The Bugle - A Very British earthquake
Episode Date: March 3, 2008The 19th ever Bugle podcast, from 2008. Written and presented by Andy Zaltzman and John OliverThis is a classic episode from The Bugle, to support us, and to keep the Bugle alive and free of ads, plea...se visit http://thebuglepodcast.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello, buglers and welcome to issue 19 of the bugle the world's only audio newspaper that we've heard of
For the week beginning Monday March the 3rd 2008 with me and ex-Oltzman now back safely in civilization in the glorious city of London and in New York it's John Oliver. Hello Bugas, hello Andy, it feels better to have an ocean
between us. It does. A Bugas Motivings has now took Andy to a basketball game on
Friday night to the New York Knicks and it was a guy behind us, I don't remember
this Andy, who was arguing with the steward about whether they had any kosher food and it was on a Friday night.
Yeah, I can confirm that he's true.
That was a man who really wanted to have it both ways.
Yeah, he wanted to have his Jewish cake and eat it at the wrong time of the week.
As always, some sections of the bugle are going straight in the bin.
This week to mark the launch of the UK's hilarious new point system for assessing the human
worth of immigration seekers, the bugle is offering its overseas listeners 10 free points
to help you move into Britain.
These come in the form of this sentence.
I am a qualified brain surgeon.
So do you use that when trying to get into Britain?
Also in the bin is our special audio debt collection service.
And the only place to start the biggest news story of the millennium so far, three massive
atomic bombs have been detonated in England. Or they might as well have been, because that
is the equivalent force of the earthquake that ripped through Britain's crust, shaking
the nation to its very core this week, leaving one man with a broken pelvis.
It was indeed the biggest earthquake to hit the UK
for 25 years causing a catastrophic zero deaths
and one devastating injury.
And yet it's still managed to make international headlines.
It's hard to know why this is,
possibly because the world is interested
in what a British person sounds like when they're shaken.
Oh goodness.
Oh, this is, oh, oh, cranky.
Where is it? Where was that?
God, it's the Queen.
It was exactly like that.
The British Geological Survey said the Quake measured 5.2 on the Richter scale.
Although the Americans are claiming it was actually only 4.7.
Come on America, let us have our drama.
Give us a credit.
You get tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes
and even volcanoes. This is all we've got left apart from unending drizzle. Let us have
our moments. The quake was probably the most powerful earthquake ever recorded. But
such is the magnificent, leonine strength of Britain as a nation that's unlike other
countries who
suffer earthquakes, we didn't make a fuss and run around begging for international help.
Because we are a tough people, John, just ask wolves.
They don't live here anymore because they couldn't handle it.
When the earthquake struck, Britain just straightened its tie, put its porcelain, queen
mother back on the mantle piece and went back to bed.
Because we're British, not even the tectonic shifts of the Earth's crust can shake our national equilibrium.
So some of them even tried to call this a natural disaster, but I think if the majority of
your population sleep through it, you cannot call this a natural disaster.
And then last time this happened, one British newspaper ran with the headline Britain
rocked by earthquake, which is a bit of an exaggeration and quite
an insult to the people of Armenia, who I imagine what Holmes saying, oh possibly the
phone I must call Britain. Is that Britain? I'm so sorry to hear that you were rocked by an earthquake.
I'm so sorry to hear that it rocked you. I presume that you're using the word rock in the
Bon Jovi sense of the word, i.e. not actually rocking you very much at all. In fact, while I've
got you on the line, Bangladesh wanted to have a word, they'vee. not actually rocking you very much at all. In fact, while I've got you on the line,
Bangladesh wanted to have a word. They've heard it's been raining quite hard over there and you've
got some wet carpets. They wanted to start an appeal for you at this difficult damp time.
John, I thoroughly resent your implication about Bon Jovi. You've clearly never heard
bad medicine. This will be a fascinating glimpse for bugleers into Andy's T-Logies and
these two favourite bands were Bon Jovi and who was it? It was Boni M. Boni M. Well, John,
come on, quality's quality. I wish I was joking, bugleers. But I actually happen to have
a tape recorder running in my bedroom when the devastating tremor struck. Why? You may
well ask well, in fact, I'm still keeping myself under strict surveillance as part of my personal anti-terror plan discussed on the
bugle some weeks ago. Now here is what my tape recorder picked up. I'm not your friend. I'm not your friend. I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend.
I'm not your friend. fucking idiot. BOOM!
Was that the voice of God Andy? That was exactly what the tape recorder picked up.
To be honest, I did have to suit that recording up a bit for broadcasts
because, you know, I know our listeners today have very short attention spans
so we've got to keep this exciting
so I did slightly fabricate the recording.
This is actually the original recording
For God's sake play Peterson at three and one day internationals
I think this captured the attention of the world's media because of the spectacular testimonies from survivors of the Quake in Britain. I've really been more proud to be British than watching these terrified citizens spewing
forth in front of cameras. And these are some of my favourites, and these are all real.
I cannot stress that enough. Andy Senior from Lincolnshire said, I couldn't believe it.
Our dogs were barking and our cockatoo was agitated. I had an agitated cockatoo. I think that's what Mexico City found
when they got rocked in the 80s. Agitated cockatoo is everywhere. But this is absolutely
my favourite. Margaret Mason from Harrow said, my first thought was that there was an intruder
thumping about in my room. My second thought was that it was a poltergeist. I only really liked somehow as late as there had been an earthquake.
Hold on, your second thought was that it was a poltergeist.
I'm now joined by a survivor of the earthquake for an exclusive interview.
That's you Andy.
Oh right, okay.
You are the survivor.
Yep, you survived it.
I did.
John.
So how have you been since your near death experience, Andy?
Well, albeit not that near.
It's very difficult to talk about this.
It's all still a bit raw.
Do you have a newfound respect for life now?
No, if anything, the opposite.
Finally, how did you survive?
Do you have any survival tips for people who may be
struck and buy earthquakes in the future? You can't show fear because that is
what earthquakes prey on. If they sense that you're afraid, they will be all over
you like a rash. So you've just got to exude confidence and maybe swear at the
earthquake a bit and soon enough it'll back off. What did you say to the earthquake?
I just called it a total f***.
In other news, Prince Harry at war.
News broke this week. The Prince Harry, currently third in line to the throne, has spent the
last ten weeks on the front line in Afghanistan.
Officer Harry Windsor apparently has the military nickname,
the Bullet Magnet. I bet that makes everyone around him laugh hysterically as they nervously
glance around and duck. There was a very strained media blackout deal between the British press
and the military, which collapsed when the Drudge Report website in the US broke the story.
And I think this is still technically treason. Well, it must be because Matt Drudge is currently in the Tower of London on a rack. And apparently the Queen
will be personally beheading him next week.
The Prince, a third in line to the much-cavvated throne of the United Kingdom, has been waging
war on evil for 10 weeks without anyone knowing. The only clue is that a number of tabloid
hacks have reported that they were experienced strange nagging sensations
that they should be doing something but weren't able to place it until it became clear that the
prince had been out of the country for almost three months. So hopefully they'll make a full recovery.
It's been very difficult for them because they've been storing up all their
audience reporting for 10 weeks now when they've known he's out there, which mean it really has all
gushed out now in a horrific flood. I think it's great news for Afghanistan.
It's been a tough last thousand years or so for that country and you know Prince Harry being
like just a bit of glamour isn't it? A bit of showbiz for the people of Afghanistan. Harry
claimed that it was, quote, nice to be sort of a normal person to once doing everyday normal
things like controlling air traffic for military
planes and engaging with Taliban fighters, kind of run of the mill stuff we all do from time
to time.
That's my Wednesday.
Yeah, well apparently the Queen had told him to go over there and he should have turned
straight round and told her to go herself.
Queen Elizabeth, one of our ancestors, led Britain into battle on a horse. When
was the last time our queen did that, she should be out there riding around and shooting
at people. If she can't do enough gannis dance, you'd at least do it in London.
US election news now and Ralph Nader, the two-time bronze medalist in the US presidential
election, is running again. Can he go to better and win
the gold? John, what do you think? Well, you're right, and the Ralph Nader, the self-styled
King of the Seat belt, and also the man many blame for Bush winning Florida, and therefore
the presidency, and therefore everything that has happened since has announced that he
is running for office once more. Can he win it? There's a short answer to that and a slightly longer one, Andy.
The short answer is, no he can't, and the slightly longer one is no, of course he can't.
But John, he's got all the experience of running for president.
He's run what four or five times? No one really knows.
Surely that could prove decisive.
It could, but it won't.
The blaming of no either by the Democrats for everything has always been
a little bit extreme. If you can't beat George W. Bush in an election, then the fault
is first with you, then with the people of Florida, rather than a consumer rights activist
who took a mere 2% of the vote. But he took 97,000 in Florida and George W. is 1 by 500.
But even so, I don't think it's right to blame Nader.
I think he should blame the 600 people
who voted for David McRennels of the Socialist Party USA.
I think those are the ones with blood on their hands.
Is that true, John?
But that was the Democratic margin.
Yeah.
So David McRennels is responsible for the deaths
of hundreds of thousands of people. Ralph Nader says he's doing this for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.
Ralph Nader says he's doing this for the American people for the concept of democracy
and out of an unquenchable thirst for attention, not necessarily in that order
and he didn't necessarily say the third one.
Particularly not because it contained the word unquenchable, which I don't believe exists.
I said unquenchable, you said unquenchable.
You chucked in the bonus syllable
because you've been living in America too long and that's what they do over there. I'm British
Andy, if I say unquenchable that is now how that word is. Ralph Nader said that he wants a revolution
in America and he won't rest until there are 50 meter high portraits of him in every American
city and he can roll around in a tank with his face on the side of it all day just firing into the air
So good luck, Nader in other election news
Mike Gravel is still hanging in there and he found a $10 bill on a bus
Which is a real boost for his campaign's tight budget. I think we'd all quite like to see
Gravel running for president. Oh, will you say we really you just mean you don't you?
I do mean you would like to see that. I would you would like to see Mike Gravel
I want to see if he's got the balls.
I'm going into the White House to do what he did
in his election campaign video.
Stand by a lake for a couple of minutes,
throw a rock into it and walk away
without saying anything.
Buglers should go to YouTube
and Todd being Mike Gravel and rock.
And I showed Andy this absolutely
mystifying campaign video of Mike Gravels, which is borderline performance
art.
In tolerance news now, and the rau over the Danish cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad has
flared up again like an unwanted boil.
When is there a wanted boil?
I don't know, an impressive girl.
The Danish media reprinted the controversial doodle following the discovery of a plot to kill
one of the cartoonists.
The Danish media then later attempted to put out a fire at a bus stop by dousing the bus
stop with kerosene and throwing heat-resistant snakes into the resulting inferno.
And when it later that afternoon felt a bit of a headache coming on, the Danish media
smashed itself on the head with an old Viking pickaxe.
So I'm sure everything will be alright. Well done everyone involved.
This was absolutely spectacular behaviour. Is it somehow less bad the second time around?
Is there a loophole in the caran? So you can't have an image of the Prophet Muhammad, but you can if you've already had it.
Any copying is fine. Could they not have claimed it was just a cartoon of someone who looks a bit like the Prophet Muhammad?
No, because no, you can't, Andy. You can't do that at all.
Right, because that already implies that he looks like something.
Okay, let's see what we've got to travel water, Cégeon.
Very trouble.
An eye for one I'm not willing to canoe across them.
The anti-cartoon protestors containing mainly of Danish Muslims,
but also some people
who just prefer photo montages. Chanted, freedom of speech is like a plague as they exercise
their freedom of speech, then sneezed and develop bubos under their armpits. I think John
that is an early entry for 2008's most far-fetched simile.
I would certainly just like to say well done to Denmark over this, well done. You've managed to learn absolutely nothing from the last time and that's very difficult to do
because you'd think you'd learn something from that from having your embassies bombed but no
they've learned nothing and I admire that. The Sudanese government has said that Daines as a whole
are no longer welcome in Sudan. Oh no, damn it. Well exactly the
Danish diplomats schedule to go to the Sudan will I've seen high-fiving each
other and trying to kiss that mermaid in Copenhagen.
Pets on Prozac, it's the reality TV show we've all been waiting for because
apparently record numbers of pets are depressed and
are being prescribed prozac.
The special dog prozac is getting prescribed in America.
Be flavored antidepressants were introduced to the US market last year.
This is true.
And that just shows America's commitment to prescription drugs.
Even their dogs can get in on the act.
You know what I say?
A dog is like its owner.
Deplineorotic. There is nothing
that prescription drugs can't solve. This country's commitment to treating the symptom and not
the cause is steadfast. Probably get depressed because they have their bollocks hacked off to
stop them trying to breed with furniture. This has mainly become the case this depression and
this self-harm amongst pets with exotic birds. And this in a sense, I can understand, Andy,
because if I'd be transported in a freight container from my natural habitat in Indonesia,
to a tiny cage in some old woman's bungalow in Basingstock, I think I'd try to tear my
own feathers out in frustration as well.
And horses get depressed when they watch the Derby at the age of three and realise that
their time has come and gone without them even realising.
Could it be, though, Andy, that the animal kingdom is starting to look at what we're doing to the world
and it just cannot cope anymore. Polar bears are beginning to look at each other whilst balancing
on tiny pieces of ice saying we've got a choice. Either evolve as fast as we can and take over the
world or prescription antidepressants. And of course, you know what's going to happen Andy,
they don't have the natural ambition to instigate the age of bears
that they know they're capable of.
So instead they'll crush up Prozac,
mash it into a seal, and wolf it down.
In fact, there was a bird of paradise
on a David Attenborough documentary, I saw Andy,
which has started doing impressions of chainsaws.
Immitating, it's true, imitating the deforestation
that it hears every day and thus singing of its own doom.
And now, it's time for the section of sections.
Everybody's favourite.
Please welcome, in the red, white and blue corner, the American!
Yes, it is the long awaited return of the Ask an American section.
I love this man. This week, the American is joining us by phone from within the nose of Abraham Lincoln
on Mount Rushmore, where he is communing with his nation's history.
Hello, American.
Hello, I just want to clarify to the world I'm actually not enabling the nose.
That is absolutely false.
Oh, right. I'm in Thomas enabling those that is absolutely false right
right I'm in Thomas Jefferson's eyelid oh sorry so it's a distinction I was
actually enabling those but I couldn't get self-service so I had to get up to
Tommy Jay's eyelid over here did you get better reception in Tommy Jay's
I got one of these iPhones now so you, I'm just thrilled to be using it.
So you have to use it in an eye, because it's an eye.
Oh, you exactly.
Yeah, they boom, right?
There you go.
I'm here all week.
Hey, it's not called a nose phone, right guys?
Hey, testify.
Hey, testify.
Hey, how you doing?
At first, American, I wanted to ask you about the entry of Ralph Nader into the presidential
rights.
And we will you be voting for Nader?
Hold on, let me finish with my armament over here, right?
Let me tell you why this guy drives me nuts, this Nader guy, okay?
He's a living on a principle that anybody can be president and that's absolutely not true, okay?
The position of president has always been, and shall always be held by people with a lot of money,
people with high influence, and people with good connection to the power elite of this country but i thought it was the american dream that
anyone could be president that's the point isn't it that's what you people like
please it's something we tell school children that don't cry
what you can tell the kid you're going to be a plumber
think about it rich people are smarter than poor people to the fact
and that's why those people will always lead the country why don't you you embrace monarchy then? We've been trying this for years. You
kicked us out. You couldn't have had this system. Disgusting philosophy. Why would we want
the same type of people running the country doesn't make any sense? Well I'm talking about
a democracy done right, American style. Yeah I mean I could have my eggs over easy, but why would I when scrambled tastes so good?
I'm not sure what that means, but that's a hell of a sense of it.
Well, it's a thinker.
All right, you think about that one for a while.
Maybe get back to me next week.
Now we have this email from Christopher Lupone.
It's addressed to John and I.
He writes,
Is your hate for America so bitter and vitriolic that you must have someone from the
putative garden state as your sample American. Uh oh. Everyone here knows that most of
New Jersey's a vast barren suburban wasteland. This is how it's always been for
people from New Jersey our whole lives. Okay. I'm gonna roll a guess out there.
This is a question of probably one of the lame estates in the country. Some
like Iowa, Pennsylvania or something like that.
Is Pennsylvania? Pennsylvania. Of, it's Pennsylvania every time.
This is what it was like growing up.
If you're from New Jersey, anyone from anywhere else
that we said something like, you know,
where you're from, New Jersey, you gross, right?
Doesn't matter how I could be from Iowa,
and say, hey, buddy, I grew up 20 miles from in hand.
You lost your virginity to corn.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha,
in my opinion, it's not worldly like i am yet in travel
all the places i've been to
which is like
you know
i went to port a week old time
and that i thought that
he's from a place i think that's a vania
so what is even though i mean that what do they have a but probably
but the internet
i think it's very interesting for britain to hear that basically the civil
war in america still right that that that happened in this country of the internet and Pennsylvania. I think it's very interesting for Britain to hear that basically the Civil War in America
still rates is wrong.
OK, the worst thing that happened in this country,
I'll tell you right now, is that the Civil War
and that the way it did.
OK.
Oh, my God.
Because if we had two separate Americans,
we wouldn't have any conflict over here.
Actually, there's probably a very coherent argument for that.
It's absolutely true.
Do you think the North should have thrown the war? I think the
North should have stepped back and said you know what take it. It's a swamp anyway. We don't
want it. Regarding your rant about American football, now this has three points to it.
It's coming from John Foster in Kingston, Ontario in Canada. Of course it does. Of course
it does. Canadian. Great and a deen great first
ago from Pennsylvania then a guy from canada great to the least relevant places
in the world in the world john fossa rights if you truly are a representation of
all americans then how do you know about the existence of canada most
americans are completely oblivious to anything north of the forty-ninth parallel
that you know that we are a country and that we are in close proximity to the USA shows that you are a rather an
atypical American. So that's actually a veiled compliment in some ways.
That is a veiled compliment and I'm going to say this about Canada,
for us anyway, for where I'm from, it's only an eight-hour drive to Hookers and Casino.
And we've always appreciated that. But other than that, really it's a kind of like,
it's a forest, people there, they don't know it's a kind of like, it's a forest.
People there, they don't know which language they want to speak. They can't decide.
Let's be honest, it's not the best place to live.
And as far as you're, you know, you're clout in the world, it's like, you're probably like four wrongs below Poland.
As well as being all representative American, you also ambassad for Jersey, state ambassad.
If the position's open, I'm free. I've got some free time and now currently
unemployed. The economy's rough, not the president's fault though.
Thank you very much American Fajerneus once again. Of course, anytime, guys, give me a call.
So if you have any further questions for the American, do email them into the online.co.uk. Now your emails and this comes from Greg Pritchard in of all places New Zealand.
Greg writes,
Hello, buglers.
In a world where mass media only focuses on negative stories, I hope you can spend some
time celebrating Zimbabwe breaking the 100,000% inflation barrier this week.
Well, we should point out that is annual inflation, not millennial inflation.
With an economy like that, John, it just makes it all the more remarkable that McGarby keeps
winning those elections.
He must be one hell of a guy.
Great campaigner on the stoop.
The rubber McGarby deserves a huge amount of credit and respect for this, as rampant
inflation has become very unfashionable recently,
but the perseverance of him and his fellow inflation fans can only be admired. Let's face it,
deep down we'd all love to take a wheelbarrow of money to the shop for bread and milk,
but under some of us have the courage to chase that dream. So in Bobwin inflation,
Efficient Arrows, Arosso in the enviable position of being able to go to the shop many
times a day as there is nothing to buy once they get there. So the fun goes on and on.
Top work, Bob.
Good news coming out of the troubled country of Zimbabwe.
We have an email here from Owen Harkness about the gay aims that we were talking about a
few weeks ago.
He says, John and Andy, I have a starting revelation that may turn your stomachs inside out
with fear, surprise and fashion sense.
Upon listening to your audio newspaper,
I was tossing most of it in the bin. My eaglet is discovered a section on the gay
aims. As a dedicated homosexualologist, I was troubled by this section. I quickly detained
myself and refused my release until I divulged the gay aims in their entirety. Here, I discovered
something shocking. It turned out the games are not universal.
In fact, they are often very different depending on the homosexualographer involved. Fantastic phrase,
Owen. As it turns out, I have a list of my personal
games on the fridge. I feel it is my duty to the average man to reveal this list. Here is that list.
Eggs Milk
Adopt neighbours children
Bread batteries Revolution of the proletariat,
apples, yoghurt, work with terrorists to destroy family values and governments all over the
world.
Oh, I knew it. I knew it was what these people are.
Clearly these aims are very frightening.
And perusal of a fellow homosexual one-homer, revealed a similar list, except with less
eggs and more guy adoption.
Hopefully you can spread the word about these horrifying aims and bring it into this madness.
Yours homosexual are graphically Owen Harkness.
Owen, thank you so much for that. Not only revealing the true truth behind what guy people at Amyat put also the various versions of homosexual agraficness.
And now it's time for the official announcements of Miss and Mr February from history.
The hottest hotties for the month of February.
The unquestionable winner in the female hotties section is Joe Anna the mad who is sponsored
by almost all bugle listeners alive and dead.
She's had some late competition from amongst others Lady Godiva nominated by Will Evans in London.
Also late competition came in from Adrian Ferrance, who said I'd like to nominate 1930s Germany as the hottest era of history. It's an interesting extension we had in the animal last week.
He's taking a little further.
He shows, of course, there'll be the no-show as crying out
what about 15th century Constantinople,
and they have their merits.
But who can argue with sexy, smoldering 1930s Germany?
History has put in some fairly heavy arguments against it.
History goes on human dignity.
All branches of moral philosophy, but
still nice universe. It's right, he goes on to say 1930s Germany is a mix of Sharon
Stone and basic instinct and Glenn Close in dangerously Aitons with a touch of Demi
Moore from disclosure throwing for good measure. Hell bent on world domination, but still
a little wet behind the years. 1930s Germany is the era that you would never take home
to mother.
Good nomination. Now it hasn't made February the shortest and the hottest month, but it may yet
make March. I'm not sure even David Irving would compare 1930s Germany to a selection of film
actresses. And Mr February from history is none other than Britain's own favourite
immediate post-war Prime Minister Clement Attlee, well done Clement's another trophy for your
bulging cabinet. And Annie in California is a particular fan. She says that Clement Attlee
never fails to set her heart aflutter. Also, she suggests that Jonathan Swift and his infantile
diet is also pretty hot. Actually, yeah, Jonathan Swift, that would be a very good nomination.
What was his infantile diet? Oh, come on Andy.
A modest proposal.
One of the greatest satirical letters of written.
Oh, that's a good one. Sorry, yeah, I see.
Yeah, I was thinking of it in terms of childish food.
So that's it for Hotty's from History for February.
Do keep your nominations coming in as we build up to the climactic announcement
of Hotty's from History from March, which will happen at the end of
March and your other nominations will be rounded up in the Bugle blog this
week. Apologies for the absence of the blog last week. This was due to jet lag
and ill baby, but it will be back bigger and better than ever. And in response to a
complaint we received all previous blogs have been put up on the websites in a single, easily manageable archive. Do check all the other goodies on
the bugle page at timesonline.co.uk slash the bugle.
Sport now, and there are rumours that Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield could fight each
other again at a combined age of 86. John, it's the fight. It's the fight everyone wanted to see.
And did see twice more than 10 years ago when many people already
considered them past their best. This is sport as it should be,
John, two middle aged men raging against the dying of their bank accounts.
And it just goes to prove Isaac Newton's first law sports marketing, that if you bite a guy's ear off
in the middle of a boxing match,
people will pay to see if you might do it again.
In fact, if there are any other throwback,
bouts or conflicts or sporting events
that you would like to see, then please email in the bugle
and let us know and we'll do everything we can
to stage them, like a kind of audio Don King style.
Golf, and Tiger Woods is
planning to go unbeaten for the entire year after cleaning up six tournaments in a row.
The response to the rest of the pro golfers on the circuit has been fascinating, they've essentially
said, yeah, he's miles better than any of us, but frankly, we're minted anyway, so who gives
a rat's ass? Now get out of my way, I've got to find out if I've still got a wife. Woods has such a
psychological hold on his opponents now that at the Veggie Might
on Toast Invitational event in Air and Spar Australia last year, he beat Vijay Singh
in a playoff after kidnapping himself, tying himself to a radiator in the clubhouse, and
getting Scott for plank to replace all of his golf clubs with giant hot dogs.
And finally, Bodybuilder Julius Clippentop, tearfully admitted not taking steroids at a
Senate inquiry last week.
He apologised for bringing shame upon his sport and embarrassing his friends and family.
And John I think there's going to be an asterisk next to his name in the Grotesque Neck Muscles
Hall of Fame.
And now, strapping listeners, it's audio cryptic crossword time.
Oh god, he's the incredible thing Andy.
I've actually forgotten as well.
This week's clue is 27 across.
And for those of you who successfully solved 20 down,
you'll know that this eight letter solution ends
with the letter O.
And really John, this clue explores the dominance
of big business and its fear of change.
And the clue is this,
Coffee's paranormal power begins to rankle with massive oil company, eight letters long.
So you can now print out the full grid of the Audiocryptic Crossword on the Bugle page
at Thomsonland.co.uk slash the Bugle also on the fourth Plinth and Trafalgar Square.
There is now a bronze sculpture inspired by
the audio cryptic crossword.
And finally in this week's bugle, it's the bugle forecast.
This week, roadkill.
John, how many animals do you think will be killed on the world's roads this week?
17.
17.
That's the Federal Conservative estimate bearing in mind that a study guessed that over 40 million squirrels
are killed every year in the USA alone.
God, that is horrendous.
Yeah, 40 million, I mean, I don't really like squirrels,
but still that is carnage.
I'm gonna stick with 17.
17 animals this week.
I'm gonna place safe and go 18.
So just what I mean needs to go over 17 and I win.
Oh, that's not, that is a very cynical way of playing the game, am I?
She will know what's the price is right and all is a kid, you don't lose that kind of tactical mouse.
That's it for the bugle this week, in next week's bugle, privacy laws across the world and a business section.
You won't be throwing the business section out, they'll actually be a business section.
Finally, you can find out what's inside that useless piece of paper.
Have you ever read a business section in your life? Of course I haven't. Of course I haven't. Bye.
Bye bye for now.
you