The Bugle - Dibs on Jacinda (4192)
Episode Date: April 27, 2021Anuvab Pal shares the latest from India, Tiff Stevenson updates us on the UK, and Andy, well he does what he always does.Subscribe to Tiny Revolutions with Tiff Stevenson, episode one, with ...Armando Iannucci is out now.Buy a loved one Bugle Merch (or some for yourself, it's allowed).The Last Post, keeps appearing here. Follow us on YouTube or Insta and see parts of this episode with actual video.The Bugle is hosted this week by:Andy ZaltzmanAnuvab PalTiff StevensonAnd produced by Chris Skinner Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You'd have to say, with me, Andy Zoltzman, one of the least visual comedians of all time in a shed.
In this Monday, the 26th of April 2021, and if you forget about everything that's going on, everything going very well indeed for this final planet was and it's most talked about species of which I am
a member currently at least let's just quickly check my current species status quickly test the
blood temperature lovely and warm skin type only 3% reptile verte vertebrate. All present and correct, hair, all fur.
Well, it's in some of the places it's supposed to be.
Three middle ear bones.
Yes, I am all mammal.
Next check, articulate speech.
Yeah!
Abstract reasoning.
Yes, I'm a definite member of the genius, homo.
And finally, am I extinct?
Let me check.
No, yes, I am still a human being. It's always
good to check. It's amazing that a number of people forget to. Joining me this week,
to my fellow planet dwellers and amongst the most sappy ends of all humanids from India.
And we have Anuvaab pal and from London, Tiffany Stevenson. Hello, both of you. How are
you both? I'll let An of our bonds to that first.
Well, I'm still alive, but Tiff and the, let me explain the situation right now in India
where I am. I just recently saw King Kong vs. Godzilla, where two fictional monsters trampled
across a whole city and destroyed it in hand-to-hand combat. That city would
be tranquil compared to any Indian city right now.
Wow, yeah. I feel like I can't complain from a little corner of North London in my
book nook with the sun coming through the window. I feel, yeah, that's why I wanted
you to go first. I didn't want to, I didn't want to have some petty complaint
to then have, oh really, is everyone dying?
Because that's what's happening here.
So yeah, I was in a car, a minor car accident last week.
So I guess that would be my,
my, the most dramatic thing that happened.
I got into a fight with an airbag and the airbag won.
Right.
So was that before or after the crash?
It was, I tell you what though, what's interesting is Paul walked the impact was on his side,
on Scottish boy friend's side and he had not a scratch, whereas I got a lip laceration and loads of bruising
because I think they're sort of just designed for male bodies, the older airbags
and then someone on Twitter said to me, well, I tell you what's great, Volvo, I've
really put a lot of money into designing them for women and I was like, I regret to inform you, I was in a Volvo. So yeah, that's been my week, vaccine, car crash, I'm getting all the crappy stuff out
the way so that you know.
Did you have the vaccine before the car crash?
After post.
Oh right, otherwise I would be a huge conspiracy.
Yes, yeah, I was going to say, but very bad PR.
Tiff, I'll be honest with you, I mean things here are really bad, but that sounds pretty bad.
Yeah, I mean, you can't see, listen as obviously you can't see me, but I have got a bit of a, I had stitches in my lip.
So, with your, like my lips, well, it's one way of getting free collagen.
I'm trying to put the positive spin on it.
So yeah, so that's one way, just
have an air bag whack you in the face. Well, I think the most exciting thing that's happened
to me in the last week is I made a surprisingly competent biryani, but other than that, very
much. No change. We are recording on the 26th of April. On this day, 1,900 years ago, a historic birth, the Roman rumenator, the mighty meditator,
the empathetic emperor, old Stevie Stoas' himself. Marcus, let me think about that for a minute,
or really, on this day in 121 AD, the man who formulated such bomb mo bangers as everything we
hear is an opinion, not a fact.
Way to go for creating the post-truth new scope we live in now, Marcus.
You also said everything we see is a perspective, not a truth.
Maybe you should stop watching American TV channels.
Marky Mark, and also you shouldn't give circumstances the power to Rouse Anger,
for they don't care at all.
And that is why he would never have made it as a radio phone in host.
Marcus,
everything's got a little bit too objective in the drive time slot. Ratings are going through the
floor. I don't give a shit if the potholes and people's roads are inanimate objects that feel
no guilt for what they're doing to the suspensions on people's cars. We need some fury!
Look at the way you refer to him as Marky Mark, who is the funky bunch then?
If Marcus really is. I'm sorry, go to Ms. Markie Mark, who is the funky bunch then? If Mark is a really...
I'm sorry, I think they're Sennits.
Senior Roman Legionnaires.
Right, Street is a bit vague on it.
To be honest, my always sketchy Roman history is now purely based on the film Gladiator,
which Markus really doesn't stop particularly well for him. Also, he said, if you are distressed by anything external,
that pain is not due to the thing itself, but to your estimate of it, and this you have the power
to revoke at any moment. But to be fair to Marcus Aurelius, he had never been hit square in the
plums by a cricket ball after he decided to get a short of a length knit back and just outside
of the stump. Even with a bit of a box on, go that stings, go having short of a length knit back and just outside of stump. Even with a
bit box on, go that stings, go do something, go get it back and across, cover the movement.
Nor had he been punched in the tits by an airbag.
Roman history would be very different if those two things had happened.. Anyway happy 1900th birthday. Markus, Markus, are really us.
As always a section of the bugle is going straight in the bin this week and Oscar's fashion review
section. Last night as we record the Oscars took place and well we're always on the cutting
edge of fashion here
at the Bugle and we have a full review of everything
people wore on the red carpet.
Very disappointing lack of socks from a number
of the women involved, Olivia Coleman.
Obviously not wearing any socks whatsoever.
Some tribute that to all those who fought and died in wars
for Britain whilst wearing socks.
Many others wearing floor length dresses so that even if they were wearing socks,
no one would know.
What are they ashamed of?
The sock is arguing with a garment that did most of boost human evolution.
Men, for me, not enough headbands for my liking amongst the men involved in the Oscars,
obviously important to look as ridiculous as possible.
So why not go to the full Mac and Row?
We will be speaking to our fashion expert, Harkylus Peace Slanger, who will talk us through the all the highlights and highlights of the red carpet.
Two really caught Harkyluses, I were Meritrisha Dogsanian, the Oscar-nominated star of
magic roundabout action spin-off Florence and Irmin Trude versus the death beetles of Nug.
Well, she'd turn head to the sensational off-the-shoulder reconstituted lawnmower dress,
whilst the always-dapper Norris Sebastian van der Klapp, former star of the Canadian
prehistoric soap opera The Moose Riders, and he was nominated, of course, for best non-speaking
off-screen role for his portrayal of the controversial Olympic athlete Justin Gatlin in the 17th
century costume sci-fi drama doc, Fratgill comedy, to Alien, Subterfuge. Well, he looks super smart in his salmon skin, Tuxedo,
and Fowl, Walrus, Pelt, Nexarong,
with his imitation dinosaur leather job purse.
Anyway, that section, sadly, in the bin.
Huh?
Huh?
TENORICAL MUSIC
Top story this week, India News,
and while it's been a horrific time for India and
evabreeling under the surge of the world's most tedious virus, as COVID-19
continues to vomit, and an ending torrent of spanners into the works of the
world, just bring us up to date with exactly what the situation currently is.
Well, I thought a lot about how to explain to you and Tiff the least macabre
version of what's happening Andy
Thousands of Indian people across India unvaccinated and tested experiencing sudden drops in levels of oxygen
Being rushed to the hospital where there is no oxygen and just dying daily note
This is the least macabre version of the story. Oh, I'll try
I think I might be the darkest star we've ever had to in this issue with the vehicle
But here's the thing rather than focus of the grim facts of the world media highlighting,
I thought we could focus on the monumental collapse of governance, such a monumental collapse
that the city of Pompeii is looking at us saying, we handled the volcano better than this.
We had a year to improve our medical infrastructure, but no, our ministers went
around saying while the rest of the world studied the genetic sequence of the virus, we
didn't need to. We had Indian exceptionalism. We had defeated the virus because what is
a virus if not a T20 cricket match? We opened up the country to state elections and mass
religious gatherings, something even a sponge wouldn't do and a sponge doesn't even have a brain.
Our leadership and political class are so devoid of literacy or basic comprehension or
motor skills that Siri in your iPhone could have delivered more hospital beds without you
instructing it to.
While ordinary people turn to social media to basically form their little private home
hospitals, in the actual government, there's an aptitude greed and cruelty at a scale where even Stalin would say enough,
an emperor Nero would second it.
There is currently more empathy, Tiff, and he, in a king cobra, eating a black mumble alive,
both gold reptiles, drowning in the earth's columns. What we are witnessing in our political leaders
are as Paul Simon wrote twisted, cyclist,
rex of men.
Things are so bad, Andy, that I'm quoting Paul Simon.
Oh, you're going to Scarborough Fair.
I'm sorry.
Any play that leaves India too.
How come it's anywhere?
Because there are planes India shut up from the world.
And finally, I have to say, this just happened.
Things are so bad that the Australian fastballer, Pat Cummings,
has donated $50,000 Australian dollars as we speak.
And he has done more than the Indian government.
But he's a lovely guy, Pat Cummings.
Much as he's an Australian fastballer and therefore evil
in the eyes of all England, green fat, he is a lovely guy, Pat Cummins, much as he's an Australian fastball and therefore evil in the eyes of all England, cricket, and that's it.
He's a bad guy.
And also he said, he wasn't sure about whether people,
they should still be continuing with the cricket
on the IPL while this is going on
and they've been told that it's at least providing people
with some form of distraction
and made this sizable contribution,
but it does seem an evab that, you know,
there's this continuous pattern that countries
with self-serving demagogues in charge
have not exactly aced this crisis.
We've had, you know, Jerbal Sonarro
brought distinctly personal heartlessness
to his mesmerically moronic effects
to maximize the Brazilian suffering toll.
Donald Trump, of course, bravely refused to allow common sense
scientific, or advice, or basic humanity to get in the way of his determination to give his supporters
the kind of deathly mayhem they expected from. Embarrassed Johnson, helped get Britain
impressively shit for brain head start in the European death situation. Now, Narendra Modi,
re-namer of cricket stadiums in his own honor, Poisoner of an almost miraculous secularism that has
helped sustain a logistically impossible megane through decades of breakneck change is presiding over one of the deadliest surges
of the virus yet seen.
In March, India's health minister said the country was in the endgame of the pandemic,
I mean, with hindsight and indeed foresight, this looks like in his at best, disrespecting the chess skills of
COVID, which is notoriously good at not getting to the end game phase.
It's absolutely correct. Last Saturday, when India detected cases that were going up
150% a day, and TV channels were showing people rushing to hospitals, Prime Minister Modi
was campaigning in my home state of West Bengal saying, I've never seen
such huge crowds.
Thank you for coming.
At least Emperor Nero was playing the fiddle or whatever that we had, Roman instrument
is called.
He was not also, yeah, exactly, that instrument.
He was not also boring petrol in the middle of a raging fire.
So it's bruised. I've never seen such huge crowds.
It's like, you know, going to a,
it's like saying, I was great to see so many people swimming at this beach where we can proudly say,
we have not had a single shark attack in the last eight minutes.
Well done.
Well done.
I mean, you've got to just go around a lung cancer ward giving out free cartons of cigarettes.
It was
passed in sensitive.
That's exactly.
It's a completely underplay in the pandemic
then turning up at Rally's mask list.
Remind you of anyone.
Yeah, I mean, I think you pretty much said it there, Andy.
But it's also, yeah, there's a complete heartlessness,
isn't there?
People pleading for help,
and people responding with stuff like, let's try and not be a crybaby about it.
Yes, that was a strawberry, the crybaby story.
That was, yeah, it's fantastic.
I mean, look, because Modi lost control,
people rushed to the high courts, right?
They wanted court orders to get things done,
to get oxygen moving.
So the Delhi government is not run by Prime Minister Modi,
it's an independent state government.
They rushed to the high court.
They said, if we don't get 480 tons of oxygen
by this evening, the system will collapse.
We have 24 hours to get something done
or something disastrous will happen.
This is what the Delhi government told I caught.
Prime Minister Modi's lawyer responded with, let's try not be a crybaby.
The only equivalent I can think for you guys is Prime Minister Suzuki Cantaro in 1945, 25, Bintol, Hiroshima has just happened and he responds with, wow, why, why, why, why,
why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, why, the dominant philosophies in politics now. Well, they spat the dummy. That's often... Yes.
Absolutely.
I mean, from people whinging about a trickle of asylum seekers
flooding their countries or immigrants doing the jobs
that no one else wants to do for less money than they
don't want to do them for complaining about rupturing.
People rupturing their selectively constructed
historical fictions.
Crybabyism, we've seen it sort of play out with, you know,
with trumpism as essentially crybabyism taken to its logical conclusion
of certain strains of prexetatiousness defined by their devoted adherence to crybabyist doctrines
of grievance, especially when that grievance is against people with genuine grounds of grievance
who are expressing being a grieve. That can actually tip crybabyism into full tantrumism,
which I'm not sure there's anything
that we can go beyond. But that maybe that's naive.
I'm not surprised that these politicians aren't good at managing oxygen because they do
produce a lot of hot air. I mean the fact that people are taking to, as you sort of alluded
to that and that were like creating their own
mini hospitals. Some people are taking to Twitter and saying, can you get me
this piece of equipment? I mean, I'm in dire straits. I mean, it's like awful to
witness and you feel utterly helpless from the other side of the, I'm sure as
people there feel utterly helpless to do anything about it.
Yeah, exactly.
So citizens have sort of, you know, helping each other, people have set up WhatsApp groups
and help lines.
And you would think that the government would respond, right?
Seeing all this is, please, for help on Twitter.
Instead, the government yesterday announced that Twitter handles that a critical of the
government should be removed. And a message is being sent out to journalists saying the media need to be positive and to
forget the past, the past being two hours ago.
And apparently the government is not to blame, the system is to blame.
This reminds me of the Terry Jones film Eric The Viking.
If you remember King R. Nolfe was on his island nation of Hybrisil and he kept saying, This reminds me of the Terry Jones film Eric The Viking.
If you remember King R. Nolfe was on his island nation of
high Brazil and he kept saying, stay calm, this is not happening
as his island nation sank.
Well, we just couldn't have found the time,
at least the Indian government in their busy schedule to tell to
a thousand blocks and tweets that were less than complimentary
about Modi and his handling of the... I mean, his handling and appropriate word. Am I
guess, you know, when you pick up a price of ancient vase and smash it on the floor, you're
a criminal thing in a way. I like that is that the Twitter complied with the order to
remove the tweets, preventing residents in the country
from viewing the posts from people who include a state minister, an opposition member of
the Indian Parliament, filmmakers and actor, two journalists and several ordinary people.
The ordinary people are at it again!
Yes, yes, you know, they're hitting the streets these tweets that say I can't breathe and I'm dead
Very bad, they're not happy with these tweets and like Andy said, you know, of course they have no other priorities
Right, obviously this is the number one concern public image
It just happened that the jelly chief minister was so desperate that on an emergency private
call with the prime minister and everybody, he decided that he was going to live telecast
it just to show off nothing is happening in these meetings.
And so the prime minister stopped the meeting and said, everyone thought he's going to
say something groundbreaking and he said, is this going out live on TV?
That's breaking protocol. That's the only thing he said. And the delhi-chi-fist is I'm really sorry I would. That was his main concern. His main concern is not that the city he
lives in is going to have no people. That was his main concern. I was interested, you talk,
you mentioned Indian exceptionalism. Modi in his speech on Saturday in West Bengal when he was campaigning at this rally.
He said India defeated COVID last year and India can do it again. Now there's a slight problem
with this in that India did not defeat COVID last year as we are seeing now. They didn't defeat COVID
anymore than England defeated the West Indies in the 1984 test series because
they won the coin toss before the first match of five and scored the first run of the series
before Graham Fowler was out to make the score one for one then Andy Lloyd was hospitalised
and never played international cricket again and England was thrashed in all five tests
but if you can't win as a win it's a win. I mean, things are so bad guys, there's a petition going around
because one of the New Zealand cricketers playing in the IPL has gone back to New Zealand because
he just, you know, things are too dangerous. And there's a request going, a petition handed
over to him if they could send back Jacinda Hardin to be our Prime Minister. They would allow him
to break his IPL contract if we could do a one-to-one
exchange. Everyone wants dibs on Jacinda. I feel like it should be like jury service. Everyone will
get two weeks, two weeks of Jacinda. Like she could just go around all the countries and sort it all out.
COVID response, infrastructure, everything. That would be great, wouldn't it?
Well, she's going to have to go to Mount Everest if she's going to do that because COVID
has even reached there in the region, climate and the sharper of tested positive for COVID-19.
I mean, that doesn't give much hope for the... if you can't socially distance on the Mount Everest,
it's going to give much hope for the more crowded parts of the world.
I thought that headline was bad because it said coronavirus reaches Mount Everest,
which makes it sound like the little virus that could.
Like...
LAUGHTER
I think we've been sitting for thousands of years now,
it's done, you know, under a year or a half.
And we thought coronavirus was big headed before,
but now we have coronavirus, the adventurer,
it's basically coronavirus and Ben Fogel.
And that is, we just don't need it.
Corona blogging about the view
and what a journey it's been on together
on the radio and chat, so it shows her
that it convincing everyone that the Sherpas love it
and it's great bands.
And what else are you gonna do in your gap here anyway?
You see that this or white water
are halfting with your gap here anyway. You see that this or white water rafting with your
great Uncle Teddy? I don't think Corona needs to get any more big headed than it currently
is. I love this Sherpa that was interviewed. I've never been anywhere near Mount Everest
but apparently he said, luckily we had a helicopter and we got this guy out of there because it's
quite crowded up there and he could have infected a whole bunch of people.
What's going on on top of Mount Everest?
Well, I mean, you do hear these complaints
that Everest has become too crowded,
they're giving too many permits.
But it doesn't make you think,
maybe I think what we need now,
and I know the world's got other focuses,
but I think we need some higher mountains that clearly Everest is not enough of a challenge anymore with the
need to be a pop, you know, we've got a few spare mountains in Europe, there's way too
many Alps as we can maybe chuck an Alp on top of Mount Everest, get some of that kind
of 12, 13,000 meters instead.
Is Matterhorn what's the highest in?
That's not the highest, but it's a crafty one, the Matterhorn.
Mon Blanc is the, the Matterhorn looks great.
That's a great looking mountain.
That's a dream-sweep mountain.
Let's objectify these.
Well, it really fits.
Really, really love the jagged outline, hard cut.
There's rocky abs. Oh yeah. I expected a lot of things on this podcast, but not erotic
mountains. Well, maybe we can open this up to our listeners, we can update rather than
hotties from history. Let's move on from humans to land formations that give you the horn.
What's the matter? You got the horn.
There's a reason they called it the horn or Africa.
But it's not all bad news when it comes to COVID in India and in VAD,
because COVID has brought out much of the worst in some of our leaders.'s but it's also brought up much the best in humanity around the world a selfless devotion to
duty of health workers around the world, a genius of scientists even if they are motivated by greed
according to Boris Johnson but still wizards in my book as they count their ill earned money
those volunteers, greedy volunteers around the world who stepped up to the various plates slapped down by this crisis. But one area where we've seen humanity come into
the fore as in the world's thieves who've been inspired to be better, not all of
them, but at least one of them in India, someone who'd stolen 1700 doses of
COVID vaccine from the hospital, returned them with a note saying, sorry, I didn't know they were
they were COVID COVID vaccines. So I mean, it just shows that everyone is doing their bit even if it
you know adversely affects their own line of work. You're absolutely right Andy Petty criminals have
really stepped up when the nation needed them. This thief was really repentant.
He left a note.
He couldn't even, so he's not even literate.
So he got someone to write a note saying he was sorry.
That's how dedicated thieves are in the, in contributing
to, you know, while our leaders are reptilian, spineless,
hollow pieces of fecal, sludge, these people.
I don't feel strongly about this at all, clearly.
I mean, the situation here is completely under control.
I mean, I've locked up my parents, my 75-year-old parents.
In what I think is a criminal act, I don't think you can legally lock them up.
But there are no police stations open.
So I'll deal with this when they come out alive.
If there are any police stations left.
So, Adam, I think people are making their own hospitals
at home. You can make your own jail and call out that.
Exactly.
Exactly.
I mean, I just have any problem with this.
But yeah, I mean, thieves have stepped up.
A lot of local sort of cheats and people
would cheat you on small things in India like medical supplies
are providing things for free. Loads of companies that were closed because of environmental pollution
are begging the courts to reopen so they can make oxygen suddenly what is sort of a very crooked, devious class of people, a certain magnanimity
has emerged, whereas leaders are very worried about Twitter. So that's the average citizen,
especially the average criminal citizen has really stepped up. Right, time to move on now to British news. Boris Johnson has had another exciting week
of self-excalation, which is this prime hobby at the moment. He can now claim the nickname
Shaggy for a very impressive range of different reasons, from his willful
incompetence, protecting hair to his trans-irial predilections, to his convoluted stories,
this Shaggy dog stories, if you will, explaining why someone, something that looks obviously
very dodgy indeed, is in fact perfectly fine, to being as suitable a person for being
Prime Minister as the character Shaggy from TV2. As we now see on a almost hourly basis, channeling the reggae star Shaggy and claiming
it wasn't me.
So he's, he's claimed he acted with honesty and integrity with regard to his affair and
dealings with Jennifer Arcurri, which caused panic and tears at the Oxford English Dictionary
as it comes out.
But honesty now encompasses not total dishonesty all the time as a definition and integrity
means whatever the fuck you can get away with. And, well, if Dominic Cummings has, well, the pro celebrity
Schetsterer has emerged from the political woodwork and launched vicious attacks on his former
client, Boris Johnson. I mean, it's getting quite vicious described as rats fighting in a sack
by the Labour Party. I mean, it's a great contest if nothing else for the youth.
Well, Laya Dominic, calling out Laya Boris, do two liars make a truiser?
Possibly. I mean, I was waiting for Boris to come out and say he also shag James Dyson, but acted with integrity.
That's just averaging out all the stories, I think.
Yes, yes.
But is anyone else beginning to think that that Henry the Hoover in the corner of the press room was a coded message to James Dyson?
Well, so just so the press room, which we could talk about in a more detailed
later this new press room it cost 2.6 million pounds and then they thought I don't
want to bother using it so essentially a propaganda facility.
Yeah.
Not the most British of British things, this bike all the way.
You can put lots of flags on it, it doesn't make it British.
And there was there was a photo taken to sort of show.
Oh look at this wonderful new facility and someone had left the Henry Hoover.
In the corner and I don't know if Dyson would have taken Carnage of that.
Yeah, I feel it was definitely a coded message.
So Dominic saying basically, we're getting a clear picture now of why Boris wouldn't sack him after the Barnard castle.
A clearer, clear, unlike Dominic's eyesight, obviously.
But I think Dominic has too much on Boris Johnson.
So he's revealed that there were these text exchanges going back and forth between Dyson
and Boris around tax affairs, that they were going to get donors to fund the refurbishment
of number 10. And then Dominic sort of, I don't know if the leaks come from him or saying
someone else has been saying it's been leaked, then someone else at number 10, basically
we need a packet of 10 LAD because these guys are leaking all over the place. So it's not even clear
these guys are leaking all over the place. So it's not even clear where the leaks are coming from,
but it's basically, his greatest ally
is now his biggest enemy.
And I think Boris probably is rightfully shit right up
by this news.
And I know we should break it down into because you probably want to talk
about the individual aspects, but I do want to raise very specifically the fact that Boris
was looking to raise, well, an ally of Mr Johnson defended the charity plan. So they were
talking about setting up a charitable fund to refurbish number 10. And an ally of Johnson
said last night, down in street is as iconic iconic as Windsor Castle, but it's in danger
of becoming tati because the civil service does everything
on the cheap.
A new charity with privately raised money
to preserve it in great shape for all time
is great value for the taxpayer and a great idea.
Sure, cut universal credit because number 10 needs a facelift.
That doesn't even make any sense. At least you can walk around Windsor Castle. Like, that doesn't even make any sense.
At least you can walk around Windsor Castle.
Like, you don't, they're trying to make it.
They're trying to make out like it's comparable
to the White House.
Like, a makeover is important for a building,
or appropriate for a building of such huge importance.
It's the house that comes with a job.
It's basically a gardener's cottage or a man's.
Stop trying to make it some Paul's Cathedral.
You can't compare it to the White House.
It's a midterrace in London.
You can't even stick an extension on this thing.
Like what are you talking about?
You can't say it's a building of historical importance
and that we should be paying for it.
But if I have a quick question for you and Andy,
don't you think though, if this approach
is very discouraging politicians,
having grown up in a culture where basically doing
big business doing favors for politicians
is essentially the rule.
And I've seen that in India for 30 years.
What is even the point of doing favors for big business?
If they can't help out with the contractor
to redo the kitchen.
What is even the point of life actually?
Well, one of the aspects of this that is quite fascinating is who paid for this renovation
and Trade Secretary Liz Truss told the BBC that Johnson had paid for the renovation costs
quotes from his own pocket.
But it may transpire that that pocket of his was there after he just put on a brand new
pair of trousers
given to him by some passing Tory party donors, as they whispered in his ear,
no, by yourself, I mean, nice, we know what you live.
So it's hard to know, I mean, there's so, I mean, the thing is, I don't think it's going
to affect Johnson, because you know, the idea, as he said,
if that, you know, Dominic Cummings has all this dirt on him.
Boris Johnson came into office
as, you know, almost homeopathic trace of human
in a mound of dirt.
So extra dirt is not gonna really have
a great impact on him.
And Dominic Cummings suggested that it was, you know, the plan to get Donas to pay for the flat was
possibly illegal in his words.
He said it's sad to see the Prime Minister and his office fall so far below the standards
of competence and integrity the country deserves to which I would say, f**k you Cummings,
with all due respect to Cummings and Johnson, this absolute pair of chances, questioning
Johnson's competence and integrity is like questioning Adolfin's ability to climb mountains
and juggle.
Those cards were slapped firmly and proudly on the table.
Besides Mr Cummings, if you're listening, you were instrumental way, you know, in persuading
the country to vote for this level of incompetence and this level of lack of integrity.
So do not tell us the voting public, what we do and do not deserve.
The Dyson texts issue is quite a complicated issue
on Sir James Dyson contacting Johnson directly
and that the tax issue was about the taxation status
of workers for the Dyson company,
were they to come and work in Britain.
It all occurred during the tragically inept early months of the crisis. And Johnson said
that he made no apologies, what he said last week, he made no apologies for moving heaven and
earth to get hold of these ventilators that Dyson had offered in the end. It's not clear whether
he moved heaven or earth, certainly no ventilators
emerged from this, but also think back to those early days of the crisis. The only way Boris
Johnson could claim to have moved heaven and earth was if heaven and earth were his nicknames
for his butt cheeks and he moved them so that they were not sitting on a chair. In, for example,
five consecutive meetings of the Cobra Emergency Committee early on in
the crisis, when moving even small parts of Earth might have made a massive difference
to the number of people having an unscheduled appointment with heaven.
He also wouldn't have had to move heaven and earth if he'd moved his own fucking eyeballs
over the text of the report, warning about the UK's dangerous lack of preparedness for
pandemics, or just looked at what was happening elsewhere in the world and thought well maybe we can learn from that even if they are foreign.
Andy there is now an image of Boris Johnson's posterior in my head that makes the crisis in India far
worse for me personally. I don't know if I'm going to be able to sleep per week. I just have a quick
exchange offer for my friends in Britain. Dominic Cummings called
Trotsch Johnson mad and totally unethical. He is sending us 350 oxygen concentrators today.
We'll take him because mad and totally unethical leads to corrupt flat but also oxygen concentrators
for us. Same in dictatorial is what we have right now
leads to a country on fire.
So, if you let go, we'll take him.
Yes, you can embrace chronicism.
You're right, if, yeah, because,
I mean, all the things you guys are complaining about,
I was quite because I was having difficulty figuring out where the ethical problems were
There was a resignation from the government Johnny Mercella veterans minister well
He was about to resign and then he was sacked after telling the government that he was going to resign out of what he described as
courtesy
He said I felt like I was treated like shit
courtesy, he said, I felt like I was treated like shit. As a government minister, and I said the government was the most distrustful. He said it was the most awful environment
he's ever worked in. And bear in mind, he fought in Helm and Province in Afghanistan, and
working for the Boris Johnson government was less awful than that. He said, but this could
be, we took about, you know, the bomb shell, you know, the getting
alcapone on tax eva.
This could be the thing that really brings down the Johnson government because Johnny
Merce after being, being sacked, said, almost nobody in government tells the truth.
And surely that is the true scandal because he said, almost, there is someone in the government
who is kind of the truth.
Can they root out the mud for it's too late?
Well, we've talked a lot about people doing their jobs who we maybe prefer weren't doing their jobs.
News now of someone who didn't do their job
for 15 years and managed to continue to get paid for it. A hospital worker in Italy
apparently managed to get paid for a decade and a half without turning up to work. AnuVab, you are a heroic, skyving correspondent. Yes, sir.
you are a heroic, skyving correspondent. Yes, sir. Just, you know, I know you have not done a full day's work since I think it was 1684.
So, bring us up to that with a story. Well, the first of all, you know, I really love that,
you know, most of the things that people say about Italy often come true in newspapers. And I really respect Italy for that.
Salvatore Scomacci was an Italian worker
at Chiaccio Hospital in the city of Catanzaro.
He made news headlines in Italy this week
when Italy's financial police announced
that they were investigating his remarkable record
of absenteeism. I've been absent a few times in my life, Andy. I have friends who missed a whole
year of school and have come out reasonably well. This man missed 15 years of work and he was still paid.
And he was still paid. And the investigators said we blame inefficiency
of checks at all levels.
In my book, I want to know what you guys think about this,
but in my book, this man is a hero.
This man should not be investigated.
If anybody, the head of human resources, should be fired,
maybe his boss should be fired,
this man deserves some sort of a national award
from his country.
Well, absolutely, you think of all the people
through history who had they taken 15 years off
rather than doing what they did,
would have made the world a considerate better place.
I mean, we mentioned Stalin earlier on.
And if Stalin had knocked off in 1930,
odd, I think a lot of Russians would have been quite pleased
with that. I mean, in many ways, I think you should be an inspiration. I mean, people
work too hard, and well done, him for trying to balance that out. And also, I mean,
really, what is not working for 15 years, other than just taking your retirement early? Uh, I mean, you're generally just
sprints to work load around.
So I'm not...
The Italian...
Retirement is wasted, I've said this,
but retirement is wasted on the old.
Uh, people like to keep occupied when they're old.
So you should retire like he did during his career.
And...
The Italian not job.
I just, yeah, you you got to admire it. Although I do think and
looking a little bit deeper, scraping a little bit away from the the top of the
story apparently someone did try to report him but then a woman that worked in
human resources raised a query about it and then people started appearing
outside our house. So she very much just sort
of left it alone and never mentioned it again. So apparently it's like quite a, like,
quite a big thing. This is again, Calibria, where this is happening. Yeah, so, and I really
loved that he was shocked that there was an investigation. All you need to do is declare himself a prince, and he can come to Britain and do the same.
We are approaching the end of this week's bugle shortly after we recorded last week,
we had the verdict from the George Floyd case, we will address the issue surrounding this
in a future edition of the
Bugle, but there was an extraordinary reaction to it from Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who
in the aftermath of the verdicts issued a warning.
Now you might think, you know, he might be warning of a flowering of related justice or
a massive improvement in police standards and techniques across the USA. But instead, he warned of an attack on civilisation.
Of course, by people supporting George Floyd, it was one of even in the universe of Fox News
and the American right wing. This was as tone deaf and inane as pretty much anything
that we've heard in recent years.
Do you know what I think? Are you had Tommy Laren as well on Twitter,
like saying something like, you got your justice.
You're like, oh, I thought justice was for everyone.
It's quite clear that you don't consider this to be justice.
Yeah, it's sort of mad, isn't it,
people showing their ass?
With, did you think Fox News could sink clover? Or did you think they'd already?
Well, I mean, there's always, I guess it's, you know, when you watched
Usain Bolt in the early years of his career, he thought, well, surely he's taken sprinting
to it, it's extremely kept doing great, and great things.
And I guess, you know, Fox News is like that.
You think, oh, there's nothing more that they can do.
And they always find, you know,
that's the genius of Fox News,
that there is no barrel to which they have yet found
an adequate bottom that cannot be drilled through
with the power drill of f***ing tree,
which they bring to journalism.
And on the sum of justice, I mean justice, people say
justice is supposed to be blind.
But I guess the problem in America is that justice
is generally merely been hiding its eyes behind
a special high performance sports sunglasses
that increase the contrast between colors.
We will return to this story in weeks to come.
That brings us to the end of this week's Bugle.
Before we go, Tiff, tell us about your show
that has joined the Bugle stable.
Yes, yes.
Thank you for letting my horse enter into your stable.
That will take that out.
Or maybe leave it in.
Maybe leave it in.
I don't mind.
Tiny Revolutions, which is the show
where I talk to comedians,
rock stars, actors, journalists, creators about the things in their life that have been tiny
revolutions. So they're their favourite films and TV, political moments that have changed them
and moved them, people that they've met that have influenced their work, and it's called Tiny Revolutions, and comes out every Wednesday. We've already had episodes
out with Armando Inuchi, which was fantastic. We had Simon Neal from Biffy Glyro. We had
Maisie Riches and Sellers. We have Roisin Connity coming up. Our Madrigal, WKMW and NATO
Green will be on Wednesday's episode.
And if I have anything to plug?
Well, I'm going to very quickly plug tips to Stevenson Show.
I just wanted to take that.
But also this is the last week on Radio 4 of a show I did called Future Empire Effect.
It was a study of India and where Britain and India's relationship is heading with one
Andy Zoltzman.
I don't know if you've heard of him. He's an Indian cricket commentator. So that's on for another week on Radio 4.
All right, on the Radio 4 website, I didn't realize that was coming down.
I'll post a link to that on the Google Twitter feed.
feed. You will first do it all. You've got cricket, you've got culture, you've got comedy, yeah, comedy, cricket culture, it's all happening. We will be back next week, I'm also currently
hosting the news quiz on Radio 4, which you can also find on the Radio 4 website for
the next few weeks. And we will play you out with some lies about our premium level voluntary subscribers
to join them and to make a recurring or one-off contribution to the bugle to keep it free,
free from Adverts and independent and flourishing go to buglepodcast.com and click the donate button.
Martin Richter thinks the world has become too set on a regular calendar. It gets a bit
numbingly predictable having the same 12 months every year, bleeds Martin, not to mention
the same 52 in a bit weeks and the same 365 or if you're feeling a bit ill in pixie 366
days, why not mix it up a bit? Why not try some years with 15 months, some with 9, you
could have more holiday in the longer years, but also less long to wait for your birthday in the shorter ones, plus it would make tax a lot more exciting
for the accountants.
Max Calica is more in favour of doing away with months entirely and instead giving each
week its own name.
Sure says Max, I would miss the old classics, luck October, January, April and the rest,
but selling the naming rights for 52 new micromonts,
could fund everything the world needs to be fixed on, calculate smacks, every time you
wrote, it's the 7th of Tez Lembre in your diary, you would feel happy that Elon Musk
is saving an endangered goat or something.
Shay Flanagan, however, is concerned about what would happen with the one or in leap years
two days left over from the 52 micromonts year.
I guess you could award a special day
to the best human of the year according to some kind of algorithm, Venture's Shay, or
to avoid arguments, just give it to someone discernibly special, the reigning world snooker
champion maybe, or the winner of the Grammy Award for best backing vocals in a scar-funct-skiffle
cover of a 90s rap song, whatever works, or maybe to please the Brit's, just name it after
the Queen. They love it.
Mark Isaacs would blend the suggestions posited by Martin and Max, and suggest that the years
could be mixed up according to another algorithm.
They can do most things, the algorithm says Mark, and I'd love to live in a world where you
had a 400-day year with 85-day weeks, followed by a year that's 330 days long, with 33-11
day weeks, each with a 3-day weekend and a day off in
the middle.
Especially if you didn't know what the year was going to be until one minute to midnight
on the 31st of December, or whatever the last day of the year happened to be.
Andy Chalice agrees and argues that the unpredictability of this system could boost creativity and
thus economic productivity worldwide.
You could even have the odd 245 day year with only one week, says Andy,
comprising 175 days of unbroken work followed by an absolute whopper of a 70 day weekend.
Obviously, says Andy, that's not great if you work weekends, but otherwise, sign me
up. As long as it averages out around the 365 and a quarter day mark over each hundred
or so years, I again things will be okay. And moving away from the issue of years, months and days, Dan Carlson had at one point
made detailed, costed plans to build and open a new museum. The Museum of Unfulfilled
Ideas, chronicling and commemorating all the potentially revolutionary concepts, inventions
and political movements that could have made a positive contribution to the world had they
actually come about. In the end, however, Dan never got round to setting it up.
If I ever do get round to it though says Dan, all those ideas about variable years and stuff are
going straight in. They're good, but they'll never happen. The 24, 7, 3, 6, 5, and 12 month
lobbies have got it all sewn up. Here end if, this week's lies. Goodbye.
This week's lies.
Goodbye.