The Bugle - Bonus Bugle - Cricket beats Covid
Episode Date: July 12, 2020Andy introduces some previously unheard clips featuring Alice Fraser, Helen Zaltzman, Nato Green, Nish Kumar, James Nokise, Tiff Stevenson and Tom Ballard. Plus, a classic US election clip with John O...liver.Plus, new Bugle intern Ross - https://twitter.com/Rambothe2nd - delivers the best piece of music from Australia since Angry Anderson, and Producer Chris previews his new series: Fantasy Travel Hacker. Subscribe now.Support what we do by making a one off or monthly donation here: http://thebuglepodcast.com/#donate. We carry no ads and exist because you make it happen!We have a sister show, The Last Post, which you can hear here. Follow us on YouTube or Insta and see parts of this episode with actual video.The Bugle is hosted this week by:Andy ZaltzmanAnd produced by Chris Skinner. FUB. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Dancelaguard fans, you will be thrilled to know a book is coming out if you fund it via Unbound.
We are publishing the Dancelaguard Reader by Alice Fraser and Dancelaguard,
a glorious insight into the world of Dancelaguard, self-published romance maven,
and online bestseller. If you would like to find out how to support it, go to thebugelpodcast.com.
If we get enough support, we will publish the book. That's a real thing that's going to happen.
Thebugelpodcast.com to support the Danciler Guard Reader. A-A-A-A Bugle Sub-episode 4159A for Advoc.
Advoc, of course, the animal famously named after a court case brought back in more
biblies times when a Dutch species technician called Peter Van Ard launched a court case
against Noah for excluding his new mammal then entoubled the snout about from the list
of animals invited to take up residence on his famous arc. The snout about had been excluded because it was a hybrid, bred as a prototype
carpet cleaner by Van Ard, and therefore not categorised as one of God's creatures. Van
Ard won the court case, the snout about survived, and the judder snitch instead was cast overboard,
though what you ask, well, exactly. The snout about then became known after the court
case, Ard, the arc, now having defended the claim as a business, rather than an individual for tax purposes.
Van Ard himself sadly drowned in the ensuing flood before perfecting his new pigeon horse
at the ultimate racing machine.
I digress. If indeed you can indeed digress, without having even begun a journey.
I am Addy's ultimate and there is no regular bugle this week because I am in a bioticure hotel
in Hampshire watching my own private international cricket match.
I basically do tune in to BBC Radio coverage on the radio or indeed online around the world
if you want to hear me actually saying some facts, all the facts about sports which is
essentially of course a fiction, but that is as far as unprepared to compromise in my
personal battle against reality. Instead we have for you this week a bumper crop of bonus
bugle material from recent weeks starting with from last week New Zealand news.
New Zealand property market news now and a replica Wild West town is for sale in New Zealand.
It's a meticulous reproduction of an 1860s Wyoming frontier town apparently, but was only
built in 2006.
And I guess the challenge is, you know, the question you've got to ask if you're thinking
about buying this property is exactly how much do you want to escape from reality.
This is a pretend town from 160 years ago in New Zealand, which
is to all practical purposes, a pretend country. That really, you cannot get much further
away from reality than that. James, is there much interest in this property?
Well, it's proof quite controversial because there's actually legislation in place about being able to buy property
if your
Overseas if you're an overseas investor, however that doesn't cover fake cowboy towns
Why don't they not think of that?
I mean
We I feel we should actually use this as an opportunity in New Zealand.
We need all the money we can get.
So if we can just get someone rich enough to buy this thing and move in and then hook
them up with Tyker YTZ, that's a film franchise ready to go.
It's got how many properties has it got 12 or 14?
So you can get Ciflis and eat 10 peaches just like in deadwood
It's right in the middle of nowhere. That's the weird thing because we also have towns in New Zealand
Which are right in the middle of nowhere. I don't think New Zealanders actually knew there was a fake cowboy town
Before the story broke. I think they were just driving past it going ah, I wonder which yeah I, I think I've stayed there before actually. Yeah, they do good scones. Yeah.
It probably just looks hipster because that's everything. Everything hipster is just kind
of like retro nostalgia, right? So it just people driving past going, look at that hipster
place. That's probably a craft, february. How much is it for sale for?
Sir, 11.5 million dollars, and if that's US or New Zealand's...
I think it's New Zealand, which is about 266,500 US.
But I guess why would you buy someone like this in New Zealand, not in Wyoming?
What are the attractions, apart from the lack of coronavirus, the lack of institutionalized
national self-destruction and the addition of rugby and cricket?
I guess the one real selling point is the almost total lack of indigenous mammals, which
must be a real attraction to people who absolutely hate the concept of indigenous mammals living
in a place to buy somewhere in New Zealand and you know, you just got a couple of bats to deal with.
I mean, that's the nice thing about the New Zealand desert.
Nothing kills you.
You get annoyed.
You will be irritated.
Now obviously one thing that no one in Britain or co-videos Albion as I believe it is now
known could have foreseen before the government attempted to launch its track and trace system months
after other countries had already done so was that one of the key aspects of such track
and trace systems was that they actually need to work.
The government's much trumpeted track and trace system destined not so long ago to be world
beating in their own words has been tossed into the wheelie bit of history alongside other things such as
credibility, hope and dignity by the government. It's announced that they will instead be writing
and sending letters to all people diagnosed with COVID asking them to then themselves write
a postcard to everyone they think they might have met in the past six months and to parade
up and down all the streets within a two mile radius of their house every day wearing a
special cape, ringing a bell and print claiming themselves unclean. So they are very much still
on top of this, still on top of it. Well, they're never really hidden their desire for us
to be dead. So it seems consistent. Yes. I guess so. That's all you're looking for, isn't
it? So what's happened is the UK government
has decided that it's not going to use its own app.
And is instead going to use the Apple and Google model
COVID trackers, which I think is nice.
It's nice to see the government coming to terms with reality
on any vector at all.
On the other hand, handing even more power
into the hands of faux independent minimally regulated,
ultra-wealthy, non-government monopolies on the infrastructure of information seems minimally regulated ultra-wealthy non-government
monopolies on the infrastructure of information seems a little bit like handing your tiny little
exotic dance alien into the slimy little paws of Jabba the Hat and making him pinky swear
not to drop her into the nearest monster hole when his hemorrhoids flare up.
But like I said earlier, most governments, not digital natives, do you trust them to build
an app competently?
No.
Or it would be just the kind that keeps crashing constantly
before you can even get into it.
Yes, and this is very much a government
that is trying to take Britain back to a pre-digital age.
I think the current target year is 1854.
Also, since their plan is for everyone to get COVID,
who needs an app to track that?
Exactly, all you need is a British passport. That's what we, that, that will do.
Remember they'll put it in the water?
Like, like, floor, right? Like the floor, right?
Get it, yeah, minutes? I mean, you might mock that now, but you know, when everyone else
has still got COVID in a hundred
years' time, Britain is ruling the world once again.
It's basically smallpox all over again, isn't it?
Can't unlearn those skills.
Many people have criticized the British government, but to be fair to them, they have done their
best to help this nation get better at cryptic crosswords, or at least they have allowed
us to hone our skills at trying to work out the hidden message in ostensibly unintelligible nonsense, such as any piece
of government guidance issued in the last few months.
Quick update on the latest government guidance on COVID here.
Interesting, in fact, the Department of Education updated its guidance to schools ahead of reopening 41 times in a week, which suggests that they're not entirely on top of things.
The latest government guidelines on when you're allowed to meet people, two people from one household can meet one person from two other households or an average of half a person from four households for a period of time defined as x squared over the square root of three y over z minutes,
where x is a coefficient of how fondly actually are of the other people in the proposed meeting
on an inverse exponential sliding scale, why is the distance they need to travel and z is
a numerical value correlating to the extent of panic befuddlement in the eyes of health
secretary Matt Hancock. However, no meeting can take place if any of the parties are currently subject to freshly inked tattoos, hangovers, symptoms
of excessive apricot consumption, an earworm of the eight 1980s novelty single Agadoo by
Black lace and or sympathetic feelings towards global protest movements. The participants
must breathe in for three seconds each in a strict rotation, with a buffer of 1.5 seconds
between breaths, and out for five seconds whilst facing diametrically away from the person
and or persons, oppositely triangulated to them in the social triangle.
All participants and participants,
why do they need to bring gender into it?
Must hum in more code rather than speak to minimise
the transition of the virus as well as the transmit of ideas,
hope and love.
Cuddles are allowed, but only of scale model sculptures
of the other meeting ease or holograms they're whom of.
Any grass stud, sat or slouched upon by the meter uppers
must be instantaneously grazed back to a safe length by a licensed goat in full military-level PPE
and rules can only underlined be ignored if you are in a position of governmental responsibility.
So we're all clear now, and exactly what we're allowed to do and with whom.
The US has issued some new guidance, which is basically, you're going to die, just get on with whom. The US has issued some new guidance which is basically you're gonna
die just get on with it. At least it's clear though, at least you know where you
stand is the confusion we have to deal with. Was it an anagram? No one knows.
Australian news now. So just checking that's America failed state, UK failed state, Australia touching go.
That's it.
Well, the big thing happened in Australia.
See, it was Scott Morrison was told to move off someone's lawn.
I was like, did you see that was standing on, he was doing some press conference, standing
like, can I come out of his house and say,
can you cut off my lawn, I've just receded.
We've all got problems on that's all I'm saying.
All our countries have problems at the moment.
Well, the big news in Australia,
Andy, is our economy is suffering.
It's first ever recession in nearly three decades
as the nation grapples with the impact
of the coronavirus pandemic and of course,
the summer's bushfires.
The country's economy shrank 0.3% in the first three months of the year from the previous quarter and
like all shrinkage, that's very embarrassing. There was a've always said Andy, it's not the size of the
economy that matters, it's how you use it. And I've also said that about my tiny tiny penis. Now,
I'm not too worried because we have a wonderful conservative government here who is dedicated
to getting us out of the COVID crisis with a business-led economic recovery, which is
one of those phrases that just makes you feel good, like flexible work hours or open
mic night.
I suppose it'll be refreshing to have a business-led recovery after having so many business-led
recessions.
So I thought I'd look forward to seeing Australian tourism ads
with Australia brought to you by Rio Tinto
and Richard Branson turn every single public library
in this country into a private prison for the unemployed.
Uh, we're planning on using the fossil fuel industry
to help get our economy back on track,
which I think is genius.
What better way to recover from a respiratory illness
than by pumping as much poisonous gas into the air
as possible.
F*** you, China.
If Aussies are going to die by coughing, it's going to be because of our own bloody homegrown
dicky-dye f***ing stray or incompetence.
Thank you very much.
You might be worried, Andy, because the Bank of England has worn Britain could be headed
for its biggest economic slump in more than 300 years.
It expects GDP
to fall by 14% over 2020, which would be the worst recession since a great frost in 1709,
a brutal time when it was so cold many Brits struggled to continue to do slavery. Of course,
Britain's second worst economic slump came in 2001 when Andy Zoltzmann made his solo comedy debut
at the Edinburgh Festival French. Economists have since studied the financials of the show's season at the French and
marbled, and how Zoltzmann's ticket sales and budgetary pressures managed to slide the
entire country into civil tennis recession and inflation and deflation. The country managed
to bounce back, but Zoltzmann would go into suffer through almost two decades of wage
stagnation and was forced to impose brutal austerity
on both himself and his children. Now, I'm worried, I'm only 30 years old, so this is the first ever recession that I've lived through.
You guys have been through recessions in your own failed states in the US and UK. Any tips to me at all?
How do you get through a recession, Andy? What do I do, Hi?
Well, can I just pit you up on that last bit?
at all, how do you get through a recession, Andy? What do I do? Well, can I just pit you up on that last bit? We try to avoid facts on the show as much
as possible. So can you just don't bring shit like that on the show again? Sorry, man.
I mean, that was, I mean, to be honest, way too close to the truth. So, well, I mean, the great thing, you say it's the worst ever recession, but you know, worst,
I mean, it's the biggest, biggest ever, biggest, biggest good, isn't it?
That's what we, that's what we learned. The thing is, the great thing with having a massive
recession, we saw this after the 2008 financial crisis is that you can then manipulate the growth
figures. So he said,
ah, we are a fastest growing economy in Europe. Yep, that's only just because you
economy into it. We are the fastest growing economy in your fastest growing, fastest growing.
On the subject of Australia, we currently have a wonderful bugle intern, Ross, who has
concocted a musical masterpiece about Australia for all future generations to enjoy. Starting with you,
listening now, who are more of a current generation, admittedly, but of course you used to be
a future generation and never forget where you've come from.
Unleash Ross. Australia. Australia. Australia Australia Australia
We inherit all our arguments from Britain and Andy
Man, Australia
Captain Cook
Australia
Australia
Australia
Australia
Australia
What a f**king face who fully sucks like an absolute dog
Australia Captain Cook Australia
Captain Cook Australia Captain Cook
Who spent a week or so in Australia then f**k off to look for someone else
Australia We all hate mandos
Australia Captain Cook Australia
We all hate man Cook Australia Captain Cook
We all hate land, Australia. Cactus a cook. We all hate landers.
Mandeys.
Mandeys.
We all hate mandeys.
Mandeys.
Mandeys.
We all hate mandeys, dog.
Mandeys.
Mandeys.
We all hate mandeys.
Cactus a cook.
Finally this week, archive time.
Remember when the prospect of an American president being re-elected?
Wasn't enough to make you run for the book of revelations to rifle through the pages
muttering, for f*** sake, if not now, then when? Well, to help Joggle your memory, here's the year 2012.
Top story this week, US presidential election 2012, vote or sigh.
And I think that the US presidential election season is actually the perfect way for you
to transition from your addiction to the Olympics, because they actually have a lot in common
those two events.
Think about it, the whole thing happens every four years.
It's two people racing each other.
After going round and round in circles, one will eventually be declared the winner. It's incredibly expensive to put on, and there's just as much corporate
involvement that slightly soils the whole event. It's perfect, Andy. It's like a nicotine
patch for a debilitating sports addiction. And there was a big development this week.
Mitt Romney finally picked his running mate, and he went with Wisconsin Congressman Paul
Ryan, a move which seemed to energize
The base of the Republican party who love to be energized by conservative picks around this time of year
Now some people might say why the hoopla it's only the vice president
Why is everyone getting excited over a largely ceremonial role?
Well because that is simply no longer the case you are thinking with a pre year
Well, because that is simply no longer the case. You are thinking with a pre-year 2000s mentality.
Because it was around that time that Dick Cheney
managed to successfully change his job description
into something significantly more powerful
than the job he signed up for.
With Cheney, the Republican seemed to unlock
their ideal formula for a presidential ticket,
a sinister puppet master pulling the strings
of a happy-go-lucky wooden boy. The aim for the Republicans at the start of any search for a presidential candidate
is now to find a nominee who's essentially an empty, amiable husk, just palatable enough
to disguise the poisonous substance of their running mate. Think about the Trek record,
Bush, Cheney, McCain, Palin, and now Romney Ryan. Because Paul Ryan might look like an average midwestern, good-looking man who was walking down
the street when a Brooks brother's story exploded all over him. But he wants to end Medicare,
has spent the last few years driving John Boehner, the speaker of the house here, into
almost unprecedented levels of obstructionism.
Now you might think, why don't Republicans just nominate the person they actually want
in the first place?
Why don't they just nominate Paul Ryan if they like him so much?
Well, because they know that you cannot shoot pure heroin at me.
It will fucking kill you.
You have to cut it with baking soda and that is what they've done here.
Well, yes, he does.
I mean, it seems like many Republicans, Republicans too love the concept of women having all the
possible babies that they may or may not want and of poor people retaining the God-given rights
to die untreated in the maximum amount of pain. So I guess you should appealing clearly to the
Republican heartlands. That's right, Andy, but what you're selling is not something that you can
appeal to people with
on the top half of your ticket.
So that's why this system they found works.
It's hard when you give a dog a pill for worms.
It's never gonna eat that pill on its own.
The pill is clearly disgusting.
So you hide that pill in a bowl of cottage cheese.
And if the Republicans have their way, Andy,
come November, America is going to have cottage cheese
all over its face and not realise what is just eating.
The concept is nothing new, look at the ancient Greeks,
they invented democracy and when they sacked the city of Troy,
they didn't just show up with a bunch of crazy Greeks,
they put a bunch of crazy Greeks inside an empty wooden horse.
What I'm saying is, Romney is that empty wooden horse and Paul Ryan
is a bunch of crazy Greeks. I don't remember that horse being quite as much of a dick though.
All right, that is a one floor in that metaphor Andy, but that is a fair point.
So the Trojans would have said, let's get rid of this f***ing horse. This horse is an asshole.
Also, it's crossed us around in a ludicrous way. This is all***ing awesome. This horse is an asshole. Also, it's crossed us around in a ludicrous way.
This horse is too big classical music.
This horse does not pay enough taxes.
That's all for this week's sub-bugle.
You have heard from, Tiff Stevenson, James Nicky say,
Helen Slatsman, Alice Fraser, Ross the intern,
Nish Kumar, NATO Green, Harry Condobolo, Tom Ballard and Chlano Levera.
Time for me to return once again to commune with the comfortably twistable truths of cricket statistics
and to recommend you listen to producer Chris's new series of his Travel Hacker podcast,
available at all good podcast shops, about which he will now tell you everything.
Chris, wake up. This is your moment. Until next week, Bugglers, goodbye.
Thanks, Andy, and hello, Bugglers.
So as some of you might know, I make a program
with one of the true greats of podcasting
a man called Richie Firth,
who believes he can get from A to B better than anybody else.
Now, you might have noticed that traveling around
has become increasingly difficult over the last three, four months, something's going on, not quite sure, should
probably find out a little bit more about that. So we have decided to basically reinvent
our show, which is now called Fantasy Travel Hacker, where basically Rich and I get suggestions from members of the global public
about ways in which we might make their journeys better. It could be a better way to get to the shops,
it could be a better way to go over a waterfall, it could be a better way to traverse between
two countries without getting any kind of visa. So please do listen, it's Richie Firth travel
hacker in all good
stores and I'm going to play you a completely out of context clip which may or may not
work in this environment. Goodbye, you know I love you all. Except you.
Well two hacks down in the first episode of series two of Richie Firth Travel Hacker,
two hacks down, two hacks Done. It's going well,
time for a new feature to season 2. Oh yes, it's a celebrity hack! Celebrity hack, celebrity
hack, do do celebrity hack, celebrity hack, do do celebrity hack, celebrity hack, celebrity
hack. Could you add some reverb and a jazzy bit to that please. Sure. Celebrity hack, celebrity hack, do do do celebrity hack, celebrity hack, do do
celebrity hack, celebrity hack, celebrity hack, celebrity hack, celebrity hack, celebrity
Rich, Rich, wake up. Right, it's time for our first ever celebrity hack.
It is comedian and podcaster Alice Fraser who brings it to us tonight.
Hello Alice, what's your hack?
Hi there travel hackers.
Popular entertainer Alice Fraser here with a request for Ritchie and Chris.
Hi Ritchie and Chris, please tell me the best way to get from nottingham castle to show
and forest. No reason, just reason. Just no guy recently.
you