The Bugle - Netherlands? More like Nether happened!
Episode Date: October 1, 2024This week we visit the moon, discuss sausages v. hostages, and for our friends in New York - what is a bribe?Andy is with Anuvab Pal and Tiff Stevenson in a podcast that is funded by you, the listener......Hear more of our shows, buy our book, and help keep us alive by supporting us here: thebuglepodcast.com/This episode was produced by Chris Skinner and Laura Turner Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Bugle, audio newspaper for a visual world.
Hello Buglers and welcome to issue 4317 of The Bugle, audio newspaper for a visual but
it must also be emphasized. Idiotic world.
I'm Andy Zottsman coming to you not live from here in the shed of immutable truth
in South London and I'm delighted to be joined this week.
Firstly joining us from India.
It's Anu Vabh Pal.
Anu Vabh welcome.
Welcome back to the Mugle.
How are you?
Hello, Andy.
Hi Tiff.
How are you both?
Hi.
Well, they they've just introduced our other guest there just building up the tension straight joining us this week did you just did
you just steal my shine there any back the whole medium the entire house things
in Mumbai well and you know I just got back from Darjeeling.
I was in a gig in Darjeeling and I was stranded till last night.
Monsoon rain, sub Himalayan terrain and a road collapsed in a landslide.
And this was 2024 and I started wondering, how did the British ever get up there in 1890? How badly did they need tea that
they were willing to risk a mountain range falling on their head to get the
right brew? Well that's just the way we will do anything for a good cup of tea.
Tiff, how are you? I'm good, I'm good. I've got a little bit of a cold today so my cure
for that of course a steaming mug of tea. It is the cure all to everything.
That's right.
That's why it's worth clambering up every available mountain in, in Asia to, to, to get a hold of it.
Um, we are recording on the 30th of September, 2024 on this day in 331 BC.
Can you believe it's that long ago?
Alexander the Great defeated King Darius
III of Persia in the Battle of Gorgomila in modern-day Iraqi Kurdistan.
Disappointing result for KD3 as he was known at the hands of ATG.
Transcripts from the post-battle press conference show Darius admitting to being, quote, gutted
and saying, fair play to Al Al he's a terrific strategist
And he's done us over right good and proper with his light infantry to be fair
Darius to finally refused to quit as emperor of Persia despite a second successive loss
To the Macedonian ace but insisted he was still the right man for the job
And would think about how best to bounce back from defeat whilst fleeing his life
And then he fled for his life. That was 30th September,
all the way back in 331 BC. And well, this is a hundred years anniversary since the 31st of
September 1924. The only recorded instance of the 31st of September happening after an administrative
error in the League of Nations calendar department led to the UN precursor organization
posting the day's date as the 31st of September causing mayhem in global financial markets
triggering the famous Wednesday wobble on the New York Stock Exchange that caused stocks
to lose 98% of their value in a day before rebounding back the following morning when
the calendar was corrected to the 1st of October.
So let that be a lesson to you.
Obviously that didn't happen, but it could have happened. And the fact that none of you interrupted me to say, Andy, that's
bullshit. So just, you know, we've learned nothing as a species, just, just because a man is saying
something authoritatively into a microphone doesn't mean he should be believed. Fact check,
fact check, fact check. We should be doing this in the American debates.
I'm not coming in quick enough for my fact checking.
Yeah.
So once you start fact checking the bugle, that is a portal into the gates of confusion
that you will never be able to close.
Stock market collapsing 98% on a made up day sounds perfectly legitimate. As always a section of The
Bugle is going straight in the bin. This week we have life hacks from the animal
world. We like to think of ourselves as the most successful species on the
planet but are we really living life the most efficient way? We look in our
section of the bin this week at potential life hacks from the animal world that might
help us humans including don't sleep in six to eight hour chunks every day, save up one three
or four month hibernation every year, then work hard, play harder for the remaining eight
or nine months.
Yeah.
And also never forget, never remember the life of a goldfish is generally one that is
unencumbered by historical fury, personal resentment, or the kind
of things that hold us back as a species. So essentially, I think those are two things that
would definitely make us function better as a species. Any other suggestions, things in the
animal world that you think would help us out on a personal level? Storing nuts. Right. Like squirrels do.
Just maybe keeping bits of food that you might have later just in the couches of your cheek.
Okay.
Like little food snooze.
That could work.
I was just reading octopuses, octopi, they hunt with fish and fish are like the henchmen.
They go in there and sort of dig out stuff and then the prey come out and then the octopus
I'd quite like some henchmen, you know, like when I step out just having a group of people
Just having the initial conversations and then I go and have a conversation
Well, maybe and would they you know a fish or an octopus could could could could do that
I mean particularly monsoon season and about me quite effective of doing things. I have, particularly in monsoon season, Anivab will be quite effective
with doing things.
I have an affinity with the turkey vulture because it vomits as a form of self-defense.
I am prone to a bit of that.
Right.
I think we could encompass that more into our dailies.
A kangaroo pouch, that's a good one as well. Just to carry stuff.
I've got one of those anubhav
any more description needed no i mean that's what i call it that's my nickname
top story this week well since things on earth are not going terrifically well broadly or specifically, we thought we'd look to the skies for our top story this week and this
thrilling news that Earth, our famous planet, is set to get a new moon. Yes, we've been
waiting for this for so long. A second moon is coming our way. If you're one of
those people who thought that we really aren't getting the best out of our one solitary moon,
that other planets with more moons have it better, even if Saturn's alleged 146 moon tally is
frankly unnecessary and preposterous. Who needs that many moons? I bet Saturn can't even remember
half of their names. But anyway, it seems ridiculous that we on Earth, which lest we forget,
is the best known and most popular planet in the entire
solar system and as far as we know the universe we just
pootle along with one
poultry f**king moon it's a big one it's an influential one but it's still
only one so the good news is
we're about to be treated to a free new
complimentary
trial second moon
uh... a small asteroid has just joined Earth on a
short-term deal for about two months from from this weekend just past it's
going to orbit the crap out of the earth for a few weeks and then is scheduled to
escape from the earth's gravity in late November and total back off into space
in search for its next moon gig but I guess if this trial is successful we
could be looking at a permanent second moon,
hopefully bigger because this one is quite small. I mean, I imagine both of you as massive fans of
moons in general must be very excited by this news.
I'm pumped Andy. Well, actually I say that we went out the other night and it was a full moon,
Andy. I well actually I say that we went out the other night and it was a full moon. The older Scottish husband and I and he looked at the moon. And then when we turned around the corner, the
moon had got smaller, like it was shy. And I cannot believe he male gazed the moon. It got smaller.
He objectified the moon and it got smaller. He's like, Oh, look, look how big and shiny it is. And the moon got embarrassed and shrunk.
And that is something that my husband did.
So I feel ashamed and the patriarchy has struck again.
Well, that's the thing with the patriarchy.
You might think it's down, but it always bounces back.
Look, it's about time.
It is about time.
Like you said, Andy, current moon, same boring
nonsense, right? New moon opens up a whole world to new culture. For
example, a possible Pink Floyd reunification project, the dark side
of this new moon, retelling of the 1979 Roger Moore James Bond classic
moon raker part G.
Retelling of the 1979 Roger Moore James Bond classic, Moonraker Part 2.
Yep.
It's going to be a scene.
I think we'd all be in favor of that.
I mean, if you're expecting something
along the lines of our world-renowned existing moon,
you might be disappointed.
You won't be able to see it because it's only 10 meters
long, although your pet wolf, if you have one,
will probably be inclined to howl at it
if it's using a professional quality telescope.
So do bear that in mind.
It's about 10 meters long, which actually makes it closer in size to a bench or a bread
roll than what we generally think of as moons.
But if the headline says we're getting a second moon, then I'm all in.
I just want, I think this planet needs to change.
And you know, this is a gratuitous piece of change. And I think it might it might just help us. I
mean, admittedly, I have all the second things that we've been
waiting for. Moon probably wasn't top of the list, you
know, second chance, second opinion, second coming, second
place rosette after dropping below Neptune in the top planet
for quality of life in the solar system rankings. Yeah, all
those good. But you know, maybe sometimes the unexpected is
turns out to be what you what you most need. And
I think, you know, second moon could could do us a lot of good.
Apparently, there's been loads of mini moons that have been
spotted. But they're like, there's been a couple that have
been spotted, but there's loads that have gone unnoticed. And
that's definitely true. Because my friend Lisa's hen do I
definitely did a mini moon at that. That wasn't recorded and I didn't get the credit for it.
Um, but I felt the effects of a second moon.
Uh, I felt the set, the effects of it since August actually, cause I had
two periods that month, either that, or it was a very stressful fringe.
Also at one point there was a tide in my bath and I think that was mini moon.
Oh, right.
Okay.
Yeah.
Good, good.
Well, look, I've just been thinking if you are a person with a pet wolf that
has its own telescope, you deserve to see the second moon.
What, what, uh, what I'm interested to know is that there's, there's, there's,
uh, according to this report, there are tens of thousands, if not hundreds of
thousands of objects out there that we haven't discovered. They
said this highlights the importance of us being able to
continually monitor the night sky and find all of these objects.
So it's good to know one day there can be a step to and sun
in space. I will probably be related to them in some way
because my great grandfather was Romany and he was a recycling
pioneer, he used to make windmills and jam jars and sell
them.
So somewhere I want to run a sort of intergalactic
bricker back shop, maybe on the mini moon.
Is it what you do with those? Those are you supposed to like spread them on toast like a regular jam or
a bit crunch?
You know, the windmills, the windmills and jam jars.
And some breaking news also reaching us, the USA, China, Russia and India have all announced plans to put a human being on the
mini moon by mid afternoon tomorrow at a combined cost of $8.5 quadrillion.
I have a feeling ours will probably be the cheapest one because he's probably trying
to go up there in a jam jar with the windmill.
Back on Earth news now and well the latest from the Middle East I think can be summarized
in two words.
Oh dear.
You could have gone with another word after the O but definitely started with oh and then something four letters long
I'm starting to think that some things aren't gonna be all fixed by Christmas as
As I was hoping both last year and this year and for every year since or a 6000 BC or so
And my main concern now is for UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, because I think
he will soon be suffering from repetitive strain injury from frowning and possibly weeping.
And it's possible that his entire face will just be fixed in a permafrown and that he
will never be able to express any emotion again facially other than despair
and disgust at what the world is becoming.
And I'm very concerned about this.
He issued a tweet.
He put out a tweet last week.
And this might be the saddest tweet he's put out, I think.
The United Security Council can make a tremendous difference for peace.
And I mean, that might be factually correct, but it also what one of the things that is least likely to happen.
On this planet bearing in mind that the members of the security council of the us a france.
Any u k and china and.
Russia and achieving unity amongst those five let alone the other ten non permanent members.
That is not looking about as likely as el Presley winning the 2028 US presidential election.
It's not completely out of the question, but it is a long shot and a lot of questions will be asked if it does suddenly happen.
Russia in particular does not seem particularly unity inclined at the moment. Have you got any shreds of optimism to throw into this casserole of gloom?
Well, I don't know.
The UN nowadays reminds me
a little bit of the Roman Emperor Nero ending. You know, like him, no one told them when the
people are up for a violin concert and when they need to read the room and not play the violin
because people are otherwise busy. I think they get together, they say a lot of things and I've learned a thing from
Millennials, it's called a word salad. It's one of the healthiest ways of consuming words.
I often wonder that if you've got word salad on one side and bunker buster bombs on the
other, I feel like the latter might be a little more effective.
Well, there's that famous saying, the pen is mightier than the sword.
And the only problem with that is that it's completely and utterly untrue.
And also the pen is definitely not mightier than the nuclear bomb, for example, or various other forms of military hardware.
But it's a charming idea to cling to, however naive.
Politico referred to the UN's relevance problem like it's a female pop star attempting a comeback.
The last kind of big thing they were doing was to propose this 21 day ceasefire. Yeah. And that everyone had come together to propose that.
And then it's just been treated as a serving suggestion, I guess.
Personally, I mean, I'm not really in favor of a 21 day ceasefire.
I'd much rather have a 21 millennium ceasefire, which I think will be just
enough time to let everything and everyone calm down and the end of which
people might have forgotten what they were fighting about But that might still be on the conservative
Conservative side. I mean maybe this this idea of unity in the un security council
It's like the start of an american sports movie where a team of people who don't get on at all
Can't play well together. They gradually bond and they end up winning a trophy and everyone getting very excited
And yeah by this time next year, we'll have kirstama whoever's running france by then
And yeah, by this time next year, we'll have Keir Starmer, whoever's running France by then, Kamala Harris, please, Xi Jinping and Vlad Poodles. I'll be singing
Love Lift Us Up where we belong at a special Eternal Peace concert in Beirut.
We just don't know at this stage.
They'll definitely be serving sausages.
Well, yeah, so this was the big highlight from last week was when Keir Starmer brought some
much-needed levity into the Middle East issue
By accidentally saying we should assume accidentally actually I say that I mean it's possible. He said he said sausages
instead of
hostages
and
People rather rashly assumed
that
That it was a slip of the tongue. I mean, do you think it definitely was tiff or do you think actually?
that it was a slip of the tongue. I mean, do you think it definitely was Tiff
or do you think actually?
I don't know, maybe he was doing,
who's the guy that does all the spooky songs?
You know, like eat it and-
Weird Al Yankovitch.
Weird Al, maybe he was weird out in the speech.
I'm just gonna swap words in.
Or maybe, maybe we've got it all wrong.
Maybe this whole time dogs have been asking for hostages and not sausages.
Do you?
Yeah.
Keep taking them to the butchers and they're like, why are you bringing me here?
I said I want hostages.
They should definitely return the hostages.
But if Hamas did take some sausages, they should return that as well, honestly.
You know, I think they should give back both those things that they've taken.
I would agree with that.
Also, I mean, it's possible that Keir Starmer is just trying to enter himself into the pantheon
of great misspoken words and famous speeches.
Because we generally only remember the retakes when people make a mistake and not the original version with the mistakes.
Starmer's mistake was that it was broadcast live so he couldn't re-record it with hostages
instead of sausages.
But for example, John F. Kennedy, his first effort was Ich bin ein burly nerd because
he loved rugby and he loved stats.
Robert Oppenheimer, now I am become Death, destroyer of curls.
Death for straight hair without the faff.
This is a very good question.
Margaret Thatcher's, there's no such thing as sobriety.
And Mao Tse-Tung, political power grows out of the apparel of a nun.
Who are Mrs. and of course FDRs.
The only thing we have to fear is ferrets health.
Just someone had mistyped his, his auto queue.
And of course, Patrick Henry, the American revolutionary in 1775.
Give me Liberty or give me free clothes and tickets to an arsenal game.
Well, that was maybe that was Kirstama as well.
What we do know is if there were sausages, they definitely weren't pork.
Yeah, I mean that probably would have helped. Maybe that would help. I don't know. Maybe
that's something that can bring people together. I am starting to worry that Gutierrez is really
not getting a lot of job satisfaction, which is very important in the modern workplace.
You know, in the 2020s, you want to be to to get into your job and and feel happy and content and i just don't think
you know he himself admitted that the un cannot mediate in conflicts where the parties are not
themselves seeking mediation so you can understand why he's so gloomy and it is hard to be held i
still personally like to think the glass is half full albeit that is half full of the shattered remnants of what
used to be the top half of the glass so that's the way I see the situation look
also I don't know there's been too much pressure on America to always mediate
things right you're a big sports fan I would imagine what if there was someone
completely from the left field who comes in and mediates and solves this and takes care of the ship?
You know, like Gabon steps up and you hear an announcement that
Djibouti has
Stepped up and taken care of the whole thing got everyone to sit down and everyone's gone home
You know, like I feel like other players need to step up now. Yes
Well, it does it does seem that whatever we're doing at the moment
isn't really, isn't really working.
And I mean, it's possible even rather than having countries, you should just
get randomly selected people or even sports teams from around the world
should be someone to write, okay, this week you are going to sort out the
Middle East, the Middle East crisis, the Jacksonville Jaguars, you're going to take a week off your troubled starts, the NFL season, and you're just going to sort out the Middle East, the Middle East crisis, the Jacksonville Jaguars,
you're going to take a week off, you're troubled start the NFL season, and you're just going
to go out, you're going to sort the Middle East, the Middle East out. I think I mean,
that could work Paris Saint-Germain could just go and instead of playing playing overplayed
football, they could just I haven't thought through the logistics.
I think Man City send them in to sort out the Ukraine.
It's about time we started using sports washing for the purposes of good and human progress.
I mean, for example, like you said, if the Saudis are going to own the second moon,
there's definitely going to be a golf tournament on there.
UK news now and well news has broken and when I say news has broken news has been created that Boris Johnson who created this piece of news considered invading the Netherlands
if I may overstate things in a manner befitting a story about Boris Johnson making up some
news in a new memoir entitled Unle. Boris Johnson has claimed that he considered
A raid by sea on a Dutch warehouse to seize covered vaccines during the pandemic
Obviously, it's a fun story particularly for those people who like to look back fondly on the time when we had a certifiable fucking clown as prime minister
And obviously this is Boris Johnson.
He might've said that he was thinking of invading the Netherlands, but we know he
would not have invaded the Netherlands because it would have been difficult.
And that wasn't really his mo anyway, the deputy chief of the defense staff,
Lieutenant General, uh, General Chalmers pointed out that there was only one
potential problem with the plan, which would have involved apparently rigid,
inflatable vote boats scuttling down Dutch canals at the dead of night to seize vaccines
from a warehouse had it happened, which obviously could never have happened.
The only problem was that the UK would have had to explain why we were effectively invading
a long standing NATO ally. Therefore, therefore this this otherwise apparently flawless plan to steal vaccines
from a Dutch warehouse using inflatable dinghies. But that obviously just couldn't go ahead.
I mean, Tiff, I know you've been waiting for Boris Johnson's memoir to be published as
you know, the the book that you've been waiting for all your life really. What did
you make of this story? Calling it Unleashed sounds like it's going to have a tie-in fragrance,
which would probably be a fart if it was Boris Johnson. Also that suggests at some point in time
Boris was actually leashed, like trained for walkies and punished for hiding in fridges.
Boris said we considered aquatic raid. That's what was described as
aquatic already. It's got into bond territory immediately. Aquatic raid on Netherlands to
seize COVID vaccine. And I just sort of thought about this. I was like, of course, because
any chance Bozza can have to make himself wish.com Churchill, he will take it. So when
Lieutenant General Doug
Chalmers told the Prime Minister it was possible, the plan was
certainly feasible and would involve using rigid inflatable
boats, you know, he was there going, we will fight them on the
beaches. That's just an excuse to get that line out. And then
it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's not baffling. It's like you say, it's not real news, is it? It's like,
what does the book cover? Well, it covers, it covers this plot, Oceans 11, or, you know,
in this kind of version, Oceans cunts. There doesn't need to be 10 or 11. There just needs
to be one. It just needs to be Boris. But the other parts of the book have him denying eating cake again. This is what we can expect from this exciting tome, this hotly
anticipated tome, denying eating cake as what he described as the feeblest event in the history
of human festivity, which was his 56th birthday during lockdown. I saw no cake, I ate no blooming
cake. If this was a party, it was the feeblest
event ever. I'd only just got over Covid. I did not sing, I did not dance. So those appear to be
the criteria for a party. Whoever the party is in honour of, they must sing or dance, otherwise it
is not a party. So how many parties have you been to Andy that have not been parties? I've never seen you sing or dance.
No, I don't think. Yeah. That means I've never been to a party, I think. I've never held a party.
Yeah. I mean, you were at my wedding reception. Maybe you sang, maybe you danced.
I did neither of those things, Tiff. No, no. So was it even a party, Andy?
Definitely not. Ash's 2005, Andy, I think ended up in a in a late night karaoke bar.
Dancing with 15,000 men.
I have never in my almost 50 years on this planet, I've never done
karaoke. And I consider that half a century well spent. But then I'm a miserable f**ker. So you know, you've got to balance that factor in as well.
We give Boris Johnson a lot of criticism for failing to be the Churchill he always dreamed
of being. But in many ways he got halfway there because Churchill famously said, I have
nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat. And Boris Johnson has got as far as
I have nothing to offer.
So it's a start. It's a start. It's another piece of mopaganda.
That's what I call it when Boris spouts a bit of nonsense because he does it while messing up the hair. I haven't read the book, but I just want to know, Andy Tiff, do you think there's stuff in
there where Boris Johnson takes credit for great moments of British history
where in some inexplicable way he was present like in Norman day for example?
Yeah I would hope so. I hope he's claiming that he was the genius behind most of his and
Bard Kingdom Brunel's best works and probably wrote half of Shakespeare's, well all of
Shakespeare's history plays given that they're absolutely full of bullshit.
That would stack up I think. Battle of Hastings? Yeah. Probably his great great
great great great great great. He probably came up with the word ashes
after his third breakup because the rivalry needed a title
Bugle crime section now and it's been a while since we had a crime section in the audio newspaper
I can't remember, Chris, can you remember if you've done a crime section before?
I mean we just talked about Boris Johnson so
talked about Boris Johnson so this is our first crime section for half a minute here on the bugle very exciting news this it's been claimed that
artificial intelligence could solve cold cases a chair of the National Police Chief's Council claimed that historic crimes could be solved.
This technology, I mean, I should before we do this, I should emphasize that no bugle co-host has been involved in any historic crimes.
Anuvabh, for example, was not responsible for a series of bank robberies in 1920s Michigan. Tiff Stevenson did not assassinate the King of Rurotania in the 1840s and none of
our other co-hosts have done things like that either. But apparently this AI detective work
can rifle through evidence at such a rate that it can process in just 30 hours the amount of evidence
that would take a single human detective 81 years
to get through which I think means that if we stick with human cops in each case
takes 81 years no crimes would ever be solved before those cops died which
might explain why things take so long to get through the court I might
misunderstood that but anyway but 30 years to do 81 years worth of work it's
so high-powered that it can even fill in
the necessary paperwork associated with 81 years worth
of human police detection in just 412 years.
The breakthrough has raised hopes
that even more excitingly than writing
the failures of justice.
This same technology could produce up to 2,700
true crime podcasts per second, which could make
it the most significant technological advance in human history. Tiff, I know that you're a
huge fan of AI taking over every aspect of human life, This must be particularly exciting. It can simultaneously examine information from multiple sources, including videos, social
media, emails and hard drives. And then the chairman of the National Police Chiefs Council,
Gavin Stevens, even suggested it could be used to crack previously unsolved cases like
Jack the Ripper. Yes, it's going to go on JTR's Facebook page and troll his posts. The lethal
the lethal apron is checked into the 10 bells in Whitechapel. What's on your mind? Feeling
stabby today. You know, Facebook memory pops up and it says share this spree from 1890 with a
couple of laughing emojis and one of a scalpel. Like we don't, we don't need cold cases. We don't need AI on cold cases. We have
internet detectives for that. We have obsessed middle aged women get out of our way. We're busy doing that. This
is technology coming for our jobs once again. How am I going to spend my afternoons if it cannot be going through
the internet opening up cold cases, true crime? I mean, come on. Do you want to take
all my fun away? Also, it's being trialed by the British and Avon police. So you can't not think
of hot fuzz the entire time. You know, are we actually going to investigate this? Are we going
to get metal Mickey on it? Then we're just going to have a jam jam, scone jam, which is going to
have a jam. Just going to have a scone. I was gonna say jam first. We're not terrorists. Anyway,
the robots going to look at Vlad the impalers Instagram say jam first. We're not terrorists. Anyway, the robot's
gonna look at Vlad the Impaler's Instagram reels later on so we don't have to do nothing.
I don't know if this is completely fair because for example, if they figured out, you know,
was Tootin Carmen murdered and who is William Shakespeare, then both Sky History and BBC4
would have to shut down. Yes.
They only exist for those reasons.
Yeah.
I mean, personally, I've long advocated computerizing the entire justice system.
You just buff all the evidence into a computer.
You set the tolerance according to the proximity of an election from vaguely sensible to lock
them all up and throw away the key.
And then you have an instant jail that can recreate a 12-year stretch in HMP
Snutterbridge in a harrowingly brutal half hour in something that's a cross between a cement mixer,
a roller coaster, a tumble dryer and a 1950s boarding school. And basically you get the entire
judicial process done in an afternoon. I can't see any drawbacks with that. I think you just describe India's legal system there, Andrew. Summary there. Very good.
In other crime news, New York Mayor Eric Adams is facing federal charges, including bribery,
wire fraud, and conspiracy. And news is actually now reaching us that Kamala Harris
has just stepped aside to allow Eric Adams to run as the Democratic
candidate for president at last the Democratic spokesperson says we have someone who can properly take on
Donald Trump and this is this is hugely exciting exciting news
that finally American politics gets gets what logically it is headed for which is to
two criminals up against each other
uh for legal purposes i must i should say that eric adams is not yet a criminal i tell you who
you need to leave it to investigate as to whether or not that is true middle-aged women on the
internet thank you so he's being investigated for getting thousands of dollars worth of gifts from
turkish investors right and i'm sure you guys have talked about this on the bugle recently your prime being investigated for getting thousands of dollars worth of gifts from Turkish investors, right?
And I'm sure you guys have talked about this on the Bugle recently, your Prime Minister
got thousands of pounds of clothes as presents. Now, this is just the Indian perspective here.
Where is the crime here exactly? Because in our politics, we would just refer to this as Tuesday.
In our politics, we would just refer to this as Tuesday. Give me an example of a local Mumbai politician, a city MLA.
He got convicted for a bribe.
Basically he spent the money building a high rise building.
He lives in it.
The guy that gave him the bribe lives on the floor below and the guy prosecuting them lives
above.
So everybody happy. You know, I think there's clear ways to think now.
Do they call that a corruption sandwich?
Here's the weird thing. There's a lot of talk about the Indian Prime Minister being not corrupt.
I mean, famously, there are loads of articles about how he's cleaning up the system. And that's why there's a strong argument going around India that the Prime Minister Modi may
be foreign because not taking bribes is not in our DNA. Till an editorial recently said that maybe
someone's giving him a bribe to not take a break.
And finally on this week's Bugle, our tech and entertainment section.
Technology continues to drive humanity simultaneously forwards, backwards, sideways, and wildly
often on track all at the same time.
Tiff, there's been a suggestion that tech could provide a solution to government inefficiency.
The CEO of JP Morgan Chase has backed Elon Musk's proposal to create a Department of
Government efficiency, I mean politics prides
itself on being as inefficient and counterproductive as possible.
Is this really something that's going to catch the imagination of our legislators?
Well Musk is already expecting Trump to win and he floated the idea that he would work in Donald Trump's government as part of a new commission
if the election were to go his way in November.
But the efficiency department, I can already see it as a sitcom.
Elon playing a David Brent-esque character who embarrasses everyone with his shocking dancing first day on the job.
The first episode revolves around a meeting
to see how the department can be more efficient
and it takes six hours.
And then Jamie Dimon puts some poor civil servant
stapler in jelly and someone starts a game of football,
sorry, soccer, in the printing room and it all kicks off.
I'm excited, I might pitch it to maybe,
or maybe even Armando Iannucci
will get a VEEP version of this.
I don't see that happening.
We can see if we can get him on the bugle to talk about it.
If you're listening Armando, to come on anytime.
In other tech news, it's turned that misinformation on TikTok
Tiff has been turning women away from using the contraceptive
pill.
So I've long thought that the internet is essentially replacing organized religion.
I mean, it essentially fulfills the same role as God, that it knows everything about every
aspect of your life.
And it's massively judgmental towards women.
I mean, it's an uncanny resemblance.
And clearly, this is another manifestation of that, the internet basically taking over the role that was traditionally performed by the
world's great religions.
Well, yeah, I think we need a morning after pill for the internet itself. One that gets
rid of the seed of every bad idea that's been planted in your brain. I think going outside
and going for a walk is probably the real life version of that.
But yeah, trending on TikTok at the moment, pull out is trending on TikTok, the rhythm method,
the crossing your fingers method, or my personal method, the algorithm method.
That's where you spend so long trawling the internet, both parties lose interest in having sex.
It's a very effective contraception. I found that the lifelong obsession with cricket statistics
works pretty well as well actually.
Stab me till I'm soft baby. Family show.
Women's health leaders are concerned that nonsense about
hormonal contraception posted
on TikTok and Instagram is driving a dramatic rise in unplanned pregnancies and abortions.
So there's videos out there with hundreds of thousands of views from various influencers
claiming that the pill is this generation cigarettes. But I thought this generation
cigarettes was vapes. But you know, it's basically wellness
influencers promoting this, who are paid to promote alternative methods. You know the type
that I'm talking about. If you've seen them on social media, they want to tell you about their
youth and health, Alexia and somewhere along the line, it contains their own urine. And you can buy
it, you know, and they'll say things like, I don't eat food, I eat my feelings, I literally write the emotion I'm feeling on a piece of paper and eat it. And you can make that
more delicious by adding sriracha. Please hit subscribe. Next week, I'll be telling you about
bumhole bathing. That's where you go into your garden, offer your ring piece to the sun,
and that will unblock any negative emotions you may have around rampant exhibitionism.
These are the kind of people filling up the ears of
impressionable young women on TikTok. And I sort of understand where it comes
from, because you know, in the 70s, feminism was concerned about the fact
that male doctors were prescribing all this stuff for women, but not listening
to women's needs or understanding women's body and everything medically based, uh, re or medical based research is based on men as the default.
So, you know, there should be a healthy amount of skepticism around.
Stuff that's historically gone before, but there has to be a middle ground
between, between that and this kind of like, yeah, sure.
Just pull out.
Actually, if you do it standing up, you you can't you know, you're going back to like teenage
If you do it standing up, you're not gonna get pregnant. I mean, what's
Where's it gonna end? Well, I mean, I think if you do it whilst
Whilst thinking about about 1980s Wimbledon finals. That's you probably won't get pregnant there either. I mean that's yeah
spread that rumor.
Particularly Conor's mackinrope. I shouldn't be using TikTok for finding kidney stone
treatments by watching some of these videos.
So, you know, right?
TikTok MD is like Doogie Howser MD,
as in it's literally kids.
It's like the same.
It's just children telling other children what to...
I saw one the other day that was about dry shampoo and this woman going, I recommend this
dry shampoo over this one. And like, because there's toxic chemicals in this dry shampoo,
because there's... the things you don't want are butane and propane. I'm like,
the things that make aerosols work. I mean, those are literally,
so you can't recommend another aerosol. Like, aren't they the propellants? Am I missing
something? I thought those were the things that made an aerosol be an aerosol.
With my hair care regime, it's neat butane and neat propane four times a day.
So you can go to a barbershop or a petrol pump.
Anubhav, let's finish with some entertainment news from India.
Well, the latest sort of ticket price controversy, we had the Oasis reunion tickets over here,
people complaining about how much they were costing and the hotels and things putting their prices up around it. Coldplay have been causing a bit of a rumpus in India with the secondary market for their
tickets for their shows next year.
Coldplay, big band from your country, Andy, very big, I think, in the 1900s and subsequently.
New in India, big fan base, but basically we have about 1% of this country listens to
English music.
And so about, you know, say maybe a few hundred thousand people were expected to buy tickets.
They put 180,000 tickets on sale on a website called Book My Show, which is sort of India's
ticket master.
And 42 million people tried to buy
tickets.
Now, what I know, this is my cadadrum.
Basically, now the government's got involved and they're saying that essentially what BookMyShow
tried to do is make it democratic and India being the technology capital of the world,
a bunch of bots and server farms got involved, bought all those tickets and put it on
reselling platforms like fire go go. And the tickets were being
resold for 9000 pounds. Now, there is a fan base for Coldplay
in India, I'm sure. But I don't know how many Gen Z Indian kids
are running out to buy 9,000 pound tickets for
Coldplay. So the debate going on in India was, you know, are there these many Coldplay
fans in India? Because the Mumbai queue, there's a queue, so you signed up to buy tickets,
it was all at one time, 12 o'clock on Saturday. And I tried to buy tickets, for example, and it said I'm 20 million in
the queue for Mumbai. And Mumbai has only 16 million people.
So.
In India, being 20 million in the queue was quite near the front of the queue for a lot of things.
I shouldn't have given up. I shouldn't. So I want to know what you guys think.
Do you think this is a massive technology scam slash complex thing to resell or do you
think suddenly India has found Coldplay?
They got so horny by it, it caused a population explosion almost instantly.
Coldplay have made India so horny.
Well you say it's Coldplay, but I did once statistically work out that the population
of India more than doubled during the test match cricket career of Sachin Tendulkar,
which did suggest that India found his perfectly correct high front elbow
sometimes a little too much to deal with alone so yeah but it does
seem like a lot to pay for a for a concert particularly for example when you
can buy tickets to my forthcoming tour show starting on the 1st of November
way way cheaper than nine thousand pounds each in fact I think it's
generally around about 17 to 20 pounds all the dates are on my website and
is also on dot co.uk I will be as always solving all the world's greatest social and political problems through the medium of
comedy
So do buy your tickets for that
All the tickets shows go on well start November to sometime in April
Dotted around UK and hopefully we'll be announcing some Europe dates soon as well
Tiff anything to plug
Yes, I'm gonna be in Rotterdam
If you're there doing a show on Friday and in Paris on Wednesday, so any bugler listeners
You know in those areas or surrounds get yourself along to the shows gonna be doing some solo shows there
I'll be at the Nottingham Comedy Festival in November and also in Edinburgh in December
Recording husband material the show I had at the Edinburgh Fringe
So if you go to my Instagram, you can find all the dates for those kind of things
about
Just one very quick thing. I'll
Be back in the United Kingdom end of October for a short stint I will be at the Canterbury Comedy Festival because
I'm just going through a very pious phase. It'll be a good place to perform. I think it's the
25th of October but I will put it out on Twitter. Great we are having a week off the bugle next
week because I will be busy watching cricket in Pakistan by this time next
week. The cricket season in England finished as we record yesterday
afternoon and the remorseless churn of international sport is such that England
some of the England players I think flew straight out off that game to Pakistan
So we have a week off. We will have a couple of bugles whilst I'm in Pakistan through October and then
Back with regular shows for the rest of the year when of course also
I will be on tour with my stand-up show the Zoltgeist
So thank you for listening
Buglers, don't forget to join the Bugle Voluntary Subscription Scheme,
um, to give one-off or recurring contributions to help keep the show free,
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monthly Ask Andy show. We're recording another one
pretty soon, Chris. Next couple of days.
Two days time, Andy.
Two days time. There we go. Wednesday.
Questions incoming now
Right, and thank you as always to all those who do subscribe
Thanks for your support until we'll have a bonus sub episode next week and then back with a full bugle the week after that
Thank you for listening. Goodbye The End