The Bugle - Bugle 4015 – Tolerance is just laziness
Episode Date: February 4, 2017From Lord Gaga to Lady Gaga, The Bugle covers it all this week. Politics, science, tech and salads – could be the tip of the iceberg, lettuce pray we romaine healthy.Plus American tourists prepare t...o take 'point and shoot' to a new level Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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And welcome to issue 4,000 and 15 of the bugle Audio newspaper for a visual world for the
re-piguing Monday, the 6th of February 2017 with me and his old man live in London.
The capital of Brexit, Ina, the new utopia that will surely be so awesome that we may even
reach a work for Bullwelcome, some you'll find lots of points in the next 50 years.
So we'll all have been worth it.
And joining me from New York City, Trump Sylvainia,
it is Wyatt Sennac.
Hello, Wyatt.
Hello, Andy. Thanks for having me.
And hopefully, even though I'm sharing my voice with you in the UK,
Trump will allow my voice to return back to America when his podcast is finished.
LAUGHTER I cannot guarantee that, I'm afraid. Trump will allow my voice to return back to America when his podcast is finished.
I cannot guarantee that I'm afraid.
You may be unable to speak for at least 90 days if not longer.
Yeah, I might just have to use one of those little mini chalkboards and just walk around
just saying everything that I need to say to people.
The next time I do the podcast, it could just be the sound of like...
That's it. That's all you get.
But as long as it keeps America safe, that is fine with me.
So, I mean, this is your first appearance on a bugle with a...
with a Trump in the White House.
With Vymar Trump?
Also, your first appearance on a bugle in which Roger Federer has won 18 Grand Slam 10 his titles.
So, you know, it's been up and down for the planet.
It really?
How was the first...
the early two weeks, first two weeks of the Trump era treated you?
You know, it's really opened up my weekend, far as just, I now have things to do on the
weekends, which are just go to protests.
Right.
Before you didn't know, a Saturday could be anything.
It could just be, oh, I'm gonna just lazily wake up and maybe go get some breakfast and
now it's, nope, I've got to make a sign.
I don't know what the sign is going to be for this week, but I'm sure if I just look at Trump's Twitter, I'll figure it out.
I'm going to spend a great boost for the, you know, home craft industry.
Exactly.
In America, Placgards, Hats, Dom, and people are learning a lot of new, new manual skills.
Yeah. If he's not making America great again, he's definitely making office depot great again,
because they are running out of poster board. poster board, sharpies,
just, yeah, little sticks to tape poster board too. It's, yeah, that's that economy.
I really hope those are American businesses
because if not, boy is he gonna have some explaining to do
in another protest that we have.
Yeah, how is it for you in Brexit land?
Well, I mean, similar.
We're not quite as intensive protesters. Oh,
we've had a few, but I'm not sure that the placard industry, when you say you've had a few,
like, have you seen ours? Are there pretty impressive? How do yours compare?
Well, pretty good. I mean, the women's march a couple of weeks ago. That was pretty impressive.
It wasn't the entire country, but it was a solid 200,000 or so.
And I mean, there's British blackards of,
I think I think we're not saying we're a great black
ordination, but I think we're holding our own at the moment.
I was certainly a lot of British people
who are prepared to write swear words down on card
more so than they were a year ago, I think.
Sure, but it does sound like as far as protests go, maybe this is where we have an inverse
relationship and that the UK, you all are kind of as good at protests as we in the US are at soccer.
Yeah, but I mean, I mean, you've got better at soccer over the years. You
had a World Cup quarter final a few years ago. Sure. We're learning. Yeah. We're learning.
You all will get better at protest, but it seems like right now we're the premier league of
protests. Yeah, but to me, fair, you are cheating by having Donald Trump the most. I mean,
that is like taking performance in hauntinging Drugs when it comes to,
but it's like pumping your body full of steroids
and oxygen boosters in your blood.
I mean, that is chain terms of getting processed.
Are you suggesting that?
Are you suggesting that we're juicing?
Because I'm here to tell you that all of that vitriol
that you thought existed on television,
it's real, friend. People bought those weird
stupid trumpats. They're out there yelling in people's faces. They really hate people
who don't look like them. And that is stuff that they have been working on for years, decades,
just doing pure work. There is no, there is no synthetic stuff in that hate.
That is real pure hate.
Can it naturally exist in the body and in that level of concentration?
Yeah, look, we just work a little harder at it.
We work a little harder at hating.
And if you all just don't want to do that,
I mean, it feels like you had your opportunities
and then you all got lazy.
Some people would call it tolerant, but in Trump's Slovenia, we call it lazy.
Right.
I mean, I think that happened shortly after the Romans invaded and they improved this day
of the roads and we thought, well, you know, mustn't grumble.
Yeah.
As always, some sections of the bugle are going straight in the bin. This week, an extreme vetting section, extreme vetting a big hot topic in global politics at the moment. So in our
extreme vetting section, we speak to celebrity stunt vet Dr Harriet Flombois, who tells us about delivering a car whilst
parachuting from 30,000 feet. Also tells us how to spy an Irish wolf hound during the
course of a Bob sled run. And we also look at how to train a chicken and a crocodile to
fight each other in such a way that they give each other acupuncture. Also in the bin
a book review section, this week books about vegetables, including when cauliflower's attack, true stories from an industrial vegetable sorting depot, bucket full
of carrots, when destiny calls the new book from Grethel Corblink, the former chief carrot
pillar at the vegan restaurant, vegetable it's potato growing for the eaglet.
Sorry.
Oh, that sounded like a page turner.
Yeah, it is a quality.
I'm giving it four stars.
And you got some very good tips on how to peel 20 carrots in under a minute.
Potato growing for the easily startled by Albertine Falook.
Apparently the key is to learn the difference between a worm and a cobra.
And the big publication in vegetable books this week,
Guckin, the official history of the Pickled Cucumberumber by Professor Jamolodyne Pruch, who of course last year had a big hit with beetroot
devils ventricle, my battles with the evilest vegetable of all. That's a vegetable book review
section in the bin. I should point out also this is a podcast. So technically part of
the media, which is the official opposition in America now. So if this episode gets enough downloads,
I will get a seat in the Senate.
So do spread the word, Bueglis,
and see if we can get me into a seat of executive power.
I'd like to see that.
I think, yeah, I mean, it might be a trade-up, to be honest.
Would you still do the podcast
if you ever seat in the Senate?
I think I'd just use Twitter.
That seems to be the way of directly injecting
yourself into the minds of voters. Don't forget your constituents, Andy. We voted you.
So Monday the 6th of February marks the 65th anniversary of our Queen Elizabeth II becoming Queen
promoted up to Queen from a humble princess when her father died.
So 65 years since Queen Elizabeth came to the throne and the BBC have allowed us exclusive
access to get commentary on some of the queen's greatest moments.
First, 1953.
Yes, there she is waving at the crowd.
That's what they wanted to see.
1977
And her majesty with that distinctively royal hand of hers, waves at the crowd.
1981
And here is the queen. Well, yes, she is waving. That is an official wave, a magnificent stuff.
2002 That is an official wave and magnificent stuff. 2002.
What a wave that was so purpose of waving from the monarch there.
2016.
I don't believe it. Elizabeth II has taken down Triple H with a bellies flash, the WWE star
riding around on the canvas and what a 95th birthday present for the Duke of Edinburgh
this is, who cares of its stage?
Oh, now out comes the Royal Pile Driver
and the crowd are loving it.
Happy day, the 65th anniversary.
I believe that's the year they give her
all the crown jewels back instead of the plastic ones
she's been using for the last 20 years.
So don't give away our secrets.
I thought everybody knew that.
I'm sorry.
I really should stop reading Russian dossiers.
Ha!
Ha!
Ha!
Ha!
Ha!
Ha!
Top story this week.
Donald Trump versus the world.
It's been a lively week, Wyatt, for your president. Here
appears to have been picking fights with America's enemies and America's friends, almost with
equal enthusiasm. It's quite spectacular for the watching spectators around the world.
Seven billion people are getting the show
to show their lives.
Yeah, it's the type of behavior that you expect
of a person the week they're quitting a job,
not the week they're starting.
Like, this is, it just feels like,
oh, are you gonna take America, which he may,
just move America to another planet, which is perhaps
the easiest way to make sure America first,
America number one, America always,
whatever other adjectives he knows to describe America.
But yeah, it's an interesting time here. He angered Iran, which I think everyone
saw that come in even Iran. They really should have been prepared. It feels like they should
have just had a response at the ready. The minute the words came out of his mouth. Then he followed it up with Australia, which, who knew
Australia would be in the looking at Iran, like, wow, that guy, huh? What do we do?
He has a mind Australia in Iran together against the United States.
Well, it's a brave new world that we're journeying into.
And I think it's dangerous to get competitive with the Australians, because they are a
naturally competitive nation.
As soon as it becomes anything like a sport, Australia will try to win it.
And I think that's a dangerous road that Trump is going down.
He described the...
He got very angry about this deal signed by Obama,
which America would take about 1200 refugees,
described as the worst deal ever.
Now, even in the Trumpian universe,
where everything is some form of business transaction,
that is some claim, the worst deal ever.
Similar as, of course, said by Jesus Christ
when his dad told him about a crucifixion
gig, which clearly had pluses and minuses. And that's another weird thing about Trump recently.
He seems to have gone, become very Christian in a way that his entire lifetime of behavior
suggested he would not do. Well, in his defense, he spent most of his adult life, 70 years,
He spent most of his adult life, 70 years,
trying to figure out who he is. And now that he knows, he's like,
okay, now I can accept God into my life,
because I don't think God would have liked me
before when I was married to that first lady.
And so then I divorced her and I thought,
maybe God will like this one.
Nope.
Okay, you know what?
Maybe he'll like the third one.
Also now, I've stopped going bankrupt
as much as I had been in the past.
I've cleaned up my life.
I think God will like this version of me.
70 year old, angry, angry guy who lives in a weird little bubble.
Last week, Nish Kumar suggested that Trump's elections prove the non-existence of time travel
because someone would have come back to sort it out. I think he's also perhaps now proving
the non-existence of God because I think if there was a God, we would at least have heard
the clouds would have parted and there'd have been a,
a, um, Donald, where the f*** have you been for the 70 years
in which being overtly Christian was not a strategic value to your career,
you cynical to have you read any of my books?
Well, sorry, either of my books, it's not my only book,
but there's the second ones of fake.
But anyway, have you read, have you read my book?
If you did, you must have missed the commandments bit.
Sure, I'll have it it out a bit quick.
But how's there been a divot adult life
in which you have not contravened
at least seven out of 10?
And I think in his mind, he would say,
look, I can make you a better deal on those commandments.
I think I can present a better deal.
You talk about your book, your book is failing,
your book, my book, art of the deal. You talk about your book. Your book is failing. Your book, my book, Art of the Deal,
sold better than your book.
Yours is a failing book.
I don't know how it's gonna stay in business.
King James Version, no thank you.
Let me get my daughter Ivanka on it.
I bet she could write a better book,
do a nice revision of it.
We'll package it, we'll put it back out there.
It'll be a better book.
Trust me. Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump'll put it back out there, it'll be a better book, trust me.
Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump.
It is kind of unfortunate that out of all the seven deadly sins, the only one he doesn't
seem to practice on a daily basis is sloth, which is the one that I think the world most
needs him to have.
Have you suddenly get, add sloth to his collection of the other six?
Yeah.
Then at least it would calm the pace down a bit. Yeah, if he could just sleep for just maybe even eight hours,
I feel like it would just be nice for everybody else
to just, we could all catch our breath.
It's frightening how much energy a 70 year old man has.
I've met 70 year old man has. I've met 70 year old man. They usually, they usually seem to need
to sit down a lot more. They want to break and they don't realize when they're farting
in public, which this may just be his way of farting every time he speaks. He may have some weird gastro and testinal thing where, yeah, the awful things that he
says, it's not that he means to do it.
He's just, he's just an old man who's farting from his mouth and he doesn't realize or
is just pretending if he doesn't notice no one else will either.
The week, in fact, just after we recorded last week,
the announcement of the travel ban was made,
which seemed to rile quite a lot of the universe,
not just the planet earth.
It was described by its critics as un-American.
I'm not sure this is a valid criticism
because it's been massively divisive.
It's guaranteed to piss an enormous number of people off
at home and around the world.
It almost certainly won't work,
and it will make a good plot line in an action film.
I don't know how much more American you can get than that.
There's been one of the most American pieces
of legislation in history.
Yeah, that actually, when you put it that way,
yeah, it really just needs some sort of corporate sponsor,
which I guess you could maybe say Uber
was the corporate sponsor on it.
You got some product placement in there,
and yeah, pretty good.
BELL RINGS
Amongst the other countries reportedly
on Trump's grump list, Georgia,
that's next in his talk,
two confusing number and for two judges in the world,
and America's already got one.
Transylvania, leaked reports suggest that Trump used vampires as
posing a clear and present danger to all American virgins.
And if sex before marriage is going to become illegal, as it appears
that it will, then vampires will become exponentially more of a
threat. If you don't agree with that, you're essentially saying
American women deserve to be eaten by vampires. He's also rumored to be
declaring war on Pangier, the ancient mega continent, since the dinosaurs have not apologized for
the atrocities they committed on American shores. And also on Lilliput's, the fictional country,
he's overheard saying those tiny little bastards are going to be hard to spot sneaking in through
the gaps in my fence. So it's going to be a lively time for the world.
Kelly and Conway's hit the headlines once again, Wyatt. She's currently riding very
high in the betting for the 2018 Nobel Prize for Delusional Hogwash. And she managed to invent
a fictitious massacre, the Bowling Green massacre,
which is, I've been caught an exciting moment in many ways for, I mean, the battle against facts.
To, I mean, there's always hidden victims in these things.
And I just worry about the,
the victims of this Bowling Green massacre
who've been, which didn't happen,
who've been wandering around for years
not knowing they'd been slain.
Yeah.
Just, you know, unaware of their own demise.
How are they going to break the news to their friends and loved ones, that they have now
been retrospectively mown down in a fictitious terrorist attack?
And now, by the power invested in the president's advisor officially dead, I mean, that's,
yeah, that is a hard one to explain.
Well, I think that also, there are two things that work there. One, I think that partially explains some of the mysterious votes that Trump believes
went to Hillary Clinton, that some of them may have been victims of the great bowling
green massacre.
They don't exist.
They're people.
When he talks about people that don't exist, yeah, there are these people who've just been
living their lives for the last six or seven years, not knowing that they should have
died and should be dead.
And that, yeah, to have to go to your family or to go to your job and say, hey, I don't
know how to tell you this, but apparently I was massacred seven years
ago. And as it happens, I guess we can't be married anymore. I'm going to start seeing
other people because I'm a ghost. and that's what I can do.
So good luck taking care of the kids.
I met an exotic dancer named Sapphire.
She was also a victim of the massacre.
It's good, man.
It's tough for the new administration because they're not only having to block millions
and millions of terrorists from the seven terrorist
sleeper countries on the list,
but they now have to prevent made up retrospective attacks
that have already happened.
When that's very hard to stop those happening.
Yeah, no, how do you stop an event that happened
in the past when it never actually happened?
I mean, this is an interesting,
a new angle on fake news as well.
It's called fake, fake history, which I guess is actually an old angle,
and Shakespeare would mode out test if I,
and that's a little joke for you, Richard, the third fans out there.
For me, my question is, when are we going to get a national day of remembrance
for the bowling green massacre?
That should be declared a national holiday at this point.
I think we probably, we need that day off.
We need at least 20 years of just day off remembrance.
And then maybe by year 21, we can figure out how to monetize it and have bowling green
day sales.
Which is the American way.
We remember something, we feel really bad about it, and then we figure, hey, you know what?
Everybody's got the day off.
Let's have a sale because it's what the victims would have wanted. Just when you thought, okay, Donald Trump, his plans, they don't make sense.
I have a story for you that makes it all make sense.
You finally see what is going on.
You see the mastermind at work.
Apparently, this is exciting. Yeah. Once he instituted his travel ban, a former Norwegian prime minister was flying into
Dulles Airport in Washington, DC that day.
And he was detained for about an hour because in 2014 he had visited Iran.
He was a Norwegian diplomat, stopped at the border,
almost made to go back to Norway, which in itself, a punishment.
And you may say, wow, that doesn't seem right. But to me, I think who better to be a terrorist, who better to be a sleeper
cell than a foreign diplomat from Norway?
Yeah, I'm not sure even the TV series 24 would have taken that angle.
No, but I mean, that's what makes the Machiavellian scheme of the Norwegian so brilliant.
They've been in such deep cover for so long. Yeah, they've just been enriching themselves with
uranium to turn themselves into nuclear weapons. And that's how they get through our border.
They come by, they go to a place and order some ludifisc. The restaurant says we don't serve that here. They get really angry and
then explode, sending nuclear waste everywhere. And that's how it happens.
Right. Have you got a secret job as Donald Trump speech writer? Because that sounded like
it might have come from the mouth of the big D himself. Look, I'm gunning. I'm in this in this in this
country. I have to find a way now to make myself useful because at the rate that he's throwing
people out. Look, if a white guy from Norway isn't safe, I'm not sick. And that is just
a motto I live by. That's been some other interesting legislation.
He's rolled back some Obama administration on background checks on people buying guns.
And I bet a lot of the US was thinking, you know what, the way to make America great again
is to raise the number of guns'lings because that is a level of greatness.
You can objectively, mathematically measure.
And at the moment, you're still quite a long way
behind El Salvador and the greatness steaks.
If that is, that is how you measure, you measure greatness.
So, uh, exciting times.
I don't know your next, I don't know the next time you plan
to, to visit the United States, but I think the way
they're going to set it up now, should you clear customs, they'll be a gun shop
right in the airport.
You can just go straight from your plane,
clear customs, buy yourself an AR-15
and just experience America as it's supposed to be experience.
There was a day that you experienced America
with a camera around your neck.
Now it's an assault rifle.
It's still point and shoot.
Just don't, with a camera, there was the time when you would say like,
oh, can I hand my camera to a stranger?
And will you take this photo of us?
Don't do that anymore.
If we were to turn quickly to Britain's protests, Don't do that anymore. LAUGHTER
In a way, we return quickly to Britain's protests. We're getting very, very good at signing petitions,
which is, you know, a nice way of protesting,
just takes a couple of clicks of a mouse,
and you've essentially transformed the entire future of humanity.
And there's been a petition protesting
Donald Trump being awarded a state visit
that has been signed by 1.8 million
people. They wanted downgrades Trump's visits from a state visit, just basically a glorified
stagdo in which rather than being presented to the Queen, he'll be taken on a tour of London
strip clubs by Peter Stringfellow. And there's been, but the, the glorious thing about this
is the Britishness of this petition.
It says Donald Trump should be allowed to enter the UK in his capacity as head of government,
but should not be invited to make an official state visit because it would cause embarrassment
to her majesty, the queen.
So that is the British objection, a gloriously British reaction.
We wanted to say, f*** you, you obviously deranged lunatic, but instead
we've gone with, are we really don't want to cause a scene? It's going to be a little
bit awkward. She's 90 now and she can't take shot. There's been a counter petition as
well that Donald Trump should have a state visit. That signed by quite an impressive
three, almost 300,000 people, but that's a weird thing to protest against something that
is going to happen. Yeah. Well, that's the confused planet we live on now.
Some other news coming in from Britain. I mean, there's lots of problems in the world at the
moment, why it? But this really puts everything in perspective. Some British supermarkets have
instituted lettuce rationing due to a decreasing supply of lettuces, customers in some supermarkets are only allowed to buy a maximum of
three lettuces each. There are rumors that broccoli could be next. So please send
help world. Send help. Do not come here refugees. Britain is now a nightmarish
hellhole where it is becoming increasingly difficult to construct a medium to
large salad.
I didn't realize you all liked salad that much. Well, start that we like it. It's just we like to have the option to make it. And if we can't get more than three lettuces, then that really
restricts the size of salad you can construct on a weekend. Sure. Yeah. Oh, you poor bastards.
struck on a weekend. Sure. Yeah. Oh, you, you poor bastards.
It's tough. I'm not, I'm not going to deny it. What's been, uh, have you, have
been a harrowing time? Yeah. Have you all thought anything about maybe alternative
lettuces like a kale or an arugula? Uh, well, I mean, that's, we voted for Brexit.
So we really don't want to use any of these fancy foreign letters, just pure British
letters, that is all we want to eat in the house of nation.
That's what we voted for.
Sure.
That's a worry like.
Well, last month we had no courgettes in Britain and everyone lost their shit.
What I'm sorry, but what on earth is a courgette?
A courgette?
Does that have an American name? Is that, is there an American word for a courgette? A courgette? Does that have an American name?
Is there an American word for a courgette?
Uh, zucchini.
Is zucchini.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, you know what, you can have all our zucchini.
You can take, and I don't know now,
I feel like there's a poll out there to be had of
what's a better name for a worse
tasting vegetable, Corset or zucchini.
I feel like Corset makes it sound nicer, but I still know it's terrible.
In Australia, the country that the United States is supposed to no longer speak of, they
have, I believe, a Ruggola is called Rocket.
Yeah, that's, we call it that here as well.
Do you really?
Yeah.
Bad I would, I would have eaten a Ruggola
a lot sooner in life if I knew it was Rocket.
Yeah, let's go to the military angle to it.
Yeah, shoot some Rocket in your mouth.
Ha ha ha.
The Ruggola.
Technology news now and disastrous times for humanity. An artificial, an artificially intelligent computer called Liberatus has beaten four of the world's greatest human poker
players over a 20-day tournament. So, I mean, the robots are taking over. We can't beat a robot
at gambling in the age of Trump. You know, the casino magnate. I mean, this bodes very ill
for humanity. We've already lost the robots at chess at the Chinese game go. I mean, soon robot computers could be good enough even to run for political office.
I mean, it can't be long before the boffins work out the way to remove any form of morality
from artificial intelligence.
And then we will absolutely be doomed.
My only hope is that should that day come when robots run for office, I really hope that it's not
because they used all the information we gave them against us.
It's an apocalyptic future.
And in other technological news, a Mexican surgeon has been using virtual reality simulations as a substitute for anesthesia
in operations.
Now, what, this is truly extraordinary.
This could change the entire nature of healthcare.
Yeah.
You put on virtual reality.
It could change healthcare.
It could also change just getting through the next four years,
or eight years depending.
If I knew that I could put on a virtual reality headset
and just happily go through my world where there is no Brexit
and Donald Trump is in president,
I think I would do that.
You could cut me open as many times you wanted to. I've been using surgery to distract myself from the news.
When I put the news on now, I just get a couple of kitchen knives and just do an appendectomy
on myself.
And half an hour later, I might be close to bleeding out on the living room carpet, but
I haven't got, I haven't got a clue what Trump has been up to.
Or whether England had been savagely humiliated at cricket.
And I feel better.
Yeah. It works a trick.
Trapanning works particularly well, I've heard it as well.
Yeah. So kudos to this to this Mexican surgeon.
It also makes me wonder though, maybe we're currently
in a virtual reality simulation
while some surgery is being done to us.
Well, that's possible, isn't it?
I mean, it does seem that the world is living
through the plot of some slightly badly planned film.
Yeah, which is so much really related.
Yeah.
Which please send listeners, please send any of your comments about how you actually
loved Matrix Reloaded to Andy.
Andy was the one who told me to say Matrix Reloaded was a terrible film.
I was just following his orders.
I'll happily take those emails.
Some other exciting developments in technology. The smart sock has been developed,
built in sensors, send you an email to all your connected devices to let you know whether or not
you're wearing shoes. So you never need leave your house unshored again, you never accidentally
get into bed wearing muddy whirlings and boots and never go on a polar expedition with that, your hug boots. And the smart bladder as well, they've developed a 3D 4G bladder
sensor which sends an alert to your mobile, your smartwatch, your smart ring and your smart
sock to let you know when nature calls can also be programmed to detect when you're stuck
in a dull conversation at a party or at work and send you an alert to tell you that you do need to nip to the john.
And smart tech, it's new smart tech coffins and Apple have just launched the new eyelash,
the world's smallest phone, just the size of an eyelash, you pop it onto your face and
you can check your email surf the net with the accompanying facial periscope, which magnifies
the 0.03 millimeter screen up to up 3,000 times. So it's
not just like watching a cinema screen. It's like being inside Quentin Tarantino's brain.
So very exciting times of technology. And 350 years actually since the first ever consumer
electronics show in 1667, wasn't called by that.
I think it was just called the consumer technology show then.
Some of the big products from 1667, the Occultech Hopkins 3.2, which find a stick?
Viewers, the finest which finding stick available at the time.
All you have to do is point the 0.083.2 at any woman.
And if the stick remained a stick, it proved she was a witch.
If the stick turned into a burning serpent or a
daxon then she was innocent. And it's a mix of medical breakthroughs on 1667. These Samuel
Peeps endorsed diuretic, was developed, a new medicine that made you write absolutely
everything down in a diary. There you go, there's a little Samuel Peeps jug.
Samuel Peep's jug full. BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY BABY over other genres of music. I mean, this changes everything about the way we think about the natural world. Researchers in a laboratory, sorry, laboratory, played five, thank you, five different genres
of music, soft rock, Motown, Pop, Reggae and classical to the dogs and apparently soft rock
and reggae were the ones the dogs like the most. Now,
I have a long running beef with science, what, that I really think they should be concentrating
on more important stuff than what music dogs like. I mean, I know everyone can do world-changing
stuff like superconductors, altarmacures, and how to turn hypocrisy into electricity, which could
power the entire planet.
But dogs, musical preferences,
but it's not a complete study.
They did not test other genres of music.
It's not just five genres of music.
And the while they didn't trust,
they didn't test out hardhouse,
Seattle Grunge, Urban Sludge Grime,
alt-madrigals, death-gore rubber dub,
chlesmatronica, industrial electrochainsaw,
slap trance, all blues.
I mean, what if the dog, what if the dog is preferred
any of those genres of music?
Yeah, I mean, it could of course be of some practical use.
When you're training a dog, do you have a dog?
What?
I don't.
And now though I feel like if I did,
I would hope to get that dog on the Grammy voting committee
because it feels like a real waste of a dog. I would hope to get that dog on the Grammy voting committee
Because it feels like a real waste of a dog
If they can parse the difference between soft rock and reggae and
classical Like that I want to take advantage of that dog's musical taste now. Do I agree with it?
You know reggae is nice if you're clean in the apartment
or something like that.
I don't know about soft rock.
I feel like I've got some real issues.
The dog and I are maybe gonna have a little fight
over the radio dial every now and again.
But if the dog has that kind of music appreciation,
I'd like to have the conversation,
maybe take
a dog to a jazz club.
I've told you, there's a lot of people with little pocket dogs in New York, and must have
been dogs in jazz clubs. I had a dog in my dressing room in Bristol, yes, I don't
mind for the first of my tour, tour dates in Bristol. Fourth coming tour dates include
Leeds Saturday the Fourth. I see, oh, this will be released on Saturday the Fourth. So,
get there quickly if you listen into it then. Then next week, Leicester on the ninth Richmond
Yorkshire on the 10th and Peterborough on the 11th, all the details at Andy's Holtzman.co.uk.
I've managed to squeeze my plug in to some dog science this week.
Well, it could be a practical use, I think, while there was a dog backstage in my dressing room,
did not seem to be enjoying the gig
when I went to that halftime.
Really?
Yeah.
Now was the dog following you?
Was the dog perhaps performing after your show?
The dog was being looked after by the chap running the gig
and was in the dressing room.
I think they were looking after it while I was
on stage and joined into it sitting there with this little bowl of food and a bowl of water.
But it did look at me as if it really did not like my act.
What would have been really, I think, soul crushing is if after your gig was over, when it was time to pay you, they said, look, we know we agreed
to this rate, but the dog just really wasn't that into the show.
So we're going to take half back.
I mean, in Trump's, in the era of Trump, anything could happen like that.
That wouldn't actually be the least logical way to sort out economic disputes.
So long as it's an American breed of dog.
Absolutely.
The best breed of dog.
It could be of some practical use though,
knowing that dogs like soft rock and reggae,
if you're training your dog, right?
Okay, you want to listen to your new best of steely down.
Well, then shit in the garden and not in the living room,
your dog.
But it could also be dangerous information to let this information out.
To let the terrorists know how easily they can distract police dogs by simply
playing funky Kingston by toots and the mates may tell through a massive
speaker at a pitch that only dogs can hear.
All these police, police, why is it over all biting that terrorist? He just seems to be
grooving out. Yeah. You were our first line of defense and look at that. Now the terrorists
are here and we've got to hope that our second line of defense, a bunch of unruly cats will take care of this. So what sport now massive weekend for America, it is the Super Bowl.
This weekend, Super Bowl 51, the half-time show being done by Lady Gaga, a very appropriate
booking that given that Lord Gaga is currently in the White House. I've heard she's gonna be either doing a strip back acoustic set of traditional Armenian
folk songs or something massively over the top.
We're still awaiting confirmation we'll find out on Sunday night.
Are you excited about the Super Bowl?
I'm not.
Oh, yeah.
I, right.
This one, this Super Bowl, I'm less excited about.
This one, I feel like a lot of Americans are less excited about this Super Bowl. I'm less excited about this one. I feel like a lot of Americans
are less excited about this Super Bowl in part because the New England Patriots are sort of
Donald Trump's team. He's oh, he's friends with the owner, the coach of the New England Patriots Bill Belicek wrote a congratulatory letter
to Donald Trump that he read at a campaign event, Tom Brady, kept a make America great hat in
his locker for a little while, and when asked about it, his response was, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah team won this team of cheaters and people who have like challenged the facts when it came
to how they were winning games that a makes perfect sense. Their Trump's team, but B does
another, does another group of guys like that have to succeed.
I mean, it does explain a bit. I mean, Tom Brady appears to be playing this pocket of calm
and almost a ethereal bubble of serenity
amidst the mayhem of 20 stone rucking balls
from the smash into pieces.
And it's even more impressive when you realize that internally
he's actually screaming to himself something
on the lines of, why is everyone in the universe
trying to destroy America?
The media works for Leonard
and we need to take our country back
before it's a must-evo coming in sub-Avab, Mexico. And yeah, he still manages to stay that calm.
Truly extraordinary. Yeah. Anyway, we need to finish because we're about to be thrown out of our
studio. So, well, thanks very much for joining us again on the Bugle. You'll be back in March
when I'm sure everything in
the world will be fine again. Do you have any shows you'd like to plug to our listeners?
Sure. If if there are listeners in the New York area or listeners who want to come to the
New York area or even refugees who like comedy and can somehow sneak into New York,
who like comedy, and can somehow sneak into New York. February 13th, 14th and 15th, I'll be filming six episodes
of the standup show that I do in New York called Night Train.
We'll be filming those in Brooklyn, and people are welcome
to come out and see the shows, and there'll be a lot of
very fun comedians.
I'm sorry, Andy, that your visa was rejected.
Otherwise, we would have had you on one of these episodes.
So I am from the Yemen, so I'm not sure I'd make it in.
That's, yeah.
Most people don't know that about you.
And I keep it quiet.
Yeah, although now you've just told a bunch of people.
Yemen's Andy's ultimate. Thanks very much, Bughalus, for listening. We will be back next week with
Anuva Pal who will be live in London until then, Bughalus. Goodbye. Bye.
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