The Rest Is Entertainment - Celebrity Catchphrase & Swearing At Children
Episode Date: October 9, 2024Richard and Marina reveal how Catchphrase make their famous Mr Chips graphics, Colin Murray host of Countdown answers if the clock can go past 30 seconds, however is there a flaw in his answer? And if... a script calls from an adult actor to swear at a child, how is this done? Watch the infamous NSFW Catchphrase puzzle. And Richard winning (filth-free) Newsletter: www.therestisentertainment.com Twitter: @‌restisents Instagram: @‌restisentertainment YouTube: @‌therestisentertainment Email: therestisentertainment@gmail.com Producer: Neil Fearn + Joey McCarthy Executive Producers: Tony Pastor + Jack Davenport As always we appreciate your feedback on The Rest Is Entertainment to help make the podcast better: https://forms.gle/hsG8XXMc4QyGNBHN8 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello and welcome to this episode of the Rest is Entertainment questions and answers edition.
Hello Richard. I'm, oh I'm Marina Hyde. Hello there, I'm Richard Osmond. How nice to see you.
Hi.
Thank you for reminding me of your name.
Very nice to see you as always Richard.
Yes.
How are you?
I'm very well thank you. How are you?
I'm really well. Should we just get straight on with the questions?
Yes.
Before we get straight on with the questions, I have some, any other business. Tim Hull has written,
do you remember last week when we talked about the lupuous disease?
Yes.
Tim says, regarding your question about made up bands, AI in gyms, I work for ImageSound and it turns out we provide music for that gym.
So they would have done some due diligence I suspect. When that was read out they're like,
oh no. Happy to confirm the track you mentioned is definitely not AI generated. At ImageSound,
we work with brands to curate their brand sound as well as several gym chains. All of our music is
created by real bands, nothing AI generated.
Our players are carefully handpicked by experts
without any reliance on AI.
In this case, Voluptuous Disease is actually
a father and son band making music
using a platform for emerging artists
to get their work heard.
Wow, a father and son, they go,
I would have loved to hear the conversation
about what they're gonna call themselves.
Do you think they chose one word each?
It's not a classic intergenerational title, is it?
Voluptuous disease?
I don't know, maybe it is. Maybe my family's weird.
Maybe it's one of those things where they both write down one word on a bit of paper
and the dad is going, do you know what? Voluptuous, I think. And the son is going, ah man, disease.
And they're going, oh no, now we're called voluptuous disease. And now they're getting
talked about. Shall we get on?
In fact, I'm gonna ask you a question about bands.
We haven't done a top three for a while.
So here is a top three question from Michael Ellis.
Thank you, Michael.
Top three fictional bands.
Who are your top three favorite made up
and fictional bands from film and TV?
God, there's so many bands
that you almost slightly feel are made up.
Like, you know, I don't know, um, Nickelback.
Yeah.
Nickel, yeah.
Hanson.
And surely not.
Uh, um, Motley Crue is a classic one that I surely is.
Yeah.
Um, okay.
Right.
Let me think of, I know that lots of people would say the blues brothers, but as
you know, I went through the public school boarding system.
Yeah. You hide that well. I had it. I had it very well. as you know I went to the public school boarding system. Did you?
Yeah.
Do you hide that well?
I hide it very well.
There was a certain type of boy in my teenage years,
like obsessively loved the Blues Brothers,
talked about the Blues Brothers the whole time.
They were always the type of boys that would talk over you
and like not let you talk.
Wait a minute.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, you know, of course I never had the confidence
to say at the time, but now I do now
I have the confidence to Tori. So what I would say is that
So I still have that Pavlovian response to people banging on about the blues razzle
Which is no reflection on the film or those brilliant performances at number three
I am putting the monkeys because to me that is so radical that idea where you kind of see the trick
You know, it's got that they're put together. You've got the television show and it's so before its time. I'm like incredible
Ridiculous. Yeah
Amazing people for them Carol King and Neil Diamond and then they turned into incredible songwriters themselves and later kind of psychedelic monkeys
Yeah, genuinely amazing stuff. The best of the monkeys is genuinely an album that will take care of you
That whole story is incredible
So I love that but they are essentially fictional because they began as a as a form of fiction. I would argue
Oh, they're definitely yeah, but but then also yeah, but then they're also and then suddenly
Okay, right minute still water is my number two from almost famous the band in almost famous
That whole thing that whole study of a band love that movie so much
Obviously all the whole sort of entourage around it.
But Philip Seymour Hoffman as Lester Banks, you know, the mental music critic,
who says to him, like when he's trying to say to this kid, you know, this is how you're going to
pitch your profile, he describes it as, just say it's a think piece about a mid-level band
struggling with their own limitations in the harsh face of stardom.
Stillwater are like, oh, that mid-level thing. They're not like Led Zeppelin or whatever.
So I love that portrait.
I think it's so perfect.
I think it's such a perfect movie.
I absolutely love it.
I love Cameron Crowe.
Perfect name for a band as well.
Stillwater for that sort of band.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
At number one, it can only be, it's Spinal Tap.
There we go.
How could it be anything else?
I worry though sometimes when you go,
it can only be, it could literally be anything.
I know, I know, I could have gone really left. You go, it can only be, it could literally be anything.
I know, I could have gone really left out.
You go, I am going to go with S Club 7.
Yeah, again, fictional but also real.
The children wanted to watch it the other day and I was like, no, you don't know enough about bands yet to watch this movie.
You're not going to get the jokes and I want you to totally get these jokes.
You need to find out more, you know, wow wow I have some really interesting cultural homework from my mother but they don't really understand
bands in the same way that we did exactly as you said where are the bands and Spinal Tap 2 is coming
out soon I was talking to someone who was yes I will not say anything this person said other than
when it comes out we'd have so much information I'm'm very, very excited about it. Yeah, I would add Boys Unlimited to that list,
which was my fictional boy band in the 90s
with James Corden as the lead singer,
which did not trouble the scorers.
Still waiting for the second series,
as we say in the business.
It could still happen.
Anything can happen.
Yeah, it may not.
That's a great question, Michael.
So those are our favorite fictional bands and for Luchuous Disease, it may not. It may not. That's a great question, Michael. So those are our favourite fictional bands and Voluptuous Disease very much not.
This is a great one about catchphrase from Stephen Coughlin.
My wife and I are fascinated by the imagination needed to create the catchphrase images in
the show of the same name, The Apollomist Show, and the sheer volume that they create.
Simple question, who creates these and how do they come up with them?
Such, I see those are the sort of questions I love because they're about something we've
seen on television for years and years and years and it's when people understand that
there's a whole job that actually these things just appear on your screen. There's an awful
lot of work that goes into it. We talked to Aaron Morgan, who was one of the former Catchphrase
producers and I will quote various things that Aaron said. There is a phrase team, the
phrase team, the phrase team.
That's a fun gig, isn't it?
That's the bracket, so I wanted my job title.
Yeah, Marina Hyde, phrase team.
A good name for a band.
I want a business card with it, fruits team.
I've never had a business card and I still want one.
Well, listen, that's terrible, Marina Hyde phrase team.
Richard Osman, Perlutris Disease.
There's a creative phrase team that concentrates
on just sourcing the phrases and then ideating animations, which so if we said
Stitching time saves nine. Yeah, then what we'd have to have the word time and then it would have to have some stitches
And then those stitches were sort of dropped down and there'd be like a nine bobbing about in the sea
Which would then sort of be looped around and then that then it would roll up and that's a stitch in time saves night
That's a really bad one
It must send you completely insane just walking around the world in your daily
life, just seeing, hearing words and immediately trying to...
Every thing.
Yeah.
Buy one, get one free.
Like immediately go, okay, how am I going to do buy one, get one free?
So that's their job all the time.
There's a huge database of phrases that have already been used.
Erin says, I couldn't tell you when it started, but as you can imagine, it is immense.
In terms of sourcing the phrases,
it's a mix of keeping on top of new phrases
that have made their way into popular vernacular.
And so, yeah, looking at essentially,
they're looking for phrases that haven't had the,
what they would call the Mr. Chips treatment.
Because they used to be super low-fi, the animation,
you know, back when they were like on a sort of MS-DOS
sort of thing moving around on the screen.
Have you ever seen the funniest clip of all time on television?
Which is there's an...
It's a Roy Walker era.
It's a Roy Walker era catchphrase. There's an animation on the screen and the squares are taken
away in such a way that it looks like Mr. Chips is performing an act of self-love.
Let's say that. It's so funny.
I haven't seen this. Okay.
Oh, it's great. We've seen this too. So everyone, funny. I haven't seen this. Okay. It's great.
We'll see this.
So everyone, listen, I know you're in your car or you're out walking your dog, but as
soon as you get home, you've got a treat in the store.
We'll put it in the show notes.
We'll put it in the show notes.
Self-service journalism.
We will put that in the show notes. Self-service journalism, that is. After they've ideated
these things, the next job is to work up suitable visual ideas for the animation. So basically,
you know, if you've got the kind of idea of what it might be, then exactly what that's going to look like.
And that's based on a combination of entertainment value and achievability for the contestants
guessing. Achievability for the contestants guessing. That's a moveable phase. That is a long
suffering producer there just going, do you know what? You just, you honestly, you're going to have
to make it even simpler. Who have we got on this week? All of these are then pitched. So that'd be
a job where the phrase team go in and talk to an executive producer. That's the most fun they have
all week. This is an executive producer who's literally just been dealing with how expensive
the lights are this series and suddenly they go into a room where someone goes we're going to pitch
you 1500 different animations. Well the real fun of making any show like that is when you get to
play along so someone would come in and show them lots of animations. I keep thinking of you being
so good in the pitch meeting
for Pointless that in the end,
you became Richard Olsen on Pointless.
Do you not think that at some phase,
we might move to live action catchphrase,
which is basically just like a form of phrase team charades,
where they're real humans on the set,
doing really quite bad mimes?
People would go crazy for that.
I know they would.
If you actually filmed the phrase team
and the exact producer looking at the original versions
of those, because firstly you could guess
and secondly you could join in working out
whether they're any good or not.
Yeah.
Or whether they should be on the show.
They're then pitched the best ones selected
to be sent off to the animation company to be produced.
There are certain jobs you do in TV that you just think,
God, I'm getting paid to do this.
And it's a joy because you know it's providing entertainment.
So you know it's paying its way, but you are also thinking,
this is how lovely to be sitting around with people I like
and doing something creative.
And Erin says, in my whole career, this was my favorite job.
Working on the phrases was always really fun.
Stephen Mulhern is brilliant.
And the team from top to bottom was excellent.
And he's right about Mulhern.
He's so good on that show.
I went on Celebrity Catchphrase and Iand. He's so good on that show.
I went on Celebrity Catch Rays and I always,
if ever I'm on a show, you sort of see
what the presenter is doing, you kind of work out
what they're about and he was just amazing
from start to finish and just everything he's doing
is making the show better, not making himself better.
The team talked about him, he's saying he's excellent
and I would agree with that as well.
But yeah, that's one of those funny things on TV shows.
There's bits of the show, like the question writing on shows as well, where, you know,
things are bought in like on House of Games whenever we do a new series, we pitch loads
of rounds to each other.
So the question writers have all thought of rounds and, you know, different people have
thought of rounds and sometimes I'll think of rounds and they go, okay, let's do that.
Yeah.
And they have to try it out.
You have to, so, you know, we'll watch all these rounds and two or three of them will
make it through to a new series.
And then if I've got one, they always go, yeah, I think it's,
it's really good idea, Rich.
Maybe too good.
Maybe too good.
It's just quite difficult to source some of the answers, but we can
absolutely make it work if you want to.
Uh, and very occasionally just to be naughty, you go, yeah, I do want to.
I go, no, it's fine.
I get it.
I get it.
This one doesn't work, but yeah, that's part of the fun of making a TV show like that is that thing of you have to test every single thing out before the contestants do. But thank you so much to Erin for all of that stuff. I have a question for you, Marina. Paul Jeffreys. Hey, Paul says, how do they film scenes where an adult actor has to curse and swear in front of children? I've been watching Ted Lasso in case you are wondering.
has to curse and swear in front of children. I've been watching Ted Lasso, in case you were wondering.
There are two schools of thought on this. One is children can take it, right? They can
take it and they can hear these words and it might not be, you know, they might have
heard this sort of stuff and it doesn't matter and it's all part of the job. There are levels
of it where, and if you talk to like the people on breeders, what they do is they will do
a clean dialogue take with
the child in question and then when they're shooting that actors coverage which is the
bit when you're sort of tight on and you'll shoot the whole scene and actually everyone's
in it but the cameras are just on that one that's called the actors coverage then then
all the swear words will go.
That's where the F's and C's come out.
And there are different rules and there are different rules in America about what you
can and can't do but in general we're quite sanguine about it in the UK, up to a certain
level.
What's interesting on the podcast, I always think on television, you don't swear after
a certain time you can swear and on the podcast, I'm aware that people listen to it in the
car and stuff like that. Maybe they'll be on a school run. So there are kids listening.
So I always usually try and self-centre occasionally say something because, you know, kids love
it if someone swears a little bit. So long as it's not like forceful or you know you know something like that you
can it's cheeky. My basic rule which I always said to my kids about swearing is adults can
swear in front of other adults and kids can swear in front of other kids but you must
never cross the streams.
That's really good. I tell my children that I've they say but why can't we swear you
swear and I say yeah basically this is the equivalent of the Ferrari you will
not be getting when you're 18. I'm building you a Ferrari of swearing, which you will
be allowed to take out of the garage when you're 18. We're just slowly creating it.
But yeah, I, they don't buy this by the way. They don't, they don't, they don't accept
this as an excuse for me being able to swear and not them.
The second you leave the room, your kids swear like troopers I have to say.
Especially your daughter.
Oh my goodness.
She doesn't.
Honestly she swears like a liveable doctor from the 1970s.
He's joking.
She doesn't.
She doesn't.
You know you do.
She's listening right?
On that note, should we progress cleanly to a break?
Let's do that.
Welcome back everybody. Here's a question for both of us I think. Nick Bowater, who
is a proud Pointless trophy holder. Wow.
Yeah, I remember Nick. Yeah. Yeah, Nick. Yeah. Podium 2. Yeah. With the trophy. His partner.
Nick, I wonder what you're what you won the the trophy on and listen doesn't matter. Oh, it's just trophy not jackpot
interesting
Very interesting Nick. I'm still gonna read your question out, but tiny little bit of respect gone
No, it's random whether you win the jackpot on that show
You listen if you know about golf and it's golf then then you're gonna win. What's that the question? No, he's random whether you win the jackpot on that show. If you know about golf and it's golf, then you're going to win.
Was that the question?
No, he doesn't say.
No, it wasn't.
He doesn't say.
You can tell he's not a bitter man, Nick.
He's absolutely moved on with his life, which is what you must do.
Anyway, Nick has a question.
Before celebrity-based reality television shows,
Celebrity Big Brother, I'm a Celeb, etc.,
would there have been a similar vehicle for a previously disgraced personality to reinvigorate their flagging career?
I really like this question and I'm not sure I entirely know the answer to it. What I would say
is even now, disgrace is quite hard to reality show your way out of. And I know Philip Schofield's done that very specific format
where he's, but he was not being,
contrary to what he suggested,
he's not being but for the jungle,
he's not being but for other things.
I think the central premise of my answer would be that
before the explosion of reality TV
in the kind of very late 90s, noughties,
there weren't that many disgraced celebrities.
We didn't have to, if you were disgraced, and there's a lot of terrible reasons for this, which is that people felt
they couldn't report things as we know. I mean, all the things you see is people say,
I didn't think anyone would listen or I did report it and no one did listen. The very
few that if there were disgraced ones, I think you sort of drank yourself to death and that
was it.
Yes, but you went to prison, then came out of prison. But no one really did.
Hugh Grant being caught with the sex worker on wherever it was in Hollywood, he just went
on Jay Leno and made a joke about it. I wonder whether you would go straight back into your
career in the same way now. I do think that people are, if they are now put beyond use,
if they are now cancelled, it is harder to get back. But I
definitely think that there were so few disgraced entertainers, it sort of came out after their
deaths. I think that's right. I think there's also another point, which were there were far fewer
famous people, what we describe as famous people, because you were either famous and known by
everybody, or you weren't famous. Whereas now there's a million different fandoms. And you know,
there's people that could be world famous and have like three million you know photos on Instagram you
never heard of them. So you have that, but also there were far fewer television shows to be on.
So if you were famous and then something happened you're disgraced and if there were three people
in the industry who decided they weren't going to book you, then you were never on television again.
You couldn't suddenly go to a you know a You couldn't suddenly start making your own clips and uploading them to Instagram, to
YouTube.
You couldn't do any of those things.
So I think that actually what has happened is the supply of celebrities has grown massively.
But also the demand for celebrities has grown massively.
It'd be interesting to know which one of those came first.
And of course, the bigger the numbers, then that's when you start going, okay, we've got to book
12 people. Whereas in the old days, all you had to do is book, give us a clue. It's all
you had to do or occasionally blankety blank. And that'd be the same people coming back
every week. And now you're going, oh my God, we've got a new reality show where it's about
combine harvesters and we need 12 celebrities have to drive combine harvesters. So, you
know, now we've got to book this. So you kind of go, oh great, we've got three or four people.
Well, I guess we'll have to get someone disgraced now because people at least have heard of
them. You get someone who got, you know, and that just didn't used to happen in the audience.
They just weren't those shows.
But there are really disgraced people on those shows. I'm trying to think the serious things
that you're actually disgraced for are so serious really in lots of ways that people don't put
you back on the television
and you do have to go and do something like, I don't know, Katie Hopkins or Russell Brand
or have these kind of fringe, possibly with large followings, but kind of wing that existences,
but you're not on mainstream things. I don't think we really launder people. They may have
had flops. I suppose something like Richard Bacon couldn't present Blue Peter anymore because
you took your Sunday in the news of the world and you might have lost that particular job,
but you might have got other jobs back. I do think there is a certain finality to the type
of cancellations that you see now. And it is quite hard to come back from lots of those
because of just the nature of what people are being accused of.
It's quite, they're quite serious things. But then, you know, we talked about last week,
we talked about Anna Delvey on Dancing with the Stars. I mean, you know, honestly, that is a
supply and demand thing. You know, there is a point at which if you're getting 12 people on a show,
if that's, you know, the jungle or strictly or any that, you know, any show that needs a lot of
people, you know, you go, we need a mix. And occasionally that mix would involve somebody who maybe hasn't been on
television for a while for various reasons.
And so I, I just think it's one of those things where there were far
fewer celebrities in the olden days.
As you say, if they were disgraced, then they were in prison and we needed far
fewer guests on television shows.
So actually they're just, there would never have been a root back.
Stay disgraced.
Stay disgraced. Stay disgraced.
Our new show.
Got a lot of formats around canceled men.
Gotta stop coming up with them.
Okay, one on countdown that I love from Paul Bateman.
Does the countdown clock only do the 30 seconds
or can it do the full 60 second rotation?
Finally.
Well, rather than answer this myself i was on
countdown recently so i spoke to uh the great man collin murray who not only has given us some
audio but if you're watching on youtube has some video as well so this is collin murray's answer to
your question hi marina hi richard it's collin from countdown. Can the countdown clock rotate the full minute? Right, I've had to do a bit of
digging. I talked to Susie Dent, who would know better than anybody. She reckons it's never
happened. But that's not your question. Your question is, can it? I don't think it can.
I remember when it broke down during an episode once and then our technicians went in and I think they fixed a light or whatever.
So it's a mock-up of a clock. It's not a grandfather clock or your wristwatch.
So why with every second it ticks it lights up. The only bit that lights up is as it ticks.
So why would they light up the other 30 seconds if it's not needed? I don't think it would make sense to light it up.
So I'm going to say I'm sure that it hasn't ticked around a full minute.
Can it? I'm less sure but I'm pretty convinced it can't.
But let me leave you with this. Why is countdown called countdown?
That's the question you should be asking.
It goes from not the 30 seconds.
It should be called count up.
If it was truly 11 updates, then the clock would start at the bottom where
it's 30 seconds and count down to zero.
So countdown should really be called count up.
Right.
Can I be the first to say that has broken me and I'm out of the podcast.
That's epic. I'm going to be thinking about a lot of the issues raised in that answer for a long time.
He's a deep thinker, Colin. I'll give that also. He's a brilliant host of that show.
Now, listen, I love Colin. I love Countdown. And you think this is the good, listen, he hosts the show, right?
And he's talking to Susie Dentane, he's talking to everyone.
So this guy's got the definitive answer.
I'm going to go slightly counter to him.
You don't think it's a mock up, a clock up, if you will.
I think a clock down, I call it.
Uh, I think it is.
I think certainly if you were to use that current clock at the moment, it
wouldn't go all the way around.
If you watch the pilot of Countdown, it goes around to 45 seconds.
That's what I'm going to say. You can find it now on YouTube. I say you can, I did. Countdown, which was
the first ever show on Channel 4. And essentially they were saying, is there a format here?
And there's a huge French format, Chefs et Lettres. And they had done it on a regional
basis with Richard Whiteley in Yorkshire, in calendar, and it was called Calendar Countdown.
You can see the very, very, very first pilot,
which has a number of issues.
Namely, it still has women picking up the letters
and numbers, but they are not allowed to speak,
is one of the big issues, which they seem to have got over.
Secondly, you're only allowed to score points
when it is your turn.
So if you both get five letter word,
only the person who picks the letters gets the points,
which is one of those format things that occasionally go, oh, I tell you, we'll do it like this,
because that's like badminton, and then you watch it goes, oh no, maybe we should just
have that, that doesn't seem to make sense. But a number of the rounds are 45 seconds
on that. The music is identical, they're all of that. But the clock, other than it ends
on a big buzzer, it doesn't end on, which da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da in its time and listen, I recognize time, but is it an earlier clock? Is that an, you know, it's a current clock.
Can the yes, but what would you mean?
Yes.
And surely.
Yes.
And, but what do you mean by the current clock?
Do you know, because this, this is clock is not going to last forever.
So the countdown clock, is it an actual physical thing or is it an idea?
So the actual physical thing, I am certain that Colin is right.
And you know, we've done cats does count on many, many times. thing or is it an idea? So the actual physical thing, I am certain that Colin is right and
you know we've done Cats Does Countdown many many times and it stops where it stops and
it doesn't sort of ever accidentally go one extra. But as a thought experiment? But as
a thought experiment, as a concept, the idea of the countdown clock, could it go all the
way around? Yes it could go all the way around because it's gone to 45 seconds before. So
it's, it has done it before and this is all I say to you, it could do it again.
Okay, as I say that has blown my mind and I'm going to be, that will stay with me as an answer
and a session of reasoning. Yeah. And also I was going to answer the question of why is it called
countdown? And I thought, well no, I have no answer. I thought I had sort of an answer, which is,
well look, it's a nine letter word. And so, you know, they'd come up with something. But actually, in that first pilot for calendar countdown,
there were only eight letters. So even that doesn't work.
I think we can consider this a mystery that's still developing.
I don't think we've got any way to the bottom of that or the top.
It is breaking news for sure. And yeah, we need more information.
Listen, Colin has done a great job.
But in the Warren Commission inquiry into the, know the assassination of JFK I think we
have years more of testimony to hear. But all I know is, all I know Senator, is that
it has gone round to 45 seconds before in the history of the show and therefore
theoretically it could do again. Don't you think? I agree with you. I just want to agree to get out of the question now.
Oh, the same stop in here. This is, no, no, no, this is so much bigger than both of us.
Real. Oh, this is, this goes all the way. Yeah. As you say,
I'm going to find something and bring it back next week. I just got to,
but thank you so much, Colin, who, as I say, what an, thank you, Colin,
brilliant host is that show. If you watch that show now, it's like a Rolls Royce, him and Susie and Rachel.
It is an absolute joy to watch.
I mean, is it worth any more questions?
What can you follow that with?
What can you follow that with?
A true philosophical inquiry.
Good luck.
Is Mr. Chipps not a real person?
I mean, come on.
No, no, no, we can't.
Don't let us excavate anything further.
That's enough to deal with for one week.
But we will see you again.
Please keep sending in your questions, the rest is entertainment at gmail.com.
We'd love to hear from you.
Thank you so much, Marina.
I'll see you next Tuesday.
See you next Tuesday. I'm a man of my word, and I'm a man of my word
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