The Bugle - British Pork Is Now Kosher (4207)
Episode Date: October 5, 2021With global supply line issues seemingly hitting Britain worse than than other countries, we look at the plight of pigs. Plus, what's an appropriate prize for female chess champion?Come see us live at... Leicester Square Odeon, in London, on 13th November.We are funded entirely by you, the listener. Listeners who sign up via OUR NEW WEBSITE thebuglepodcast.com have long enjoyed the opportunity to get: mentions on the show (in the form of lies), merchandise and general sense of wellbeing for supporting this fine work of art. As of this week you can also support the show directly via Apple Podcasts. Our new channel ‘Team Bugle’ also includes The Gargle and Tiny Revolutions, shows which currently carry ads - but they will be completely ad free on this channel. So if you love The Bugle, and it’s siblings, then please support The Bugle via our website or Apple Podcasts where you can subscribe today.Buy a loved one Bugle Merch - COLD AND WET WEAVER T SHIRTS ON SALE NOW). Listen to The Gargle here: https://pod.link/GargleFollow us on YouTube or Insta and see parts of this episode with actual video.The Bugle is hosted this week by:Andy ZaltzmanAlice FraserJames NokiseAnd produced by Chris Skinner 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,
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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 Dancilla Guard Reader.
Don't forget there is a live bugle show in London on the 13th of November at the Odian
in Leicester Square, which I think means that it'll be, you know, a Gala Black Tie event
with the Stars of Stationscreen and royalty. They all come if they
all confirmed the Royal family. I think they tend to reply quite like
all that. Come dressed as the cast of the Rocky Horror Picture Show and really confuse everyone.
The Bugle, audio newspaper for a visual world. Hello Bugleers and welcome to issue 4207 of the Bugle, the very special 501st full episode of this podcast we are recording on the 4th of October
2021
We slightly forgot about the 500th episode last week due to having skipped
well
3700 episodes in between 294 and 4,000 and one
But anyway, this is it. So we're celebrating it this week. The 501st
La Riversary of the Bugle in honor of Brian Lara's highest first-class
score in cricket, a far more significant number than 500. But we have now done
more than a half a thousand full episodes of this show. And if you told me
50 years ago that I would be hosting a podcast that was doing its 501st episode I wouldn't have believed you I mean I was still just over 3 years away
from being born aside from anything else and so I was still in the government secret refrigerated
laboratory where they stalk British embryoids before deciding once we're British woman
we then have to pretend to be pregnant before supposedly giving birth to a Brit I mean
it's not the most outlandish conspiracy theory you've heard reading the book but no I'm living testament to it being true. But the point is over half a thousand
episodes of this show not including some episodes. That means there's only 49,499 to go before
we wrap it up with the 50,000th episode spectacular in the year. Let me just work this out.
Ran about 3260. I think we're probably
on high ages here and there for various reasons, but I reckon we'll keep churning them out around
40 a year, unless they change the lengths of years or weeks or maybe Britain will go back to some
kind of lunar calendar as part of the inevitable post-Brexit re-adjustment phase. Half a thousand
episodes, that is around about 300 hours of pure unadulterated part truth, splurded into this universe of doubt.
And if you were to transcribe every single episode of the bugle in the style of an illuminated medieval manuscript,
it would take you at a rough estimate, depending on how fancy you got with the opening letters of each paragraph,
and I'm just making it up now, 38 years and four months.
That's working eight hour days with 20 days holiday yet.
Now, if anyone is interested in that job, do drop us an email, but you're going to have to be cheaper
than buying a printer and some knockoff and bring your own coils. Joining me for this
momentous occasion, from the other side of the world, firstly, the now very, very nearly
100% pregnant Alice Fraser. Welcome Alice. Well, what's the current stat in terms of percentage?
I don't think it's too much to say that I am now. What the technical boffins down at the lab
would call massively pregnant. I was like to put it in a more numerical term. So we'll go with
I was like to put it in a more numerical term. So we'll go with 99.94% pregnant at the good Australian number. Also, they're joining us to keep the number of people currently
harboring another person inside them to acceptable levels, currently residing in Perth, Australia.
It's James Nukise. Hello, James.
I am pregnant with joy. The best form of my when I've always found that with joy as well. It
takes me nine months to get really happy about anything minimum. So and and how's how's a
Perth? Treating as Perth has had sort of caught a sort of strict lockdown hasn't it? And
you know no one going in and out of Western Australia. Yeah, I mean, we've had a strict lockdown
and that we've just locked down the entire state
as one house and then no one's allowed in or out.
I'm very wary of saying this to anyone else
who's in Australia, especially someone like Alice
who's been in Sydney.
Normally I just go, it's okay.
And make sure I always film indoors.
That's the key Andy in these situations.
Make sure the camera is indoors.
Well, I mean, this is really a good thing for Western Australia and Differqueen's Land,
which is similarly having closed as borders, not at all locked down because those two states
that really want to secede the most from Australia in that way
of thinking themselves, both more Australian and less Australian than the rest of Australia.
Yes, wonderful.
I feel like I've been here long enough and Alice might be able to concur.
The reason they lock down Western Australia is basically because no one trusted Western
Australians to stay in their house.
Like these these cashed out bogans are too loose mate.
Well, of course, the UK seceded from Australia. It was in 1900, I think that we were through some sort of common.
There's still a place on the Federation's papers for New Zealand to sign on if you want.
I think we're taking Western Australia, I think that's what happens. Sandwich maneuver, I like it.
We are recording.
On the 4th of October 2021, today is International Awareness Day, a
Awareness Day to raise people's awareness of all the awareness days that we
need to be aware of.
We should also port a remember on this day, the several million krill that died 25 years ago today due to all the whales being hungry. A special section
this week in the bin is the 501 section, the Bugle Lara Versailles. Now Brian Lara broke the
record for the highest individual score in first class cricket. 501, not out in 1994 playing for Warwickshire against Durham.
13 years later, Brian Lara retired from international cricket.
And only six months after the Great Left Hand has finaled
international match, the Bugle came into existence.
And now some 14 years later, the Bugle is still going and Lara is
still retired.
And as long as he stays retired,
we will stay bugling because the world needs one
or the other of the bugle or Brian Lara
playing international cricket.
Either the scintillating batsmanship
and fascinating career fluctuations of Brian Lara
or me and my guests banging on about the new.
So we're keeping going until Lara comes out of retirement
and he is now aged, I don't know, 50 odd, I reckon, so it's probably going to come down to us, I think.
He shook my hand as a child. Did he?
Did he?
Did you imagine Australia?
Yeah, I was a big fan of Brian Lara.
Well, that, I mean, that congratulations, that's the correct way to be as a human being
and a dealer cricket fan.
For us, special hundred and first episode,
we have been inundated with tributes from our colleagues
in the worlds of media and showbiz.
This one, for example, we can only know that we know nothing
and that is the highest degree of human wisdom.
That's from Leo Tolstoy.
Truth is like the sun.
You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't going away.
Elvis Presley, thanks for that.
Elvis and simplicity and sincerity,
generally go hand in hand as both perceived
from a love of truth, Mary,
Walshdencroft.
Now, none of them were specifically talking about the bugle,
to be fair, and none of them are really relevant.
But still, it says a lot about this podcast
at the likes of Leo, Elvin Mazel,
but Fred takes some time out from their schedules
to play homage to this show.
And to mark the 501st episodes, we look at a few other things of which there have been or are
501. There were 501 body doubles of Queen Victoria that were used in the early days of postage stamps
before they changed the law that said that every individual stamp had to have a hand-painted portrait
of the monarch from a licensed and witness sitting after a couple years, Queen Victoria went off-grid and protested, and the government hired 501
Victoria local likes, plentiful in those days, of course, to sit for the stamps.
There, 501 is also the number of different news stories in history, they're now just
being endlessly recycled with different names and technical jargon cut and pasted in.
And of course, 501 is the number of different attempts it took,
Levi Strauss, before he got Strauss as right. Famously, the 501 genes were launched in
the 1890s after 500 previous prototypes fell by the legway away, so I'd include the twos
that the waist sewn together, and were impossible to put on. The 19s, the monolague design, proved
to be restrictive and unpopular. The 46s, with built-in ankle blades, were deemed too lacerative.
And the 165s, with their single-length leg scandalized 1880s America by being only just below
the knee of the taller customers, the exposed calves of a young jeans wearer at the inauguration
of President Harrison in 1889 caused a new first-leddy Caroline to suffer a swooning from
which she never truly
recovered. The Levi 214s had revolutionary rear pockets made of salt crystals, which
were visually striking but proved buttock, exposingly soluble in anything more than light
rain. And the 542s were the first attempt to infuse new electricity technology with clothing
to make trousers that lit up when the wearer started running using an early dynamo withdrawn
after a spate of crop shingings. Famously, Levi Strauss, when asked about so many experiments,
said, I haven't failed to make jeans 501 times. I've learned 501 ways not to make a light bulb.
Well, there you go. That concludes our special 501 section.
Top story this week, Supply Chain Chaos around the world, and while Supply Chain's love
and my hate them, they're really important to supplying stuff.
And they've been in chaos around the one, Of course, much of the time supply chains are hidden
from a public view, the Santa Clausian,
magic of modern logistics,
providing those of us in the fortunate echelons
of team human with what we want, when we want
and what we think we need, when we pretend we need it.
But at the moment, there is chaos around the world.
I mean, how's things in Australia
from a supply chain point of view?
I mean, they're fairly all right, Andy.
Right.
Things might be taking a little longer to deliver
during COVID times, but they are still going fairly well.
It's astonishing how quickly people in the modern world
have gotten entirely accustomed to pressing a button.
And then within days, having a stranger deliver
a Silicon oven mitt 13 tiny gnome shoes
for their lockdown madness garden gnome installation, a bucket of protein powder and a sign that says
leave laugh love which you can't tell whether it's a misspelling or some Brexit based satire out of the people's Republic of China.
But apparently Britain is not not so good. Uh, shoppers have been warned to expect a nightmare Christmas with limited stock on the shelves
and higher prices by suggests the nightmare has already begun.
So this is more like what you would call a nightmare before Christmas if you have very boring
nightmares about supply chain issues.
I'm Jewish, every Christmas is a f***ing nightmare.
Cost us a lot of market share.
I'm a Pacific Islander, every English Christmas is a f***ing nightmare. Cost us a lot of market share. I'm a Pacific Irelander. Every English Christmas is a f***ing nightmare.
What we're going to do? Go out and play? What are the...
According to the times, a lot of families are not going to be able to have a
turkey for Christmas day, which is a big relief to people who think turkey is a
boring food with little to recommend it.
And also that we've been warned that presents under the tree may not meet expectations,
but to be fair, they never do.
How can any gift unwrapped match the unparalleled possibilities of a wrapped gift?
Also, it's a great excuse, supply chain issues, is a great excuse for parents who give dud gifts, sorry, centres, European, and couldn't get a visa to get into the country.
So here's your box of splinters. I mean, it does turn out that, you know,
the supply is complex where but of interconnected industries. And it's necessary to mean that,
you know, when I want a Donica Bab delivered directing
to my mouth and the comfort of my delivering room at 3 a.m.
It should only take three taps on my phone to make it happen.
And you know, that's just a basic human right.
But we don't really, we don't appreciate everything that is needed to make that, to make
that possible.
And particularly here in Britain.
I mean, Chris, have you spent much of the the week you know, queuing up for I mean I know you have various other forms of transport
notably you know swimming cycling and running in quick succession.
But you know have you spent have you been panic queuing this week?
I've done the full Christmas shop. Right.
Including my daughter's presence, my wife's presence, which is the same thing because I just
thought I'd like, you know, scale it down a bit. And I've ordered all of the food. Now,
I guess the one worry I have is that it might have gone off by December, but that's a risk
I'm prepared to take.
Well, according to the Grocer magazine, which is a magazine I've just discovered exists and now want to see the sexy centerfold of
big producers of turkeys have reduced the number of birds they're
rearing by about 20% not because there aren't enough anything but because
they fear because of Brexit they won't be able to find seasonal workers
to pluck and pack and deliver the birds in December and Paul Kelly of
Kelly bronze fame pointed out,
a turkey after Christmas day is worth nothing,
depreciates more than a car.
But yeah, all over the place,
the workers who keep these global supply chains moving,
putting their hands up to suggest
that it's all gonna come down,
crashing down around our ears.
I love this work, it seemed to be in the tricky situation where they've been told to get
out because they were taking everyone's jobs.
Yes.
And now they're being asked to come back in.
So maybe everyone in England could just gift each other on theme a little just a blank
piece of paper with the words consequence.
I just have a new Christmas tradition of hubris that every December.
The words consequence and hubris are not in any dictionary in this country.
That is a new government law actually.
This just came out last week to remove those words from the dictionary.
This was off the Boris Johnson was seen physically tearing all the pages out from the dictionary for words beginning R E S P
and just to be on the safe side also tearing out any pages that had a word ending in
oncibility, oncible or act as well.
Boris Johnson really has been as always leading, as always, leading from the disused
fridge out the back of his house on this. And I mean, it's largely a ceremony or roll
these days being Prime Minister. But he's given a couple of extraordinary interviews. Have
this not only the petrol crisis and just to give you a quick update on the petrol crisis
and the panic that it is instilled in this country. People have been seen squirting unleaded petrol directly down their
throats, then running home and vomiting it into the waiting mouths of their
young. A life-size cardboard cutout of the action movie star Vin Diesel was
stolen from outside of multiplex in Tombridge Wells and heartbroken fuel fans
have been desperately begging for service station staff where there's no fuel
left to just describe the smell of petrol to them, was weeping on miss it so much.
One of the contestants on the Great British Bake Off this week made a cake in the shape
of a petrol pump, said I hope it's a magic cake or I'll never be able to get home.
I mean we are really at breaking point.
In fact one person just reading about was scene shoving dead plant matter and algae into
their petrol tanks while screaming can you please turn into fuel unless the million years
or I'm going to miss my momma Krame lesson. We are at
breaking point as a nation. On the bright side, the gambling industry is going well.
People are laying odds on the next thing, which is going to be shortage.
Yes, short, the shortages. It's a very lucrative, lucrative market. But Boris Johnson has told us that this and also the PIGCOLM SHAMOZL, where hundreds
of thousands of British PIGS are unable to be executed for sausages, as they were destined
to be because of a shortage of workers. And Johnson told us that the petrol crisis and
the PIGCOLM was essentially part of a necessary period of readjustment after Brexit.
Now, I do do any of the rest of you remember that from the sides of the buses, you know, the,
the, you know, the promises of hundreds of thousands of unkilled pigs roaming, roaming the country.
I mean, it was, I remember this sort of 350 million quid a week for the NHS and the big
posters of people coming over here to do our jobs for us.
But I don't remember the unsossaged pigs posters and I feel let down.
I think it's because you weren't watching for the whole amount of time and there was the
bus and then behind the bus there was a little minivan with a pig just kind of tapping
a watch.
Well, this is the problem.
Boris Johnson can't understand the mind of the every
man. He sort of tried to deflect questions about the pig problem, which is all these
hundreds of thousands of pigs having to be massacred and disposed of because they can't
be eaten by people by saying, well, it's not like they weren't going to be slaughtered
anyway. But of course, he doesn't understand that, you know, your average every man might
not enjoy the idea of wasting, you know, pig lives or perfectly good food because he comes from a millier in which a hobby of theirs is going together to spit wine on the floor.
Like that's what a wine tasting is, they just spit wine everywhere.
He also suggested that the reason that the petrol shortage is so bad is because they don't have enough truck drivers and that's because more women haven't been attracted to the
job, that the truck industry isn't welcoming enough to women, which I just think is top
notch deflection.
He's like, women don't want to piss in bushes and that's why you don't have petrol.
I do it was women's fault. It always is.
It always is.
I think to be fair to Boris Johnson, this is needed a most embarrassing or stressful
moment for the Tories involving a pig.
So I want to say this directly to Boris Johnson, I will piss in a bush.
I have no problems.
That is not the issue here.
One of the issues with the pig situation is a lack of British youngsters who are keen
to make a living slaughtering animals for every reason.
God damn snowflakes.
I mean, when my generation was there, we weren't even allowed out of the house in the
morning till we'd slay in a cow, a pig, a sheep, and a bucket, a chicken, and the mini
avatuaas, all the homes had in those days, but the modern generation, you know, aren't as tough as the house in the morning till we'd slay in a cow, a pig, a sheep, and a buggy chicken in the mini-abattoirs, all the homes had in those days, but the modern generation
you're honest, tough as to lie to me.
But the problem is, is that when you're young, if you walk around and go in your
mouth, I just want to kill some pigs, then maybe with a hot start, search you, get a little
mark next to your name.
I do think it's not, we're not very far away from the government claiming longer, happy
alive for British piggies as a benefit of Brexit.
I think that is within the next week, keep it out of the news.
I mean, I was worried to be honest about the pigs' breakfast of pigs not being made into
things you can even breakfast, but on the plus side, they do become kosher if they're
not eaten.
So there's that tickling, and it's signifying us, escaping the tyranny of Brussels that forced,
forced, I'd tell you, all of Britain's industries to hire the cheapest available labour.
Is it now known as a Brexit full English then?
It was just a full English without bacon.
Without full English, we're just a live overweight pig.
So it's just a plate on a pig. You can get in Melbourne. The
decons, the re-constructed sausage. That's very farm to table.
It extremely, I mean, in terms of the global supply chain is in America, container ship stuck
in a major clogging of the coast of the
USA. Toys clothing furniture, basic common sense justice and facts all running in dangerously
at short supply once again in the USA. They are power cuts in China, leading to concerns
that Chinese factories might not be able to make all the shit we need to keep our economies
going. They might have to switch to more environmentally friendly forms of dissent suppression and ethnic cleansing,
which could exacerbate the power crisis.
Dried noodles in Russia are in short supply.
Could this be what finally brings Vladimir Putin down?
No.
And in Britain, this shortage of lorry drivers, which has led to a shortage of fuel at service stations,
which has led to a shortage of calm equanimity and queues at service stations,
people have been drawing knives on each other.
There have been fist fights over fuel.
And it's led to a classic shortage of leadership
from the government as well.
And there might even just reading today
be problem supplying English cricketers to Australia
for their quadrennial thrashing,
which shows how deep supply chain issues go.
It didn't really affect me the fuel crisis.
I've got a very British car indeed, which is surely Andy. Surely Andy, the bigger issue is
whether England's supply of South African Crocodons. Well, that's actually dried up quite alarming
like a gentleman's reflected in England's recent results. But the fuel crisis didn't affect me.
I have a very British car indeed, which is fueled by a burning sense of pride in our role in the industrial revolution.
The problem and ease all these networks are breaking down. People don't trust experts anymore.
They also don't trust workers or business owners or landlords or tenants or politicians or institutional power or teachers or teens
or the every man who's probably an anti-vaxer or the privileged middle class f***head or the police who are probably a rapist and it turns out that the whole of society up until now has rested
on a fragile web of trust and accountability in systems that although flawed more or less
worked and now the firehose of the information age has just forcibly sprayed out of the garage
roof corner of modern life. We've suddenly realising that that particular spider of trust
was the one bringing us luck by keeping away the flies of Christmas nightmare.
Right, I mean, that's an interesting way of putting it, and certainly not the way that the government have been portraying. It's certainly not in those terms.
Anyway, I'm personally, I think it was all kind of inevitable the moment that we left the caves we used to live in 30,000 years ago and started wanting to move around.
It's been downhill.
I mean, really, arguably, since we moved out of the sea that we lived in so happily until
half a billion years ago, till some over-curious fucking fish thought I wonder what's over there.
And that's what I'd blame more than Brexit.
I do feel bad for the British because we stopped allowing you guys to colonise and it's
still all just falling apart, isn't it? Well, I don't think you stopped us. I think we chose,
we chose not we chose to let the world go its own way. That's how a break up works.
It was a mentoring scheme James. It's been very badly represented by historians.
It is interesting that the depending on I used to live in Brixton before
the apocalypse and if there was a knife at the petrol station that was a community problem.
But now in like winter when there's a knife at the petrol station it's now official humanity is going to be overtaken by robot life within
probably a decade or two there's no escaping it now the robots are on their way Amazon have proudly
announced that they believe that in five to ten years time every home will have at least one robots
As part of every day life to which there are two responses one
Stop trying to strip all the humanity out of humanity and
Two only one robots why only one robot we need more not just in the home
We need in all top-level politics only when it's completely robotized
Will we be
able to sleep comfortably in our beds at night without waking up in a cold sweat screaming
who's prime minister I'm sorry grand and I'm so sorry um how excited are you both by the
prospect of uh an Amazon robot being um part of every single family in the known universe within
10 years first of all hats off to Amazon because Amazon because they've looked at a global pandemic and for how could we
raise the stakes and they've introduced a robot which again really just screams Jeff Bezos.
They think it's cute. It's the creepiest damn thing. They've caught it Alexa on wheels, like that
isn't a Hollywood pitch right now for a horror series. And I think at some point we have
to understand that if you put a robot in every house in the world, where the pets of the robot?
A wealthy friend of mine has just offered me her $2,000 robot crib, which
senses your baby's cries and rocks it with increasing velocity until the baby
either shoots into space or accepts the robot as its proxy mother and that
begins to prod against you. I did say yes because I didn't have a crib and you
don't have to plug it in so it can just be a normal overpriced place to put your
baby and if it can plug itself in all the best of luck to it, we weren't done for anyway. Yeah, I didn't
have a crib and then, but this is like, this is also an inheritance thing apparently
when we were born as twins. Dad was like, don't we need a crib and mum said, we can just
pull out a drawer, put a towel in it.
Not, God, we need a robot.
Didn't go down that route.
I'm sort of terrified by the prospect of this robot group, but it's, it's sitting in the study staring at me.
So,
I mean, it's going to, I reckon it's going to prove too tempting at some point,
just to see,
on my friend's layers by it or praise to it, I can't tell which.
I just don't know any bed of literature where a robot has raised a child. That's worked out well.
Amazon has suggested that it's not just for children. It's a $999 robot, which is £740, it could be a help to the elderly, though, of course, not the poor elderly.
No, true.
And also, to get robot assistance.
Well, that's essentially robotizing grandchildren now, so they're not going to leave human
grandchildren, they just have a robot to tell you alarming stories about the past.
So they say that the robot will be able to
patrol your home and alert you if it detects quotes something unusual. Now that is a that is a
concerningly vague term for me because unusual, I mean that could range from a servant
voly in modern professional tennis as pretty unusual. It could be hearing a politician give a direct
factual answer to a question in an interview.
It could be form of BBC sports presenter, Desmond Lyne, dressed as a pumpkin, or it could be a giant
group of sentient alien plasma eating all the pastrami from your fridge. I mean, those, I mean,
something unusual is that's too vague, isn't it? That is too vague a thing to trust a robot with.
Yes, absolutely. It's all well and good until you have to watch it a distance through
your phone app while your robot vaporizes a squirrel. I'm not keen. They keep trying to
humanize this robot, which I think is the wrong track to go down. You want the robot to
be, you want to be sure that the robot is a robot. This robot does beatboxing, but the
definition of beatboxing is where you make electronic or sort of
recursive noises with your mouth.
The robot doesn't have a mouth,
it's just being a drum.
It says, so it's not beatboxing.
It's not even a drum, it's just a speaker.
It's not.
Yeah.
Just taking all the romance out of beatboxing.
And I thought, what,
it's done, that's the right way to go.
You know how you're always scared that someone's going to discover
what you've been looking at online? I just feel like having an entity in their house that already
knows before you've got a chance to delete it is a, it's just a socially bad idea.
Especially if that entity has access to your bank account. I just saw big red flags jumping up.
The robot revolution is changing the workplace as well and you know don't be complacent
but you might think it's going to be okay for your job but progress is progress and if you are not
worried you should be just ask a horse.
You know, when the motorbike was invented,
they probably thought, yeah, right, no legs and no tail.
Good luck with that.
You too will want to be donkey.
But look at it now.
And robot is in Scotland.
I mean, working on robot solutions to medical problems.
And they've trained a robot to be,
any guesses anyone, a surgeon maybe,
and a needs statistic, a midwife, perhaps a GP
that can fire lasers into the ceiling to scare off timewriters who've got a hurty knee?
No, they have trained a robot to be a squash coach.
Yes, a robot squash coach has been developed in Scotland.
Mammotor Science solved World Hunger First, improved squash coaching methods.
Second. science, solve world hunger first, improve squash coaching methods second. I mean, is this
progress for humanity to have the game of squash, which is a sport of incredible craft,
skill, athleticism and speed and squeakiness of shoe, to have that coach by robots rather?
Is this what we need at the moment as a species?
Yes, absolutely. New robots to do all the dirty boring jobs that
real people don't want to do and squash right down there at the bottom of the heap.
I disagree. I disagree, Alice. I think there's a lot of former actors and out of work stand-up
comics who have managed to chan their way into pretending to be a squash coach.
to charm their way into pretending to be a squash coach. LAUGHTER
These robots are coming over here, taking out your hops.
I mean, it's a sport that's been dominated by Egypt in recent years.
So, Alice, imagine Egypt will be very cross with you
for your adverse comments about squash.
Well, to be fair, they are naturally suited
to squash the Egyptian phenotype is suited because
they're always in three quarter profile.
And that is the best way to approach a squash ball.
They have seven men and six women in the current world top 10s. And no sport has been this
dominated by Egypt since they were absolutely bossing the professional least space efficient
means of burial circuit back in the day. They've also developed robots
to play football as in proper football, not any of the American or Australian versions.
Can you see robot rugby taking off James? I mean, you know, to the way England have been
trying to impose this on the world for many decades in the way they play the game, but
still using actual physical humans. Do you see robot rugby as an improvement?
No, no, I think if there's a top five things we should not teach the robot. Tackling
is definitely up there. Don't teach them the chase, don't teach them to tackle. That's Terminator 101.
I would love to see a human try to explain the inexplicable homerotuses of a scrum to
a robot.
It's just a transformer combino, isn't it?
It's a cello, isn't it?
I mean, if we want to break the robots, we just show them footage of Aussie rules and
get them to try and understand that.
Air travel news now.
And Alice, you are the Bugles Air travel correspondent having jetted from hemisphere to hemisphere
so many times until the last 18 months or so. Bring us up to that with what is, you know,
potentially one of the most exciting developments in the history of air travel.
Well, this is massive innovation and massive innovation in the air. A budget Ukrainian
airline has allowed its air hostesses to not wear high heels in the sky,
which they've revamped their uniforms to great controversy. Some people are very upset by to not wear high heels in the sky,
which they've revamped their uniforms to great controversy.
Some people are very upset by this.
Some people are very happy about it.
Move over suffragettes, contraceptive pills,
hashtag me to, there's a much more significant moment
in feminist history.
The airline is called Sky Up
and the flight attendants will be allowed
to wear trainers in the sky. Up and the flight attendants will be allowed to wear trainers
in the sky. One of the flight attendants said when asked to comment that 12 hours in heels
is extremely painful following up with a long noise in Ukrainian that translates to
fucking obviously everyone wants to take their shoes off on a long flight. You think we
want to bring you your tiny bottles of overpriced liquor in foot knives. I love teetering about on my tb toes
thousands of feet in the air you f*** heads. Anyway, I just find this story so funny because it seems
so incredibly overdue. The idea that women should be wearing heels in the sky. Literally,
just feels like an outdated, leftover piece of garbage.
But James, do you have other opinions?
Do you like your women's slightly taller than they should be?
I just have to pause.
I almost walked myself into a family argument on a joke there about my Pacific Island cousins.
But let me tell you, where does the end?
That's my only concern Alice. You know, where does it end?
If we, if we start letting air hostesses wear sneakers,
then soon they're just going to be only wearing the skirt and the blazer for the
check-in and then changing into track pants.
They'll be pushing the cart up in comfy socks.
Probably have one of those neck pillow things around as well for when they sit
down. I mean, if we make these people comfortable, then they're going to start being
happy. And no one wants a happy flight attendants on a 18 hour flight.
Well, this is a domino situation because a number of airlines are giving up traditional
uniform requirements. Virgin Atlantic has allowed their flight attendants to not wear
makeup. Japan airline has allowed their flight attendants to not wear makeup.
Japan airline has allowed their flight attendants to wear trousers instead of pencil skirts if they ever want to take a step longer than half a foot.
And Norwegian Air has allowed flat shoes as well. So it's how will you know? I think this is the real question.
How will you know in the air? Who's the airline host and who's just the idiot in trackie
dack sitting next to you? It's because the airline host is the only one who's
obliged to smile. That's.
But I mean, until a host have full freedom of footwear, we won't live in a
truly equal planet, you know, until we have, you know, the, the, the, the
flight attendants wearing, you know, welly boots or pointy-toed medieval poulanes
or clown shoes or high-toed shoes rather than
high-heeled ones, that, I mean, that's just clearly
in another form of prejudice.
We won't have a fair planet.
The media reaction has been interesting
to this, you know, latest dismantling of patriarchal
tradition, brimstone flock it in a daily telegrapal.
So this is feminism gone mad, whatever next we allow them to doorbar faces with masonry paint
instead of serving us a gin and tonic. Danil Ramahorn from the weekly bleeds, this is bad for
passengers, flight attendants will be shorter without heels and therefore less able to see down
the aisle when I want another whiskey. Well the airline's providing with periscopes, don't hold your breath. And Garforth, Snelly from anachronicity.com,
the only paper-based website on the internet said whatever next will male flight attendants
be forced to wear bras? Why can't we let men be men and women be what men think women
should be? So strong media reaction to it. Elsewhere in the progress of feminism news, Alice, a big story in
the world of chess, Fede, the chess governing body has provoked anger amongst many chess players
by a sponsorship deal with a company that specialises in breast enlargement surgery.
I mean, chess at its heart is a feminist game,
a useless man depend on a high skilled, high-chieving woman.
But I mean, this doesn't seem to be the kind
of sponsorship deal that a game stroke's bought,
looking to progress in the 21st century should be signing.
Well, is it a feminist game, Andy,
or is it a game where the queen multitask zips
all around the board and then the bloody king gets credit for being the vital piece moving one square at a time while she
can run the whole board in one go. If they're married, she is 20 years younger than him and
he still tells her to get Botox. That is the situation that we're in. Well, I don't know
if they didn't want Chess to make them think about boobs. They shouldn't have made the
bishops' heads look like little nipples. They should have also. We all know that checkmate has always been
sure for check out those tits mate. We all know that.
We are in the middle of party conferences in here in the UK, we will have a full update on it
next week, where the Labour Conference last week
just received the final confirmed score, Labour Party NIL,
the Labour Party NIL, to go into a replay yet again
between those two age-old foes,
and struggling for party unity.
So I mean, for most of the Labour Party unit E
is the one between unit D and unit F,
the storage step-o, where they dump the boxes
and boxes of unusable.
Congratulations, you won an election balloons.
This week we have the Conservative Party conference.
We will have full updates on exactly how they've tried to spin all the shit that's currently going on.
Right, I think we need to wrap up because we've done a mess as anything else.
You just really wanted to get out. Great.
I need it. I've done it how I messes anything else. You just really wanted to get out. Great.
I mean,
well,
I probably shouldn't use those words.
Oh, we just had a hope that these were
being Braxton Hicks's throughout the last hour or so.
All right.
I think they are.
I think they are.
Well, I'll do,
I mean, we're happy to live stream it if you want Alice. Well,
that brings us to the end of this week's bugle, which will be the last bugle that Alice will
do before having a baby on the outside of her rather than the inside. Good luck. I would say enjoy it. I don't know if that's the right thing to say at this.
I mean long term obviously is short term, I don't know. I don't take a scrambles.
I was interested to see how it goes Andy. People keep asking me, very nice big guys keep asking me for a PO box to send gifts. I don't want your stupid gifts. Once I get a secretary to help me get
organized enough to hire a secretary who's brave enough to fire the original
secretary, I'll get that secretary to sort out a PO box for me. Until then, you
can just send support or threats in the form of subscribing to my Patreon or
my Twitter or finding a donation button somewhere
and just giving money to anyone really that made me happy.
It would be nice.
It would be nice to each other and create a world that I can birth my child into.
That is hopelessly naïve, but it's a lovely sentiment.
James, anything to alert our listeners to? I would offer to let them send me gifts, but I'm currently podcasting from my wife's childhood
bedroom, and I just think I've already put enough pressure on my in-laws without random
gifts from podcast fans showing up in the mail.
I think, you know, so I do have a mental health podcast, which seems might be good for some people at this point and season fours just
come out of that which involves eating chicken in a shower and talking about how insane the world is. Which I just recommend for people anyway, whether they listen to the podcast or not.
That concludes this week's bugle. We will continue with the second half-bellenium of Bugal shows next week.
In the meantime, here are some lies about our premium level volunteer subscribers.
If you want to join the Bugal Volumptu subscription scheme to make a recurring or one-off contribution
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Timothy Chilvers is never that fast by the number of dead insects on the windscreens of cars.
I think it's testament to the arrogance of these quite literally spinous blowhards,
expounds Timothy. They think they're tough and cool because of their compound eyes, or
very fastly flapping wings, or exoskeletons or whatever,
and that they can take on a car. Well get this, splatts of the roads,
know your level, I'll take the car plus human driver every time, unless you get inside a car while
it's being driven of course, in which case it's more like 50-50, concedes Timothy. Greg Lazarev is
not convinced that rainforests are particularly well designed, given how important
we are told they are for the planet.
It seems a bit silly to pile all your resources into concentrated, distinct areas, says Greg,
leaving them vulnerable to mass destruction.
Surely it would be better if everybody in the world had maybe two or three trees to themselves,
rather than outsourcing it to a few key areas of billions of trees of rainforest around
the world.
It might make us take a bit
more responsibility, as well as giving us the chance to find an exciting new undiscovered
species of something in our tree. Charlie Vickery thinks that people make too much fuss
about Leonardo da Vinci designing a helicopter.
Look, the guy had some funky ideas, I get that, says Charlie, but what was the point of
a chopper in 1480s Italy? There weren't any helipads for a start, so where would he have flown to and from?
And what if his helicopter designs were as crap as his seating plans at team building
dinners out?
I mean, seriously, 13 dudes all on the same side of the table.
Look, I get that the 13 ladies didn't show up for whatever reason, but even so, you go
boy, girl, boy, girl, don't you?
It's absolutely basic stuff, complaints Charlie.
Andre Amare once bought an old oil lamp at an antique shop and excitedly took it home
in the hope and indeed expectation that it would contain a magic genie that would grant
him some wishes. On rubbing the lamp, a genie did indeed emerge, but was quite rude, claim
he couldn't do anything more ambitious than a couple of free meals at the local cabab shop,
and swore at Andre's next door neighbours when they knocked on the door asking if the genie could
help find their missing cat. Andre asked the genie to go back inside his lamp and then
put it in the metal recycling. By contrast, Helena Thomas had a delightfully polite genie
emerged from an old lamp, she found it a charity shop. Unfortunately, the genie, for all its
conversational charm and impeccable diction diction confessed to being quotes really out of form these days after losing confidence when an
attempt to summon a brand new Lamborghini resulted in a skimpy, sheepskin swimming costume,
whilst another wish for a never-ending milkshake resulted in a traumatized cow and a small
earthquake. And finally, someone who goes by the name of Invert J can relate to the experience of a non-functioning
genie having had them misfortune to someone who, tearfully admitted to being on their first
job and only being a genie after themselves accidentally wishing to swap places with
their own genie having meant to ask to swap places with Hugh Grant but not clearly enunciating
the first H of Hugh.
The rookie genie was thus
unable to successfully grant any of Inve's wishes, the contents of which we are not liberty
to divulge, suffice it to say that someone really wants a fire-breathing dog, and someone's
dog is now terrified of candles. Here endeth, this week's lies.
Goodbye.
Goodbye.