Table Manners with Jessie and Lennie Ware - S2 Ep 8: Felix White
Episode Date: April 4, 2018Felix White. Some of you know him from The Maccabees, some of you know him from his cricket journalism but I know him as the new boy at school who I forced to go out with me at 9 years old. Since then... we’ve shared many experiences; a few teenage snogs, our first TV appearance and even our first mugging. He’s had countless dinners at Mum's over the years and here pops over to mine for one more. Yala!Produced by Alice Williams for Cup and Nuzzle Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi and welcome back to Table Manners. I am Jessie Ware and this is my mum Lenny.
Hi. It's just going to be like that now isn't it? Yeah. That was better though, it was a little bit warmer.
For dinner this evening we have one of my oldest friends, a school friend that I met
when we were nine years old
and we've stayed best friends ever since.
You were seven, were we?
No, because Felix came late.
He was in the infants.
No, he wasn't.
He was in top infants.
He came in top infants.
Oh, we'll ask him in a minute.
I remember.
Tonight, we have Felix White
of the Maccabees on Table Manners.
Also, he's famous for cricket. Well yeah this is
his well. Cricket and broadcasting. Yeah. And record label. Yeah. He's an entrepreneur now. He is. Yeah.
I have to tell him. I mean it's pretty amazing that Maccabees broke up less than a year ago and he's
already kind of got this whole new career ahead of him and it's really I'm very proud of him he's already kind of got this whole new career ahead of him. And it's really, I'm very proud of him.
He knows me very, very, very well.
Too well, I'm slightly worried what he's about to say on this episode.
Him and mum can have a right old laugh and a poke at me.
We had a deal when we were, if we weren't married by 30,
we would get married.
I don't know if I made the wrong decision.
How could you have decided that when you were 10 yeah I think I did yeah I think
I've been going out with Sam since you were 18 like so and mum um but yeah Felix White is on
tonight's table manners I did a show last night and i'm not gonna lie i'm feeling a little worse
for wear but um the deal was that i cooked dinner tonight so i have done the most lazy chicken roast
it's the lazy girls one where you do it all in the same tray and it's just really easy and
felix is really happy about it yeah i'm also trying this new
cauliflower cheese out where you i love cauliflower i'm doing it a bit different it's inspired by the
marksman no okay it's it's inspired by the marksman pub um who i think do an amazing roast
in hackney um is that double fried what cauliflower cheese no they do double fried
chips yeah no it's not it's not that it's it's a i've never done it before and we're kind of just
guessing what's in it but it's a whole cauliflower that you bake and you kind of
make it really nice and brown and then it's quite a thin cheese sauce that I'm using. I mean, I'm going for it, Mum.
Like, diet's out the window.
Cream.
Bit of nutmeg.
Don't mind tonight.
I know.
It's a cold night.
And I'm going to... I've already curdled one attempt at it.
So I'm going to try and put that on near the end.
So it's kind of more in a kind of cream sauce.
But with hazelnuts and parmesan.
And then we've got some Brussels sprouts with chestnuts.
Wow.
I don't know.
I just thought, why not?
Good.
And I've made a crumble.
Good.
With a muesli topping.
Good.
And coconut oil, so it was a bit less naughty.
Okay.
But then I put butter on the top too, because it looked like it was going to dry out.
So that's like a blackberry an apple
and a bit of plum because and with my new favorite thing to put in a crumble is mixed spice so easy
yeah spices it up well it does but it makes it smell like mulled wine it's just great
so that's the meal you could put star anise in i do usually i just couldn't i couldn't be asked to be honest so is this all spice or
mixed spice it's mixed spice but you could use all spice okay and i think all spice and mixed
spice are the same thing i don't know i'll have to find out uh but yeah i'm taking liberties
because felix has eaten many a cook meal by my mother many a takeaway and he's actually really happy Jessie you've lived with him on and off
I've lived with him too
I've lived with him at uni
and after uni
I don't know why because he's
quite messy
well then you've probably got on very well
but yes
here we go
Felix White on Table Manners
Felix White on Table Manners.
Felix White, welcome to Table Manners.
Thank you, Jessie.
Does this feel weird?
No, I thought we were going to do it at your mum's house.
I'm sorry.
No, that's all right, because I've been coming round there since I was about... I know, see.
...seven or something, so in my head I thought we were going to do that again.
When did you start Honeywell? I came to Honeywell when I was about eight, I think, see. Seven or something. So in my head, I thought we were going to do that again. When did you start Honeywell?
I came to Honeywell when I was about eight, I think.
Okay.
But it was in top infant still, wasn't it?
No, I thought you were second.
I think year five, year four, year five.
No, year five is nearly...
Miss Morris.
It was in, it was...
No, it wasn't.
I remember being in the...
Oh, no, I know why. I think he knows better oh no i know why do you know why i met you i used
to see your mum waiting for william yeah you would have done yeah yeah so his mum used to wait for
william that's why i thought you were in the infant yeah and i i remember walking into class
and i remember seeing your i still remember it seeing your face walking to class as a new boy
i just remember you like and you seemed you seemed like yeah this girl rules the classroom. Oh my god the bully! I remember thinking she was in charge. I wasn't a bully!
No she wasn't a bully but she was obviously in charge Lenny. Oh wait. Sound familiar?
I see. What do you mean I see? That's true though. Oh my god that's, but I was always nice to you. You were immediately nice to me. I asked you out, didn't I?
Yeah, I was going to...
Age to age.
Do you know the story?
Jessie forced me to go out with her when I was about nine or ten.
I remember this as well.
I was kind of in the corner of a classroom and Jessie literally cornered me and said,
you're going to be my boyfriend.
Jessica.
Didn't stop you kissing me throughout our teenage years.
So there you go.
Do you want to do it chronologically or not?
Yeah, let's stick with the chronology of it.
Let's start.
And I said, I don't think I want that.
To be your boyfriend.
And she said, no, no, no, you have to.
I don't believe, I think you're going to be me. I remember you came closer and closer to me. And then I said, all right you have to i don't believe i think i remember you
came closer and closer to me and then i said all right i'll do it i'll do it i'll do it
i was grooming him anyway it didn't it didn't work did it didn't work out why didn't it work out
i think because you forced me to do it and And bad kisses. But we are best friends.
So something worked out.
It did work out very well, yeah.
And I was just doing the intro for you,
and I forgot to kind of add that, like,
we've lived together on two separate occasions.
Yeah.
And the first one was a hovel, let's be honest.
Oh, yeah, in Brighton.
The fly situation we had. That was disgusting.vel, let's be honest. Oh, yeah, in Brighton. The fly situation we had.
That was bad.
That was disgusting.
Yeah, that was my fault.
Well, I don't want to blame and name names,
but it certainly wasn't my fault.
No, I'm joking.
You were never there.
I bought kebabs and left them there
before we moved in, remember, for two months.
Oh, my crikey, Fee.
God, you're disgusting.
Yeah, but we was only like 18, weren't we?
Your love for kebabs hasn't changed, really, has it?
No, it has, the last couple of years.
I'm sorry I didn't cook for you, Fi.
You're busy driving from Chelsea.
Chelsea.
I don't know, because you've obviously come round to our house a lot,
and you've had lots of mums cooking.
Yeah.
Any memorable meals?
Or do they just all roll into one?
My main memory is that when I first used to come round for meals,
I used to come home with massive bowls of chicken.
You used to make me leave.
I remember you driving me home and then you'd...
That's food.
And I'd have plates piled up.
Things over the table.
I'd ring the doorbell and it would be...
I think it was like barbecued chicken.
I'd quite often have do you
remember do you not remember that it sounds like it sounds right what was your like situation how
did you eat like did you eat around the table with the family like yeah that's um that was I
was thinking about on the way up here actually and we didn't really do because as you know my
mum got ill when we were quite young and she was ill for most of our childhood so I think my mum would have cooked for us when
we were little yeah when she got ill there was so much sort of chaos and my dad had to
deal with three young boys having a job having a our mum be ill so looking back at now he did
pretty miraculous job, actually.
But the one thing that kind of got left by the wayside was the food.
And then having got in a band from the age of 17 until thingy, as you know,
your life is just on tour.
You get fed, don't you?
You go to places and eating.
So actually cooking and eating properly is something I'm just doing.
But you can coffee
i can cook a little bit yeah because i heard about your roast i do really good well i tried
to do christmas dinner last year yeah well tell us what it was i did probably what we're about to
eat now like basically a roast you have roast chicken yeah the roast chicken yeah because my
dad used to take us to um it, for kebabs for Christmas Day.
I think, or he used to get a kick out of serving jacket potatoes
when we were sort of teenagers.
What, on Christmas Day?
Yeah, on Christmas Day.
He used to have, like, my mum's family round for Christmas,
and I think he used to get a slightly sadistic kick out of
just giving everyone jacket potatoes and seeing what their response was.
Were you pissed off?
No, I used to think it was kind of funny. I was like slightly proud of the sort of anti-tradition
of it. But anyway, a couple of years ago, I tried to seize some of the tradition back
and I've been cooking for everyone. And I really enjoy it a lot.
Do you still have a jacket potato with your chicken?
Last year, actually two years ago,
I made jacket potatoes as a joke for everyone.
Which my dad didn't find the humour.
Funny.
We've been joined by a guest, haven't we?
Someone's teething.
So baby Burrows is going to have a little bit of nana.
I mean, Fi, it's been quite a mad year for you.
Yeah, and that's why I feel a little bit, at the moment,
like I've been punched a little bit, and I'm just thinking about,
well, it's just the whole, when your whole,
we've had such a crazy year with the Maccabees ending
and all kinds of other things, so.
It must have been really hard breaking up.
Yeah, the Maccabees was such an emotional thing.
Well, you know, you were at the last gig.
Oh my God, I cried. I moshed and I cried.
Did you come, Lenny? I invited you.
I didn't come. I think I was away.
It was really bittersweet.
Which month was it?
I can't remember. I think it was the end of June.
You'll probably reform again, though, soon.
Well, don't say that.
Well, that's what groups do.
Yeah, I know. That's what everyone says.
Yeah, I'm sure you will. But you just don't know, do you? It'll be like S Club 3. Well that's what groups do. Yeah I know. That's what everyone's saying to us.
But you just don't know do you?
It would be like S Club 3.
Who's the four we're losing?
Who would rejoin?
Is that a thing S Club 3?
Which three of them stayed?
I think it's H.
Oh no that's Steps.
Oh okay.
They've reformed as well. Yeah. This is Jessie's problem
is she can't break up with herself. I can't break up with myself. No so you're just going to be
Jessie. Oh yeah no that is a problem. Well or I'll be a this morning presenter.
Fear do you miss performing? Yeah I do. Because you were really good on stage oh thank you now handsome oh accomplished and you enjoy you
look like you're enjoying it i just enjoyed it so much and we used to have that thing we stopped
playing tour but you at nine o'clock you suddenly feel like quite low all of a sudden i realized
that's because your body's used to getting that that adrenaline rush yeah like fed into it so it takes a while just to sort of come back
to common ground you know what i mean you're doing so many other great things yeah it's been good
your own record label yeah the label is that going well yeah really well yeah yeah introduce your
record label so we started a record label called yalla records because my mum was as you know is
palestinian so she used to say uh yalla all the time or my grandmother would yell it was in Arabic is come on hurry up let's go so
he's been like yala was like let's leave the house let's go what a great nice phrase isn't it but we
used to sort of mock use it to each other quite often and then um so I've always had that phrase
in my head and then when we started we realised when the Maccabees ended
that a lot of the sort of communities that formed what the Maccabees were
when we started have since been eroded away.
There used to be a lot of seven-inch record labels, independent culture,
club nights, guitar bands where you can kind of form identities, I guess.
That doesn't really happen anymore.
Given that we got a studio and everything that we built at Maccabees. But you've still got your studio. Yeah, we've got a studio and everything that we've built at Maccabees.
But you've still got your studio.
Yeah, we've got a studio.
In Elephant.
In Elephant, exactly.
So we can record bands in there
and we're just trying to sort of
re-galvanise a bit of guitar culture.
Fantastic.
Yeah, which has been an amazing thing.
I realised after the Maccabees
that what I liked about the Maccabees
was it was lots of people together
making something happen.
And then I thought,
well, that's exactly what
this label is going to be as well it's people together so how many people are
involved in the label well it's just two of us but then outside of it just me and Morad
but then outside of it the other Maccabees work on the recording aspects
the people that worked with the band do run the venue that we do the
night at and various fans like you know
hannah kovacs yeah took photos of us so we're trying to like harness that family because there
was such a family with the maccabees i mean you saw it at the alexandra palette palace sorry
alley pally you just saw it was kind of like being, a funeral. It was like friends we hadn't seen for years.
Yeah.
And people that live all over the world now
that came back for this show.
Yeah.
And it was just the most bittersweet kind of evening
where it was reuniting all these kind of old friends and faces
because the Maccabees gigs
was such an important part of our growing up, I think.
Yeah.
And such a social
thing there was amazing feeling in those room weren't they who did them it felt a little bit
like us but because we'd been children basically up to that point you know teenagers and through
our 20s but it was this sudden realization that everyone in that room was saying goodbye to
their childhood really and because we were doing it in a united way that wasn't bitter or resentful
and was unified yes there was this kind of feeling of exorcism in the room where everyone
was using it as a metaphor so across that week i had people come and sing oh my dad died and we
listened to that thing or my friends were getting all back together from there and you realize that
it's kind of about the band but actually it's nothing to do with the band as well, it's about the people and you've
just sort of been a vehicle to move it through, do you know what I mean? That's what the great
thing about, because people have come to see you and have met their partner or whatever
it is.
Yeah, and those are the things that you take back, like that's, they still bowl me over
those, those stories.
yeah those stories oh we've got we've got the baby the baby's finally happy and eating loads of veggie crisps
but your mum's your mum was um palestinian yes her mum was palestinian but did you eat
lots of palestinian food yeah so we would have um her mother especially would have gone around
and would have eaten um lebanese dishes you know it would have been round and would have eaten Lebanese dishes.
You know, it would have been like those kind of dips and all that sort of stuff.
And she would have cooked it when we were little,
but I probably have very little memory of it, to be honest.
Because your mum got sick from when you...
Well, yeah, she got MS when I was...
I don't know when she...
I would have been three or four when she got diagnosed with it.
And she died when I was, as you know, when I was 17.
So that was, it was slowly downhill.
Yeah.
I remember when she was still walking and everything.
Well, you knew her well, didn't you?
Yeah, I remember.
She was beautiful.
She was, yeah.
Very beautiful.
Clever.
Yeah.
Did she have blue eyes for you?
She did, yeah. The same eyes eyes she did yeah piercing blue yeah you're an
ambassador for ms society yeah do you feel like that's i mean i feel like you understood the
illness so much but do you feel like it's had like a cathartic being an ambassador yeah well
i think it's just helping people that in relatively similar
situations isn't it you know but i to be honest i don't think i do um understand the condition that
much because it's something that you know we wouldn't wouldn't really front up to exactly
what it all meant do you know i mean it's just sort of happening in front of you isn't it
so i think what we're trying to help with more than me and hugo who's also an ambassador is
this sort of emotional side of it you
know kids that might have parents that are going through it do you go and see well yeah we meet
them do you know what I mean and get and if it because obviously the McAfee's appeal to younger
people which MS doesn't necessarily have society have that reach towards it's been a bit more about
you know connecting with those people that might be affected. That's amazing. Yeah, it's been a nice thing. So as an MS ambassador, what do you have to do?
Well, mainly it's the sort of fundraising aspects,
putting on events and things like that.
And a lot of it is, like, for example, last week,
I held a human brain in my hand.
Crikey, why?
It was a 46-year-old man's brain with an MS,
and it was to show you what a person with MS's
brain, how it physically looks different.
Does it change?
Well yeah, what's supposed to be white isn't white and all that kind of thing.
How interesting.
And we looked, well obviously you have, I can't imagine you have, held human brain.
No, don't think I really fancy it either.
Man it's so deep.
Was it quite heavy?
Yeah, it's really heavy
and we're just about to eat.
It was dripping as well.
It was like real brain.
I've put the babies back to bed.
She's had her veggie straws and banana
and now we're going to eat
and actually, you know what?
Considering I was really hungover this morning I actually I'm gonna say I think this is quite a good attempt
I was doing a gig last night and Jose Feliciano was there. Right. And it was a really, like, pretty star-studded thing.
It was really amazing.
Yeah.
And we were sitting next to each other.
Yeah.
We ended up, like, he kind of was chatting to me.
He, um...
He's blind.
I didn't know he was blind.
Didn't you?
No.
Is that, like, a known thing?
Of course, Jessie.
How long has he been blind for?
Forever.
Oh, right.
Like, Sylvia Wonder? Yeah has he been blind for? Forever. Oh, right. Like Sylvie Wonder?
Yeah, he's always worn dark glasses.
Okay, well, so he was blind, right?
Yeah.
You don't even know what's coming, right?
So he goes, we're sitting next to each other.
Now, in like a rehearsal before, this wonderful singer called Ruby was making him turn his back to me.
And she was like, I keeping jose away from you with
this like look and i was like maybe he's got a glad eye excuse the pun but whatever so um we're
sitting next to each other he hasn't said anything to me all night and then he says something to me
and we kind of end up holding hands and he was like sorry is this appropriate and i was like oh
yeah what do you mean you sort of end up i don't know we were like sitting next to each other i
don't know maybe i shook his hand i don't know it was fine i sitting next to each other. I don't know. Maybe I shook his hand. I don't know. It was fine. I was like, yeah, no, it's all good.
And then he went, I have to say, you look very pretty tonight.
And I was like, come again.
And I said, thank you.
And he went, just like Lady in Red.
I was like in a black and white dress, babe.
So who else does he use this come this this come on line to and just
hope that they're in red yeah and then and then he didn't give up there so i was like cool brilliant
that's quite funny um uh and then he went now let me ask you something are you married or are you
happy i said i'm married and happy but thank you so much Jose. And then we just like kind of left it at that. But thank you so much Jose.
Is that what you said? Yeah I think I did. Could you just say no way Jose?
Oh damn!
Shit mum you're too sharp!
So yeah to talk more about your cricket career.
Come on.
Do you like having a job?
Like, I know being a musician, it still felt a bit not like a job.
It felt like a dream a lot of the time.
Well, it feels like a dream for me, but, like, it's really hard.
But is it quite nice to feel like this is what I do?
Yeah, I think there was... I think there's a lot of
elements of being a musician or being in a band where you can forever be a kid because you're
told to get on a bus that time we're in that time we're going on stage that time when you do anything
well someone goes you're brilliant well done but I feel like um yeah I feel like you're in danger
to being that as musicians and never quite getting in touch with reality and I feel like yeah I feel like you're in danger of being that as a musician
and never quite getting in touch with reality and I feel like the way the Maccabees happened
in the long term do me a favour because you just got to get that's what living is you just get
punched don't you and then you've got to deal with it and like since then I've become well
I'm doing a I'm a radio presenter I've got a label, a cricket one, because I'm making...
I mean, you're not just doing one thing, you're doing about ten things.
You're writing a book as well, see?
Yeah, I'm doing a book as well.
I really want to talk about this, like, life after,
because it kind of brings us, follows us nicely from that.
It's like, there is life after the Maccabees for you,
but will you just kind of explain this?
Do you want to talk about the cricket article?
I kind of.
I find cricket really boring, but I do want to talk about your cricket stuff.
Because I'm proud of you.
Okay.
But I don't really care about the cricket.
But I care about what you're doing.
You should, Jessie.
Do you care about cricket?
Yeah, I slightly do.
That is such a lie, mum.
I don't love cricket.
You just side-eyed me and that was a lie.
I slightly do.
Darling, I played cricket at school.
I was the best long thrower.
You know, that's not a thing, though, in cricket.
When you have to field, Cripp Fee,
you don't throw as far as me.
I was like Gary Neville's sister.
She's never, Mum.
She's hockey.
But she's got a very long throw. That's why Gary Neville's sister. She's netball mum. She's hockey. But she's got a very long throw.
That's why Gary Neville had a long throw.
I don't want to talk about cricket.
I just want to talk about what you're doing in cricket.
Okay.
Well, we can talk about cricket.
Or we can talk about Lenny's cricket.
Yeah, broaden your horizon to cricket.
Are you sure you weren't playing like netball mum?
Well, now I've realised that the person that I really fancied
wasn't the person I thought I fancied in the cricket team.
The one with the sleepy eyes, that's Alistair Cook.
Alistair Cook is JX Catton, but he's got quite a wide jaw.
He's very good looking, Fi.
He is, he's gorgeous.
As good looking as Freddie Flintoff.
A test is a day.
No darling.
A test is two in What's the other one? Is it... It's two innings for each...
That's true.
Correct.
Two innings for each team.
But, you know,
a test match lasts five days.
Five days, darling.
I just don't have the patience for it.
I'm sorry.
Well, obviously not.
No.
I might just put this
in my cricket podcast.
Do you know what?
I'd really like to know
what it means
is when you have to follow on
and people get so excited
if you make big teams follow on
yeah can i tell you about that yeah okay so uh in cricket uh you have two teams that bat twice
yeah if a first team scores say 500 yeah if the next team don't get within 200 runs of it
yeah so the next team get um 250 they're quite far behind the team that batted first have the
option to make the team
that bat second
again
so you can put them
through their misery
they follow on
they bat again
and they still might not
get what you've got
the first time
no it's
well you're tactical
so they do that
now what's that other thing
that they do
in cricket
that people
say is not nice
sledging
sledging
yeah you'd be a good
I've heard all about it
do you have mum on your podcast
yeah
sledging
tell me Fi
well you know
is it like saying
your mother
it's exactly like that
that's what they do
it's exactly like that
I was going to call
the podcast
your mum
and especially now
you've got stump mics
so you can hear
what the parents are saying
so they get in trouble
you're about to bowl
and you walk past them
and you say
your mother or I was with your past them and you say, your mother.
I was with your missus last night.
Your mum. Your mother.
Do you know what your missus is doing?
Is that what they do to wind them up?
Which are the biggest sledgers?
The Australians or the British?
The Australians are famously...
Shane Ward.
There was a big Shane Ward.
There was a big one.
There was a famous one last year
where my friend Jimmy was batting,
James Anderson.
Right, yeah.
And the Australian captain
got up to him
and they didn't think
that he'd get picked up
on the stunt mic
and they go,
get ready for a fucking broken arm.
Oh, that's wicked.
I thought it was quite too good.
So that's Australian.
No, it's deep.
Shit goes down, yeah.
Shit goes down.
Jesse, you see? maybe I do want to go
what
well this is what
we want in cricket
do they get like
do they fisticuff
no they don't fight
do they sledge in other
sports
I think they probably do
don't they
yeah
but this is the thing
because cricket is a game
played in the head a lot
you have to get inside
someone's psyche
so if someone's batting well
and you can't disrupt them
this is
the idea is to slightly distract them or to get into it but they can't be very bright cricketers
because if everybody knows you're going to do that you just kind of block it out wouldn't you
well you'd be a very good cricketer by the sound of things oh please road rage over here please
should we tell everybody about when you got fish and chips thrown over you by the van driver
because you told him to fuck off or something.
No, I did not tell him to do that.
What happened?
Did you get mushy peas?
I said, do I?
He was going at 10 miles an hour down Acre Lane.
Right.
And when I drove alongside him and I said, do I have to go at 10 miles an hour
because you're eating your lunch?
And he said, have some and threw it in my face.
What are you afraid of? It wasn't as bad as when the Chelsea supporters peed on our car. I know. You asked for that too, you put the flag up. Because you had a Man United. Yeah,
you had a scarf out. I'm proud, man you and proud. What because you parked it up? On Albert on Albert Bridge no just over that road
Beaufort Street
as we're coming up
you think that's wrong Fee?
have you forsaken Fulham?
no
before you wanted to be a rock star
you wanted to be lots of things
including
football manager
I mean that was quite a serious time
did you play
in the first team
Fee
no
thinking man
thinking man
okay
so
there was also
no
to do with Fulham
yeah
you wanted to have
a burger van
didn't you
oh yeah
why was that done
so he could be near Fulham
he gets very obsessed
about things
okay
so he wanted to run
a burger van outside Fulham.
I don't think that's a great aspiration, to be honest.
I think it's quite a good one.
Do you?
You've wanted to be a wrestler, too.
No, I haven't been wanting to be a wrestler.
I did was obsessive wrestling, wasn't I, for a little bit.
Yeah, please, can you do your rock?
No.
Please, because I got it from you.
I haven't done it for 25 years.
No, no, no.
I'm not going to do it.
Come on.
I haven't done it for so long now.
Can you smell what the rock is cooking?
It's quite good.
I can't even remember that.
Slice that up.
Did he say putang pie?
Did he say that? Don't say that. What's putang pie? Don't even remember that. Slice that up. Did he say poutang pie? Did he say that?
Yeah, don't say that.
What's poutang with garlic?
Never mind.
Okay.
All right.
Okay.
Okay.
Fee, what is your worst table manner of somebody else's worst table manner?
Does that make sense? sense yeah that does make
sense i don't like do you know one weird thing i don't like in a restaurant when people are still
eating and the waiter comes and takes takes um plates away from people in america all the time
it's a thing in america i don't know what and i don't also don't know why it's that's upsetting
why that should be
offensive
because it makes you
feel like you're slow
you are quite slow
like mum and I
finished like
normally I'm really
really fast
you're often talking
I know why are you
being so
you're usually like
wolf it now
because I used to
that used to be my
thing to eat
because there was
three of us
there was three of you
as well but we used
to eat so quickly
to get whatever
was left
everyone had to eat
quickly to beat Jesse never left. Everyone had to eat quickly to beat Jessie.
Never share a meal with Jessie.
She says,
oh, let's have this, this and this. We'll share.
And me, Sam and Alex are going,
no.
We want to talk about
eat my word.
Eat your word.
Well, seeing as this is a food
podcast and it is quite funny
yeah
when you were 11
yeah Felix
you introduced this
on my 16th birthday
Felix
brought this out
the video out
yeah anyway
I don't think I've ever
laughed so much
I actually felt
have you still got the video
yeah I've still got it
oh my god
do you know I got mugged a bit
and asked it back
you didn't
because after my party you all got mugged at the end of the road.
And we got mugged.
And then we had to come back to the house.
And mum went and tried to find them all, didn't you?
You came with me, darling.
We got mugged.
And you gave us all whiskey.
I remember we were only about 15.
You got punched.
To get over the shock.
All right, so we went to primary school together, as you described.
And when we were, maybe, we must have been about nine or ten.
People came round asking, asking for kids that wanted to be on a show.
I think we just got picked.
I think we just, people came to class and you had to draw a picture.
Oh, really?
Or tell a story or something.
God, you have such a better memory than me.
And they went, all right, you six are in, or whatever.
Okay, yeah.
And me and you were two of the people that got chosen.
Yeah.
And it was being chosen for a ITV, children's TV show called Eat Your Words,
which Simon Parkin presented.
And it was on at about 3.30, 4am.
In the morning.
Your dad was the only person who recorded it.
My dad got up to watch all of them and recorded them.
But the motive, basically, of this TV show was
you had to answer like in you had
to answer inanely simple questions but if you happen to get them wrong and you had to eat a
disgusting forfeit yeah and if you ate a disgusting forfeit then you bizarrely got more points than
you did if you got the question right yeah so who so i... So I'm first and Jessie's next after me.
No, well, Jessie's first.
And they ask Jessie what the...
They ask Jessie what the fifth letter of the alphabet is.
The alphabet's written out in front of her.
She goes F.
I've never been good on TV.
And they go, OK, you're going with F.
Are you sure?
Are you sure F? And Jessie looks at it again. She goes, yeah, you're going with F Are you sure? Are you sure F?
And Jessie looks at it again and she goes
I'm definitely going F
And I'm looking across at it
And I'm going Jessie
With my buck teeth because I hadn't had my teeth straightened out
Jessie had her red denim jacket
Pink denim jacket on
Are you sure it's F, Jessie?
And she goes, no, I'm 100% it's F
Anyway, it wasn't F The fifth, I'm 100% it's F.
Anyway, it wasn't F.
The fifth letter of the alphabet is E.
Especially if it's written out in front of you.
But he said, don't worry, Jesse.
As long as you eat one of these disgusting forfeits,
you'll be fine.
So Jesse had to eat... Cold peas or something.
You might remember better.
Did I get the pickled onion and custard,
or did I get...
Cold custard and carrots and everything.
Oh, yeah.
It's a deeply frustrating memory for me because Jessie just wolfed down all the disgusting... And got most points.
...forfeits and she knocked me out just by the fact that they were like...
Not out of it.
And how was that?
And she'd be like, no, it was all right.
It was good.
It wasn't intellect.
Was it disgusting?
She'd be like, no.
Tactical me. That's pretty good. It's just like... Jessie, maybe you should. It was good. It wasn't intellect. Was it disgusting? She'd be like, no.
Tactical. No, it's pretty good.
It's just like...
Jessie, maybe you should go on a celebrity.
Oh, no fucking way.
I got asked for that bloody Bear Grylls celebrity island thing.
Everyone would have seen what a nightmare Jewish princess I am.
You got asked to go on Bear Grylls...
Yeah.
What was it called?
The island.
What, you have to...
Fuck that. I'm a Jewish princess. Why the fuck would I want to be on a fucking deserted island where I can't eat? Jessie. go on Bear Grylls what was it called? The Island what you have to fuck that
I'm a Jewish princess
why the fuck
would I want to be
on a fucking
deserted island
where I can't eat
sorry
yeah let's not
swear as much
but that was
tactical
that was a tactical
thing just you know
maybe I could play
cricket
do you think
you realistically
will be on a reality
TV show
is that
a rhetorical
question
which one would
you be on
strictly strictly just so you lose the weight and you get to Is that a rhetorical question? Which one would you be on?
Strictly.
Strictly.
Just so you lose the weight and you get to dance.
That is really funny about Eat Your Words,
and quite appropriate for this.
Yeah, anyway, years later,
when we were, Jessie, it was your 15th, 16th birthday.
Yeah, you bought the video. After leaving your house, we all got mugs of everything we had.
Can I, no, but like...
We sure might be living in a rough area. No, we were the most innocent kids, because teenagers.
Yeah, well, that's why we got mugs.
It was an afternoon tea party on a Sunday.
Yes, it was, babe.
It was, it was afternoon tea, babe.
That was the joke of it.
It was on Sunday, on an afternoon.
No, it was pitch black out there, it was dangerous out there.
Yeah, but it was in October.
And you left about seven.
Oh, really?
That's not my memory of it at all. But that's what we were on, but it was October. And you left about seven. Oh, really? That's not my memory
of it at all.
But that's probably
It definitely was
afternoon.
How many times
have you been mugged
though?
Enough.
And your dad
had to come and
pick you up.
Did he?
I had to ring him
and say,
Felix has been
mugged but is okay.
Did we call the police?
No, you think
you are the police.
You think you...
I am not.
We went out. Jessie and I like the police. You think you... I am not law.
We went round, Jessie and I like vigilantes. No shotgun.
Come at me.
You went out looking for them. Yeah, we did.
Me and Jessie did. We went looking
for them and the police then said to me,
I'd just like to warn you, Miss Swerves,
leave the policing to us.
Anyway, when
we got mugged, they nicked the video,
the Eat Your Words video that I'd taken up.
And I thought, fuck, I'm never going to get that back.
Not that.
Anything but that.
So I just gathered all the courage I had just to run back to the pack of kids.
Oh, Fee!
And I just located the guy that I thought would be most unsightly
and just went, mate, I'm so sorry.
I know you just hate him, but there's a video in all that stuff you've got which I Lenny, don't stitch me up on podcast.
We have had girls mugging around.
Were there girls?
No, no, no.
But there were girls mugged Tommy Stubbington.
Do you remember coming off the school bus?
And he's like six foot three.
What did we eat a lot of when we lived off Mare Street?
Oh, I'll tell you what we did eat.
Lammerchen.
Lammerchen.
We were obsessed.
It was only a pound, wasn't it?
And that was just lunch and dinner.
At the time, you were working in Selfridges.
I was.
Where were you working?
Yeah, I was working in Selfridges.
Maccabees, we were making our second record
were you doing
second record
yeah
what was Sam doing
being a freeloader
Sam and Jessie
had just got back
to together
you literally got back
together
when we moved in there
I know I'm so sorry
that I did that
and we all moved in
that tiny flat
didn't we
it was so small
no it was great though
it was such a good time
but like
what liberty
I was like
yeah me Joel
and Felix lived together and then I was
like, oh yeah sorry I'm back with Sam so can he live with us and you were like, yeah cool.
You didn't mind Sam?
No not at all, I love Sam so much.
He's pretty easy, you probably wanted him more than me.
He's probably tidier.
He is.
We had rats.
No that was in Brighton.
No that was in, no that was in, don't you think?
Did we?
Yeah in the walls, yeah.
Because do you remember you,
you,
because I was the last person to get there,
you really kindly,
kindly gave me the designated room,
the worst room, yeah.
Oh, they were all pretty fucking small.
Joel got the best one.
Well, mine was the smallest, so.
We drew straws.
Well, I wasn't there though,
we drew straws.
Well, that's a shame.
So,
so that's interesting,
that you drew straws, but I wasn't there to see that I got the smallest straw, but I did. You always, that's a shame. So that's interesting that you're sure about that.
I wasn't able to see that I got a straw in a straw, but I did.
That happened with the house in Brighton as well.
I think it might have done, Jessie, didn't it?
Yeah, but you paid less.
Because didn't you drop out that year, the second year?
Yeah, we dropped out, yeah.
Because I was really worried about you dropping out, yeah.
Yeah, we signed a record deal, I think.
You shouldn't be worried about him. I'm not worried about you dropping out yeah yeah we signed a record deal i think yeah you shouldn't be
worried about him not worried about him now yeah can you just tell us about the life after oh okay
because it's so interesting okay yeah so when bernard mccabe's uh finished it was a calamitous
period of time and um i was nervous a bit for a while about what i was going to do after the band
and uh as we've already established i'm obsessed with cricket and love cricket and the first Roeddwn i'n bryderchus am y peth rydw i'n mynd i'r band. Ac fel rydyn ni wedi'i ddatblygu, rwyf yn sgwrsio am cricet a'n caru cricet.
Roedd y cyntaf o bobl i mi'n meddwl oedd cricetwyr.
Rwyf wedi cwrdd â rai cricetwyr yn y gorffennol ac roeddwn i'n teimlo eu bod yn yr amser gyfeillgar i mi.
Roeddwn i wedi cwrdd â cricetwr am ddwy flynedd yn ôl a oedd yn gweithio mewn ffenyw.
Roeddwn i'n ei adnabod fel bwler, who I recognised as a Lancashire fast bowler,
and he was just sort of loading waters in and out of a fridge.
How did you recognise him?
Because I just really love cricket.
OK.
And he'd been Player of the Year at Lancashire the year before.
He'd won the County Championship,
which is like the cricket equivalent of winning the Premier League.
Then his back had gone, and his mum had died actually in the same week,
and he'd had to start again,
and obviously cricketers don't earn a huge amount of money at that level.
And we got talking about it and I was really, I was just really taken with the enthusiasm with which he was just moving into a new.
He was basically being like a roadie.
He was a rep.
A rep.
At the time.
And he was a very successful rep, but he was just sort of, you know, he was working as an assistant rep at the time.
A promoter. a promoter so they kind of look after you in each venue that you're in and they'll make sure that
your ride is there and they'll make sure that like you get paid and stuff so yeah exactly so
and then and when my band broke up he was the first person i thought of and then i thought
oh there's a story in that somewhere so i've been writing for cricket magazine I went to interview him and it
kind of snowballed into a piece about what do cricketers do when I interviewed you know people
like Freddie Flintoff and loads of and loads of low-level cricket about what you do at that point
in your life when everything changes using my own experience as a kind of uh sense of capacity yeah yeah do i mean and so there's people that have
started um like made shoes uh started coffee companies come painters did you just specifically
look at cricket cricket yeah it was just through cricket just because i love that you could do it
for every well exactly that's it and you're going to do a podcast well no this is what the book oh
the book is going to be with um if you've got to be with footballers, cricketers, I'm talking with someone about it.
Amazing.
And maybe even dancers, things like that.
So people have been quite physical or something that when you're young you can do it but maybe not as you get a bit older.
Exactly, exactly. do it but maybe not when as you get a bit older exactly exactly and those that small elite that
can do whatever they want from the top but then you have this whole world of people that have
been fighting fighting fighting fighting to get somewhere and then you're sort of catapulted out
of this situation and even if you know you need to prepare for it the reality of it is deeper isn't
it of course it is you know especially if you're you have the physical element your body can't do
something that you want it to do anymore and so it's just it was really interesting getting
to the heads of all these people and i think what i found out the other side of it which is actually
more interesting than what i thought i was going to find i thought i was going to find something
that was a bit darker but actually pretty much all of them said i'm happier now that I'm not just a cricketer so I feel myself
as a three-dimensional person and you know that I could get in touch with different things that's
what you feel like and I felt like as I was moving through I was like oh maybe that's
there's a lesson in that somewhere you know
what would be your last meal ever on death row?
Oh, I know what it is.
Go on.
Calamari.
Do you love calamari?
That's a good one.
Yeah, I'm obsessed with calamari.
Ever since I was a little...
I went to go in Spain and I found them a little
and I was like, what are those things that look like onion rings?
The first time I'd eaten them, I'm thinking, what is that?
Squid, all kinds of squid. Battered squid. I know. It's really I'm thinking what is that? squid all kind of squid
battered squid
I know
it's really good
do you remember that
that's a very good one
what did Homer Simpson say?
give me the calamari
with extra tentacles
because no one really
wants the tentacle bit
they all want it
around there
Bart said that
would that be
you're allowed like a starter
and a main
okay calamari start
okay nice
and then have
I have steak and chips.
Yeah, I like steak.
Very good.
Just really good steak and chips.
Which sauce?
I wouldn't have any sauce.
Oh.
Just really good steak.
Not even Dijon?
Mustard.
Oh, I'd have mustard.
Okay, you wouldn't have a Bearnaise.
I thought you meant like peppercorn or whatever.
Oh, yeah.
No, no, no, no.
I hate that stuff.
Not even on the side to dip?
No, no, no, no, no, no.
And then pud?
I'd have...
I'd have Alex's ice cream. Oh, shut up. Yeah,? I'd have, um, I'd have Alex's ice cream.
Oh, shut up. Yeah, you've got to come round. I'd have Alex's ice cream. No, but you always
told me about ice cream was apparently, you said this to me, ice cream was for happy people.
Did I? Yeah. I don't remember saying that. When we were little. Ooh. Happy people like
ice cream. Did I say that? And I didn't really like ice cream, so then I just thought maybe
I was a depressive person. I can remember Fee, when you'd had your braces off.
Okay, great.
And you'd just had them off that day, and I was on Northcote Road.
And you came along, and I heard this voice say, Lenny, Lenny, Lenny.
And I said, hi, Fee.
And all I saw was this big smile.
I said, God, he said, look.
And I said, you look wonderful, Fee.
And this dazzling, handsome smile.
Suddenly appeared.
You definitely needed the braces, let's be honest.
Yeah, those teeth were massive.
Well, look, I needed to lose the weight.
He needed the braces.
Let's not talk about appearances.
Right, okay, we're going to have some crumble.
Thank you for being on Table Manners, Felix.
No, it's better.
It's just like normal, but with microphones.
I know. But you are an excellent guest.ers, Felix. No, it's better. It's just like normal, but with microphones. I know.
But you are an excellent guest.
Thank you.
You're still my favourite.
We had an agreement.
I know, darling.
What's that?
That we were going to get married.
Oh, we did.
Yeah.
When was this agreement?
When was this agreement?
I think it was when we were 30 we were going to get married.
I know.
I think it was when we were teenagers.
No, I think it was earlier than that. You said... Oh, married I know I think it was when we were teenagers no you
I think it was earlier than that
you said
oh god
when I was nine
yeah when you were forcing me to go out
you said
you agreed to it though
yeah I agreed
you said
okay if we haven't got
we're still lonely at 30
we'll get married
so Jessie got married quick
sharply
before that So Jessie got married quick, Charlotte. Poor thing.
I feel like we don't even need to discuss Felix because everyone will know how much you adore him.
Love him.
I feel he's part
of our family I know it was a bit funny doing it with him because yeah because you know so much
about each other and he knows so much about you and us but I hope it you know people are supplied
with fun information about um his buck teeth and my lack of intelligence.
I've just got such admiration for him.
I know. Because he's always been a very
brave person. Yes.
And he's always very
gentle. He's not
aggressive. He's just the most lovely person.
And he's doing really
well. That's fabulous. We're very
proud of you, Felix. Yeah. Love Felix.
Thank you for listening to Table Manners this week.
I've been Jessie Ware and this is my mother, Lena.
Bye.
The music you've been listening to on Table Manners
is by the wonderful Peter Duffy and Peter Fraser.
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