it's kind of surrounded by a beautiful countryside.
It's kind of similar size.
I love Dublin.
The people are very warm, super friendly,
mad, brilliant sense of humour.
And my school was behind my back wall so i
every every day i would go over the wall oh my god that's brilliant yeah so um i had a nice kind
of local local vibe and was your family a foodie family no but your mom your mom was a vegetarian
my mom hated cooking my dad worked in England from Monday to Thursday
every week
my mum brought up
four kids
she had four kids
in five years
A
she's mad
B
she brought them up
pretty much
in the weeks
on her own
C
we didn't have any money
so she like
made the curtains
made the clothes
dad made the furniture
it was all very
kind of like
DIY vibes
she was a school teacher
when she was able
to go back to
work when I was old enough to go to school she went with me and taught but um yeah she the cooking
was purely functional and we had a different meal every night of the week so Friday was chips eggs
and beans Wednesday was pizza Thursday was macaroni cheese with sweet corn tinned um and so
and like so it was just like it was purely like I have to you know
get food on the table and that is it but I still love cheese to this day yeah like did did you
kind of enjoy that that you knew you were getting every day yeah I loved it and because there's four
in the family like there was no you know you you you had to eat what you could because if you know
if you didn't it would be people just taking food and stuff. But I do also have
lingering memories
of my mum
like making me
eat broccoli
not broccoli
Brussels sprouts
and cabbage
and like I was not
allowed to leave the table
until they were gone
and I would just sit there
for hours
with like four
soggy Brussels sprouts
because she boiled
the fuck out of them
and they tasted disgusting.
Do you like Brussels sprouts?
No, I still hate them
to this day.
I've got a fracking recipe
for not Megan because it's got cheddar in it. I've got a cracking recipe for it.
Is it like not Megan?
She can't wrap it, Mum.
Not Megan.
Because it's got cheddar in it.
Oh, but she could have vegan cheddar.
It tastes like shit.
No, you know what?
I really...
I'm starting to find vegan cheddar in it.
You have to slice Brussels sprouts really fine.
Yeah.
And then you mix it with hazelnuts,
a yellow mustard dressing,
quite a thick yellow mustard dressing
and then put cheese in as well
and mix it all together. It's delicious.
That's really good.
Rosie Mack wasn't
having the hazelnuts and the mustard back in the day.
But I do feel like Brussels sprouts have come a long
way from the 80s.
Yeah, they have.
Yeah, yeah.
So food, and still my mum can't stand cooking.
Really?
And when people are coming round, she's So, yeah, so food. And still my mum can't stand cooking. Really? She's still like, ugh.
And when people are coming round, she's like, what will I cook?
And she has recipes for magazines.
And she's, you know, she cooks like vegetable bakes and quiches.
She's, you know, she's got better at it over the years.
But I think she'd say herself.
Are they still in Dublin?
Yeah, they're still in Dublin.
That must be hard for you because you're quite a close family, right?
Since kids it's been harder, actually.
Yeah, I bet.
You miss your family loads when you have kids.
Does she come over?
Yeah, they come over a lot.
And I go over to them as much as possible.
I had a brother in London for ages, but he's back in Ireland now.
So all my family are in Ireland.
So yeah, I miss them.
I think, like, you know, my mum complains that she's in South London
and I'm in East London.
I complain because guess who always comes?
I'm always here, darling. I've been been here this is the third time in four days but you get to see your beautiful granddaughters
I adore her yeah my beautiful daughter but and son-in-law but it is hard because I work as well
well I think I don't think we should complain because you're not a Ryanair flight away
no but I always go Ryanair as well.
Don't go Ryanair. Well, they never learn.
That's like big eating meat to me.
It's like they came to see me in Ibiza.
The two times they've both gone Ryanair
and both times they have been traumatized.
The first time there was a stag party on the flight
and there was a guy pretending to be a horse
galloping up and down the aisle with a horse head on.
It's like a horror film
and they were just like
from us
and then the second time
my mum actually
punched someone
oh my god I love this
she was sat beside a guy
who was a part of
another stag party
and they were like
yelling abuse at each other
getting hammered
and like he stood up
and just said like
they were towards the end
of their flight
and he stood up
and like said
yelled abuse to another person
and she just went
stop it
like a real mom like rosie
matt right now can i ask you this so the podcast is called table manners um we like to ask the
guests if you have any like pet peeves like any table manners that you think are just the worst
thing you can't stand in a restaurant or i just i just the thing that i i judge everyone on i try not to judge people especially as a mother it's
really easy to judge yes yes my only thing i judge people on is how they treat the staff
so if you're a rude to a waiter you're dead to me yeah basically i know that's as someone who's
waited a lot of tables in my life and worked in a lot of pubs and stuff, I just feel like that's a really good, safe measure of a person.
I think you're so right.
Nobody said that.
I think you're so right.
I've had some friends where I've just really disliked them
after going out for dinner with them.
You get a bad feeling inside
when you see someone you know be like that
because you're like, God, I don't want to.
I mean, I did have an altercation with a Nando's staff member,
but I feel like we were having a right old Josh about.
However, he got my order wrong, and I was like,
I'm really sorry, you missed out the mushy peas.
And he was like, you didn't order them.
And I said, I did, actually.
And he said, no, you didn't.
And I said, well, I'll just get my receipt out, shall I?
And I'll show you.
And then he looked at it, saw that the mushy peas were there,
and I said, don't fuck with me, Jack.
Because he had this name thing, but I said it very calmly.
Don't fuck with me, Jack.
I just said, don't.
It felt like I was in 24.
That's so sinister.
He looked at me.
My husband, it was in Brixton Nando's, and he was like, you're a psychopath.
What did Jack do?
Jack went and got my mushy peas.
Yeah, of course he did. And kind of with a wry smile yeah i was like thank you jack but it was it just came out oh my god i love it
i mean we were getting on and i was very polite but don't fuck with me jack i know my order that's
good but that you you know that's a mutual that's a conversation that you had where you are equals
you know what i mean yeah i mean yes but for me it's like when people don't look at the waiter
and they're like bark orders at them
and it's oh totally
so I know that you don't get that much chance
to cook because obviously like
well I mean you're out
basically Monday to Friday
at dinner time
do you cook at the weekends? Do you like cooking?
Yeah I do actually I've grown to like it
and when I was on maternity leave I really
enjoyed it's quite meditative
isn't it
you know just chopping things and preparing things um and I used to make um a mean macaroni
cheese oh yeah pre-veganism oh that cheese was good oh man because there's this book called
Anna Mae's mac and cheese you know when you go to festivals and there's an Annie's mac and cheese
people always send me oh yeah yeah yeah so they've done a book on just like and it's mac and cheese. People always send me Instagram. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. So they've done a book on just like... And it's a vegan one?
No.
No, no, this is pre-vegan.
Oh, this is when you were...
So I used to make mac and cheese every week.
Like, just things like stir fries
and like nice bakes and stews and stuff I would make, yeah.
So do you have like a family roast or anything?
Do you do that or will you go out for it?
We never do roasts.
I mean, at the moment, I don't.
My boyfriend wishes we did roasts.
I think he's going to learn.
Men always...
I feel like men
want the roasts
more than the women
because the men
get cooked by
we're always the ones
bloody cooking it
it's a real British thing
in Ireland
where I'm from
roasts aren't really
that big a deal
oh really
like Yorkshire pudding
what is that
I have no
I don't get it
so what would
you be having
would you have like
a family meal
on a Sunday then would it be is there an equivalent you would but I don't think there's all. So what would you be having, would you have like a family meal on a Sunday then?
Yeah, you would.
Is there an equivalent?
You would, but I don't think there's an Irish equivalent, no.
The Irish love a stew.
They love a lamb stew.
There's lots of carveries in Ireland.
There is, but when it comes to like,
when it comes to like, you know, the way in here,
in the UK, the culture is let's go for a roast on a Sunday.
It doesn't really feel like that's a thing in Dublin.
But I presume you go to the pub on a Sunday, maybe?
You go to the pub, yeah.
But you just don't get the roast?
I would...
Well, I do like a roast.
I get a veggie roast,
but the Yorkshire pudding, I'm not on.
I don't like it.
So you just don't get...
That's so weird,
because I feel like Yorkshire pudding's
like the least offensive thing in a roast.
I don't know, it's just tasteless.
You just put loads of gravy
and then it just tastes of soppy... Is that what you do i mean you fill it with gravy it's like gravy cardboard yeah i guess
when you think about it it doesn't have much well it started it wasn't served with your roast it
served before with gravy and to fill you up before you had the meat how do you know this because i
know that did you get and what so because there's not that much meat, so you have to be full. Yeah. So people filled it.
So it's a huge one.
You put gravy in it and it filled you up first because people didn't have that much meat.
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So we have dished up and it's a bit of a mishmash. I know that Annie loves a potato,
so I've basically done breakfast roast potatoes in rosemary and garlic. And then we've got a tofu
scramble with kind of cumin and cayenne pepper and some sriracha and kale and garlic. Yes! And then we've got a tofu scramble with kind of cumin and cayenne pepper and some sriracha
and kale and garlic.
What's sriracha?
Sriracha.
Sriracha you just spray on the sauce.
Oh that's the sauce?
Okay that's the sauce.
Sriracha sauce.
Hot chilli sauce.
Yum.
Then we've got avocado smash with coriander and we've got some, my favourite things like
the roasted vine tomatoes.
Mum, you can have some butter.
Do you not have any butter on you? She's just like misbehaving. That's my other thing with halloumi and some butter. Do you not have any butter, Annie?
She's just like misbehaving.
That's my other thing.
Do you want some toast?
That's the other thing I miss the most.
Real butter.
You get just dairy-free butter.
It's fine.
Yeah, it's fine.
I'm sure.
I feel like we need to address this
because Annie was really integral.
Well, I mean,
I've spoken about this before, but Annie was really important basically you and Annie were the people that told me to get pregnant
and I felt like I needed a I needed a voice from music to tell me that it was going to be okay a
female voice to tell me it was going to be okay to be pregnant and be able to still do my job and
I guess Annie was the perfect voice to give me that because I could see your career's got better
and better since you've had you said your career's got better since you've had children like it's
like it's true it has and why do you think that I think I think it's two things I think it's because
I waited till I was you know in my in a position where my career was safe yeah um to have a baby
so I was 34 when I had my baby and as in
I felt secure
to leave it
never that secure
I know
I feel like
music is never that secure
but it's still terrifying
having to leave a job
which is essentially freelance
which essentially is like
you know
someone's going to be
doing it for you
and when you're in
the public eye
you know
at least someone
isn't going to step in
and be Jessie Ware
while you're on maternity leave
but in my job
someone is looking after what i consider to be my baby um as in my radio show so
that that's hard but it makes you super focused you know you don't have as much time to spend on
it there's no procrastination you have less time you go in and you you blitz it and you know what
you want and also it was good
for me in a way because it made me realize that people did miss me and I had no idea where because
I'd never been away I'd never had a chance to test that out it's not something you want to test out
voluntarily you know but I did and it made me feel way better about having a second baby as well
did you feel like then you had this greater confidence
when you returned yes that from feeling wanted and also feeling like you could do anything because
you're a superman you've been you've had a baby and you know yeah more just like okay you know
obviously what i'm doing is it is satisfactory to people they like it not just on the radio but
beyond that being a dj as well um um and then I guess now I kind of feel
a sense of not responsibility but a kind of part of me feels like what I'm doing is really important
because I am a woman yeah and because there's no other as far as I can see well not not not many
other women mothers who are DJs um you know in in my sphere and and i feel like it's really
important that i keep doing what i'm doing do you feel like people kind of like focus on that as
like a unique selling point do you feel like it deters people i feel like it's both okay yeah i
feel like from a promoter's point of view because like with the exception of me i think in the uk i
don't know any festivals are run by women it's all men and I think that men
are only now in the last kind of three or four years starting to see it from a female perspective
because they've kind of been forced to because people are giving out about it but like you know
if you look at a festival lineup it's always like the first 10 rows are pretty much men a lot of the
time recently so for me because I'm a woman and because I can sit in high up in
a lineup promoters want to book me because there's so few choices of DJs so they're like we need Annie
because she's a woman so it's good in that way um but it's also you know um I don't know it's it's
never felt like a deterrent to me the only way it's felt like a deterrent is by not being able to focus on an international career but that's my own personal choice like
I could bring my kid with me but it wouldn't be very fun for him yeah no that would be look I'm
about to embark on an international tour with my child and a husband and maybe it's and a husband
there's the key yeah so your husband's coming and
all the djs i know who do tour with kids have a partner that they bring um who will look after
the kid and that is brilliant but for me i wouldn't be able to do that because my partner
is also a dj yeah yeah so um there therein lies my problem i think yeah i'm look i'm very lucky
that like sam is basically going to take take a year off to help me.
Well, yeah, I mean, that's the most beautiful thing.
He's lucky because he's a personal trainer,
so he can kind of in and out.
Alex is still offering to help, by the way.
My brother, who's also taking a year out being a doctor,
so he's ready to to be nanny which is
great but i think i think still it's weird isn't it that it still sits funny and you almost have
to like thank the person even more like i feel like it's a given the other way around never
thank a wife exactly for doing that i mean like it just feels i feel like i maybe and i respect
yeah maybe they would but like i respect sam and i appreciate it so much that he mean like it just feels I feel like I maybe he would and I respect yeah maybe they would
but like
I respect Sam
and I appreciate it
so much that he's doing it
but I do feel like
I need to complete
always address this fact
that he's taking
the year out
and that that's quite
a novel thing
but wouldn't anyone
address it
if their partner
was suspending
what they did
maybe a guy
wouldn't address it
as much as a woman
would I guess
I don't know
if you have a job
and you're committed to your job and you stop doing it,
I think you'd thank either person.
I think you would like to think that.
I think probably it's been done.
It's more systematic for women to be the ones that sacrifice their career
or for the man because traditionally it's the man that's the breadwinner.
Yeah.
But things are very much changing now.
And I think someone like Sam is, you know,
a shining example of a man who's not led by his ego.
No, I know.
Who's just, you know, loves his family.
I think personally for me, the talk,
talking about the kind of deterrent factor of it,
which is ridiculous to talk about, sorry,
but like I think it was more my own insecurities
of worrying what other
people were going to think of me becoming a mother and a singer and this kind of less desirable
woman in a way like you kind of i remember i remember it's not done adele any harm adele
could do anything sing the alphabet and she'd be okay so like she's okay i still feel like when
you were talking you know you're talking about secure
jobs like I still don't feel like my job is secure like ever I feel like you're only as good as your
last yeah record maybe like so um so it's harder it's interesting it's all kind of suck it and see
we'll see how it goes but I think that's parenting and this is what I think the most about parenting
the hardest thing I learned was that you can never predict how you're going to feel.
So when you rang me that time and you were like, I think I want to have a baby.
Am I mad?
You know, you didn't know how it was going to be.
And that's the hardest thing.
You can't plan for being a parent because you could hate it.
You could love it.
You could have a kid who never sleeps and you can't do anything.
But I think with this, you just have to try it you have to do what makes you happy as a
mother because as a as a happy mother you know your kid will be happier yeah totally can i ask
i mean because as a female in music i've always felt like there's been this kind of silent
undertone of like trying to almost you that you're put against other women whether it's like
hon who was it in my first campaign I feel I feel like even though me and Leanne got on really well
like Leanne Le Havis was like an upright uprising star there was this girl called Delilah and it was
like you became like it became this kind of almost a battle and it was stupid because it wasn't it
was other people putting that on Leanne would have me support for her and it was stupid because it wasn't it was other people putting that on liam
would have me support for her and it was amazing and but do you feel like that happens ever within
like radio or with radio yeah djing lasso because there's not i bet there's no one there's a crew
of women there that good yeah there is yeah because there's so few i think everyone backs
each other up but um dj radio there's a lot of women in radio which is
great still a lot of work to do in terms of representation like if you look at radio 2
there's not been a female fronted daytime radio 2 show in 21 years between between the hours of
8 a.m and 8 p.m it's fully men that's that blows my mind that someone thinks that's okay. That must change. I know.
What the hell?
But it's, people just, because it's always been that way, you know, we think about it.
But it's Vanessa Feltz in the morning up to Chris Evans.
And then it's Joe Whirley from eight on.
But in that middle block, it's all men from eight to eight.
And I heard Sarah Cox like almost midnight.
Yes.
She, it's, that's sacrilege that she's not on daytime radio.
She's great.
She's fabulous.
She's so funny and engaging.
She's fabulous.
But, yeah.
And Lisa Tarbuck, I think, sometimes.
Yeah, she's great also.
She's really funny.
On radio, too.
I think what you're talking about happens mostly with artists for some reason.
I don't know why.
I think in radio, because there's so many many women it's not as easy to pit them against
each other but in what in what you do i can see how people would do that and i think yeah the
answer is to do what what you do which is just to be you know openly supportive and friendly with
these women i think there's been really i've had such wonderful experiences of women with music
like you know paloma faith has been amazingly she's also very vocal and she's
become a mom she is amazing and she's kind of um no nonsense and I you know um no there's so many
wonderful women out there but yeah I was just wondering whether it was similar I just kind of
wondered whether they tried to do those silly kind of almost they're like silly mind games almost
yeah yeah silly I know it's very
very silly i think yeah it's just about having a support system i guess you know where you support
each other but i do think as well that there's still a lot of kind of it's still conceived like
considered a novelty when it's like loads of women together you know like the fact that radio
two can be all men and no one says a thing imagine if that
was all women people would be like uproar it's all women are they trying to make a point what is this
you know what i mean and it's the same with like dj lineups or you know festival lineups the day
that we can see a lineup where it's just women and no one comments on it is is the day that i
dream of where it's not a token thing. It's not a considered thing.
It's just because women are really good
at doing what they do,
and there's loads of great artists out there
who are women.
That is a day I can't wait for.
Hopefully it won't be too long.
I mean, I feel you do these
Animat Presents nights,
which I think I'm doing one of them.
Yes, you are.
Yeah, thank you.
The day after the Brits thanks so much for that
you cow you absolute cow
yeah thank you I'll come with you
I'll be with you every step of the way
it'll probably be a miserable
night anyway at the Brits so it'll be fine
but
I was wondering so I guess
I'm presuming you always make sure that there's
a female on your line up yes we have
to I mean the thing is it's like iting you always make sure that there's a female in your lineup. Yes, we have to. I mean, the thing is, it's like, it's also about making sure that no matter what, you're
supporting good music.
Yeah.
That's got to be the first priority.
Yeah, totally.
And with the festival, like, especially this year, we...
Lost and Found.
Lost and Found Festival, which is a festival I do in Malta every year.
How brilliant, what a brilliant idea to do one abroad, so you can get a tan, work and
get a lovely tan and a glow.'s fun i like it um but yeah that there's there's a real kind of precedent
me for me now to to to make sure because especially there is so many women so it's not
like there's no excuse for not booking women now because especially in the world of dance there's
loads so i really want to make sure but now do you feel like there's almost an added pressure
that you're like the pioneer like you're the like pioneer for all these women like
you're the kind of the woman's woman and now you're like i've been i've been kind of conflicted
over the years because especially at the start when i was a woman i used to get asked when i was
a woman i'm saying when i was a dj i used to get asked to play female lineups all the time as in
like come on we let's hear it for the guys.
Come on,
that play a girl's night.
And I always said no,
because my thing was like,
I don't want to be a token.
I just want to be considered a good DJ regardless of my gender.
And I think we should be pushing women forwards,
obviously supporting them and being,
you know,
actively supporting them.
But I feel like sometimes those girl nights don't end up being uh beneficial
because it helps put you know women DJs in a box and I don't know I still feel a little
conflicted by that but equally how did you start being a DJ did it start in Ireland yeah it started
when I was in university I bought a set of decks off my friend yeah in Belfast yeah what did you study I guess I studied English lit
yes
and I loved it
do you still read
I love reading
I love writing
that's what I want to do
I want to write so much
oh yeah
but I never have time
a book
anything
book
I don't know
you do write
she writes brilliantly
I never
there's never
like this is
this is the biggest bane of my life
it's just never having enough time
to actually really put you know be good at something because you have to practice
to be good at things as you know and I always feel like I'm just kind of a fair weather rider
and in my head when I'm like you know in my 60s I just write I'll have a little desk by a window
that sounds gorgeous.
Annie, you know, because you're a DJ and you play dance music.
Yeah.
When you took over the evening slot and you have to play a whole range of music.
Yeah.
Do you like all the different musics?
Oh, okay.
So it isn't like.
Like no next level.
Like I love dance music, but I had been going to see my boss at Radio 1 for years saying I want to get out of the box.
Okay.
Because I always liked,
I mean I used to work on Zane Lowe's show
where he played every...
The show that I'm doing now,
I used to be the assistant on for years.
Oh, did you?
So I worked on that show.
I made Zane's tea for him.
And I used to play guitar and the mandolin and the piano.
Like I'm really, I love... Oh, wow. So you love music. different types of music. Have you thought about making your own music? Loads of times
but I can't be that guy girl. Why? Because I can't be the radio DJ that makes music.
Why the hell not? Because I can't be like I don't know it's too much. Your boyfriend
is? I know but he made music first and then I just became a DJ. You need to just have
a different name. Yeah. Do like a subtract. A name yeah like a subtract yeah pseudonym yeah you'll be alright are your children going to have
piano lessons I do you know what that's I was really thinking about that this
week because I really want them to appreciate music and I had lessons when
I was a kid and I think it really helped me did you I really regret Jesse had
piano lessons and I got this elderly man who was very kind.
He smelled of tuna.
His breath smelled of tuna.
Mr. Morris.
Mr. Morris.
Stunk of tuna.
It was alcoholic.
And she didn't have piano lessons.
So she did up to grade eight voice without reading music.
Wow.
Well, not that impressive.
I had to go to like a different, like it wasn't.
A different guild hall.
I had to go to like Trinity or something.
Yeah, but it didn't matter because you've got a good ear no it's but but it's a i think i regret that she
didn't play an instrument okay i i'm i'm gonna like ram it are you gonna play oh i i'm going to
basically you're not gonna learn everything i'm gonna make sure she learns like i've got got her
a little mini piano for her birthday she just plonks it like
she just likes yeah thrashing but that's still that's still i know doing it in her way and she's
really rhythmic so i just kind of and hopefully she's going to be surrounded by music kind of
being on tour with me but like i'm desperate for her to be like a piano like well yeah
extraordinary like prodigy so i mean so what instrument you'd start him on the piano probably
the piano or the drums as long as they were in a different probably put them in the office at the
end of the garden that's such a good idea soundproofed as well that place so that's good
but i like the idea of him kind of yeah like just any anything he wants i've just taught him about
rock and roll it's occurred to me that he's never he's only ever listened to like we listen to a lot of R&B and soul and rap in our house we
don't listen to a lot of guitar music I listen to kind of like Bon Iver and
stuff but and because there's not really that much on the radio he's not really
that familiar with it so I found this new thing called daddy doughnuts which
is like dinosaur songs but all done in rock and roll style.
Oh, that's amazing.
Johnny Cash vibes.
Like, so good.
That's so cool.
And he's obsessed.
And he said to me yesterday,
I was like,
why do you want to dress up as Halloween?
And he said, a policeman.
But if not a policeman,
a rock and roll man.
A rock and roll man.
You've got to make him a rock and roll man.
Oh my God, how do I do that?
Dress up like Jimi Hendrix or something.
I know.
Thank you so much for finding the time
out of your ridiculously busy schedule.
I love you.
You inspire me all the time.
And I'm so happy that you've been on Table Manners.
Oh, thank you, Jessie.
Pleasure.
Thank you.
She's so beautiful.
I know.
I just couldn't get over her skin.
It's so beautiful.
I know, she has got excellent dewy skin.
She looks like she's just... And she doesn't ever look tired. I know she has got excellent dewy skin she looks like
she's just
and she doesn't
ever look tired
I know how is that
she just looks fresh
I don't know
she looks beautiful
the busiest woman
in the industry
yeah and she looks
so fresh
she doesn't look like
she works in the evening
I hate to tell you
what
it's the vegan diet
piss off
we've been
Table Manners I'm Jessie Ware and i'm lenny and thanks so much for listening if you
are enjoying this podcast please subscribe or rate us um it helps with the figures and
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