Radio Rental - Bonus Tape: One Night in Essex
Episode Date: November 19, 2025Bonus Tape >> One Night in Essex ...
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Radio Randolph on the state.
I'm from a really small village in England, smaller than most small villages are.
There's not a lot of people there at all.
And I grew up there from when I was born to when I left when I turned 18.
And I didn't really have a great childhood there.
I didn't enjoy it very much.
I wasn't really one of the popular kids.
I didn't have many friends.
My whole childhood was kind of marked by being bullied a lot.
And I was bullied by a few different people.
But the main bully I had was this kid called Brett.
He lived a few doors down from me.
he was a few years older than me
and he was like the opposite of me
he was really cool
he was really handsome
he was really good at sport
he was like a constant reminder
that I wasn't one of the cool kids
and I wasn't popular
when I was younger
he would bully me on the bus
and he'd wait outside my house
for me to go to school
and pick on me there
and he would like throw things at me
because I was fat
he thought it was funny to throw donuts at me
a lot of people were aware of it
but no one really ever did anything
Brett was kind of good at everything I was bad at.
Brett was great at sports and I never really did well at sports.
Brett was pretty popular with girls and I didn't talk to girls ever.
I was the complete opposite of him.
He was a tall, handsome, thin guy.
I was a short, dyslexic, unsportsman-like person.
I had dyslexia, ADHD and dyspraxia.
So I couldn't focus on stuff and when I did I was bad at it.
And he's the main reason I wanted to kind of get away.
The village is a really quiet town.
We don't have a train station or a bus station.
There's not any buses that go through the town.
It's the kind of place that you're born in, you grow up in and you're dying.
People there are really nice, but not a lot happens.
So when I turn 18, I leave the village I'm from, and I moved to London,
and I become a comedian and a writer for some TV stuff.
and my life completely changes.
I started doing comedy and it went all right.
I got to go all over the world doing gigs and I never went back to the village.
I just didn't want to be the person I was when I lived there
and the easiest way for me to do that was avoid it.
In 2015 I just finished doing shows in Australia.
I did the Melbourne Comedy Festival and the Adelaide Comedy Festival and they were great.
I came back and I remember
I remember sitting in my apartment in London.
My suitcases were still by the front door, and I was sitting on the sofa, getting ready
to unpack all my stuff.
I checked my email, and I've got an email from an email address I don't recognize.
It's from one of the local counsellors in my village, and they invited me to come back and
to headline a comedy show.
I'd been in a few newspaper-y bits, and I'd done a few things that people had seen.
I've been on TV once or twice, and they wanted me to come on a headliner show to raise
money for something they had going on. I can't remember what it was. I think it was like a church
roof or something like that. I thought about it for ages and in the end I agreed. I thought it would
be good for me to go back as this new version of myself and like kind of have one of those
moments where the hero goes back to his old neighborhood and he's changed and it's like a homecoming
story. So on the day of the gig I was really nervous and I got there.
really early and I just sat in my car like I didn't get out and walk around at all I was just
driving around this village and it takes about 10 minutes to walk around the whole village so I was
just doing laps and laps of this village for hours I was so nervous to like see people and and
go back to my childhood essentially I was worried that if I saw people I'd be transported back to the kid
I used to be it'd be some nerdy weird kid with no friends and about eight o'clock um I go into the
gig in this little village hall and the room is completely full. It's like full of all my old school
teachers and people I used to know from the cricket club and, you know, faces from my past. And I was
so ready for it to turn ugly. Like I had this nightmare vision that the whole village were going to
hate me and boo me and then Brett was going to stand up at the back of the stage and I don't know,
like give me a wedgy or throw a donut at me or do something stupid. But when I got there,
there was no Brett to be seen
and everyone was really nice
and the gig went really, really well.
It was probably one of the best gigs I've ever had
and it was really kind of healing, I guess,
to talk to all these people
and tell stories about when I was a kid
and make fun of the things that used to cause me a lot of trauma.
I really enjoyed it.
And I was so happy after the gig,
I decided that I was going to walk home that night.
So it's like 10 o'clock at night.
So I leave the gig
and I walk home. It takes me about 20 minutes to walk home
and it was really nice walking through the empty streets
and everyone from the village was still at the show
so they were all still drinking and having fun
so the streets were like empty really
and it was a really nice night
I got home at sometime between 10 and 11
I think it was about quarter to 11 at night
and because my village is such a quiet place
no one ever really locks their doors.
There's not really any crime in the village to be scared of.
Like, we've got feral geese, but you don't need to lock your doors for them.
And I was surprised when I walked up to the front door, I pulled the handle down and it was locked.
My parents had locked the front door before they went to bed that night.
But it was fine because I know my parents always leave the back door unlocked.
So I walked down my house and down a side gate to the left of my house, into my garden,
and then I let myself in the back door.
It's weird.
my back door at my parents' house is a bit different my dad put it on himself and he's not very good at
DIY so he put it on upside down so when you pull the handle down it's like it's locked but then you
pull it up and and you go in that way so I pulled the handle up and I went in the back door
walked upstairs I got in bed in my childhood bedroom which was really weird everything was
exactly the way it was the day I left when I was 18 like nothing had been moved my mom had
gone in and like dusted but she'd never moved
anything. And I get in bed and I close my eyes and I fall asleep. I'm not sure when I became
aware that someone was at the end of my bed, but I did. I opened my eyes and there was a figure
standing at the end of my bed. I'd just woken up, I was kind of still a little bit sleepy. I couldn't
really focus in, but as my head came around, the moonlight was hitting the person and I saw
that it was my mum.
My mum was standing at the end of my bed,
and she didn't say anything to me, which was weird.
I hadn't seen her yet.
She'd gone to bed before I got home,
and this was the first time I was seeing her.
It was the first time I was being back in my childhood,
at home in years.
Before I could ask my mum what was wrong,
without looking at me, she said,
Edward, whatever you do,
don't make a sound, don't turn on any lights.
And that was really scary.
Because my mum's not that kind of person, my mom's like a little tiny version of me.
She's like the happiest woman in the world, and she's very un-serious.
And so I get out of my bed, and I walk past my mum.
When I get out of bed and walk past my mum, she doesn't move at all.
She just keeps staring out the window in my bedroom, looking out onto a green near my house.
I walk onto the hallway, and that's where I start to hear the noise.
I wasn't aware of it until this point,
but someone's outside my house banging on the door.
I properly slam it's not a knock.
It's somewhere between a knock and a punch.
It's really loud.
And it's the middle of the night in this tiny little village,
so the sound is like deafening.
It's so noisy.
I noticed that my dad is awake as well.
He's standing at another window in the house,
at the front of the house, staring onto the front garden.
And I put two and two together.
My dad's standing, staring at whoever's at the front door.
So my parents are aware that someone's at the front door trying to get our attention or get in,
and they're not doing anything, which I thought was really weird.
I think about it, though, and I think, well, I've just done this gig.
It's probably one of the local people from the village who's drunk and has come to tell me
how much they enjoyed the show and it's just a little bit confused.
So I thought I'll go downstairs and I'll answer the door and just tell them to be on their way.
I tried to walk down the stairs
but before I could get onto the stairs
my dad's hand swings around the banister
and picks me up and slams me against the wall
he leans into my ear
and he says whatever the fuck you do
do not go down those stairs
and this is when I start to panic
like I'm starting to get the sense
that something isn't right tonight
this night's a little bit different
than I thought it was
my parents are aware of something that I'm not
And my dad's holding me against the wall, like properly pinning me so tight I can hit
the plasterball behind me start to creak.
And my mom comes onto the hallway and she says, John, let him go.
My dad takes his hand off my chest and I kind of slide down the wall and slump onto the floor.
And all three of us just kind of stand there for a second.
Not saying anything, but all just trying to make as little noise as we can.
And the banging's still coming from the front door like it's starting to reverberate up the
Bannister, it feels like it's moving the bones of the house.
My parents don't say anything to me, so I stand up and think, I'll do the obvious thing.
I go back into my room, I shut the door behind me, and I call the police.
When I call the police, it rings for a little while, and I get through, and I say,
hi, my name's Ed.
I'm calling because there's someone at our front door banging quite loudly.
I live at number 40, Benfield Gardens.
I'm not sure what's going on, but my parents seem really scared, and I think it would be
Good if you could send someone over just to find out what's going on.
The police officer on the other end of the phone says,
sorry, can you repeat your name?
And I said, my name's Ed Hedges.
And they said, can you repeat your address?
And I said, oh, it's 40 Penfield Gardens.
And the police officer on the other end of the phone said,
We're very aware of the situation, Mr. Hedges.
Barricade yourself inside the house,
and please do not leave under any circumstances.
And then they hang up.
And I think,
that was rude. And I walk back out onto the hallway and I say, guys, I think this is a bit
serious. I've just called the police and my mum puts her fingers to her lips. And I stopped
talking and I listen and the banging sound outside is gone. It's been replaced by the normal
silence. Except this time it's a creepy silence. And then I hear the footsteps of whoever's outside of our
house walking down the pathway to the left of my house down the alleyway into my garden to
the back door that we never lock then I hit them put their hand on the handle pull it down
and it doesn't unlock and then they just disappear into the night and my mom turns to my dad
and says I think they've gone that's when we hear a really loud bang at the door like a louder bang
than we've heard so far. And we all panic. We think whoever's outside is trying to break in now.
So my mum pushes me and my dad into the bathroom. It's the only room in our house that has a
lock on it. And she locks the door. And the bangers carry on for probably like 10 seconds longer.
And that's when we hear the helicopter outside. And we see flashing lights and we hear sirens.
And the night goes back to silent.
We will let ourselves out of the bathroom.
My parents go downstairs.
And I'm not sure why, but I just go back to bed.
I'm a comedian.
I had a gig.
A really long way away the next day I had to get a train into London
and then drive from London up to some show that I had.
So I just wanted to get some sleep.
I knew it was going to be a long day for me.
I figured my parents had it all under control
It was probably some drunk
So I go to bed
I shut my eyes and I fall asleep
The next morning when I wake up
It's beautiful
It's a really nice sunny day
I get out of bed
And I can't quite tell whether I've dreamed it all
I thought someone might have spiked my drink
Or like
Maybe I'd touch some kind of rare flower
That had some kind of creepy pollen
on the way home
but I walk downstairs
and all of our blinds are shut
in the front room.
My dad's sitting on the sofa
and my mum's in the kitchen
and I can hear her crying.
I sit down next to my dad
and I say,
what was last night about
who was at the door?
My dad doesn't say anything.
He just picks up the
television remote and
turns on the news
and I see my street
covered in police tape.
and I see the roads that I walk down
and there's a reporter talking about what happened that night
about how that night
a young man called Brett
killed his mum and their family friend
he stabbed her 47 times in the face and neck and arms
and he was identified by the shape of his footprint
on the side of his mother's skull
Um
And then he came to my house
The inquest into the death of a woman and a man
They found the lifeless body slumped on the sofa
And covered in her own congealed blood
He also repeatedly stabbed and caused a fatal head injury
He had 41 stab wounds to the head, neck and torso
Plus 14 blunt force injuries and defensive wounds
There's actually more to this story.
And if you'd like to hear it, check out the podcast, Wisecrack.
Available now, everywhere you get your podcasts.
Search Wisecrack in the podcast app of your choice.
Radio Rental is created by Payne Lindsay and brought to you by Tenderfoot TV.
Showrunner is Meredith Stedman.
Producer is Eric Kintana.
Executive producers are Payne Lindsay and Donald Albright.
Our host is Jeff Foxworthy as his character, Ricky Lee Bagley.
Writing by Meredith Stedman.
Original score by makeup and vanity set, with additional score by Jay Ragsdale.
Editing by Eric Kintana, Payne Lindsay, Stephen Perez, Cooper Skinner, Meredith Stedman, and Dylan
Harrington.
Sound Design Mix and Master by Stephen Perez and Cooper Skinner.
Our production manager is Jordan Foxworthy.
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Video editing by Dylan Harrington.
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