The Bugle - Bugle 4151 - Boris Babies
Episode Date: May 2, 2020This week it's Vengaboys versus Beastie Boys, Corona versus humans and kids versus grandparents.Andy is with Alice and Josh to talk about the Swiss, kids, Tr*mp, BJ's babies and everything else in the... whole world that has happened this week.We are funded entirely by Buglers! Support The Bugle. We carry no ads and exist because you make it happen: http://thebuglepodcast.com/#donateWe 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 ZaltzmanAlice FraserJosh GondelmanAnd produced by Chris Skinner. FUB. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Bugle, audio newspaper for a visual world.
Hello Bugleers, audio newspaper for a visual world. Hello, buglers.
Majorityo lost Blue Glarros for our European listeners, and welcome to issue 4151 of the
bugle.
I am not really sure anymore.
I mean, my name is Andy Zoltzon, but who am I?
It's a difficult question to answer.
It's, I've no idea, a time and day of C-Sto existence concepts.
In fact, I don't know much anymore.
What I do know is if I had a hammer, I'd probably accidentally put a nail through a water pipe again.
If we were, if we allowed, and indeed taught pigeons to drive,
they'd probably stop taking jealousy shits on our cars.
The volcano, an erupting mountain of pastives,
that splits Bolle and they saw through the
place when served, could be the dish that saves the restaurant industry.
And when all this is over, the first thing we should do is have a global ceremony at
which all 7.1 billion of us nods sagely and say, yeah we f**ked up a bit there, didn't
we?
It's still strange times, but it was I'm pretty sure at some point this week the lockdown
started going backwards
And as sure as breakfast follows lunch I woke up the day before I thought I'd gone to bed
But anyway, here we are. It is Friday the 1st of May 2020 and joining me from Australia
Alice Fraser how are you Alice?
I am well and exult when I spent the morning with my adorable baby niece
So everything is everything is good in the world.
And then I found a red back spider in the pool filter, and that took things downhill in a rapid order.
How big is it? Are they quite small?
They're about that big, they're very beautiful, the female red back spiders, but they will kill a child.
And importantly, I was with a child. Right, I see that's a bit of an issue.
Well, I guess if there's a message from this week's Google,
it is death to all spiders.
Joining us from New York.
It's that the spider owns that pool now.
Joining us from New York City, welcome back to Josh Gondelman, hi Josh.
Hi, Andy, thanks for having me. Great to have you back. How are things in New York City. Welcome back to Josh Gondelman, hi Josh. Hi Andy, thanks for having me.
Great to have you back. How are things in New York?
Well, I haven't seen any spiders, but the rats have become incredibly confident.
The city's rats, they're no longer scurrying.
They've got kind of like a swagger to their walk now.
And I've seen them crossing the street which again feels ambitious. I don't
like a rodent that has like a megalomania to them. It's a green man not a green rat at the crossing.
Absolutely. I know it's probably a good time to be a rat when you think of the history of
human pandemics. This is one that they are absolutely off the hook on and they're probably thinking, well, you know, let's just, let's just enjoy what we can. I feel like
they're worried because they got blamed for the last plague and I think they're like,
don't pin this shit on us. Also possibly taking confidence from their
president as well. So we are recording on the first of May 2020, Mayday, Mayday, never a more appropriate day to record
a satirical podcast than Mayday of this year. It's interesting the origin of Mayday as a distress
signal. There are various theories as to how this came about, the term Mayday, Mayday. One is that because Mayday, the day, signal the
approaching of summer, if you're in the correct hemisphere, of course, the medieval church issued
a Mayday warning to alert its priests to the fact that the warmer weather could lead to an
increase in licentious behaviour and diabolous, grannular urges, hence Mayday, Mayday, Mayday, would be
and Diabulous, Groanular Urges, hence Mayday, Mayday, Mayday, would be sung from the Church rooftops. Another theory is that the notoriously panicky risk taking an accident prone 19th century
British general, Greville Yard Montclotchett, would often implement high risk battlefield
strategies, but when things went wrong he would struggle to admit that he'd messed up and start stumbling on his words in a kind of Hugh Grant style.
And I'm say, I've made a, made a, made a, and the rest of his, his staff would see that as a sign that things have taken a terrible, terrible turn.
And a third theory is that it dated back to Henry VIII's time and when he was choosing a wife,
choosing a new wife to replace the one that he'd recently, shall we say, separated from in one of his various modes of separation, which came, of course, in various degrees of physical literalism.
When he was choosing a new wife, he liked to be presented with a selection of anonymous
portraits of eligible princesses, noble women, and or just assorted young hotties. These would be labeled made A, made B, made C, through to made J, very much like a goal of the month,
but with 16th century women. He was the term made, so he wouldn't be swayed by their social
status, only their looks and personality as painted by the skillful portrait artists of the day.
Anyone, one occasion shortly after swiping down on his previous date, Stroke Wife, he picked the first portrait, or made a, that was the Transylvanian Countess
Inid Dracula who had a reputation for being, shall we say, something of a manny to Henry's
courtiers and Lord Snutterbridge, the recently appointed Pimp Royale who'd replaced the
executed Lord Nantwich. New that counter-seeded would be a catastrophic wife
of big Henry, panicked and shouted,
Mayday, Mayday, Mayday, and summoned up
an emergency short-term Catherine
from the Crown Reserve of Catherine
as to distract Henry Wastafallis.
Flattering portrait of Enid was painted.
Anyway, those are the theories, I guess.
We'll never know anyway, the Mayday call.
About a hundred years ago now, replaced
in the early days of aviation,
the previous alarm message of holy fucking shit,
shit, shit, this is what happens
when we fucking play with physics.
Henry VIII very much the pioneer of conscious unle is going straight in the bin.
Well, a free giveaway this week in the bin, an automatic clapper when you want to express
your appreciation for someone doing a socially useful job, but don't really have the time
to do it yourself.
Simply play this sound effect from your phone. And also in the bin poetry or poetry as
discussed as had a real resurgence during the lockdown. And our in-house poet
Gannicka Straffich has written for us his latest poem about the current
situation. Corona virus, you are only small, not tall at all.
You are far from big, unlike a large pig.
You are tidally in size, therefore harder to see
that wasps or flies.
You are not bulky, but you seem quite silky.
Nevertheless, you are a massive f***.
That was coronavirus by Gannicus Straffich in the bit.
It's very, will you magonical levels of class right there?
I like it, I like it because it rhymed and then it didn't.
That's the toughest.
Like all the best poems.
Yeah, slitch it up. Top story this week, children versus the virus.
Well, this coronavirus in common with most other
major political figures of our time.
So it's generally not bothered itself with children
and has focused mostly on the old.
But children around the lockdown world
have been having a tough time of it. They have been climbing up the walls, frankly, which
is good exercise and something to do. It helps them learn about physics and statistical
risk and how to administer elementary first aid to themselves. But these are interesting
times for a generation that will carry the effects of this crisis, this lockdown and it's aftermough through the rest of this century in their personal and working lives.
Alice, you are correspondent for everyone on the planet under the age of, well let's say, well, 44, which is how I see children at my age.
What is the news from the world of kids? How I see children at my age.
What is their news from the world of kids?
Well exciting news out of Switzerland.
Children are now allowed to hug their grandparents again, so all the battles for Omar's respect
love and the inheritance of Nazi gold, Adelweiss and timepiece fortunes can begin again.
Actually it's not just that they're allowed to hug their grandparents.
In Switzerland right now, hugging your grandparents is compulsory even if they're smell weird or are bastards.
I think that's kind of nice, but I think the kids will agree it's way more exciting and
badass to hug your grandparents while it's still illegal.
It's a little, you know, I guess they're a little fun.
You actually never really paid a kind of extreme sport,
or, you know, it's sort of counter-cultural expression
of rebellion.
Yeah, the last time I was hugging your grandparents
has been the coolest it's ever been.
Real edgy.
Also, if kids can't have, you know,
if kids don't get coronavirus,
but they can still be carriers,
it's just like a nation full of tiny adorable grim reapers.
Ha! Well, it was always the kids who wouldn't hug anyone they can still be carriers. It's just like a nation full of tiny adorable Grim Reapers. Ha ha ha.
Well, it was always the kids who wouldn't hug anyone
that you used to suspect of being sociopaths.
But now when a hug might be a death sentence,
you have to wonder about the real huggy kids.
Ha ha ha ha.
A Swiss scientist has claimed that children cannot transmit
the virus.
Other scientists have claimed that children
can transmit the virus. So, you claimed that children can transmit the virus.
So, you know, science, you are really not covering yourself in glory at the moment.
A third said a scientist claim that children are the virus.
But because it's Switzerland, they're going to pretend not to take a stance and that
any either science side could be right.
It only applies to Swiss children.
Swiss children are unique in not transmitting
the virus. I guess if that's the case, we have to ask why is it, you know, their genetic
neutrality, as you suggested, is it an excess of mountains, is it holes in cheese? Or is it,
I think, most likely, that Swiss children have been brought up exposed to the single-handed
backhand in their star tennis players that that having grown up watching Roger Federer and Stanislaus Vavrinka
playing with such beautiful, elegant single-handed play,
that's made them less susceptible to the virus
than the Spanish and Serbian children
who've grown up watching the more functional,
less aesthetically pleasing, two-handed backhands
of the likes of Nadal and Jokovic.
We don't know.
I guess these are one of the many things that science
will have to study as we learn more and more about this virus. Also, in Switzerland, it's only children under 10,
apparently who do not transmit the co-advice and can hug their grannies and grandadds,
under 10, specifically. As soon as you... I don't know if the coronavirus has a bit of an OCD,
think about single-figure numbers, or simply that
on their 10th birthday, Swiss children become lethal vectors of contagion, as we've already
always suspected them to be.
Another angle on this is that scientific research has also suggested that it's precisely the
age of 10 that the human brain starts to develop an understanding of the concept of inheritance,
which is why the Swiss government doesn't want children aged 10
or over risking their grandparents' lives. Well, they aren't taking some precautions, right?
Like when you make physical contact with your grandparents, you have to use some PPE, you have to
hug them through the holes in a piece, a large piece of cheese. It's a coming of age thing.
When you're 10, you put on your long pants, you take your hair down and you stop hugging
your grandparents.
It's like a bomb, it's for Swiss people.
That's right.
Also for teens, right?
You don't want teenagers having been touching anyone in weeks.
You don't want someone hugging their own grandparents becoming physically aroused.
The hormones are out of control. Ha ha ha ha.
Family show, Josh.
It's actually very similar to a bar mitzvah in that when you come of age in Switzerland,
you get some Jewish gold.
It's just...
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Not from your relatives.
Meanwhile, in Spain, Spanish children are allowed out for the first time in six weeks.
They've allowed out to play in the streets,
and they can return to their traditional pastimes
at eating tapas at midnight, bullfighting,
and staring morocally out of an oil painting
at you wearing full child-sized adult clothing
while someone with dwarfism
does menial tasks in the background.
But that is such, such stereotype, Alice.
That is not what Spanish kids do.
What Spanish kids do is just traditional, cultural,
Spanish activities like riding a bicycle for weeks
on end, patiently passing a football through midfield
or looking at a pig and thinking,
your legs, my thumb, it's a date in 18 months time
or more if I'm treating myself.
Well, apparently Spanish people have been taking
the time in quarantine to stock up on their sea estates.
So when the lockdown stops,
nobody will be allowed to take a seester
for another eight months.
You know, it's a great time for people to be allowed
to go outside in Spain.
It's almost electronic music and ecstasy season
on the beat.
So, this is a beautiful time.
But there are concerns that there aren't
going to be enough people to harvest
all the ecstasy and electronic music
This year
Due to the lockdown so they you know, there could be lots of electronic music this just goes to waste
Just on yeah, there's fat beats rotting in the fields. Yeah
I really the goal behind this right is to let the children out is to avoid turning an entire generation
Into a nation of competitive esports champions. And I think that's normal.
They're just going to get too good at gaming if they have to stay inside.
You don't want competitive esports players.
When you play sports and esports at the same time, the winner is always
friendship or in the case of esports loneliness.
Yeah, the real, the real victory in esports is the friend you didn't make along the way.
Here in Britain, let's talk of a phased reopening of schools, despite many in the conservative
government deciding that schools are no longer necessary.
The junior education minister, Millicent Radish Greef, was overheard speaking at a press
conference saying there
are going to be called decent jobs for these little funding hovers, so what's the
f***ing point? However, there are now discussing ways of having a staggered reopening, so
that schools are overburdened and can maintain some form of social distancing. There's one
option that they reopen with no children., another they open with no teachers and just
children allowed to roam around the school on their own.
Another they reopen with teachers but no lessons or teachers giving lessons at night to an
empty classroom when people coming in during the day to just osmos the learning, the waves
of learning that are still rebounding around the room. Another, there will be children will have to have classes individually, but
so that's a class of children, say 30 children can get through an entire lesson. Each
going to be taught massively, intensively for 90 seconds of furious teaching each. Another
option to try and keep control of social distancing is
a reduced syllabus in which children are only allowed to learn one subject for the rest
of their school careers. That subject, of course, being drama, because as discussed, that
is the skill they're going to need, the ability to pretend that they're living happy and
fulfilled working lives. Regarding exams, there's a confusion of exactly how all the exams that are
no longer going to be done are going to be marked. And the latest proposal from the government
is to use Victorian fronology to work out how well the children would have done in their exams
based on the shape of their heads. It seems as good a away as any. We're going back to the old ways
in so many different facets of life.
It seems the logical step.
So here's some great news out of Australia.
A book has been, a children's book
has been commissioned to be published as a film.
The children's book, Nullabaloo, Hullabaloo,
which was written in Buna-loo in Australia.
The author, Fleur Ferris, she grew up in a small farm in Pachy Wallach in Northwest Victoria
before moving to Melbourne and then to Bannerloo. Apparently, it's going to be made into a Hollywood movie
and I have no jokes about it. I'm just like saying those words.
This is how I picture all Australian news.
Like, to be a newspaper in Australia is just like,
hallowed blue, mullabaloo, and kind of a do.
And then a politician says,
nothing obscenely racist.
Well, the author, Fleur Ferris, was a police woman in Melbourne
and then a paramedic.
So she'd just seen too many bad things.
So she retired to banaloo to write this children's book.
To conclude our bugle children's section, the latest
instalment of our bugle, home school exams.
Obviously school exams have been stopped, but we at the bugle are
as a fount of all learning, helping anyone who is home schooling
with a series of exams
to keep their children educated and informed. This week, geography, get your pens and papers
ready.
Question 1. Are rivers a metaphor for life? They start off fresh, exciting, running
around all over the place, then they settle down and end up meandering, getting fat and
then just giving up.
Question 2. Using maps, graphs and picture grams,
outline the correlation between tectonic fault lines and A,
snake populations, B, hip hop stars, C, the production of
world snooker champions, and D, ice cream flavours.
Question 3. Outline the geological evidence presented in
an influential late 1960s research paper by the
seismologist, Tarell and Gay, that the world is a great big onion.
If Tarell and Gay, that the world is a great big onion. If
to Rell and Gay were correct in their assumptions, will global warming in fact make the planet
smell absolutely awesome, like a giant fast food van at a sporting event.
And finally, question four, if you had to install a new mountain range somewhere in the world,
where would it be and why? Choose from the following options, a new year old mountains, the
current year olds are a piss poor mountain range
to divide two such famous continents.
B, along the Netherlando-Belgemic border,
the Sheepho-Rycard range, going up to 5,000 meters in height,
could be installed overnight, really just to see the looks
on the faces of people who used to cycling everywhere
without having to go uphill.
C, a new mountain range in Central Asia,
called the Hurra Layers, two part of the Himalayas,
but break the patriarchy of mountain ranges, or D across the English Channel. If we're going to do
Brexit, this is fucking do it properly. Virus around the world news now and well it's not going
any any better really this this this this story it might be getting slightly better at the short term,
but it seems to get a bleaker and bleaker long term. The United Nations Agency, the International
Labour Organization, has worn the almost half of the global workforce, that's 1.6 billion
people are in quotes, immediate danger of having their livelihoods destroyed due to the economic
impact of the virus, the pesky
little influenza, parody virus jerk that has ground humanity to a quivering standstill,
with its morally abominable microscopic guerrilla campaign of sometimes symptomless terror.
It served the world an unwanted undrinkable cocktail of mayhem stagnation and slow motion
panic without even a parasol or slice of lime to pep it up. And the world's economic house of straw
is being thoroughly blown down
by an invisibly small, big, bad wolf.
Lessons should be learned next time.
We should definitely, definitely build our economy
out of wood.
If half the world loses their job,
I mean, that's gonna be terrible
individually and for the greater economy.
But we should really spare a thought
for the other half of people who just have to keep
and go into work, well no one else is.
Just getting up in the morning like this shit again.
I think we need more creative solutions.
Don't cut the total number of jobs in half.
Just keep everybody going to work
two and a half days a week, that's a win-win.
That is a genuinely good solution.
Thank you.
I mean, in fact, you could even spread it out because that's 3.3 billion is the working
population of the world. So that's still as well less than half the world's population.
So if we just get children and old people working again as well, I think everyone could be
basically on a one day working week. Sixday weekends, we can build a better planet.
Oh, are there tourism that's going to get done on a six-day weekend or the shopping?
The economy is going to be booming with people working one day a week.
I don't think it's going to work that way at all, Andy. I think what's going to happen is we are
going to invent new jobs. We are constantly inventing new jobs. Who would have thought even five
years ago that there'd be such a thing as a social media image consultant. And yet, now there's
more than 95% of the world's population has that job.
Well, in the United States, they're going to create some new jobs where 50% of the working
population will be conducting celebratory flyovers to salute the other 50%
who are doing essential jobs.
They did that this week.
There was a flyover over New Jersey in New York to salute essential workers.
And the only way that could have been less effective is if they had started shooting
bullets down at the disease.
Well, I mean, we're doing better than before the suffrage, you know, back in the olden days,
I don't know if you remember Andy. 51% of the world didn't have jobs, and in fact, we're
not allowed to have jobs.
It's bad already.
I read this.
This is true.
100,000 Hollywood actors are currently out of work and tragically among them, 32,000
hemzwarfs. them 32,000 Hemsworths. I'm sure that's an old measure of white, isn't it, the Hemsworth?
Hemsworth, yeah, it's like 215, 230 depending on what they're training for.
I'd like to buy a Hemsworth of Cole.
The ship was pulled over with 10 Hemsworths of cocaine in the stow. to buy a hymns worth of coal. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha the driest year on record, wildfires about. Push fires, we call them in the summer.
Family show.
Family show.
Chris, don't applaud that.
Do not applaud that.
I'm not here for standard.
You're just encouraging it.
It's interesting, the new jobs that may emerge from the mayhem to replace the jobs and businesses that are dissolving
before our eyes.
I mean, in Britain, certainly, there is hope that people working for all the official inquiries
into everything we f***ed up in this crisis could provide employment for between two and
three million people in the USA.
That could be up to 35 to 40 million people. Other jobs that
could come into being panic planners, we have wedding planners, so I mean, you have another
unnecessary planning industry, advising people to what's a panic buy in the next crisis
arises. Research and development, I mean a lot of scientific research and development
emerging in the aftermath of this, developing technologies to help us through future epidemics including scientists needed to develop a
powdered hospital which you can just keep in a silo and just add water and all this turn back into
a hospital as soon as you need it and caudric accoons. If you can an automated cryonic freezing pod
automated, automated, cryonic freezing pod for the old to live in. So that when a virus breaks out,
they can just be put into suspended animation for as long as it takes.
Surely that's more humane than what we're doing at the moment.
A hyperconnery consultant.
I think hyperconnery consultant is going to be one of the big growth industries
of the next 10 years to help people worry about some other things and the things
they really should be worrying about, so very valuable life skill.
And in terms of manufacturing, I think the big growth sector is going to be zorbing
balls because when you think of the social distancing regulations that we're going to need
to observe, but also the need to transport ourselves physically from place to place to get
the economy going again, the zorbing Ball is the perfect compromise because it keeps you in your own protected,
hermetically sealed virus-free zone at approximately a two meter range from everyone else in Zorbing
Balls. This is the way to get the world moving again. Zorbing, we need,
many of fact, to my eight billion Zorbing Balls and this planet can get back to business.
There are no downsides to this apart from up hills up hills might be tricky
But there are other than the physical downside
Upsides there are absolutely no downsides to it. I anticipated big boom in in the work for holohupists
Just large holohupists keeping each other at a distance and also medieval nights with full jousting armor
keeping each other at a distance and also medieval nights with full jasting armour. No one's going to cough at you if you're thundering towards them at 50 km an hour on a
war horse.
Trump sent 1000 suits of medieval armour to New York at Cuomo's request. Well, let's, since you mentioned your glorious leader, Josh A's, been on characteristically
terrifying form this week, it's claimed to have seen evidence that the coronavirus
is basically an act of biological war by China. Evidence that his own scientists have
not seen or produced.
Do we just have to accept that the threshold of credibility for evidence in the Court
of Trump is different to a Court of Law or a scientific research paper?
Well, I'm seeing a lot of headlines that say Trump suspects certain things about the virus,
which is like the wrong word, because that implies he's capable of deductive reasoning.
If you can suspect something.
He babbled that maybe the disease came from a lab in China.
He ejaculated that, or he hormonally intuitive.
It's all very kind of animal brain with him.
So I think we just have to choose our verbs more carefully.
The standards of his believing something
are just that the flicker of a synapse in his brain
suggested that it might be true.
And it doesn't matter where that synapse came from.
He could have stuck his fingers in an electrical socket
for all I know.
He just gets on TV and, oh, sorry.
He just gets on TV and says, whatever is in his mind
for 60 minutes every night.
And before I saw him doing that for months, I thought, you know, maybe Dave Chappelle is
going out with a little untested material a little quickly.
And Trump is just blowing him out of the water.
The thing about Trump is that people keep accusing him of saying stuff when he actually
doesn't say anything.
Like all the words are very much sort of abstract impressionism.
It's jazz chat.
It's word association. Here's a quote. He said when he was asked, he was asked if he was suggesting that
the coronavirus was not naturally occurring. He said no, we're going to see where it is, where it
comes from, theory from labs, the bats, the type of bats couldn't have been here or there a lot of
theories. We have people looking at it strongly, scientific people, intel people. This is not the word, these are not the words of a man who knows what
words mean. Hey, let's give them some credit. He knows what words are. Look, he doesn't make statements.
That's for sure. Statements imply sentence structure. He just does, he just does sort of, you know, this, it's a beautiful
use of words in a poetic way. It's just, it's free association. The silences are where the meaning is.
He kind of, the way he talks, it's so like stammering and fragmented. It's like someone
caught him cheating on his wife with the corona virus
people always miss quoting trump i understand why people accused
you know the left of miss quoting trump because it is actually impossible to
quote him
you just if you try and quote trump your computer or corrects it
uh... some breaking news from uh... from america one of uh... america's leading
oil companies
uh... is stepping up to do its bit for
the public coronavirus effort.
The oil industry has been undergoing turmoil.
Prices fell a little while ago below the psychologically crucial zero dollars per barrel
mark and the storeage is almost fully full.
Anyway, the oil company Lovely Butterfly, which recently rebranded from its old brand name Toxico to make it sound more environmentally friendly without actually
doing anything to justify that tag, LB have filled up Lake Nugget in the Barton King Memorial
Nature Reserve on the Idaho Kentucky border with 100,000 barrels of excess crude oil. It's
the least we could do explained more as be callous, the CEO, chief ex-girl patient officer of lovely butterfly, who added
people can just come and help themselves to free oil whilst times are tough,
and they can probably help themselves to some free ready-based,
efficient birds to eat as well while they're at it. So nice gesture from a
beleaguered industry. Well, is that saying, you know, like a fish needs a bicycle?
A fish doesn't need a bicycle
because a fish has a car and that car is currently full of crude oil.
Alice, Australia is the lockdown is being slightly eased.
Yes, indeed. Different states are doing different things, but for example, in Australia,
it's just ticked over to us being allowed to invite two people over to our house so that everyone is now playing the game of who's their favorite relative
to invite over more than one at a time.
Apparently New Zealand is not approving of our apparent laxness because even though they
seem to have completely eliminated the virus, they still think that we're going about things
in too reckless a fashion.
That is a classic Australian New Zealand beef, which if anyone knows history
dates back to the mid-90s dispute between the rappers Outback Chakor and the
notorious Kiwi. And is that a joke that insults the intelligence of the
show's audience and the nationality of one of its hosts? Yes, I'm like, keepable of better. I would argue. I am not.
I also, two people, two people over your house at a time, that is a valiant effort by the Australian
government to jumpstart its floundering threesome industrial.
It's been one of the few growth sectors in the global economy in the last 10 years. Also this week about the 250th anniversary of the arrival of Captain Cook in Australia,
the British exploring celebrity who spent a week or so in Australia then f***ed off to
look for somewhere else.
Cook claimed Australia for the British crown under the Finder's Keepers rule of Imperial conquest, which had a legal loophole in it that to be considered to have found it,
you had to have done so within the last 30,000 years. Anything earlier didn't count, that was
a loophole that Britain exploited with Australia. Scott Morrison, the current Prime Minister of Australia,
said the date represented emerging of histories,
which is shortly after he'd merged an annoying wasp with his newspaper.
We got to stop celebrating.
I mean, you say that's atyrically the finders keepers rule, but actually the rule was called
teranalius and it was, yeah, no one lives lives here even though there were clearly people living there.
We got to stop celebrating the first time white guys show up to a non-white culture.
The only exception being the Beastie boys who I will continue to celebrate because they didn't commit genocide.
Unlike the Venger boys which is a little known, the Venger boys is short for vengeance boys and they are out for vengeance and they are back.
Yeah, that bus was coming and you don't want to know what's on it.
The poor citizens of Ibika.
Oh, don't kick them while they're down there in the middle of that terrible techno recession.
Right, I'm now out of cultural references to deal with this bit of banter.
Why so? I've not brought nothing to the table there. Nothing whatsoever.
Can we talk about cricket? Here in Britain, the Prime Minister is back at work.
Boris Johnson has returned to work having,
well, as people say, beaten the virus.
I don't think he beat the virus.
I think the virus beat him comfortably on points.
He survived the virus because while he was supposedly beating
it, the virus totally demolished the fucking country.
I guess next time, tactical.
If you're looking at this as a fight,
maybe don't show boats so much in the first minute
of round one.
You cannot psych out a virus.
He's also returned to it and had a baby in the meantime,
his partner, Carrie Simmons,
has had a baby boy.
Congratulations to Simmons on her first child
and to the prime minister on his X plus oneth child
where X is a number between, I don't know, five or six
and whatever, sorry to get a bit mathematical,
especially in this time of confusing statistics. But there is some hope though that it will seem be possible to reduce
Boris Johnson's rate of transmission down below the crucial R1 points, but we can't quite pin our
hopes on that yet. He is, however, back to take control. Take control of our national bus that he
so heroically drove into a swamp in the early days of this crisis
and his own personal spin on the kink and you goes paddling at the seaside story. But I guess if there's one man who can drive a bus at
our swamp, it's a highly trained expert with a large backup team to plan the practical and logistic side of things. But Boris Johnson is going to be very good at shouting, come on boss,
you can do it and waving some union jack pom-poms in encouragement.
So we have a prime minister again.
He does love a bus.
Yeah, he loves a bus.
He absolutely loves a bus.
He is back.
There's a feeling of relief here in Britain that Boris Johnson is back.
Maybe you can't relate to it.
Let me explain.
Imagine you're being anesthetized for an operation.
And just as you're going under,
you see the surgeon walking in
and it's Freddy Krueger wielding a chainsaw.
And then you wake up mid-operation
and it's no longer Krueger operating on you.
Instead, it's Hannibal Lecter.
It's that same feeling of relief, you know,
that things, it's a little bit better, probably,
possibly, anyway, it's chill.
At least it's the person who technically has this job title. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha aggression on a pirate ship. It's like the Scoville scale for Chiliotness.
Boris Johnson described, well I'm talking about what point Britain's going to start relaxing
the lockdown. He said this was the moment of maximum risk, but that is, that might be
true, but that is only true because at the previous moments of maximum risk, but that is, that might be true, but it is only true because at the previous moments
of maximum risk, he took some massive f***ing risks. So I guess we have to acknowledge
that now and take, try to make sure there is not another moment of maximum risk, some
point in a few months' time. He says Britain is past the peak and then carried on to say,
leaving us all to enjoy a fundamentally altered world in which millions and millions of people
have been upheav'd in a fundamental and irreparable way.
Team GB.
When he says Britain has passed the peak,
I don't think he means for the disease.
I just think he means that the nation is in decline overall.
Although I do think he would be accurate to say
that COVID-19 has passed its peak.
Like when you're a pandemic,
how much better can you do
than infecting Boris Johnson?
You've peaked right there. Right. Okay. Well, he has had this new baby. Everyone loves a new baby and people are celebrating his little
fruit of last. It has to be hard for the uncounted legions of other Boris babies he may or may not
have had. Do I need to say may not? No, he definitely had the massive babies. He's so far
refuses to take credit for. It's funny, He's so far refuses to take credit for.
It's funny, though, that he refuses to take credit for the babies,
because he took credit for the Boris Bikes, and they weren't his idea.
Maybe all babies are Boris babies.
He should put them on public racks for people to take and return.
Boris babies, they're pretty good,
a little heavier than other babies, but that's the technology.
I think you've just outlined the future of parenting post-virus.
He promised maximum transparency from the government, Boris Johnson, which is rather like hearing
the Pope promising a rave with free booze, hot chicks, hot hunks and heroin.
I don't really believe him and I don't really want it to happen anyway.
I don't want maximum transparency now, looking
into a deep void of despair about what life will be like for the foreseeable future. This
is the time I want him to lie to us. Not before. Not now. I want good, productive lies
now.
Well, Mr Johnson said that keeping the reproduction rate down is going to be absolutely vital
to our recovery and he means the virus, but I think it also serves as a word of warning to his penis.
Sports news now.
Well the main sports news is there's still no fucking sport and this has got well beyond
a joke.
Alice, I know you're obsessed, arguably to a fault with the administration of professional
tennis.
What's been going on there?
Well Roger Federer backed by a number of other tennis stars has made a plea for a merger
of men's and women's governing bodies in the sport of tennis.
So apparently at some point men's and women's governing tennis bodies are going to merge.
For, yeah they are. You'd like that Federer federal you perfect wouldn't you?
yeah put it put it something something something love I mean it's that I
mean it's either there's I don't know quite what they mean by merging either it's
the sexual Congress or maybe they're gonna do like a Frankenstein e-monster thing
I'd like I would love to see a forearmed forele gonna do like a Frankenstein-y monster thing. I'd like, I would love to see a
forearmed forelegged Federer Williams, Frankenstein monster play mixed doubles as a single
entity like something out of space jam. Also, if they do that, it solves the social distancing rule by
just smashing tennis players together. I think that's I think the core of it right in this
era of social distancing. I think Roger Federer is just desperate for any kind of
merging bodies.
Well that brings an end to another viral bugle. Thank you very much for listening
buglers. We'll be back next week. Alice, anything to plug up on the last post, of course,
which, Carrie, what episode are we up to? Into the...
114th...
8...
Something like that. We've been doing one a day since the 1st of January. It's so much nonsense.
But also my stand-up special, Savage is on Amazon Prime So if you want to watch something that has me in it, you can watch that Josh anything anything to plug
Sure, I have a new podcast called make my day. It's a comedy game show where one guest competes and they always win and
And my book nice try is still out you can get it on ebook or audiobook if you don't want to have a thing delivered to your house
Nice try is still out. You can get it on ebook or audiobook if you don't want to have a thing delivered to your house
Bugglers, thank you very much for listening. We will play you out with some more lies about our premium level voluntary subscribers to join them
Or to contribute whatever you want to the ongoing existence and
Independence of the view will go to the buglepodcast.com and click the donate button The Thomas Hornigold thinks glaciers are overrated. They take ages to get where they're going,
they leave rubbish everywhere, and they need very specific conditions in which to exist
complains Thomas. Sure, they look pretty from a distance, he rails, but as a means of getting water from A to B,
they're hopeless. Give me a proper liquid river, any day.
It must be said that Thomas was very disappointed as a child to discover that glaciers do not contain frozen fish.
It would be logical if they did, he grumbles morocally.
Dominic Lagas-Mur once had to dissuade a theatrical
impresario friend of his called Neil from attempting to launch a new musical production
called The Stalagmites. The Stalagmites was due to comprise eight brave little children
who helped capture the RAF pilots escape from a German prison revocamp built into rock
formations growing from the bottom of a secret cave. Neil did reluctantly accept
Dominic's advice. Margaret Bell came to the rescue when the persistent
if deluded Neil then suggested that the production might still work, if the heroes were instead
little insect-stallag mites that bit the camp guard to distraction thus facilitating
an escape. Margaret said, maybe you could slake your first meal for writing musicals involving both German history
and caves with Otto in the Grotto.
About the 19th century statesmen Otto von Bismarck's quest to unify Germany via a series
of secret candlelit underground meetings with the leaders of the 39 states in the German
confederation. I'm still not sure it's a guaranteed ticket-shifter,
equivocated Margaret. Alexandra Schwab jumped into the breach to suggest that a more ethical
and visually striking alternative production would be ETT, the extra T-Rex trial, a Stephen
Spielberg-themed courtroom drama musical about the legal wranglings over a planned double
sequel combining E.T. and Jurassic Park in an alien dinosaur spectacular.
Alexandra did warn Neil that he would have to drop the caves and German history stick though.
Azalea Wilberg as a further alternative suggests a babushka, a musical using the songs of Kate Bush
about a Russian grandmother who travels around in a car formally owned by
the ex-American first lady, Barbara Bush. As Alia says, musicals using songs already written
by famous pop stars are popular for whatever reason. You could even get 94-year-old Olga to
drive the barb bush car back in time to have a secret romantic liaison with Martin Luther
in the Berkster's Garden Saltmine in Bavaria if you really won't shift on the
Germanico-historical subterranean theme, Neil. And to conclude our history of Germany theme pieces
of drama collection of lies today, Tony Vailard was long convinced that Star Wars character Yoda
was so called as an acronym shortening for his full name, Johannes Dahlsbrocken, a young German
who was fired into another galaxy
and time in a covert 1930s experiment that went disastrously wrong. It would explain why
Yoda's mastery of the English language remains incomplete, even at the age of 900 speculates
Tony.
Here endeth the lies.
I'm going to bed.
I'm going to bed.