The Bugle - Money, Money, Money

Episode Date: January 28, 2008

The 14th ever Bugle podcast, from 2008. Written and presented by Andy Zaltzman and John OliverThis is a classic episode from The Bugle, to support us, and to keep the Bugle alive and free of ads, plea...se visit http://thebuglepodcast.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:38 Hello world, welcome to issue 14 of the Audio newspaper for a visual world. Hello world, welcome to issue 14 of the bugle, the pioneering audio newspaper from times online, the week beginning 28th of January 2008. What a week. This threatens to be possibly one of the great weeks of 2008 so far easily in a top 4 or 5 I'd say. I'm Andy Zoltzmann in London in New York City. It's John Oliver. Hello Earth, what a pleasure to be in your ears.
Starting point is 00:01:11 As always, some sections of the audience paper go straight in the bin. This week a section on space exploration with the mystery image of life on Mars, which appears to show what might be a human form on Mars but is in fact clearly a small rock. Raising the intriguing possibility that there might be objects shaped like humans elsewhere in the galaxy. There is apparently a comet that looks a bit like a dog from a certain angle so truly exciting times for space fans.
Starting point is 00:01:40 Also in the bin is a token for the one drink for the price of two promotion which is part of a new campaign by the licensing trade to cut down only amount people drink on binges. So our top story this week, money, money, money, money, money! He's still edge-up. Are you alright? Yes, I am. I'm here. I mean, Rick James came in for a second and decided to lay down a fat track. His stay was brief, but funky.
Starting point is 00:02:17 So is the world on the brink of an economic meltdown? Now in the interest of disclosure, let me point out that I know absolutely nothing about economics. I've lived for 30 years on this planet, um, to elsewhere, and I still don't get it. To me, economics is like the Dutch language. I'm told it makes sense, but I seriously have my doubts. Now, the US Federal Reserve slashed interest rates to 3.5% the biggest rate cut in 25 years and incredibly, the markets have staced a comeback for the
Starting point is 00:02:45 time being, for reasons that no one understands and that no one can explain. Now they lost billions of dollars through wild speculation and in response to giving $600 to each US citizen in tax breaks. And that respectful gesture will be most appropriately delivered by posting $60, $10 bills into the top of the underwear of each American citizen, muttering, there you go, sweet cheese, buy yourself something pretty and shut up. Which I believe Mike Huckabee is suggesting in his election manifesto. Yep, to great acclaim.
Starting point is 00:03:17 But across the globe, more than $5 trillion has disappeared from the value of public companies in the first three weeks on no financial expert John but $5 trillion. That's a lot of money. There's a lot of money, yeah you could... Even given the exchange rate, that's still over a million pounds. There you go, there's less over the rope. Brokers want free market economics, no regulation and no government interference unless that government interference is bailing their behinds out of trouble, in which case they want plenty of interference, sweet protective interference. Then
Starting point is 00:03:50 they'd like to be left alone again to plunder the developing world before once again overstepping the mark and coming back to suck on the teeth of the Fed. The Fed, of course, has slashed interest rates. Now it's been under huge pressure at the Fed, which might explain its below-part performance in the Australian Open. As a joke for tennis fans. And only a selection of tennis fans. The old economic saying is when the US sneezes the world catches a cold. Well, the US seems to have sneezed so hard its economic balls have fallen off. And now the world is looking down at its own balls saying, please don't leave me. I don't really understand a number of aspects of
Starting point is 00:04:29 global academics. America is the world's leading capitalist economy, also famously, big fan of Jesus, America, who of course said it's easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. So it seems slightly odd that such a wealthy nation should be so Christian. But I guess what they could say is that by perpetuating global poverty, really helping the world's poor get through heaven's notoriously restrictive immigration policy. So that is a positive I've not heard anyone use it but I imagine that will come quickly now. And this may be playing into hands of candidate Mitt Romney, more of whom later the multi-millionaire. People in the US might feel they trust someone who's been successful in business
Starting point is 00:05:12 to revive the economy if he does become president, head for the hills. But in many ways the world economy is already in recession. The question is, will the recession be long and shallow like an Olympic-sized paddling pool or short and deep like Danny DeVito? Can you just explain that last comment? Well, he's short and he's a very thoughtful man. He's kind of a fan of Camu. Also this week the World Economic Forum was held in Davos, Switzerland and there's a chance for the heads of the world's leading companies to gather together, cackle-like demons, roll
Starting point is 00:05:44 around on beds of money, and it may be a tribe of snowboarding. According to the WEEF's motto, it is committed to improving the state of the world, although that is from a logo of businessmen who is laughing, as he says it. Now, was Bono there? Of course Bono was there. And as it was going on, Bush called for a kick start for the economy in a speech, and as soon as he finished the speech, the Nasdaq plunged 300 points.
Starting point is 00:06:10 That is not a great vote of confidence in someone. That's a tough response and I've had bad gigs. I know you have, aren't they? But have you ever had a gig so bad that the world knows dive towards economic armageddon. I did do this one gig at the comedy store in Manchester where at best I struggled and at worst I abominated. After that it was tough times across Europe as shares plunged and a businessman just generally looked out of high office windows and thought, should I? This crisis began when US mortgage companies made hundreds of billions of dollars of inappropriate loans to individuals with poor credit history. These debts were somehow packaged up and sold on to financial institutions around the world
Starting point is 00:06:59 who then sold it onto pension funds and hedge funds. So we still don't know where these bad debts are and where they are concealed in the financial system. These debts have essentially run away from home, Andy. We need to put pictures of the debts on milk cartons or have world leaders hold a tearful press conference to plead with the debts to come on home. They love them. They're not angry. They just want to know they're safe. So if you have seen a debt bad or otherwise wondering around the streets looking for scrapped in bins, please do report it immediately to the bugle at www.tondonline.co.uk. Further to the current economic storm around the world, the French Bank Society general,
Starting point is 00:07:41 managed to lose 7.1 billion US dollars, 33.7 billion pounds, and $4.9 billion euros in the same fraud. For all society general, they only have $700 billion worth of assets under management left. So having lost $7 billion, do you two one trader who was apparently on a annual wage of around about 70 grand a year and wasn't making any personal money out of this, making it one of the most spectacular but pointless crimes in human history. It's incredible. This man deported the bank to the tune of $7 billion and yet they're still announcing
Starting point is 00:08:19 this you're a profit of $600 million. If you can lose $7 billion and still turn an annual profit, you are quite simply earning too much. It is amazing that one man did this alone though. I mean, last, this is a great time for the French. And it's very few times you can actually say that. Last week, we talked about the French man who tried a solo invasion of Sark. This week, a lone French man nearly topples a national bank. This is an incredible time for French maveries. If they could team up together, France would be devastating. Now that will dissipate it. Do you think so? They all have to work alone. I think the problem is they're doing too much together. The French could be the most powerful
Starting point is 00:08:59 people in the world if they all kept themselves to themselves. Resignation news now and Peter Hain, the work and pension secretary, has resigned after becoming bored of people telling him to resign. In his resignation statement he said, Tiffley, I just want the wittering to stop. Now I hope to be able to get on with my job without being told to resign from it whenever I so much as shop and a pencil without telling the queen in writing. And also because the police became involved and you can't expect to run a government department whilst having a confession beaten out of you. So, Hain has resigned and inevitably has been linked to the vacancy as Kevin Keegan's
Starting point is 00:09:35 assistant at Newcastle United. Disasterity for the government on the very same day that the work and pension secretary Peter Hain resigned, the Welsh secretary Peter Hain also resigned in solidarity with his colleague, Peter Hain and Peter Haine also resigned in solidarity with his colleague, Peter Haine and Peter Haine's resignations were the first from Gordon Brown's cabinet. Peter Haine should have stayed, let Peter Haine resign. A hundred thousand pounds donations went underclaed. What's, I mean how would that go down in America? Presumably, the American reaction would be a hundred thousand pounds,
Starting point is 00:10:00 what he didn't declare the budget for the parrots that go in his cocktails. Man, that's harsh. That's true though, because now I think I've now been here slightly too long to take this story seriously, because 100,000 pounds, I just think that's quite, isn't that quite, he's resigned over 100,000 pounds. This is blockbuster politics over here Andy. You couldn't get anything off the ground
Starting point is 00:10:20 with 100,000 pounds. That's a low budget indie politician that no one's ever going to see. I did some sums John, what a hundred thousand pounds could buy you a 17 second long presidential campaign. That's probably true, isn't it? So you would really have to get your message across quickly and decisively. That wouldn't be on network television, that would only be in a state. He could run for president for 17 seconds in Arkansas. He could get someone to put out some chairs for a caucus. British party politics, John, in your absence, as clearly you were holding it together,
Starting point is 00:10:53 is now boiled down to an unappetizing soup of bickering over which party is cheating most, and most gnawly over party funding and superficial scripted squabbling between the Prime Minister and the Opposition leader, which is breaking records for political verpility and covering the entire parliamentary system in a slurry of opportunistic audio. There, I've said it. No, I've said it. Thanks, John. Someone had to say it, not necessarily in those words. Ha ha! Middle East update now, and there are currently 1.5 million Palestinians trapped inside the Gaza Strip. And a very interesting story happened this week when those Gaza's managed
Starting point is 00:11:33 to get out and flock to Egypt on what was essentially an explosive shopping trip. The border was blown up with explosives and cutting equipment. It really sounds like a bad 1960s Michael Cain film. And tens of thousands of Palestinians searched for guards went to Egypt, they went shopping and this is actually incredibly good news. No one got hurt, this was people power and it's best. Blowing up a wall, no one gets hurt and going right, who wants to go shopping? Egypt has become the shopping mall of the Gaza Strip. I think it's consumerism gone mad, John. Well I know the fence was down, but to
Starting point is 00:12:10 illegally cross a border just by luxuries like basic food and essential medicine. Well it makes you sick. It's a very pit of your stomach. You think the consumer culture has gone out of hand in Gaza Strip? Yeah. Make it just take what the Lord has provided for them, namely a massive blockade. The rationale behind Israel cutting off food supplies to Gaza. What is that rationale? The rationale. I've not been quite able to put my finger on it.
Starting point is 00:12:37 I mean, they haven't been explicit really. It's basically to stop the rocket attacks. They are trying to stop food getting in so people don't have the strength to hold rocket launches. That seems to be what's going on. Starvation generally does calm people down historically. We'll be interesting new bugle listeners around the world so the lustrous group of men and women who next January may be ruling over all of us, at least until the Chinese take over sometime in 2000 and alone. And our opening piece is on Mitt Romney, a Republican front runner and potentially disastrous
Starting point is 00:13:18 44th president of the United States. Willard Mitt Romney was allegedly born in 1947, a tall story to me in Detroit, Michigan. It was a dangerous birth, as doctors had to perform an emergency operation to remove a set of silver spoons that were wedged in his mouth. Thankfully, they removed most of them, and he went on to live a full, privileged life. His father's cousin played quarterback for the Chicago Bears from 1925 to 1929. I'm not saying he caused the Wall Street crash by stopping playing, but I am saying that when he stopped playing, Wall Street crashed.
Starting point is 00:13:51 Rommie's great-great-grandfather was a man called Pali Parker Pratt, who was born in 1807 but is now tragically dead. Pali Parker Pratt, winner of the 19th century's most eliterative name, was, unlike actor Steve McQueen and Indian politician Gandhi, an influential Mormon. He is thought to have been the world's first game show host with his hit touring stage show How Many Wives? Now Mitt Romney is a rich man. He is part owner in companies that have given a great deal to humanity, companies such as Domino's and Staples. People will always need bad peaches and adequate stationary and tapping into this fundamental human need has given him a personal fortune
Starting point is 00:14:30 of over $250 million. Romney or the Michigan minotaur as he is known by his fans as a result of his predilection for living in mazes and eating virgins, one of his home state of Michigan recently in what was described as a make or break primary for him. But it was never going to be make or break and I'll tell you why he has a personal fortune of over $250 million. And when you're that rich, you get to decide when anything is over. He can keep campaigning long after the election is lost if that's what he wants. That's what happens when you're rich. That is exactly the kind of stuff you can do. And this tactic did after all work extreme well for the 43rd president. And that joke is now into its final year of
Starting point is 00:15:09 existence. We'll all miss it when it's gone. So, reasons he could be president. Firstly, Romney ran the successful 2002 Salt Lake City Olympic Winter Games, which he reminds people of constantly by talking of things in gold and silver metal terms, as well as banging cowbells and hurling themselves down mountains on a tray. And if voters are unsure, all Romney needs to do his whip out America's 2002 ice skating gold medalist, Sarah Hughes, and announce the world, vote for me, or I will kill this woman. Incidentally, Sarah Hughes' Jewish, arguably the greatest Jewish skater since Henry Kissinger, who of course invented the triple salco.
Starting point is 00:15:44 Second reason, Romney is rich white and male, which would make him fit in nicely to a wall of presidential portraits. But there are some reasons why Romney couldn't be president. He famously told an extremely funny story involving a time that he strapped the family dog in a carrier to the roof of the family car before embarking on a 12-hour trip, before realizing that saying you want strapped a doctor to review your car is less a punchline than it is a confession to a state crime. Luckily there are 250 million reasons that that never went to trial. Another reason Romney can't be present, he's a Mormon. Surely not even
Starting point is 00:16:18 America could elect a Mormon. So far in his campaign Romney has been criticized both for being Mormon and and not being Mormon enough. Opinion polls are now suggesting that if he can achieve 38% more Monty, he will win over both sides of the Mormon debate and will soon be in possession of the keys to Air Force 1 for him and the innumerable first ladies he would have if he were the cartoon Mormon neutrals want him to be. Now, he is widely viewed to be the candidate, all other GOP candidates, dislike the most, which perhaps explains his current popularity with voters.
Starting point is 00:16:48 John McCain said of him, never get into a wrestling match with a pig. You both get dirty and the pig likes it. However, if you do get into a wrestling match with a pig, here are the steps you should take. One, sack your manager. If he's arranging fights against far-neued animals, he's probably not the right man to run your wrestling career. Two, get the crowd on your side. The pig is a big unit, but crates popularity and feeds off the energy of the crowd.
Starting point is 00:17:09 Make the pig feel alone and, tactically, he will break down. 3. Don't try to beat the pig at his own game. He'll want to spend most of the time rolling around in his own extra room and occasionally eating swill. Don't follow suit. You're better off keeping the fight technical. Use the pig's own way to against him, and once And once you got on top close out the fight by killing, scurrying and slow roasting your opponents over an open fire So have a lapelsource and a taunting lug of key anti How did this profile of Mitt Rothey become a voice on how to fight a pig? That's what happens in an election campaign John. Expect me. I'll expect Ladies and gentlemen, when you think of America, you think of a number of things, hot dogs,
Starting point is 00:17:50 Chevrolet, Cadillacs, and this man, the American. That's right, it's the return of the legendary Ask an American section. How you doing? Welcome back to the show, American. Thank you guys very much for having me and very excited to be here as usual. You know, things have been hectic lately. One particularly hectic. You know, a lot of things going on in America right now, and I just... I have to focus on, you know, the home, the home turf, but I'm safe to be back. By the way, yeah, safe, that means like excited, you know.
Starting point is 00:18:23 Oh right, it's like American, it's an American expression. Oh, I thought it that means like excited, you know. Oh right. It's like American expression. Oh, I thought it was, uh, you were psychologically ready. Both. It's actually as dual meanings. Oh, good, good. Um, so Andy, do you want to kick straight off? Yeah, the first question for the American comes from Jodie Major in Kent, who asks,
Starting point is 00:18:38 When I was at school, we were paired off for a project with American counterparts as pen pals. My American counterparts first question was whether we in Britain had electricity or not. This question was made more absurd by the fact that I was emailing her. In light of this, I would like to ask the American when it was he found out that we do in fact have electricity in Britain. Jody, that is a good question. But first let me tell you this.
Starting point is 00:19:00 Here's what's misleading about your question. You call it a pen pal yet it's through email. So first of all, you should really call it an pen pal yet it's through email. So first of all You should really call it an email pal and then we'd all be on the same page here And maybe your American friend wouldn't be so confused. So first of all first mistake is on you But if you say the same page if it's on email You say we're on the same screen. There's a pun. I was a pun. It's a plan. Well, that's right. No, it's trying to think you don't trip him up What are you trying to do here? You know, it's good to be back don't trip him up with that kind of logic going. No, it's good to be back.
Starting point is 00:19:25 I thought you guys were on my side anyway. Second of all, about electricity. I think everyone here is well aware that England has electricity. You guys stole it from us. Whoa. It's an invention that we came up with. What? You know, the world then caught on.
Starting point is 00:19:38 I mean, of course, you stole it from us. You tried to make it your own. You know, like, your plug suckers are those stupid little holes that none of our things fit into which doesn't make any sense to me I mean ours are slits why would you want holes in you want when you can have slits it just makes more sense yet another thing that the Americans came up with you know we come up with all good inventions that make the world hum like say cars planes boats you know whoa whoa whoa whoa hold on a second I can't let that last one go through was that boats yeah you know Whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa hold on a second. I can't I can't let that last one go through. Why is that boats? Yeah
Starting point is 00:20:07 You didn't you can't you didn't invoke invent boats you were invented by boats Yeah, you're talking about like the old wooden ships those things I don't I'm not I'm done about nice boats like the kind of boat you can zip around the lake Water ski off the back of you know, maybe pick up some chicks out. I know who what are you gonna do? What are you gonna bring like a Spanish wargalley and out to the Jersey shore for the weekend? What are you going to do? I'm talking about like a nice boat. Francis Drake picked up more chicks on his boat than you've had hot dinners.
Starting point is 00:20:34 That might be true, but I could beat him in a race any day of the week and I could pull skis off the back of my boat. The next question is from Dave Hyde, who says, after only 12 months it seems the American owners of Liverpool Football Club are about to sell up and leave. In that short time they have, promised not to finance a new stadium through risky loans, attempted to finance a new stadium through risky loans, publicly humiliated a world-class manager by admitting trying to replace him,
Starting point is 00:20:58 and done nothing but cause chaos and instability and turn the fans against them, and they are still likely to make a huge profit from the sale of the club. If your American was to purchase a British sporting institute, which one would it be and what changes would he make to it? I don't really understand anything that you guys have said to me with that question There's really a lot of like pops and clicks. I didn't really get much of it But I could tell you this just to answer very quickly. I would never buy something That's not American Especially at that scale because it just doesn't make sense I mean if you want a quality product it better say made in the USA on it
Starting point is 00:21:33 It's just kind of a rule I like to live by and that goes with clothing Automobiles obviously. Yeah, I don't want to bring up boat again I know how sensitive everybody gets you know anything good usually good, usually is made here in America. And as far as football clubs go, I'm assuming you're referring to soccer, which is what we call it here. Oh, don't say that, don't say that. I know people hate that word, but look, it's a good word. We invented it.
Starting point is 00:21:55 Yeah. We had that word first. Well, we had football first though. No. The good kind. No, you didn't, stuff. You don't even make your ball out of pig skin. That makes very little sense to me. Why would you you not well i mean what's better than pig skin you know
Starting point is 00:22:09 you had so much of it lying around from all the bacon we're all eating is use it that is important to use it for support i'm gonna give it back i'm being told yeah i got it back we're like the native americans in america we let we let nothing go to waste we we make lacrosse sticks out of whale blubber nothing goes to waste here nothing that could be the most inaccurate thing you've said so far. Nothing goes to waste in America. My response to David Hyde pierced over there
Starting point is 00:22:31 would be don't buy anything unless it says made in the US say on it. And I don't really understand the rest of the question. Well, most of your cousins are probably might in China. I guess all I know is they say made in the US say. Oh, okay. So, I mean we are on a good amount of China so it's really the same thing. It's really the same thing. At this point we own so much of the world that wherever it's made it's kind of still made in the US.
Starting point is 00:22:53 You're in for a very unpleasant surprise in 10 years. I think John that answers shows perhaps why Liverpool fans are slightly skeptical about the extent of American influence in their soccer club. So, and did you have any other questions for them? I do. I have a question for the American. And that is, who do you want to win the presidential election? I get this a lot on my late night drive talk show.
Starting point is 00:23:18 Electing the president is one of the largest, if not probably the largest responsibility in the world, because when you elect the American president, you're really electing the president of the world if not probably the largest responsibility in the world because when you elect the American president you're really electing the president of the world okay so there's a lot there's a lot on our shoulders because we know that our leader kind of ends up running the world which look what we're fine with that you know I mean that's you don't like job so far but I can well thank you and I'll tell you this I'll give you a clue I don't know exactly and I don't want to you know tip anybody off out there because you know we like surprises. I'll give you an idea. How most likely? Be a man most likely be white and he'll definitely hate you people
Starting point is 00:23:56 How you doing and You know when you have a lot of responsibility like that If you're gonna be tough on America all these people that they say they hate America, the terrorists, they want to kill us, you have to understand if you understood how we looked at the world and the responsibility we have to the world, the world to us is like a little baby, you know, we have to take care of that little baby. And if people realize that that's how we view the world, I think they would hate us less. On recent evidence, you've been giving that baby some fairly tough love. Well, hey hey Tori installed parents and going hey the kid tries to bite your hand
Starting point is 00:24:28 He got a knock him in the head every now and then so my parents are to me. I think I turn out pretty good If a baby's if a baby's crying You know, maybe you should pick it up and cutlets rather than well in a different room It only depends it all depends on your philosophy and right now You know our kids are doing stuff. They're like, you know, sneaking out after curfew. You know, they're like, you know, they're coming home late. You're daughter, right now our daughter, she's, you know, banging the football captain in the back of my car,
Starting point is 00:24:57 my car, you know, I lent her my car. I got a minivan. I got to deal with that, you know what I'm saying? I'm not sure that we've lost the metaphor we're now going into and I've just said, I've just said, you know I got a deal with that, you know what I'm saying? I'm not sure that we've lost the metaphor and now gone into an extra day. I've just said, you know, you're dealing with slutty people and you got to sometimes knock them around. Well, thank you very much, American. It's been an explosive return to form.
Starting point is 00:25:15 Always a pleasure to spend some time with you guys. And hopefully we'll see you very soon. Oh, I can't wait. Yeah, right. So keep your questions for the American coming into the bugle at timesonline.co.uk. Don't forget also to go to the bugle page at timesonline.co.uk slash the bugle where you can access all the back issues of the bugle, whether you've missed them or just want to listen to them again as you all should. Also, you can get the print edition of the Bugle.
Starting point is 00:25:46 You can get a PDF downloadable of the legendary audio cryptic crossword for which there has been considerable support from you listeners, for which I'm eternally grateful and John is frankly disgusted. You can also get the Bugle blog summarizing the rest of your emails that don't make into the show. And also, new up last week, the Hotties from History slideshow,
Starting point is 00:26:11 where you can vote for your Mr. Stroke Miss January from the selection available. Yeah, and I have to say, I was skeptical at the start, I've seen the slideshow and I'm a complete convert. It is incredible, we will be adding seen the slideshow and I'm a complete convert. It is incredible. We will be adding to the slideshow. So you can see incredible hotties like a statue of Bismarck, which really makes you feel something deep down inside your house. I've long been dormant. Granite Pex. And now it's time for your emails. We've had an email in from Dan Hancock's helping us to explain how caucuses work. He writes, I want to help you so much understand how caucuses work that actually got out of my bed in late December and went all the way to Iowa from Ballum in South London to go to a caucus. The twisted Victorian parlor game I witnessed there did not help explain things I'm afraid.
Starting point is 00:27:03 It was absolute chaos. 381 people walked into the canteen of the Iowa City Senior Citizen Centre, stood on plastic chairs shouting at each other for four hours, re-arranged themselves at apparently arbitrary intervals, and by the end of the evening, the arrhythmic dance of democracy was apparently complete. Well, thank you to Anne for that update. That is why we must export this form of government around the world. Democracy is dead. And the email came in from Monique Superville.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Brackets, yes, that is my real name, she claims. Some more outlandishly. She also claims even more outlandishly to be from a nice part of New Jersey. And she writes, dear John and Andy, thank you for creating the crack cocaine of podcasts. I knew that someone would eventually make a podcast that could create psychological dependence. I didn't guess that it would come from Britain. Now Monique, I'm not sure we should take this as a compliment. You suggested that our podcast can ruin your personal family lives and lead to your premature death.
Starting point is 00:28:06 As well as just causing social problems. On a scale far beyond the imagination of most journalists. I feel really guilty that we've created this monster. Although the bugles should be listened to in Dens. Just ideally not crack Dens, just a den you make yourself. A lot of the D den you make as toddlers There is a vote for hotty from history from Danny Harkins who says Chancellor Otto van Bismarck Surely not for his looks you understand purely for his real politic and unification through war technique That is so lacking in today's one politicians
Starting point is 00:28:39 Bismarck is a hotty amongst hotties Hitler without the lack of conviction Now there are many criticisms you could levied at Adolf Hitler, many many criticisms. A lack of conviction is not one of them. In many ways if he had one quality it was real conviction. Another slightly surprising suggestion for Holidays from History comes from BC Woods in Aberdeen in Washington State. Who suggests Mother Teresa comes first to buy mind? Uh oh. This benevolently beautiful Hottie from History gave peace and sucker to thousands of those who would have died cold in the loan were it not for her intervention. This makes her an absolute bave in my mind. Oh boy. Oh boy. To keep your emails flooding
Starting point is 00:29:23 in to thebugalatimesonline.co.uk and don't forget to read the bugle blog with the best of the rest. Bugle Sports Baseball in a controversial move the Minnesota twins franchise is to play next season under the new name of the Portland twins after the twins owner Carl Polad bought the city of Portland and moved it to Minnesota. Polad said, I've always liked Portland, but I wanted my team to stay where it was, so this seemed the best solution. Portland is now located 20 kilometers south of Minneapolis, and its former site in Oregon
Starting point is 00:29:56 is to turn into a sanctuary for bears who've got the blues. Results now, dying, Bobby Fisher won, Boris Spasky-Nill, another win for Fisher over his old adversary who has failed to outlast the American Icelandic Grandmaster in Weirdo. Spasky seemed to have the upper hand after having a stroke in October 2006, but failed to capitalize on his advantage and Fisher pulled off an excellent victory with a clinical variation on the old classic kidney failure gambit. Spasky immediately challenged Fisher to a rematch, which Fisher declined. And in Fox punting, Oxford beat Cambridge, repelling themselves down the Thames with a long
Starting point is 00:30:30 pole at a leisurely pace on their fox for five hours without falling in, Cambridge, despite having a slightly more buoyant fox, drank too much pims, capsized their fox, and were disqualified for drowning the fox without the use of the regulation trumpet. Next week in sport, the Super Bowl and the Six Nations Rugby. And now it's time for the much-law-did and globally supported audio cryptic crossword. Thank you very much to all of you who've sent in messages of support. Are you sure some of them weren't sarcastic? None of them were sarcastic, John. Let's just get this over with. This week's clue is 9 down and it's a clue that really touches upon the dangers of tinkering with the natural order of the universe. It's 14 letters long, two of the letters at a,
Starting point is 00:31:17 but I'm not telling you any more than that. And the clue is this, hold the flowers, they bring the dead back to life. And finally, a bugle prediction, which is a meal forecast for Tuesday, breakfast light requiring mid-morning snack, lunch, heavy, veering, gluttonous, snooze, tea and biscuits purking up slightly, then dinner, tasty, fattening, heart attack. Good. So that's all from the bugle issue number 14 this week. Thanks for listening if you've made it this far. Unless you tuned out at the audio cryptic crossword in which case you don't deserve to hear it. You don't, you don't deserve it.
Starting point is 00:31:58 Bye. Cheerio! music

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