Comedy of the Week - Best of The News Quiz 2025
Episode Date: January 5, 2026A satirical smorgasbord of The News Quiz's best bits of the year, covering local elections, flag fever, Starmer's struggles, Trump's travails, and a very special meeting between King Charles and Pope ...Leo XIV.To hear more episodes of The News Quiz, search "Friday Night Comedy" on BBC Sounds.Written and presented by Andy Zaltzman.Producer: Rajiv Karia Executive Producer: Pete Strauss Production Coordinator: Giulia Lopes MazzuA BBC Studios Audio Production for Radio 4 An Eco-Audio certified Production
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Hello, I am Andy Zaltzman, and this is the official News Quiz Review of the Year for 2025,
a mind-waping, retina-burning, history-shreading, predictably chaotic 12 months of not particularly merry
mayhem. Fair to say that 2025 did not score too highly out of 10 in the calm, global happiness
and mutually respectful dialogue categories, but it racked up some serious numbers in political
enchantment, existential panic about AI taking over the planet, and worldwide use of the
phrase, he's done what now? The news quiz year began with one of British politics most frequently
overbaked hot potatoes, as the organisation that has to cure our ills was itself ill, still.
And our first question can go to Paul and Angela. Prime Minister Kirstearner this week
announced a new partnership between what and what? Is it Angela Barnes and Paul Sin?
This is his plan to basically save the NHS from privatisation by using the private sector.
Yes, clever that isn't it?
It's very clever.
He's laid out his plan for the NHS.
That's what's happened to cut waiting times.
Well, it was quite interesting.
He said he wants more treatment outside of hospitals.
Presumably still in a medical setting, though.
I don't think we're quite at a stage of getting appendectomy at Claire's accessories.
But I think it's...
Well, as you hope you know by now,
I have skin in this game on two fronts.
Number one, I used to be a doctor,
and it's estimated I saved the lives
of over 5,000 patients
by giving up a career in medicine.
I have to you my dreams of comedy.
But secondly, I've not been a well man.
I mean, I've already had Parkinson's disease,
but since I was last doing the news quiz,
I've had two heart attacks, two angiograms,
two MRIs, ultrasounds,
seven x-rays, a cardiac bypass operation.
And let me tell you now, you have not lived
that you've been sat in a bed on a ward in St George's Hospital
and heard a man ring his wife and her on speakerphone
and you hear her bellow at the top of her voice across the ward
odd thing is he's the chaser I've always hated
The other way back across the Atlantic now
And in February just over six months into their government
There were more suggestions that Labour had hit the ground stumbling
Slipped on their own pack lunch
Which they dropped whilst trying to fight off a non-existent bear
ruptured a cruciate ligament
And fallen into a wheelbarrow which then plummeted down
a bobsled run, because Nigel Farage's Reform UK topped a national opinion poll for the first time.
I mean, reform, it's understandable why they're, I don't know what their policies are,
but when you've got like, the party that were in 14 years, no one likes them.
The other lot come in, and there was some hope, and then that's been dashed.
So, but the problem is reform, they're sort of like UKIP, if you feed them after midnight,
aren't they, David?
Their manifestos, the last thing we really know anything about, right?
And it was kind of like right-wing fantasy football, wasn't it?
They just threw every single right-wing idea that they put messy, renunciable.
now don't, probably should be doing cricket references.
They put Cowder and Gower
in the same team.
But their agenda, no one knows what it is, right?
It's a sentiment at this point, but they do have Farage, right?
And for all people might not like about him,
he could talk.
Problem is, he doesn't have anything to sell.
Sort of like a doctor who is all diagnosis
and no prescription.
He'll tell you, you go, well, you've got a cyst on your arm,
your legs hanging off, and your head is broken.
They go, what do I do about it?
Well, it's a farce.
You go, yeah, I get it.
It's a farce, it's a disgrace, it's calamitous.
What he really is, is he's a fissaurus.
Problems with maths teaching over the centuries
have led to us having an economy
where the sums simply don't add up,
and the government was being told to find more ways
of spending more of the no money that's available on defence,
when we haven't even used our nukes yet.
How does that work out?
Following the Trumpian onslaught,
Kea Starmer has been encouraged to do what faster and further?
is he doing a nude calendar
it's defence spending
yes we do need to
dramatically increase our defence spending
but I don't know if we're going to increase it enough
to make up for not being the size of America
so I don't know if that's necessarily going to help as much
also we need to have more people in the army
we only got about six people in the army
and we increase it to 12
we're still in quite a lot of trouble
I'm at that point where I'd probably sign up
yeah yeah I think if we do end up going to
I think it's foolish and foolhardy to send our young and hopeful and ambitious.
I think we should send people like me who are really menopausal.
And I'll be honest, up for a fight.
I mean, I know my limits.
I will need a leg over the wall, but once I'm there, I'll be like a Jack Russell.
I won't let it go.
Yes, indeed, throughout the year, we've seen the rather unsettling spectacle of the
world's news pundits earnestly discussing how other political leaders should deal with
the President of America as if he is some kind of cross between a potentially lethal
zoo animal, an alien who could destroy the world and an overindulged toddler.
And the DNA tests that we've had done that have just come back on him suggest that he is
all three of those things. In February, it was Keir Stama's turn to face up to the challenge.
Keir Starrma, the Prime Minister this week, chose for whatever reason not to come to Yorkshire
to speak to one of the many great people from this county
but where out of all the other places in the world
did he go instead
and who is he meeting right now as we record?
I believe he's gone to meet Donald Trump
in the USA
and everybody's been on Tent Hooks
will they get on and I think they should
because they've both spent a lot of time in courtrooms
and obviously
Kirst Armour being a barrister would have had to wear a ridiculous wig
I think in fairness to Gia Starmer
is a difficult position he's in
because he's got to explain
what's going on to someone
who's got very little knowledge of British politics
but then he does practice every week
with Kemi Badenock
I suppose it's the killing with kindness route
in it really I mean I sort of quite like
Macron, I watch Macron the way you dealt with him
I don't know if you noticed he'll let him sort of speak
and then he did that thing that my wife does quite a lot
when we're out
You know, when you're out
and you're having a dinner party
and you're thinking I'm doing really well
and the feedback's going to be good
in the car on the way home
and then her hand will come out
and it'll go down my shoulder
and I'm such a moron
I think it's affectionate
and then she'll squeeze
he did the squeeze on Donald
it did the squeeze as if to say
come on pal
we've all had a drink
and then what my
wife will do is just lean in
and she'll just go, I think that's you
done now.
We also found ourselves
wondering exactly what national
resources are still actually
national resources. I think currently
on the list is Prince George
but he might be sold off to Saudi Arabia
before the next budget. The gaps
between the stones at Stonehenge and a
bench somewhere outside works up
I think. What is left? Is there anything
that's left? Nothing left. I mean, does any of this a surprise?
Who could have foreseen this
us selling off our biggest commodities to communist China.
I mean, some would say sort of deliberately trying to turn off the furnaces
so that we'd have to buy their cheaper Chinese steel
because the arse has fallen out of the Chinese property markets.
I mean, I'm just speculating, but it just seemed like that's what was sort of on their minds, doesn't it?
Apparently, if you turn these blast furnaces into ones that can create steel
in a more environmentally friendly way, this is a good thing, but they take 80% less labour,
so you have to make redundancies.
Now, on the surface, you can think that's a terrible thing.
People won't work, but people can be retrained, they can get other jobs.
Humans can't breathe nitrogen.
So if any of our listeners do own a blast furnace, please.
And also, this is the kind of defeatist attitude saying that we can't breathe nitrogen.
It's holding this country back.
We can dry.
I mean, there's quite a lot of methane, too, that comes out of this furnace.
I haven't discovered that I'm recently lactose intolerant.
I can tell you.
Actually, you can tolerate quite.
a high level of methane, it's
for years.
For years. I mean, the budgie's
dead, but they've ever like...
It's so brighton to be tolerant of everything
except for lactose.
April was also local election
season and I do hope you've all calmed
down since then. Traditionally, for the sitting
government, local elections function as
something between a sad haddock in the face
and a medieval mace to the groin
and Labour were looking worriedly
at both the fishmonger and the
mounted night in shining armour with a purposeful look in his eye.
How excited are you by the local elections?
Yeah, I'm absolutely giddy.
Yeah, fizzing.
Reform is saying they're going to clean up.
Hard to tell with reform, whether they mean get lots of votes or ethnically.
Well, I think it's difficult given that when you look at what labour are doing,
you know, not scrapping the two child benefit, taking away disability benefits from people,
you might look at it and think, well, what's the difference between these two parties anyway?
which I probably think is the reason why people are going
well why not give the other guys a chance
it's just a shame who the other guys happen to be
it's interesting that they look at it and go
there's no difference between these two guys
I want an even meaner part
yeah but you say that
it's like it reforms the only choice
if you don't want the two big two let's not forget
somewhere out there at Davy's on a bounty castle
it is like the Lib Dems wished on a cursed monkey paw
We'd go back to three-party politics
and it's sort of curled.
And Najafranj sat bolt upright in bed somewhere.
I love every time I see Ed Davy on the news
going down a log flume or just having the time of his life,
I just have this image of just a monster-raving
loony party candidate in their house
just throwing their enormous clown shoe at the television.
Whilst the Labour government may have been metaphorically
fumbling around in darkness,
hoping for power to work, waiting for a shaft of
light, Spain and Portugal took it one step further.
For all of this week's starter questions, the answer could be about Trump but isn't.
So the first of our not-Trump starter questions, this can go to Ed and Lucy,
where in the world this week has found itself fumbling around in an enveloping darkness
with the pillars of civilisation crumbling, almost taken backwards to a bygone age,
leaving people desperately wondering how on earth what's happened has happened.
About Trump, what is that about?
If it's not Trump, then I think it is Spain.
where they had a power outage
and no one could do any work
for a whole afternoon,
which luckily had no impact on the other.
They think it wasn't a cyber attack.
My guess is the Spanish Energy Minister
simply pulled out the plug marked Portugal
so he could charge his phone.
People were stuck in lifts,
the trains weren't working,
blackouts ever.
Obviously in a Spanish blackout,
very important to keep a pin between your teeth
in case a football official tries to kiss you.
It's difficult to report on something like this
without being really boring
because you read about it in the paper
and it was a massive power cut.
Yeah, there was a massive power cord, yeah.
Some people were stuck in lifts.
Yep, that's what happens in a massive power cut, all right?
Some people reported, ATMs weren't working.
Yep, that tracks.
That might be the sort of thing.
Some hospitals had to shut some stuff,
but other hospitals had power generators.
Yes, it very much sounds like a power cut.
With the year muddling onwards
through its troublesome middle months,
Labour found itself at odds with an old enemy,
and I mean literally old.
The problem is, you know, Labour have taken on people
whose very names have positive connotations, right?
Farmers, people like farmers.
Pensioners.
People like pensioners.
But they're minted pensioners.
Because the problem is, I say pensioner,
and even now I'm thinking of some little old deer
with that trolley they push in front of them.
But what's in the trolley, F old.
Gold.
Gold.
And 90% of the cod stocks from the non-year-old.
North Sea. You're the reason
there for that we're all in Pollock as you're off
on another Viking River cruise.
So this is what Labor
should have done. Build up the hatred, you see.
But it felt like what happened was they just announced
the winter fuel policy, and the next thing I saw
was Angela Rainer doing shots with David Gouet.
It was quite a leap.
I'm really confused. Now, I can't tell
if you are for or against labor policies
at this point in time. I think
when I come on shows like this, I'm the one
defending them. That's how right-wing Labor
It's very weird because the Labour campaigners are getting in real trouble on the doorstep.
They say the cuts are only going to affect wealthier pensioners.
And I think they've made a real miscalculation there because in this country you can say what
you want about, you know, immigrants or trans people or disabled people.
But if you come for pensioners who've got a little bit of money put by, they will tear you
apart like a Jack Russell eating a pasty.
Those people have served our country
They haven't fought in a war
But don't tell them that
In this week of all weeks
It does make me think of a generation
That absolutely did fight in a war
And my granddad
You know, like it was just normal bloke
And he ended up holding a gun
Which he never should have done
But you know, did he moan about it?
No
He had the common decency
To become a lifelong alcoholic
And I respect that
Well we're sitting here really awkwardly
Because your granddad was Italian
And mine was German
either, yeah.
And mine was Jewish, so...
But that just shows how far we've moved on in the last 80 years.
Back across now to our estranged former imperial partners in America.
Donald Trump was trying to deal with the slightly awkward Fourth and a Half Amendment of the U.S. Constitution,
which states, you can break some of the laws all of the time, all of the laws, some of the time,
but you can't break all of the laws all of the time.
Which of President Donald Trump's actions
has been ruled and or deruled illegal
by judges this week,
apart from all the other things he's already been convicted for?
Yes.
It is everything, isn't it?
Yeah, how much time do you have?
Deportations.
Tariffs.
Tariffs.
Tariffs, specifically this week, yes.
His favourite word?
Yeah.
He's terrible...
The thing about Trump.
That's very neatly summarised there.
He thinks if you just say you've done it that it's happened.
And life doesn't work like that.
So it turns out he doesn't have the power to order tariffs.
That's with Congress.
Right.
In the same way that he doesn't really understand how Ukraine and Russia works.
But he says, we've done a deal and they haven't.
But in his head he has.
And, you know, he thinks he will solve global warming by doing a deal with the sun.
I've got the words here.
He said, judges must understand the nation is not here for them,
they're here for the nation.
I shall remove from office those judges
who don't understand the demands of the hour.
Oh, no, that's Hitler.
Spring turned to summer,
which seemed a very good time to take a summer hiatus,
which we did.
When we returned in September,
the under-pressure Labour Party
was coming under-increasing pressure
as the pressure grew on under-pressure deputy leader,
Angela Rainer,
something or other that should have been done or not done in some other way.
Lucy and Coco, you can take the first question.
Now, for this question, for the sake of impartialism,
I'm going to use source material from all sides of the political swamp.
So here we go.
Which prominence politician this week made an honest mistake
in an act of shameless hypocrisy relating to a complex technical matter of tax law
that showed typical out-of-touch politician's arrogance
resulting from a series of difficult personal family issues
that should prompt immediate resignation,
if not some kind of public walk of shame through every city in the land,
having dealt with the problem swiftly and openly,
bringing immutable, unclensible shame upon the government
that ought to blow over quite quickly if we're being objective about it,
and will rightly surely bring down the Starma regime by,
oh, I reckon, the end of this show, if not already.
Well, I think this is Angela Rainer,
who apparently paid the wrong amount of tax on her flat.
She said she consulted three people before buying the flat.
people were Jimmy Carr, Gary Barlow, and the ghost of Ken Dodd.
So, yeah, we don't know at the time of recording whether she is going or not,
but it's the housing minister, and she's messed up by in a house.
This comes after their homelessness minister was accused of making people homeless.
You're going to what next?
The Chancellor of the Exchequer owned £5 million in tax to HMRC.
Oh no, that was, Nadine.
So, yeah, so she's paid the wrong amount of tax.
She says it was a genuine mistake.
She has referred herself to the government ethics advisor
who said he couldn't help because the flat isn't in ethics.
It's in ethothics.
I feel like I should explain then for younger listeners
who might not be familiar with stamp duty,
in the olden days when I was a boy,
if a man and woman loved each other very much
they could get a mortgage
and they could use that to buy a house
whilst a house nobody knows
because the secret of building them has been lost
but basically depending on the cost of the cost of the house
you might have to pay a tax called stamp duty
to an ogre I think I'm not sure
Angela Rainer is probably my generation
John Prescott, the millennial John Prescott,
the working class sidekick to a sociopathic prime minister.
And I think that's very progressive.
I think it's great that Britain has its first female John Prescott.
Fantastic.
But I don't think she has Prescott's juz, you know.
He had proper scandals.
He'd be out there driving two jags, punching someone, you know?
Like fun, interesting scandals that you'd want to talk about
on a topical, humorous show.
Where you don't have to look at what stamp duty is.
I think that's the problem with Labour today.
Like, John Prescott, you may not have agreed with his politics,
you might not have liked him, you might have liked him, whatever.
You can't argue, the man was a top shagger.
He was an epic lad, he was a character.
In 2001, if you'd seen a headline that said,
John Prescott found naked in London Zoo,
you'd go, which enclosure?
Next up, England Flags,
a terse but largely accurate description of the last few decades.
Oh, sorry, I hadn't seen the rest of the sentence.
England flags were making the news as autumn toddled along,
and as the nation continued to struggle with the two conflicting statements,
this country wants immigrants to move here,
and this country does not want immigrants to move here.
As always, it was proving hard to find a compromise point somewhere in the middle.
This can go to Andrew and Alistair.
It's going to end in 2029, said Kirstama about what this week?
There won't be migrants in hotels.
Yes, correct.
They will be in restaurants.
They will then fully be on holiday.
They'll have got their bags in, they'll have settled in,
they'll have charged their devices,
and they'll just be on holiday.
That's the plan.
And then phase two is the water parks.
But the point is that there's been migrants in hotels.
Some of them are, quite frankly, not very desirable people.
and the people who live near the hotel
were expecting tourists
or business travellers to be in the hotel
this has created disappointment
verging on anger
some people have taken the streets
and there's been some civil disputes
but mostly people have decided
to live like Northern Ireland
and just put flags everywhere
it's the exact opposite
of how we thought the troubles was going to play out
we thought Northern Ireland would become like the rest of the world
but instead you've become like Northern Ireland
but it's all happening in Ireland as well
there's an enormous amount of flags going up around Council of States in Dublin
I was only home working back home I'm at Dublin or I'm from the north side of the
working glass side of the city
there was somebody had hung this massive dry colour the Irish flag
outside their house
but they had hung it the wrong way around
which I don't even notice
but the flag of the Irish Republic
the other way around
is the flag of the Ivory Coast
you know what I mean
when you're a comedian
you're always like
I just couldn't help myself
I knocked on his door
I shouldn't have done
I'm a busy body and a comedian
and so I knocked on this dude's door
just to see what would happen
the guy answers the door
and he was from the Ivory Coast.
As sure as night follows day,
and as sure as crushing disappointment
follows start of an Ashes series away from home in Australia,
October sneaked in after September emotionally resigned as a month.
With polling suggesting her party
remained about as popular with the public
as a shark at a vegan swimming gala,
Kemi Badock delivered her first party conference speech
since the Conservative members
voted her their least unelectable candidate
at 2024's thrilling leadership election.
Kemi Badernock at the Conservative Conference
said that the delegates at the conference
could feel the what?
The invisible hand of the free market.
Feel the temptation to defect to reform.
I watched too much of that conference
than he's acceptable.
Because he started off bad, didn't it?
He had the energy of a speed awareness course.
Anyone going to have another stab at the correct answer?
They could feel the what?
It will just be something about the pure sexual energy in the room.
Closer?
It was the buzz.
They can feel the buzz.
Everyone is telling me about the buzz they can feel.
Is that something in someone's handbag that's gone off?
That they shouldn't have at a Tory conference.
Mind you, though, you'd break up the day, wasn't it?
Kevin Beggnotch also pledged that the Conservative Party would do what
to help people afford what?
Is it tax the mega rich
to help people afford the basic things
that they need?
Incorrect.
Is it pray for a miracle
to help people afford a Tory government
again?
They would remove
stamp duty to help people afford houses.
I just sort of think, if scrapping
stamp duty was such a good idea,
why did they not do it when they were in power?
And just think of all the things
we could have saved loads of money,
loads of lawyers' fees,
Angela Raina's career, like, loads of things.
She did a little tease with the stamp duty thing, as well in the speech,
where she said, she's looked at all the figures
and was wondering if she'd be able to reduce stamp duty,
and she went, and I've decided we can't.
We're going to abolishing!
And everyone's like, wah!
Everyone's jumping up, it's euphoric,
because if ever there's a room full of people
who are desperate to get on the property ladder,
Irconcilable divisions were all the rage by this stage of the year.
King Charles, the second longest reigning monarch we've had since the 1950s, of course,
is no stranger to the rift.
But in October, he took a few days off from family squabledges that go back decades
in order to try to heal a schism that goes back half of a whole millennium.
Charles and Leo the 14th, I mean, what do you think they should have been praying,
what do you hope they were praying for in this historic meeting of church?
I like to think that the Pope prays for pretty mundane things on the day to day, because if you were fully the Pope, like you'd worked up to becoming the Pope, and every night you prayed for world peace, and it didn't happen, you would start to think, well, this doesn't seem to work at all.
And given I am the Pope, you'd think it had work, unless...
and so I reckon to play it safe
he just goes with
I hope Liverpool break their losing streak
and then 5-1 in Frankfurt
the Lord's with us
probably also
they're praying that Prince Andrew
doesn't seek sanctuary in the Vatican
they wouldn't really be able to make up much of an excuse
right because the crime would fit in there
right
I'm Jewish so this is
fine.
I'll do you one better. I'm Catholic,
so it really is fine.
Charles has always been kind of progressive
on this, because he always said that he wanted to be
the defender of faiths, not the defender
of the faith. And in a post-Brexit world,
I kind of think this is our way back into
Europe. If the king converts to Catholicism,
I'm quite excited, frankly,
because let's be honest, Anglicanism, it's had a good run,
but it never really kicked in as a religion
for me, you know, it's a bit like
Paul McCartney's wings. It's fine.
What's it about? Cucumber sandwiches,
tombolas. When was the last time anybody caught a witch?
Come on.
Full Catholicism now.
That would be so exciting.
I'm not saying I grew up really sheltered, but I met my first
Catholic at 13, and that was
the most racially diverse person I'd ever met.
I grew up in Somerset.
in a very small house.
And it was, if we all went Catholic now
and we could do like Spicy Church,
that would be so exciting.
Spicy Church is actually what my people call it.
So there we are.
Another year done.
I don't know how we'll reflect on it in future,
or indeed, if we'll reflect on it in future,
we probably won't have time,
and reflection will be banned at some point in 2026 anyway
for being bad for the soul
and even worse for the economy.
Under 975 years left in this millennium now,
which might be enough time to pull things around and sort things out,
but it is started to look like we are cutting it fine.
Thank you to all our panellists and writers in 2025,
on now to 2026, which a little bird tells me
is going to be a year of unremitting peace, harmony and happiness.
Or it might have been telling me how much it loves eating insects.
I don't speak bird.
To find out if I was right and it was right,
join us next week with the first news quiz of 2026.
Until then, happy new year.
The News Quiz Best of 2025 compilation was written and hosted by me, Andy Zaltzman.
The producer was Rajiv Karia, and it was a BBC Studios audio production for Radio 4.
If you want to hear more from the news quiz, search Friday night comedy on BBC Sounds.
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