The Rest Is Entertainment - The Prince Andrew Newsmageddon
Episode Date: February 26, 2026How much will the photographer that captured Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor slumped in the car have made off that single picture? How are figure skating fees worked out? Is Breaking Bad's crystal meth acc...urate? Richard Osman and Marina Hyde chat about the former Prince Andrew, book recommendations and ice skating in another excellent QA episode. The Rest is Entertainment is brought to you by Octopus Energy, Britain's most awarded energy supplier. Join The Rest Is Entertainment Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus content, ad-free listening, early access to Q&A episodes, access to our newsletter archive, discounted book prices with our partners at Coles Books, early ticket access to live events, and access to our chat community. Sign up directly at therestisentertainment.com For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com Video Editor: Max Archer Assistant Producer: Imee Marriott Senior Producer: Joey McCarthy Social Producer: Bex Tyrrell Exec Producer: Neil Fearn Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This episode is brought to you by Octopus Energy.
Now, it is award season.
Everyone is wondering who's going to clean up.
And we tend to think awards are about that one big moment, like, oh, my goodness, that one night, that speech, I can't believe I've won.
But.
The effort that goes into winning an award.
Everyone going for one of those big movie awards.
It's not a coincidence that Academy members or whatever are saying, oh, did you see that thing?
You did.
It was really good.
There is a remorseless, many months campaign.
and there are tens of people working on every single film's awards campaign.
I thought you're going to say tens of thousands.
No, no.
But there are tens.
Yeah, there are tens.
But that's quite a lot when you think of like one.
And it's a full-time job.
We mention this only because we are announcing our presenting partnership with the lovely people at Octopus Energy,
who have just won the which recommended provider of the year for the ninth time in a row.
And that is not something you get just by year.
Which is hard to win.
Which is hard to win.
Which is hard to win.
We're just hard to win.
But nine in a row, I would say that makes Octopus Energy the Merrill Streep of the business.
Oh, yeah.
They're the Merrill.
They're the Merrill.
I call the Merrill Energy.
That's what I call them.
Hello, and welcome to this episode of Restors Entertainment, Questions and Answers Edition.
I'm Marina.
And I'm Richard Osmond.
Hello, Marina.
Hello, Richard.
How are you?
I'm very, very well.
We had so many questions about Prince Andrew and various aspects of the...
Artists formerly known as...
Artists formerly known as Prince Andrew Matt, Matt, Benton, Windsor.
but so many. So should we just pick one and sort of talk around it? Talk around it, yeah.
That might be the way to do it. Steve Lloyd, you've been chosen. Well done, Steve. Because he's
coming by the photograph, which I think is interesting. Oh my God, the photograph is effort.
But thank you everyone for all your questions. So this is the one we will use as representative. Steve says,
how did Phil Noble's photograph of Andrew Mountbatten, Windsor, leaving the police station, end up on the front page of every newspaper the next morning? How did he get the shot and how much would he get paid?
for it. Yeah, it's one of the all times of great news images. I love great news images. I've got so
many books of them. I've got great one of National Quara famous images. This is absolutely up there
with all of them. Phil Noble at Reuters took it. He works for a news agency, Reuters. So to answer the
first bit first, he is contracted to Reuters. That was always going to be sold around the world.
But if it had been an individual publications snapper, then they would have got, you know,
then there would have been their exclusive picture, which would have been one of the great exclusives.
But again, if it was, say it was a daily mail photographer, would the daily mail then be able to license it around the ones?
Yes, of course.
And they would.
But there's something amazing about that first image, and they would have kept it to themselves at the start.
But it's very difficult now when everyone could just kind of scrape it off online and people are just going to unauthorizedly steal it anyway.
It's not like it used to be where you think, like, okay, that photo is on the front of the sun or whatever, and you're going to buy the paper because that's the only place you can see it.
Yeah.
But ostensibly, every single time you see it in any like normal news organization online or anywhere, they paid.
It's getting paid.
But they also have deals with Reuters that are like long term, you know, they can use.
But it's a bit like the Associated Press or any of those news agencies where you might, you have a kind of overall deal with them that you take that content.
It's very clever how he got it, Phil Noble.
It's really difficult this.
It's fine if you know a celebrity is going to come out of a nightclub and all the snappers are standing outside.
they're waiting for it to happen.
The whole point of this arrest was they didn't give anyone advanced notice of it
because they thought it would become a complete feeding frenzy,
which it obviously would have done.
It's in Norfolk, which everything's quite spread out.
And there were about 20 different police stations he could have been taken to.
Yes, so they didn't say exactly where he'd gone,
just he'd gone to a local station.
They never would tell you that because they would say you might get a confirmation
if it's the Met like a central London police station.
But they knew it was somewhere in Norfolk.
He had a tip off, Phil No,
and you can read about this, he's talked about it now.
And some of the Reuters people were went to Ailsham.
And there are only like three of them there.
And they waited all day and they waited and they waited.
And then they just thought, nothing doing here.
And this, by the way, this is like about an hour from Sandringham as well.
So this is not the local police station by any manner of place.
So presumably.
There were 20 potential.
There were presumably there are photographers outside pretty much every single one of those.
And some people would have gone to the nearest one.
Some people have gone to the biggest one.
And because it's so spread out, you've got to call it.
You're not going to hear, oh, he's just driven out.
and then hurry away over there.
That's done. You've missed it.
There's nothing you can do apart from Take Apart.
You've got to be directly outside that one.
So it's proper, sort of quite old-fashioned stuff.
They think, okay, nothing doing here.
Let's just check into a hotel and see about the road.
So they're outside Eilsham Police Station.
Yeah.
They've had the tip off.
And they're like, they're getting to the stage like in a movie where they go.
Well, it's been dark for a few hours now.
I think this is bum information.
Yeah.
And they, but they think they'll check into a hotel.
And he was actually walking on the way down to the hotel,
which is wherever it was local.
I must have been some sort of pub or something.
And he got a phone call saying some cars are coming out.
Because he's an experienced photographer, he knows that the first car will contain the police officers
and the second car will also have police officers, but will, the security officers, but will have
the target in this case, Andrew.
The principal.
So therefore, he doesn't take anything in the first car.
He gets six shots, all of which are out of focus apart from that one, which is incredible,
which, you know, I hardly need to describe to everyone
because it's already iconic of him leaning back.
The red eye somehow makes it even better.
But isn't it, it's like you just think, oh, that's annoying,
there's red eye on this.
If that came back from boots in the day,
it would have a little sticker on it.
Yeah, yeah, it would, exactly.
Do you want to tell us to tell you what you want to do?
Yeah, I know what I did wrong.
But well, it's, and it's great,
and I've already seen things comparing
to so many sort of great historical paintings.
For me, it is very like the Francis Bacon, the Pope.
But there are many other ones, yeah, really like dark and, you know,
I've spent a lot of, I've worked at the sun at the start of my career and I used to deal with the pictures for a little bit.
And it's so interesting talking to those kind of photographers who, in those days, it was really hard.
Remember, it was all negatives.
And so if they missed it in any other way, there was a community, as there always is with packs of anything,
whether it's the lobby or the sports press or whatever.
And they used to say to each other, give us a egg.
Because you'd be, you'd be in so much trouble if you miss, not if you miss that shot.
That's too difficult.
and you're like, fine, you pick the right police patient, you're amazing, well done.
And you'd be line-eyes for that, of course.
And we already know what the photograph of the year is.
So anyway, you have to get the shot at the time.
And you'll see sometimes, one of the things you'll see snappers do when someone,
say someone's been convicted of some awful crime that everyone has talked about,
you'll see them just holding the camera right above their head in order to get it into the prison van.
Because those prison van, because there's prison van, the black cat windows.
If you have the ultra flash on, you sometimes just by pure.
luck of getting your camera against it, you might get something inside and you might, and there
are certain famous ones, sort of child murderers and things, which they managed to get inside.
That shot interested me while I was away last week and I was saying to my children,
oh, because it's head on. That's hard. Think about getting the head on shot. I have spoken to a
lot of photographers who've been carried on the bonnets of cars before because you're literally
hanging on to a wing mirror and just clicking through the front window and hoping some of it's
usable. To me, it's fascinating this because
You wouldn't do that.
I don't think actually even now, given how far he's fallen,
you're still not going to be doing that.
And people don't necessarily behave in that same way as they used to.
It's not the 80s or the 90s anymore.
But people did do that.
He's got highly trained security operatives with him.
Yeah.
And who knows what's going to happen to you.
But he would have reached across because you can see the angle of the picture.
The angle of the picture is not from the side of the road.
The angle of the picture is sticking your hand right out.
It's really, I mean, it's amazing he got the shot.
It's one of the great ones.
And I love that he's had so much attention.
Because you could clearly see from inside the car that there was a photographer there,
the whole shot is made by the fact that Andrew is like kind of just scooching down in his seat so he can't be seen.
Too late.
And it just makes him look.
It's a perfect encapsulation of what we think of him and a perfect encapsulation of him being caught in this.
And as you say, the red eye adds to it as well.
The only thing I saw about Phil Noble, I thought, was extra interesting.
Russell T. Davis was saying that I think Russell T. Davis used to produce Why Don't You?
You know, the kids Saturday morning. I'm aware of why don't you.
The kids, you know, summer TV program. And Phil Noble was one of the kids on Why Don't You that Russell T. Davis cast.
Oh my God. That's so cool. And look at him now.
Look at him. Well, it is. Why don't you?
Yeah. Take a photograph. And there is something painterly and epic when you see an image like that.
And the reason that everyone said like, oh, it's like a Francis Bacon and where it's like, you know,
chronos heating is chroth.
You know, there's so many things that people say it looks like the scream or whatever it is,
is because it immediately becomes, in the truest sense of the world, iconic.
It's an icon.
And is there good money in that for Phil Noble, or would that be covered by his?
I hope there's a good bonus in it for him.
But he wouldn't ordinarily, he'd be covered by his Reuters contract.
Yes, I don't know the details.
And people have different types of contracts and sometimes there's a sort of commission thing on the top of it.
I wouldn't know the details of that.
But in general, it's because the reason.
it was instantly everywhere. Two reasons in this day and age it's quite hard for things not to be.
But if you do scrape things, they will come after you and say, you've done this, you've broken our copyright and you will get the money eventually.
But that sense that you can have an exclusive and hang on to it.
But because it's come from a news agency, you expect to get a significant number of the pictures used in your news publication on any given day from Loiters or the Associated Press or whatever it is.
I think another...
There's also the idea of...
We talked about weirdly Pokemon cards on Tuesday show, that idea of scarcity.
Because ordinarily, if someone's been driven out of a prison or a trial or something like that,
there's 50 photographers and everyone gets slightly different angles of the same thing.
And one is the best.
But this is, he is literally the only person there.
You're trying to be where the ball is going to land rather than where it's.
But which happens so rarely these days.
Yeah, people keep saying it's the biggest crisis since the abdication, which, as you know,
I think that's when they all weren't wrong with the ad.
But we won't go over that old ground.
No, go on. Let's do a tight 10 on that.
No, it all went wrong in the abdication when they allowed, he should never have abdicated.
However, it's interesting in that the same sorts of things are happening.
People say it doesn't repeat itself history, but it rhymes, okay?
Everyone, ordinary people loved the abdication.
Sorry, everybody, but they did.
They thought it was a huge amount of art.
The people in the creative, and we know this because we have lots and lots of diaries to rely on at the time.
people in what we've now called
the creative industries
but I don't think Virginia Woolf referred to herself
as being in a world character
She was a content creator
She was an influencer
Yeah
She feels like live streaming a lot of what she did
Anyway, but then they said it was like
Melodrama better than a novel
Virginia said it
Oh it was an electric atmosphere
The people who they began in mass observation
When they started like recording the voices
of ordinary people
Nella Lass
They started doing it just after war
But she was able
You know that's housewife 49
Nella Last Swore is a really good book if you've never read it,
which is the stories of all her kind of memories of things.
And Victoria Wood played her on television as well in a thing called Housewife.
Tell me more about her.
Nella Last was just one of the people who was chosen to be part of mass observation,
which was recording the voices of ordinary people and what they felt about all sorts of things.
And it's an amazing project.
And so we know much more.
People afterwards will always tell you that, you know, like the application was a huge crisis and whatever.
I don't know.
She, Nella Lass was one of those people who thought, of course,
and this was a very popular sort of working class view at the time,
that he'd done it all for love.
He was really popular, Ed with the Eighth.
He'd done it all for love.
Bear in mind, this is before he tottered into the embrace of the Nazis.
Afterwards.
So, but there's, so what we're dealing with now,
and by the way, and all the elite diarists of the time,
the sort of Chips, Channers, the Howard Nicholson's or whatever,
thought it was all dreadful for the monarchy
and even someone like Cecil Beaton,
the great photography, who was a terrible sort of snob,
thought, oh, this is all so vulgar, it's disgusting, it's blah, blah, blah,
which is actually very similar to what's happening now.
You'll hear all these elite people saying,
oh, this is dreadful, there's a crisis of monarchy,
but honestly, lots of ordinary people are really enjoying this.
I appreciate that this isn't like someone's done something for love.
This is a much less savoury story, although not as unsavory as Nazis.
So it's interesting.
I'm watching all the politicians jump,
jump on the band, bag, and I find amazing.
This is exactly what happened in the abdication.
Exactly.
The same thing.
I saw Tom Dugan Hart.
I mean, God, he rushing towards a camera to say, well, we might have to reopen all of the 700-year-old treason laws.
And there should be a special committee.
It's like, oh, and you'll be on it, I bear.
They're loving it as well.
Stanley Baldwin, the great political survivor, was drunk on the abdication.
Okay, there's a thing.
He grabs Harold Nicholson, because Harold Nicholson puts his diary.
he's an MP who writes dowries at the time.
And he grabs Harold Nicholson after he's done the abdication address in the House of Commons saying that the king is going to abdicate, saying,
I had success, my dear Nicholson, at the moment I most needed it.
And Harold Nicholson says, no man had dominated the House, says Baldwin did tonight, and he knows it.
Now, all the politicians that you hear now are hoping for something similarly.
You don't think if it goes wrong for Kemi Badnock in the May election, spoiler it's going to,
that Tom Tuggenhard isn't going to have yet another crack at the leadership.
You know, they're all joking, they're all using this thing because it's the same as it always wants.
This is like the royal family for politicians are like the Beckham's are for us.
Yes, but the queen chose a way to be.
She chose to create, you know, she was the original person of a documentary where she's the executive producer of it all.
That's what they did with that documentary where she decided to turn it into a sort of family show and to allow the, you know, unscripted, whatever, unscripted drama.
and it actually has of course become so popular
where they've got a no-contact son,
they've got dirty and dodgy uncle, allegedly, who knows, but he's difficult.
And actually, in lots of ways, it's become something much more like that.
But the Royals were the original executive producers of their own documentaries
and it doesn't always work well.
Yeah, but whenever I see, oh, this is a nightmare for the Royals
and this is, it feels like Andrew exists in a slightly different sphere,
which is he's found himself in a different,
group of people. He's not seen as part of that kind of, you know, he's seen as like a weird
adjunct. But number one on Amazon all week, I'm delighted to say is Virginia Dufre's
biography and talking about her life. And how great that all, just seeing him again and again and again
and again is sending people to that and hearing her truth and hearing her story. You know,
the whole thing, there's something, hopefully,
cleansing about the thing. There's something in the news media that feels quite cleansing.
But yeah, I'm with you.
Can I also say, though, I think something that's interesting, because since we're, to return
to the sort of entertainment related aspect of it all.
We're really not answering Steve's question here. We have done that. We have done that,
so now we're answering everyone else's question.
The Instagram documentaries that are already being announced, you know, Channel 5 announced
one, I can't remember who else, our TV have announced one. They're all doing, again, this is
something that I feel, it's.
It speaks to the sort of ridiculous churn of our culture.
Don't forget there were two documentaries, sorry, two dramas about the documentary itself,
one based on the bookers book and one based on Emily Maitlisters.
But I have to say, it's always better to wait.
I hope we're only on Act 2 of this with this development in the story.
And I think there could still be in Act 3 we don't know.
But everyone goes so early nowadays.
This never used to happen.
And I've also talked a lot about on the podcast about the erosion of the very idea of documentary,
where essentially it's just become a very quick kind of cuts job.
There's never any real form of perspective to lots of these documentaries.
They're made to order and they're kind of instant.
There is something to be said for not doing it at the exact moment of requirement and waiting a bit.
Because it becomes something much more interesting if you can allow the story to develop in a certain way.
And of course, we'll have it all over again.
but there's something about waiting a little bit,
but nothing on our culture wants to wait.
So you're going to have 10 mushroom poisoning documentaries
or you're going to have lots of documentaries about,
and there'll be lots of documentaries about this,
even though there's very little extra we can say,
and you've seen it all just now on the news.
I do think there's something worth waiting
for both drama and documentary
and thinking, hang on a second.
What about if the interview is just the end of Act 1?
One of the fascinating things, though, I think.
When I'm talking about the interview,
I'm talking about the news and I think.
Sorry, I should have made that clear.
One of the interesting things I think is this, which is although, of course, you cannot talk directly about the allegations and about the investigation, all those things.
What this being on our sort of new cycle for 24 hours a day means is you can start talking to people who worked with Andrew or worked for Andrew or who had been in his orbit.
And they can tell their stories about their personal view of him.
No, Ross.
Which is the absolute, I know, but there's a point before someone is arrested where actually you can't.
You sort of feel it's a disloyalty or that people won't believe you or anything like that.
And actually now the floodgates have opened and you see a whole group of people.
There's that amazing clip of the guy on Australian TV saying, oh, yeah, I mean, we did have a nickname for him.
And they're going to know, what was the nickname?
And he goes, well, he had a code name with the Secret Service and he was like Purple 51 or something.
He said, oh, no, but he said he had a nickname as well, he said, I sort of,
can't really say you wouldn't be had a broadcast and they're going,
go, go, just tell us, couldn't have done this before, this was all on the news because,
and tell us, it says, well, we used to call him the c-
and you just think, that is something you could not have put on the news.
And that is one of those things.
We talked about open secrets before.
You talked to anyone in the last 5, 10, 20 years who'd worked for him and they would
give you stories like that.
But it's not something, there's not a place for that in the middle of our culture.
is not a sort of place to tell that story.
Lots of people have sort of, you know, done kind of blogs or tweeted about it, but you can't,
it can't be reported.
Whereas now, all of that stuff, the stuff that is not subdued to see, the stuff that is not
to do with a, you know, a court case or an investigation, everyone can tell you their stories about it.
Well, yes, but I would say that this is also a failure of the UK media, and I really do think
that because I can assure you, I can't remember how long I've been doing this story for,
but it's a long time now, like a decade, decade and a half.
And nobody really bothered very much with it at all.
It was not complete.
The stories, the multiples of stories about Megan compared to multiples of stories about this.
After he had been pictured with Epstein, after all of these things, which was ages and ages ago,
and they all knew off the sort of record and what people said about him.
And yet the obsession was still with Megan.
And I remember doing this in 2019 and just thinking this is absolutely.
bizarre. They're obsessed with the fact that
Megan and Harry have gone on a private jet to
Abitha. Look at the other way.
Why is the Queen just driven to Balmoral
for this incredibly presentational events?
To Churchill, Baramoral, with him sitting next to her
in the car. But they wouldn't say anything.
The media is part of the
establishment, and the establishment has
now decided that cutting him
loose is a more protective
stance than doing what they did before,
which was not properly interrogating
at all. And the media is
part of that to some extent. Not all, I can't, you know, characterize the whole media as one thing,
I wouldn't begin to. But I will say that as someone who wrote about this for a very long time,
there was a long, long period when they were far more interested in covering Megan than looking
into any of this stuff, even though large aspects of it were in the public domain.
Love it. And there was one journalist I would absolutely love to give a big shout out to,
because she, I have followed her for such a long time. And that's Julie Kay Brown, who worked with the
Miami Herald and who did the original, who eventually went back and was able to piece together
the whole Epstein story as much as possible of it, because so much of it been sealed by this
dreadful bargain he made back in 2008 or 2009. And she was able to piece together so many
of the stories of the victims and police talking to her after record. That is an absolutely
stellar piece of journalism. And I think they've made a sort of dedicated area on their website
where you can go and have a look at it. She's called Julie K. Brown and she is really,
an absolute kind of linchpin in this whole story.
And we've covered so many different questions that people wrote in there.
No, because lots of people did ask things.
We'll leave it to next week.
Someone asked a question about Sarah Ferguson's book sales, which I have some information about it.
We'll do that next week.
Okay, next week, next week.
Enough Andrew Matt Batten, Windsor.
Now, shall we go to some adverts and some non-Andry-related questions after that?
Yes, we will do.
Welcome back, everybody.
The Winter Olympics is tragically.
over but was brilliant.
I've got a question about the ice skating
from Catherine who says,
with the Winter Olympics in Milan,
figure skating feels more pop and camp than ever
with Madonna, Spice Girls, Backstreet Boys,
medleys everywhere.
How does the music actually work?
Do skaters need to licence these tracks
and how are the medleys cleared and edited?
Well, it's interesting with Winter Olympics
because we only see it once every four years
and so sometimes there'll be seismic changes in sports
and we don't know.
So I think a lot of people are slightly taken
are back when they're watching the ice dancing.
And more people watch ice dancing this year
because of Lida Fier and Lewis Gibson.
We had British contenders in it.
So I think a lot of people watched it.
And yeah, we are very, very used to watching figure skating
to classical music essentially.
And that's because until 2014, in fact,
so there's been a couple of Winter Olympics.
Until 2014, you couldn't dance to anything that had words in it.
So you had to have, which was largely why people just dance.
to classical music also because you don't have to get any you know all of that stuff is out of
copyright you can just play whatever you want 2014 they said no let's we're going to modernize our
sport a little bit you can now dance to um tracks with uh with words in it which of course opens up
a huge can of worms because you are then everyone wants to dance to pop music because everyone
wants to dance to something that's going to get everyone in the stands interested and you know
it just it gives slightly more energy to your uh performance you know course it has different beats and
this sort of the other um
But yeah, they absolutely have to get the permission of the artist.
There was a big story just before the Winter Olympics.
The Spanish skater was dancing to a medley from minions.
And he realised just before the Olympics started that that had not been cleared.
And the process was taking quite a long time.
In the end, sort of went online, did a big social media campaign.
And Sony were made aware of it and sped it up.
And so it was fine in the end.
So, yeah, it's completely changed.
So Lila, Fear and Lewis Gibson danced to a,
Spice Girls,
Italian's dance to a Backstreet Boys medley.
Because my wife, Ingrid,
was an ice skater in her youth.
Like a really, really...
How did I not know this?
And so she was like, oh my God, they're dancing.
Honestly, ice dance and backstreet boys at the same time.
She was like, suddenly, oh, sport!
Okay, count me in.
She was excited by that.
There was Lenny Kravitz.
You know, there's Madonna, as a question said.
Ricky Martin, three different countries danced to Ricky
Martin, Finland, Sweden and one of the Spanish bears, dance to Ricky Martin.
So, yeah, it is, it's completely changed.
You can dance to whatever you want.
You do definitely have to get permission.
There are also, of course, competitions between the dancer to get songs that they want.
You know, when Torven and did Bellaro, you know, there was not a lot of competition for that.
But the big new thing now, because if you want to, you know, if you can't get permission and, you know, you want to do classical music.
and this is what the Czech Republic did, or Czechia, is AI music.
And so Czechia danced to an AI version.
It sort of sounded like ACDC but wasn't ACDC because they didn't have the rights to do that.
Sort of had some samples from new radicals as well, which they didn't have the rights to.
So you can now...
What's happened? Are they in trouble for it?
No.
No. Everyone seems fine.
It's the Winter Olympics, isn't it?
I mean, you know, we've moved on.
In the world cinema, classic Blades of Glory, where they're not competing, they're not competing at Winter Olympics because it's so heavily copyrighted.
I don't think you can even say Winter Games.
I can't remember what the competition they're competing at, but they do everything to things with lyrics.
Will Arnott and Amy Perlowe, who is still married at the time, who played the Fairchild's, von Fairchild's.
There's one point where they're doing something to like urban music that is, I strongly recommend a much.
Also, have you listened to the episode of Smartless where Amy Polar comes on?
Yes.
Because you know, often on that show they don't know.
Sometimes they know who the person is, but Will Arnett is certainly surprised that his ex-wife is the guest that week.
So, yeah, you can absolutely see why they've done it.
It makes ice skating much, much more kind of modern and current.
But it is a can of worms.
But, yeah, that, you know, when I was looking into all the different stories in it,
the AI thing, the Czechia finished 17th in the end.
So it didn't do them a huge.
amount of good. But yeah, that's, I think, the first AI winter Olympic story I've seen.
Well, I obviously think everyone should just green light everything for use because it's so
funny to see what they do with it. Yeah, exactly. Come on. It's not going to ruin the minions as a
property. Yeah. I mean, when you wrote that song. Take the money and shut up. In your bedroom,
you weren't thinking you're going to have two, you know, Latvians doing triple axles to it.
But just also maybe don't do the whole routine and just then be waiting for some,
horrible Hollywood lawyer to clear it for you because I just make clear first.
Marina, George Griffey has a question.
He says, you recently answered a question about how writers get things like scientific accuracy in books by speaking to professionals in that field.
Pat lovely Hannah Frye answered that for us.
George has a more specific question.
How do writers get such in-depth information about illegal activity?
For example, and something like Breaking Bad, it feels so specific.
I can't imagine the writers just Google that sort of info.
So how do we find out about illegal things?
Writers do want to get that right and they just, mostly, as you've said, I think before,
they want the thing that they want to happen to be made right in some way by an expert.
But Breaking Bad is particularly interesting because, of course, it is quite technical
in terms of the chemistry of cooking crystal meth.
Tell me about it.
Well, funnily enough, Vince Gilligan, when they started that, you obviously don't know
that it's going to become one of the biggest TV series of all time.
And they didn't have a huge budget at the start.
and they got a lot of the first series off Google as...
But he then, because it became a huge thing pretty quickly,
he didn't interview...
I can't remember where...
It's like some sort of literally like an entertainment magazine saying
I'd actually really welcome some input from the chemistry community.
And a woman who later became chair of the American Chemical Society
who was eminent sort of chemistry professor,
Donna Nelson read this and thought, well, I would like to help.
Fancy a bit of this.
Yeah.
So she kind of managed to get in touch to the magazine and said, can you just give my details to him?
And they did actually pass it all on.
And she became the science advisor on Breaking Bad.
They were always very careful because they never, although you can look up on the internet how to cook meth from start to finish,
they didn't ever want to provide an exact sort of manual of how to do it.
And so they would always omit key steps.
but they taught the actors exactly how to do it
so that they always knew what they would be doing at any one time.
And there are certain things that are not accurate.
Like, you know, he has his famous product, his blue meth that's really amazing
and it's really sort of extra pure because it's got this sort of ethereal colour.
They actually got that, I think, from a sweet shop somewhere in Albuquerque.
It's probably just some sherbet or something.
But if it were that colour, it would be impure.
So there were certain things like that that aren't strictly accurate.
it. Anyway, Dona Nelson then began to properly consult and it becomes very technical.
She always knew that scientists get annoyed if people get things wrong, as all people who are
experts in their field do if they think Telly gets it wrong. But she was stunned by the whole
kind of breakout community of novice scientists talking about the show in a really, really
essentially chemical way. And she really loved it. So she thought, gosh, I mean, the level of
depth and whatever, they also, in terms of the crime stuff on that, they did have DIA, you know,
drug enforcement agency representatives advising them because they want to say, okay, when you raid a lab,
what do they look like inside? What are the, you know, that doesn't, they don't have pictures
of real life meth labs normally online or maybe they'd have a few more now, but they certainly
didn't back when Vince Giller was writing this. And so they would say, okay, how does it actually
look? How would you run a raid? And so they're able to say all of those things because, and they
had a guy from a DEA lab in Dallas, a guy called Victor Bravenick, and he, a, a, of a
advise them on that sort of thing.
And also how to handle the equipment, which was very, very important because they thought
if all of it was really, it's a little bit like the wire or something.
Well, David Simon did the wire because he'd been a crime reporter for how long.
So he knew about how all these things happened, how you got a wire going, all the sort
of permits you need to make it happen.
If you're doing an actual crime procedural or something like Breaking Bad, which isn't
but it has procedural elements to it.
You really do need specialist advice on things like that to make it part of the world.
The interesting thing about, if you're talking strictly about illegal things,
so we're talking about, you know, do you have, you know,
because lots of crime writers will talk to police officers,
lots of crime writers will talk to people in the security services.
So the question is, do lots of crime writers talk to criminals?
I would say it's much less common.
I mean, there are plenty of people around who will, you know,
who've done things.
in the past and who were available to talk to.
But the truth is, if you have good contacts with the police, say,
or, you know, the serious, you know, fraud officer, whatever it is,
they tend to know what criminals do.
And they love to talk, by the way, off the record.
But in the same way that they will tell you about how to investigate something,
they'll also say, oh, yeah, we arrested this guy and this is what he had done,
and this is the techniques they use.
These are the things they do that make them almost impossible to catch.
These are the ways that, you know, that they...
So, weirdly, the contacts you would have,
to talk about investigating,
talk about police work,
would be the same context
who would be able to tell you about the illegitators.
There will always be a bit of colour
you'll get from someone who's, you know, done dodgy things.
But actually, law enforcement knows both sides of the coin.
In the same way, that actually.
Bless Dona Nelson who understood fully about how you would cook mess.
She had no idea what one of the labs looked like when it was raided
and you have to go to law enforcement for that.
Yeah, exactly. But Donna Nelson would, you know, she'd go,
she's a bright woman, she'd go, oh, okay.
And if I were to do that, this is the way that I would do it.
This is the way I would streamline that.
This is a way I would, you know, I know for a fact that the lab would really have to be kept cool.
So this is how I'd air conditioning, all of that stuff.
It's once you get people on either side of that, they can pretty much tell you everyone's job.
Well, here's a question I've been dying to ask.
It's about your mum, Richard.
Michelle Muldoon says, I've just finished reading When the Cranes Fly South, which I loved Richard.
Does your mum have any other reading recommendations?
Oh, that was my mom's recommendation, which I recommended to you good listeners, and everybody seems to have loved.
She just got sent through a poster by the publishers of that for her, like a Mother's Day thing.
And it says, as recommended by Richard Osmond's mom.
And you're like, she was delighted by that.
I can imagine.
Yeah, she loved that.
So, funny, if I saw her this weekend, I had a family weekend, went to see my brother's band, as we've discussed before, and went to see Brenda.
And I said, Mom, they're asking on the podcast about.
any other book recommendations.
I always forget with my mum.
I always say, oh, I don't, I don't want to be too show busy.
And, you know, would you really want to sort of say something on, you know, for the podcast?
She's like, oh, my God, yes.
Yes, brilliant.
Okay, let me tell you.
So I also do two things, that the three favorite books ever and then a book that we haven't
heard of, which she absolutely loves.
Her three favorite books ever, she said, Life After Life by Kate Atkinson,
which would be in my top three books ever as well, I think.
I love that. She said, A Prayer for Owen Meaney by John Irving. She said, no one else likes it, but I do. So you take that on advisement. And Finger Smith by Sarah Waters, the three books she says, her three favourite books of all time. So I said, give me a book that people don't know. And this is a great recommendation, I think. Elizabeth George, who, right, she's best known for writing Inspector Linley Mysteries.
an amazing crime writer, but also sort of social writer.
You get lots of information about the world.
She said one of her books, it's one of the Lindley books, funny enough.
She said, I think this will be taught in schools in 20 years time,
just showing us how the world was like, what the world was like.
So this is her recommendation of a book you have not heard of.
It's got a great name as well.
So Elizabeth George, What Came Before He Shot Her.
Oh, okay.
What Came Before He Shot Her by Elizabeth George.
It's a Linnelly novel, but it's, yeah, it's about class.
It's about all sorts of different things.
But that's her lock of the week.
That's Brenda's lock of the week.
What Came Before He Shot Her by Elizabeth George.
You should interview her on your series that were a power recalling but worms.
She would be unbearable.
Honestly, I couldn't do it.
I could not do it.
There's only so much power you can give Brenda.
And you've given her just enough with that.
Have you just, what? She is. You know what? She's absolutely good as gold up to a certain level.
There would come a point where I think she would become uncontrollable. That's what I think about
my mum. And I listen, I love her. But, you know, you have to, you have to know your family.
Right. That's what I think about that. I now so want it to happen even more than I did two minutes ago.
She needs to be contained. Why? That's all I think. I don't want her to be contained. No, I know. You don't want her to be contained.
No, I know. It's different. I'll tell you what we do. I will interview her for bookworms if
I can interview any member of your family who I choose.
Mommy on your podcast, I don't know.
I don't know.
I'd like to, oh, yeah, you're right.
It's tricky, isn't it?
Yeah.
But I'd love...
Should I tell you the best people in the world?
The best people in the world are other people's moms.
Yeah.
Quite right.
Let's agree on that.
Always delightful.
And with that, Richard.
Yeah.
Thank you, Brenda.
Thank you so much, Brenda.
I would like to hear more from you.
Tomorrow we will be doing for our members
Top Gun is 40 years old
amazed we've managed to get this
down into anything less than a 10 part series
but okay. If you want to join for ad-free listening and so on
and these bonus episodes, it's the rest of entertainment.com
but otherwise...
See you next Tuesday.
See you next Tuesday.
Did Vladimir Putin interfere in the US
2016 presidential election?
I'm Gordon Carrera, National Security Journalist.
And I'm David McCloskey, author and former CIA analyst.
And we are the hosts of The Rest is Classified.
And in our latest series, we're going deep inside the 2016 election
to reveal the true story of whether the Russians helped Donald Trump take the White House.
This is the unbelievable story of how Russian spies first hacked and then leaked
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how Julian Assange got involved with Putin spies,
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