The Gargle - Climate jobs | Sauna sessions | Influencers
Episode Date: June 27, 2024Dan Ilic and Joe Kent-Walters (aka Frankie Monroe) join host Alice Fraser for episode 163 of The Gargle. All of the news, with none of the politics.🥵 Climate jobs🧖🏻♀️ Sauna sessions�...� Cheat sues Apple🤳 Influencer fined🍴 ReviewsWatch on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/@BuglePodcastStory 1: https://www.businessinsider.com/gen-z-climate-jobs-skills-gap-linkedin-2024-6Story 2: https://www.404media.co/game-studios-job-requirement-non-negotiable-sauna-sessions/Story 3: https://uk.pcmag.com/ios/152837/man-sues-apple-after-wife-discovers-cheating-via-messages-synced-to-imacStory 4: https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/jun/15/dubai-influencer-fined-for-trespassing-on-sardinia-pink-beach-spiaggia-rosaWritten by Alice Fraser, Dan Ilic and Joe Kent-WaltersProduced by Ped Hunter, with executive production from Chris SkinnerHOW TO SUPPORT THE GARGLE- Keep The Gargle alive and well by joining Team Bugle with a one-off payment, or become a Team Bugler or Super Bugler to receive extra bonus treats!https://www.thebuglepodcast.com/donate Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This is a podcast from The Bugle. tree and gasp gulping sweet breaths of night air. How could he have won her heart and thus betrayed her?
What a fool she'd been.
Amelia, she heard the duke's heavy footsteps
on the paving stone.
Amelia, my darling, you must listen to me.
It's all a terrible misunderstanding.
Warm hands seized her tiny waist and spun her towards him.
She swung for a slap only to find her wrist caught
in an iron grip.
His breath fanned her face in the darkness,
smelling of mint and expensive wine and sandalwood and an ephemeral mask that was only him.
Amelia, you must listen to The Gargle. Welcome to The Gargle, the sonic glossy
magazine to the Bugles audio newspaper for a visual world. I am your host,
Alice Fraser, and these are your guest editors for today's edition of the
magazine. Joe Kent-Walters, welcome. Hello, thanks for having me. I thought I was in the wrong podcast for a minute there with the intro.
I've got very scared. I've not got much literary knowledge, so I'm in the right one, I think.
I mean, this is my strategy is starting the podcast with a different epic intro every time.
And I've realised what that means is that ideally anyone listening
should think they're listening to the wrong podcast for about the first 20 seconds, which
is a terrible marketing strategy.
Oh no, that's a hook. That's a hook.
I thought I was on some kind of Bridgerton recap show, but clearly not.
That voice was our second guest editor for this week's edition of the magazine, which
is Dan Illich. Welcome back.
Yes, thank you. In true Bridgerton style, I was speaking without being introduced to
the room. Sorry, Alice. Terribly sorry.
Scandalous. I mean, this is the etiquette of podcasting is that you mustn't speak until
you've first been introduced by a mutual friend. How delightful. Very regency of us all. Well,
before we take tea in the approved fashion which is
this week's top stories let's have a look at the front cover of this week's
magazine. The front cover this week is the river Seine in Paris
controversially being cleaned up for the Olympics against the will of the people.
I don't know if you've been following this story, Dan. Would you shit
in a river for political purposes?
Yes, I love this story so much. The mayor was going to declare that they were going
to go for a swim in the river just to prove that the Seine was clean. Then thousands of
Parisians said, well, we are going to shit in the river just to prove the mayor wrong.
And I think that is just absolutely beautiful.
That is not the Pista resistance, that is the Pouda resistance. Well done, Paris, you've done
an incredible job there. I think, I wish I was on the ground. I know this is not a political podcast,
Alice, but Julian Assange is arriving back in Australia today. But I would not, I would not,
I don't give a shit about Julian Assange. I want to go to Paris. I want to see people shit in front of the mayor. And apparently
there's some kind of app or some kind of web portal that can give you a location on the
Seine and tell you when exactly to do a shit so that your shit will have more chance of
hitting the mayor than anybody else's shit and that is ah that is that
is true French style I love that that is great it is very egalitarian indeed and
the certificate cartoon this week is Justin Timberlake being arrested for
drunk driving he was not recognized by the policeman who arrested him because
the policeman who arrested him was too young. Look, I think
that is the biggest argument I've ever heard for getting more middle-aged women into the
police force because had that been a suburban mother of three, he would have gone free as
a bird.
That is not true. Had that been a suburban mother of three, he would have been locked
up for days on end because they would have known and remembered
what he did to Britney Spears
and it would have been all over for Timberlake.
Yeah, well maybe if they were young enough,
they'd just think,
oh, are you the voice in Shrek 3?
As the prince, no way.
That's the biggest thing he's got in my generation.
I mean, the argument in court has to be,
I'm gonna be fray.
Did I introduce that entire story for that punchline?
I'm bringing sobriety back, hey.
I'm not drinking anything whack, hey.
Our top story this week is wishful environment thinking news, which is the news that Gen Z,
more than any other generation, want to get jobs that will help them with the environment
and yet do not know how to get jobs that will help them help the environment.
Daniel, you very famously and award-winningly helped the environment.
Can you unpack this story for us?
Yeah, apparently, this is a survey according to LinkedIn, they used a whole bunch of data to
survey a whole bunch of Gen Zs about how they want to help the environment. It turns out they
don't actually have the skills to help the environment. And now apparently, people within
the next five years, they really want to get a job. But I don't think the next five years,
the next five years is too late. They need a job right now.
Western society, by the way, has had a long history
of children and carbon removal.
Like I saw that documentary, Mary Poppins,
and they had lots of little kids
cleaning out those chimneys.
They had a whole song about it.
I think we should get over ourselves,
forget about child laws, labour laws,
and just get this problem solved.
Get the kids in the chimneys, is what I'm saying.
Ideally, of course, the kids could all run for office, but maybe this is the
best way out of this because if you're Gen Z, you're probably in your late teens, 20s
now, you need to get out on the hustings, you need to kiss some babies, and people will
let you because you are a baby. It won't be any weird. It's not weird at all for a baby
to kiss a baby.
Apparently LinkedIn also said that Gen Z are lacking skills when it comes to
green jobs. And one of the skills they say that Gen Z are lacking are measuring
carbon emissions. This is where I think LinkedIn is wrong. I think they're a bit
out of touch because if they've ever met a Gen Z person, they should know
that they are way past carbon.
In fact, they're onto more deadly, more potent greenhouse gases.
If LinkedIn ever dared to go and survey a boarding school dorm, they would see Gen Zers
effectively measuring methane emissions on a nightly basis, a much deadlier greenhouse
gas than carbon.
Look, I'm a big believer in putting Gen Z in charge of all the fugitive emissions
because if they know who smelt it, they can tell you who dealt it.
And then they can put those countries into like a, give them a big wedgie and then throw
them in down the hill in a recycling bin.
And I think that is climate justice right there.
See, as a child, I remember we were fed Captain Planet and then all of our like school excursion
is involved picking up rubbish
Or maybe that's just the school I went to there was like quite a few open days where we all had to go and pick up rubbish
Was this part of your experience or did I just go to like a particularly environmentally conscious slash child labor school?
Folks I was I was once a part of the SRC the student representative council in high school
There's a big deal. There's a bit. Oh, hey look leadership material. That's me. That's me guys I was once a part of the SRC, the Student Representative Council in high school. Clang.
This is a big deal.
Oh, hey, look, leadership material.
That's me.
That's me, guys.
Youth leader right here.
Three-time Australian Comedy Podcast of the Year winner.
Four, four times.
More importantly on the internet.
But who's counting?
Oh, sorry.
Not this SRC leader.
No, no, no, no.
And part of the deal was I created this E Plan. This E Plan was called the Environment
Plan and I broke it a deal with the school management, i.e. the principal, that I could
solicit Music Track's popular music of the day and play it in the last five minutes of
lunchtime and when people heard the cool music, they knew it was time to pick up trash and put it in the bin. So that was
the E plan. That was my very early foray into environmental public policy.
That's, I mean, look, you could do worse. I've seen, and most politicians seem to do
worse. Sorry. Politics bellpepp. Joe, what are your thoughts on this?
On the Gen Z environmental issue?
Well, I am a Gen Z.
I've come clean.
I'm one of them.
I'm one of the baby kisses.
Oh no, oh no.
Yeah, I know.
I've been here all along.
I've been spying on you.
Hang on a second.
Gen Z are a lot older than I thought they were.
Yeah, yeah.
Too right.
We're fixing your fridges.
We're in your fridges.
We're hiding.
We're everywhere.
Um, you know, I think, uh, I, I,
I thought that the only two examples you've given here were fridge based.
Yeah, well, you know, we did, we, and actually fridges are not so good for the
environment.
It's all we learned is cause all they taught us was fridges. We're so cold. We just want. But, you know, I
read a statistic in the article that said, you know, one in fancy Gen Z's lack green skills.
And I really presented that because, you know, from my personal experience,
I've got loads of friends who are really good at rolling spliffs and packing bongs. We love
it when people can smoke loads of it. So I can't, yeah, I resent that really. I think
we've got loads of those skills. Very transferable. You know what I mean?
Maybe if we can pack a bong, maybe we can pack the ozone.
You know what I mean?
Put those holes in.
Look, Joe, if you and your Gen Z refrigerator mates could just fix up the CFCs that you're
packing the back of fridges, then we would have an ozone layer.
Well, yeah, there you go. I don't know, I think that also another thing
that I think skews the data here is that,
you know, millennials and boomers,
they're in a lot of ways,
they're a lot more confident than Gen Zs,
especially when it comes to the professional world.
You know, we've been sort of stuck in internships
for so long.
We're like overly polite.
We're meek, we're a meek generation.
And you know, someone said hello to me the other day on the street and I said, thank
you. That was my gut reaction. You know, so we're not gonna, I'm not gonna bolster my
CV by saying that, you know, I know anything about science. Like I'm not gonna lie. I'm meek. I'm just know anything about science. I'm not going to lie,
I'm meek, I'm just happy to be here. I guess the problem with Gen Z is that they're going to be
asking everyone for permission to make solar and wind projects when no one actually wants them.
It's true. I think we should look to Generation Z, from Generation Z to Generation X and go with the Bart Simpson motto of don't have a cow
man if we cut down our beef exports.
Very good, very good.
One of the worst things you can do for the environment on a personal level, but actually
personal level is dog shit.
What we really need to be doing is knocking up the CEO of Shell and
dangle him off the edge of something.
A ball pit by his ankle.
Yeah.
Yeah. I thought you meant impregnates him.
We're not talking violence though, are we Alice?
We're really just talking about like some kind of comical TV game show,
Japanese style sort of.
Yeah.
Well, ball pit, a pit full of human testicles.
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I debated against him once.
And you were there, Dan.
Was I? Oh my gosh.
Oh, was it Splendour in the Grass?
He came in via Skype, back when Skype was a thing,
and the most notable thing,
he was basically there to plug WikiLeaks and the WikiLeaks party and the most notable thing was a
guy who looked exactly like a tiny Julian Assange in the audience who was outraged that we were
doing a debate against his hero. I don't know whether he supported Julian Assange because he
believed in freedom of the press or because he supported the right to get famous while looking like a bargain bin Draco Malfoy,
but he threw a bottle of water at us.
I don't even remember this.
Oh my god.
Yeah.
He came up to the stage and he threw a bottle of plastic bottle of water onto the stage,
which means that this ad was brought to you by half a glass of water.
Gotcha.
You thought that was a rambling anecdote off the top of
my head, but it was actually a pre-written bit, as is this.
Now it's time for nude sauna sessions news now. And this is the news that in non green jobs, there's a game studio that is requiring
nude sauna sessions from its employees. Joe Kent Walters, you're sweating. Can you unpack
this story for us?
I'm in a sauna right now. I thought let's let's go. Let's go authentically with it.
Yeah, so I found it a little bit difficult to wrap my head around because it all
revolved a little bit around a beef between a former employee and this guy. But one of the
things I found sort of give it a little bit more clarity is that the game in question was a game
in a sauna, like based in a sauna, like sauna simulator. So the advert was like, oh, if
you want to program for sauna simulator, you have to be in a sauna. But I really think
that this is all, the whole thing is just this guy's kind of creepy ruse. That's my
take because the company is financially bankrupt, you can look up the company on
companies house and that it's struggling to play their pay
their employees, it's bankrupt. And because I think it's just
one guy is kind of big fetish machine. And when he was trying
to, when he was trying to sort of, he was trying to defend
himself and saying, and say, Oh, I've got a quote from him, Hang on. Um, in a quote, he said, he was talking about,
you know, the benefits of we're making this game about a sauna.
So it's great when people are in the sauna and coming up with that.
He says, he says, my narrative girls have to go to the sauna with me to come up
with an amazing script for the proof of concept. But he says, my narrative girls,
like that's like trying to defend yourself
for not being a misogynist by starting to say this,
well, me lovely ladies were all coming with me into the sun.
They're very good at things.
So yeah, my take is I think he's a creepy guy.
And I think he's been rummelled that he's just been sort of using investor money to feed
his sauna fetish.
That's my take.
Joe, I think you've been too harsh on this guy.
I used to work at Activision as a game maker and I made Call of Duty and the amount of
Russians I had to kill to get that game into production
was astonishing.
I've got blood on my hands, but sure, but it's realistically looking blood.
I know how to use Unreal Engine, so hey, whatever.
Yeah, it's true.
Famously realistic games, aren't they?
That's why you see the Japanese creators of
Nintendo's Mario Brothers jumping on mushrooms all day long. Yeah, fists are
bleezing from smashing blocks just to really get a feel for it. Yeah, that's the
best excuse when you get called up by the cops for kidnapping a princess.
It's like, I'm doing research for a game level. I'm doing research for a game level.
Don't send the cops, send a plumber.
Yeah, why are we sending a plumber to rescue a princess?
The founder of the studio said something very strange, among other things.
I don't want to waste my time to explain the difference.
What's the difference between a rusker, bannier, or a dry sauna?
You have to feel it.
I'm like, actually, maybe that is something to waste your time explaining about.
Or at least spend your today's making a f***ing game.
Look, I don't think the game's going to be very popular. Apparently it's only going to be available on Steam.
So that's a very niche gaming reference.
Although I think you need to spend a bit more time in the sauna because they're usually dry, actually.
I've got to say this.
You want to hop in here with me. Trust me, it's a good time.
This company is very problematic. It's a very problematic company.
Like, if you go to HR, they'll only see you if you also accept a massage.
And apparently, it's the only way to get your case a happy resolution.
And that brings us to our reviews section. As you know, each week we ask our guest editors to bring
in something to review out of five stars. Dan, what have you brought in for us today?
I've brought in a fork, you know, crafted unapologetically from a single piece of stainless steel.
The fork is simultaneously more complex than a spoon, but it's also very similar in function
to a pair of chopsticks, but it's actually much simpler in the way you use it.
A fork fits in between the thumb and the forefinger, eliminating fatigue during extended dining
sessions.
Forks have really mastered the seamless transition from
hand to plate, allowing a vector from plate to mouth.
Forks are great for anyone that wants to bite off more than they can chew.
And while the minimalist design is functional, some might find those clean lines rather sterile,
though sterile could be argued is a feature, not a bug.
So I say fork S, four stars.
Did you choose four stars
because of the four times of the fork, Dan?
Yes, well, I think so.
One star per prong is what I was going for, yes.
No stars for the handle, though.
What's wrong with the handle?
No stars for the handle, no, no, no.
Three stars for a fish fork.
Joe, what have you brought in for us?
I've brought in Chris Pratt's Garfield.
He's here with me.
And let me tell you, he's annoying.
He's saying, he's running round.
He's like, you know, I don't know a lot about Garfield,
but I thought he's a lazy cat who's sarcastic
and he likes lasagna.
This guy's jumping around.
He's grinning, grinning from cheek to cheek.
He's sort of, he's just infusiastic about,
he loves everything.
And he doesn't even have any lasagna on him.
He's rubbish.
One star for Chris Pat's Garfield.
And his dad, Samuel L. Jackson. I don't know how that works, but that's the film.
Joe, how does he feel about Mondays?
Let me just ask him. Chris Pratt's Garfield, how do you feel about Mondays? I love him.
He looks, you know what I mean? I don't think this guy's Garfield.
I don't think he is. I don't think he is Garfield. One star. He's a liar.
And that brings us to our cheating news of the week. This is the news that a man has been discovered
by his wife cheating. And the way that she discovered
him was via messages that were synced to a family computer, all of which pretty par for
the course. The next step, however, will shock you. The man has sued Apple for revealing
his infidelity to his wife. Joe, you've eaten an apple. Can you unpack this story for us?
Yeah.
I mean, yeah.
So it was not, you know, just any infidelity.
It was messages to a sex worker
that he'd sent and he'd not realized that on your phone,
there's like a setting where if you don't click it,
it syncs all of those messages to your family computer. So his kid was probably going on to play Angry Birds and
instead was faced with an angry anyway, you know, it's, it's, it's, I just think this
guy, he's probably friends with his sword or creep, isn't it? They're probably mates. Because I just think, he's done a messy job.
He's not done a good job of covering it up.
And I feel like suing Apple for this is like suing Dettol
for not cleaning 99.9% of germs on your bloodstained shirt.
You know what I mean?
It's like he's red handed.
He's got guilt all over him. This doesn't make a difference, but you know, he's clutching
at straws.
Yeah, sounds like he's just trying to get the house back.
Well, she filed for divorce and it cost him five million pounds or more than five million
pounds. And his statement
is that they probably wouldn't have gotten divorced if Apple hadn't revealed the messages
in such a brutal way, which is to say by not letting him delete them off his computer and
that had Apple not deleted the messages, he would have been able to have a conversation
with her in a rational way and might still be married today. And what he means by that is what he would have
been able to do is continue to hide his sexual infidelities from his wife until one or both
of them caught an STD. That is, I think the iMessage is less brutal than like, sweetheart,
you've got chlamydia.
I'm no expert, but I feel like the rational person here is the wife. And I think, yeah,
she's the rational person out is the wife. And I think, yeah, she's the rational person
out of this relationship.
It's just so terrible.
Like it's, I think the most terrible thing about this
is that he is not as ashamed as he should be,
because if he were as ashamed as he should be,
he would take his licks, deal with the divorce,
and like try and rewrite his character
among his closest,
nearest and dearest. But instead he's made himself international news by suing one of
the largest companies in the entire world.
Yeah. He really puts the class into class action. That's what he does. I mean, there's
so many other ways to communicate with sex workers in 2024. You don't have to use a phone.
You could use smoke signals. That is, stand at the end of the bar,
light a smoke, look like a loser, all alone.
Somebody will eventually come up to you and say,
hey, are you a lonesome loser that needs a blowjob?
And then you're in.
Like, that's how you go.
Or pigeons.
I mean, pigeons are a risk-free way
to communicate to sex workers
because no spouse is gonna wanna hang in the pigeon coop
as you frantically receive and send messages. Though it can take a few days to have that conversation. It takes
a day to set the location, a day to set the costumes, a day to set the kink. By the time
three or four days are gone, you've probably knocked one out anyway and you're no longer
horny. So pigeons do have their downside.
I just feel like iMessage was his, like the move was not iMessage, the move was like there are
plenty of things from Snapchat to Signal that pride themselves on their privacy settings.
Like this is, he's not hiding it himself, he's coming home with a collar full of lipstick emojis.
I reckon like his operational security is so bad I reckon
it's something that you shouldn't even have to worry about in a in a
relationship like that but I reckon that she already knew for a very long time
what was going on and she was just trying to find the receipts.
And that brings us to our final story of this week, which is the news that an influencer
in Dubai has been fined for trespassing on Sardinia's famous pink beach.
Dan Ilic, you are not not an influencer.
Can you unpack this story for us?
This is great.
It's a Dubai based influencer, influencer, sorry, I've just had my influencer
shot so influencers on the brain. A Dubai-based influencer, she got fined 1800 euros for trespassing
on this incredible beach in Sardinia. No tourists are allowed to go there. It's an island, it's
protected. It costs like, if you flout the rules, you get fined like a certain amount.
And then if you take a vessel that hasn't been given permission, then you get fined
another amount.
So she got charged quite a bit of money.
And the reason she got caught was she flouted the rules and she also took a terrible video
with Edith Piaf of her walking on these very rare pink sands and then posted that video to her 35,000 followers.
As if the people who run that island
are never gonna see the tag when you tag that island.
She got dumped.
She got dumped.
It's like, if you're gonna do crimes,
don't do crimes on social media. It's disastrous. It's like, if you're going to do crimes, don't do crimes on social media.
It's disastrous.
It's very bad.
People find out.
It feels like it's such an odd attitude to life, as though if you don't get caught doing
something in the moment, it's not a crime.
I don't understand the logic of what she was thinking.
The point of doing, of breaking the law, I mean,
is that you don't leave any evidence.
At least all the crimes I've ever committed,
I've never told anyone about.
Whoop.
Eh.
Joe.
They're here, I was a smile all along,
I'm from the police, I'm new to the pods,
no one background checked me, we're coming for you.
Me and Chris Pratt's Garfield are gonna cuff ya.
I'm gonna use the human shield of Justin Timberlake, but you won't know who he is.
I'm repelled by how unknown this guy is to me.
He's eerily symmetrical in his features and yet I don't recognise him.
He's eerily symmetrical in his features and yet I don't recognise him. Yeah, no, crazy story. I mean, I think if you probably put one of those, there's a bit
of a problem at the moment on Instagram where it's detecting everything is made with AI.
I don't know if you've seen this, like, you know, people are putting their Edinburgh posters
up at the moment and there's all these graphic designers who've worked really hard on something.
And then it says made with AI automatically puts it on.
So they're kind of it's a bit of a controversy.
But that could go in her favor.
She wax a filter on this made with AI.
The whole thing never happened.
It was generated. You know what I mean?
If a tree fell in an AI-generated forest
and no one heard it, did it ever really fall?
Look, if you can't get a job in the environmental sciences, Joe, you can get a job as a crime consultant.
Joe, I think you're onto a brand new business model here. I think there is a whole new market
for influencers to create, generate these videos rather than actually,
experience these videos.
And that way they could rack up the clout and the likes
just with their AI walks on the pink beach.
It doesn't have to be pink beach.
It could be a fuchsia beach or it could be a teal beach.
It could be the rings of sasson.
Yeah, why not?
I mean, this is the thing.
She could have just gone on any beach and then coloured it in with paint afterwards.
And also, can I just say, the sand doesn't look all that pink. It looks pretty like a normal beach.
It doesn't look like an impressive beach, but maybe in European or Mediterranean standards it is an impressive beach.
She should just come to Australia. We've got heaps of things you could stomp on that look very similar. It'll
be fine.
My favourite kind of influencers are tradwife mumfluencers. If you don't know what a tradwife
mumfluencer is, she is a lady who appears online. If you've never come across her, just
Google nappies for a while and she'll arrive.
But her job is to go online and tell women that women shouldn't have a job
and that people shouldn't listen to women
and women should kind of be in the home
and be making their husbands happy and so on and so forth.
And women shouldn't be earning money,
they should be making their husbands happy
and their children comfortable and so on and so forth. And her saying that women shouldn't have a job and women shouldn't get paid is
her job that she gets paid for. So I think that's what's your favourite influencer Joe?
Gosh, I think the one that I find really fascinating at the moment, my girlfriend is obsessed with
Gypsy Rose.
I don't know if you're at all familiar with Gypsy Rose.
So she was basically at the same place.
It's a long story, but I'll sum it up quickly.
She was in the noughties involved in one of the most horrific kind of abuse scandals which essentially ended with her
paying for her boyfriend to murder her mother, her abusive mother, and she was jailed for eight
years for this and now she's been released from jail and walked straight out into a full-time celebrity influencer career.
She's got millions and millions of followers, like people are obsessed with her. She's like
one of the top influencers now. She's been on Keeping Up with the Kardashians and it's,
it blows my mind because it's like, it's like the last minute of a Black Mirror episode. You
know what I mean,
like something horrible happens and then there's this kind of twist that that's kind of celebrated
in today's pop culture. But that's exactly what's happened. If you don't know it, you should look
it up, but it is a real wormhole. But she doesn't talk about any of the stuff that happened,
that's not the fascinating stuff. She talks uh, the people she's sleeping with at the moment.
She's famous for the phrase, uh, uh, the D was fire.
That's a catch phrase.
If the D was fire, seek consultant from your doctor, please.
Yeah.
Check, check your husband's eye messages.
Dan, what's your favorite kind of influencer? Thank you, Joe. I've now looked her up and I am now following with great intent.
It's a wormhole. You're going to go down it. There's like a catalyst at the moment with
influencers where people have had enough of them. And I think that's interesting. Like in Brooklyn,
there are several cafes who have banned influencers from coming into their cafe with tripods and things. And there's like a very
famous example of a Korean cafe which had a beautiful aesthetic. And because one person
posted it in Brooklyn, hundreds of influencers turned up trying to replicate the same video
in this cafe
and they would come in and buy one drink and then like spend two hours filming
and the cafe owners are just like hey no more f***ing influencers please.
They've had to shut off a whole section of Kyoto to tourists the Geisha district
of Kyoto no longer allows tourists in because influencers were being so obnoxious to the geishas.
Oh my gosh. I think I saw a video from this district just the other day and it was of
a boomer with an iPad chasing a geisha down the street trying to get the perfect shot.
And you could hear the tour guide going, no, stop that please, don't do that please. And she was so intent on getting this picture.
And the Geisha was like moving out,
like out of the way of this woman,
trying to dodge a photo.
Just like she got the photo, she was so pleased with herself
by getting a photo with an iPad.
And it was just like, oh my God.
Just a selfie of me and a really angry looking Geisha
trying to run away.
Just a selfie of me in a really angry looking case you're trying to run away. I'm sorry to everybody who has a precious culture that's been ruined by tourists with
iPads.
I feel bad, though it wasn't me, but it will potentially be me in a few years when I get
to iPad taking photo age.
And that brings me to the end of this episode of The Gargle.
I'm flipping through the ad section at the back.
Dan, have you got anything to plug?
I've got nothing to plug.
Stuff it.
I've got nothing.
I've got...
Please.
I...
Can I...
Though, can I just plug iMessage?
It's a really great service.
You can put your text messages across multiple devices.
iMessage keeps you honest.
I'm going to do a plug for Dan. I'm going to plug a rational fear. with your text messages across multiple devices. Eye message, keeps you honest.
I'm gonna do a plug for Dan.
I'm gonna plug Irrational Fear.
Not only do they share my initials, ARF,
they're also a four-time best comedy podcast
in Australia, award-winning podcast.
And I've also been on a number of episodes,
which are, inarguably, the best episodes.
So if you do nothing else, go and look up
all the episodes of Irrational Fear that I've been on. We should make an Alice Fraser
compilation special just for that plug thank you Alice. Joe what have you got to
plug? I've got myself to plug my show at the I'm doing my debut hour at the
Edinburgh Fringe which is a character comedy show.
I have an alter ego called Frankie Monroe, who's a demonic, he owns a working mental
club in Rovereham that's also a portal to hell.
So it's kind of end of the pier nightmare.
It's sort of Phoenix N Night meets the Mighty Boosh.
And it won best show at the Leicester Comedy Festival, so it's good, so you can see it.
It's on at Monkey Barrel 2, 11.25pm every night of the Fringe.
Come along.
Gosh, that sounds so good, Joe.
I hope you break even.
Oh, I absolutely will not.
It's guaranteed.
It's a guaranteed loss.
Well, I hope you do a run in London.
I'll be in London in September.
After after the end, Refringe is over.
I'll also be running some writers workshops in London.
And you can find out the details of those.
Also in Tokyo, you can find out the details of those on my Patreon, patreon.com slash Alice Fraser. It's a one stop shop for all of my Star Wars specials,
podcasts, blogs, as well as my twice weekly writers meetings and my weekly salons where we all get in
the Zoom room and chat about tricky ideas. This is a Bugle podcast and Alice Fraser production.
Your editor is Ped Hunter. Your executive producer is Chris Skinner. I'll talk to you again next week.
your editor is Ped Hunter, your executive producer is Chris Skinner, I'll talk to you again next week.
You can listen to other programmes from The Bugle, including The Bugle, Catharsis, Tiny
Revolutions, Top Stories and The Gargle, wherever you find your podcasts.