The Rest Is Entertainment - The Salt Path Controversy - Explained
Episode Date: July 7, 2025Are the couple behind the phenomenally successful 'The Salt Path' lying in their incredible memoir? How has an AI band duped music fans around the world? What is the secret sauce to the Youtube sensat...ion Hot Ones? The Salt Path rocked the world in 2018 when couple Raynor and Moth Winn told their real-life tale overcoming terminal illness and homelessness by taking a 630 mile walk around the UK. Now an incredible article in the Observer claims that the main elements of Raynor and Moth Winn’s story, including their names, are fabrications. What is the truth and what do publishers or film studios do in cases like this? The Velvet Sundown are racking up millions of listeners on Spotify, despite having never existed. Does it matter that our streaming services are flooded with AI slop - and can Richard and Marina have a number one hit using the same software? Hot Ones, it's the show with hot sauces and even hotter IP. The Sean Evans fronted YouTube show has sold the format to a German comedian - but what is the secret behind this success? Recommendations: Richard - Death Valley (iPlayer) The Rest Is Entertainment AAA Club: Become a member for exclusive bonus content, early access to our Q&A episodes, ad-free listening, access to our exclusive newsletter archive, discount book prices on selected titles with our partners at Coles, early ticket access to future live events, and our members’ chatroom on Discord. Just head to therestisentertainment.com to sign up, or start a free trial today on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/therestisentertainment. The Rest Is Entertainment is proudly presented by Sky. Sky is home to award-winning shows such as The White Lotus, Gangs of London and The Last of Us. Visit Sky.com to find out more For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com Assistant Producer: Aaliyah Akude Video Editor: Kieron Leslie, Charlie Rodwell, Adam Thornton, Harry Swan, Josh Smith Producer: Joey McCarthy Senior Producer: Neil Fearn Head of Content: Tom Whiter Exec Producers: Tony Pastor + Jack Davenport Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
INTRO
This episode is brought to you by our good friends at Sky who've made something rather
nice.
It's called Sky Glass Air, a 4K TV, sleek, sharp and from just £6 a month, which let's
be honest is less than most people spend each morning chasing the perfect oat milk latte.
It's the kind of picture that makes your living room feel like it's had a tasteful
upgrade. Every shadow, every sword fight, every suspicious glance, exactly as the director intended.
It also uses Dolby Audio and automatically adjusts picture and sound based on what and
where you're watching.
No tinkering, no faff, just clever telly that adapts to you.
And it's got Sky built in, plus all your favourite apps in one place, ready when you
are, which means less time hunting, more time watching.
Skyglass Air brings the cinema to you, only this time you decide when the show starts.
To find out more or to get yours from just £6 a month, head to sky.com.
Prime Day is here so you can get a great deal on a new foot spa.
Transforming you into the queen of kicking it.
Wait, this has bubble jets.
OK. Shop great Prime Day deals now. This episode is brought to you by Adidas. Wait, this has bubble jets. Hmm. Okay.
Shop great Prime Day deals now.
This episode is brought to you by Adidas.
When the frustration grows and the doubts start to creep in,
we all need someone who has our back.
To tell us we'll be okay.
To remind us of our ability.
To believe.
Because their belief in us transfers to self-belief
and reminds us of all that we're capable of.
We all need someone to make us believe.
Hashtag you got this.
Hello and welcome to this episode of The Rest Is Entertainment with me, Marina Hyde.
And me, Richard Osmond.
Good day to you, Marina.
Good day to you, Richard.
Now, how are you?
Yeah, I'm not bad.
You have a slight cold.
I do. I feel like I have an extreme cold, but you Marina. Good day to you Richard. Now how are you? Yeah, I'm not bad. You have a slight cold.
I do, I feel like I have an extreme cold, but you know.
Of course you've got an extreme cold.
Yeah, only extremes.
But other than that, very well.
And how about you?
Yes, I'm not bad at all.
It's an interesting week this week.
We've got some fun stuff to talk about.
We're talking about,
if people have seen the story over the weekend,
the book, The Salt Path.
If you don't know that story,
I shan't give you any spoilers.
We're gonna be talking about-
I will tell you I'm transfixed by it.
Yes, it is quite a tale.
I'll say that.
We're also talking about one of the great format successes
of all time, which is nowhere near any terrestrial TV channel. It's on YouTube
and it's called Hot Ones. We'll be talking about the history of that and the future of
that and the money that it's making.
And we're also going to be talking about The Velvet Sundown, an AI band and the absolute
sort of wild story around AI music and how an AI slop and how it's coming for absolutely
all of us.
I mean, all three of these stories, I think are fascinating. Genuinely I'm
excited to talk about all three of them. I'm often excited to get your take on
things all three of these. I'm very excited. Well I am always excited to get your take on this.
I shouldn't say I'm often excited to get your take on this. Occasionally not. I'm always excited to get your take.
Occasionally I think yeah yeah occasionally by surprise. Well both of us are gripped by the tale of the salt path.
Now, if you haven't heard of the salt path, let me take you through it.
It's a true story of a couple from Wales who through no fault of their own,
lose their house and become homeless.
Not only that, the husband in this couple, and they're called Rainerwyn and Mothwyn,
the husband has a degenerative disease, something akin to Parkinson's. They
find themselves homeless and they embark on a 630 mile walk around the southwest coast of England
called the salt path. So it's a memoir, it's a true story. It became a massive phenomenon. Book clubs
all around the country love it. It's such an incredibly inspirational story. People have
really, really bought into it. It means a great deal to a huge amount of people. So much so that a movie came out a few weeks ago with Gillian Anderson playing
Rainer Wynn, Jason Isaacs playing Moth Wynn. And it's just one of those incredibly rare success
stories where a publisher picks up a small story, a true story, something that speaks to our time,
something that speaks about humanity, something that speaks about human beings, and readers really, really jumped on board.
This book means a great deal to a great deal of people. So just this incredible true story,
strength, adversity, bad luck, just everything about life. But it turns out, perhaps it was not true. And then this weekend and a
fantastic investigation in The Observer came out by the journalist Chloe Hadjam
Mateo but also some additional reporting violence on them. There's often quite a
few people involved in a big team effort like this saying that their names aren't
really Rayna and Moth Wynne, their names are Sally and Tim Walker.
Walker?
Yeah, Walker.
I mean, it was right there.
They turned walking into wins, that's for sure.
Yeah.
Those were not the circumstances of how they lost their home.
In fact, it's quite a convoluted tale, but it suggests that Sally Walker embezzled money
to start with and then, as I say, it's quite convoluted.
There's a loan, there's all sorts of other things. But the embezzlement is the key part
of it. And it also contains commentary from various sort of consultant neurologists who
say that this diagnosis of corticobasal degeneration, you would normally expect, in fact, nobody really lives beyond eight
years and it's an awful, awful condition. And 18 years on to be flourishing is essentially
unheard of. And of course, occasionally medical, I mean, in the Blue Moon, a medical miracle
occurs, but there is a considerable doubt cost on the nature of
that aspect of the story as well. So it's pretty much all of it. I mean, I think
they did the walk. Yes, I think, yeah, I don't even know if they did all of that.
So it is this incredibly inspirational true story, which turns out it may well
not be true. Can we not have nice things? This is like Captain Tom's family all
over again. Could she not have a spa complex, Richard? No, she couldn't. She had to have it knocked
down by you.
I bet she has got one. I bet the Walkers have got one. But I cannot overestimate how much
this has gone off like a bomb in the world of publishing because this is a huge, huge,
huge lead item for everyone. This has been one of the massive success stories and publishing,
you don't have all that money and they pay for everything these big success stories and the salt path
is one of those books that has paid for so many other books over the last eight years
it is massive and everyone in publishing is absolutely reeling this week.
All of this has been put to Rayna and Moth Wynn and in significant detail and they've
issued the following statement which is not very And they've issued the following statement, which
is not very detailed. They've said, the sort path lays bare the physical and spiritual
journey Moth and I shared, an experience that transformed us completely and altered the
course of our lives. This is the true story of our journey. Well, thanks for the blurb,
but that does not respond even vaguely to any of the material allegations in this particular
investigation.
A spokeswoman for the Winds has said that the allegations made in a Sunday newspaper
were highly misleading.
They are consulting lawyers.
They're consulting lawyers.
Clearly, this is published by Penguin Random House.
I mean, they'll have a lot, well, I mean, let's start talking about it. Well, yeah, no, absolutely. I'm published by Penguin Random House and you know,
a bomb would have gone off there this week because this-
Would it have gone off? And you see now I have another theory, which is that I actually think,
you know, we've all heard the expression and it means lots of different things where there's a hit,
there's a writ. Yes.
People often come out of the woodwork when something becomes successful.
Rather like those consultant neurologists, I'd be surprised if this was the very, very
first that after a book has been that successful that Pengrim Random House have heard that
maybe the circumstances at the start of it certainly that lead to the whole story taking
place don't necessarily add up.
I would be surprised if that's the first, because there has been online
commentary, which I actually wasn't aware of, but I've gone back and I can see.
So often when these things you, you, you read people going, Oh, this was an open
secret and I definitely don't think it was an open secret.
I'd never heard before that this was.
Faker hadn't really got involved in the salt path world.
I know I can sort of feel that's that book is not, not for me.
Um, but you know, people
say, oh no, we knew and we'd be at festivals. Gillian Anderson, when she said, they said,
oh, how did you find Raina Wynne when you met her? And she went, uh, I found you quite guarded.
And I think, yeah, really the two central tenants that are at the heart of this book, the things
that make it sell a huge amount of money, the things that make it really resonate with middle
Britain and with readers across the world are they lost their house through no fault of their own.
These allegations suggest that is not the case.
They lost their house because Sally Walker had embezzled money.
They didn't borrow it from somebody else and that person had called in the loan and so
the house no longer belonged to them.
And also the ability somehow to turn back the course of an illness through communing
with nature.
I mean, you have a huge responsibility.
Everyone, everyone who writes about anything, uh, medical and any form of,
even in the broadest terms, alternative treatment has a huge responsibility to
bear. Well, I saw publishing anything that suggests that then you also have a
huge responsibility to bear. As I say, I mean, I saw, I saw a woman saying that my husband's got CBD and I've lost count of the times in the
last five years that people said, you must read this book and perhaps you should go for
a long walk.
And the despair that I had of understanding that's not something that he was able to do
and not quite understanding what it was that must be in this book.
If you're talking about medical things and you're talking about what nature can do and
you're talking about medicinal effects of things, that is a big issue.
Not only for the wins, by the way, and that's their business, but for the publisher.
Yes, for the publisher, the medical aspect is probably the most serious aspect of it.
It's interesting, I kept thinking back and as I say, I don't know the origin story of
this, but obviously she's a first-time writer.
And I wonder if she perhaps glossed over, as you might do, the circumstances of the
loss of house, because it's much better to get on the walk.
And they've said, and your editor would say, well, hang on, I think we really want to delve
more into this because the payoff is not so satisfying.
Yeah, and also this.
If we don't see the tragedy, you know, we've got to go really down.
Rainer wins version of the book. There is a bad guy who is a colleague of moth wins who sort of asked him to
invest in something and then pulls the rug from under them and takes their house.
So there's, there's a proper bad guy at the start of the book who were like,
Oh my God, you're so unlucky that that happened to you.
And yeah, you would think that an editor might be saying, Oh, it'd be, let's
find out a little bit more about that person.
I think that person, um, who is, who is Ross Hemings' husband passed away a few
years ago and she said, well, same thing said in a way I'm sort of glad he doesn't,
he didn't see this book ever come out because it would have absolutely, it
would have hurt him so much the lies in it.
Well, I think it's, yeah, I think it's interesting, but I do nonetheless think,
what's the editing procedure there when you're saying,
okay, this person did this thing to us?
You're still thinking if you're the lawyer, okay, can this person be identified?
If this person can be identified, well, are they still alive?
You're going through all of those different pros,
you have to be so careful with all of these things, as we say.
And you can get away with things in books that you might not be able to on
TV or whatever. But if that person is dead, then even so, I think you'd have to produce,
I would be, if I was publishing this book, I would require these people to produce some
forms of evidence. And maybe they just said, well, we don't have anything left because
we put us what we had in our backpacks and we weren't on our wall.
Or it's too painful for us.
Yeah, if over the next few days, weeks, whatever,
the amount of people coming out of the woodwork
because they've been emboldened by this
and it's gone public to speak out
and the claims are able to be fairly
and incontrovertibly proved to be false,
what do you then do if you're paying in random house?
Gosh, it's a very interesting question. I think that probably you try and claw back some of the
money that you've passed over. I don't know this particular contract. The contract would normally
be that they have guaranteed that everything in this piece is truthful. And again, things can be
highly misleading. But if something is a deliberate lie, then, you know, Penguin Random House, I guess would would would have some sort of recourse.
Obviously, any money you do get back in, that's got to go straight to some sort of charity.
I mean, that has to because Penguin Random House will know also that, you know, they've they've been remiss here.
You know, you know, when you're involved in a book and you have that sort of fan groups around the book You know how much these books mean to people and especially with this one is to do with illness
You know what this means to people so you know that people are gonna be very very hurt. I
Suggest that there would be on one hand
There'll be some legal issues if these things do turn out to be not true and on the other hand some some
Reputational work that would need doing and I was getting a new neurology wing
Yeah, exactly.
We'll get onto more, you know, other instances of disputed memoirs or memoirs that have been
proved to be false in a minute.
But as we've talked about so many times, and we're going to probably talk about in another
item on this podcast, people are obsessed with authenticity in this age.
They are totally obsessed.
They've, you know, as we've said, people feel that
Instagram influencers or the Beckhams or whoever are miss-selling them something when it's
really not that big of a deal. This, I have a lot of sympathy with anyone who feels lied
to by this book if the allegations in that article are correct. And by the way, the Winds
slash Walkers have not said they're not correct. They've just said, this is a lovely uplifting a story.
This is our truth.
Now, to some extent, all memoirs, I was thinking about this on the way in to talk to you and I
was thinking to some extent, all memoirs are reality bending because you're, you're writing
them at a point in the year, you're not, you're not writing them contemporaneously.
And usually you want to be the hero of your own memoir one way or another.
Well, I mean, that's, yes, that is the tricky element of lots of them.
And as the reader, you're thinking, am I getting, is this the, you know, what is truth?
Am I getting the kind of recovered feeling as it occurred at the time?
Or am I like most things in human life, you know, that I'm getting order is being imposed
on this kind of tide of experience that happened back in the day and a narrative is being created.
So to some extent, all memoirs have those sort of things and you know, you leave out
lots of things and you know, you shape a narrative.
But this is likely to send, you know, the mumsnetters, the tattle lifers, all the people
who might go nuts about things like this off the dial, especially as they've
loved it, it's meant such a lot, it's become this film, it's one of those inspirational
stories of, you know, boomers going, walking somewhere, which is actually a genre.
I mean, it really is a genre.
There's been so many of these sort of films and books over the last, yeah, you know, something
happens to a boomer, maybe health related, or maybe maybe something else. Then they meet a baby tiger and everything's
okay. And if they walk, yeah, they need to walk. So it's worth thinking. So if I take
you through the publishing process and where Penguin Random House, which my publishers
would have been says Michael Joseph, which is one of the imprints of Penguin Random House.
When this came in on submission, you would buy it, I think, because of the story. You would certainly take a meeting. You kind of go, oh, this is
really, you know, there's not a lot that gets sent into publishers where they go, I haven't
read this before. And she can clearly write Rainer Wynne. I mean, it's not my cup of tea,
but she, you know, she's no markets that, you know, it's uplifting and all of those
things. So Rainer and Moth will come in, you will chat away.
It will not be an enormous book.
You're not thinking, oh my God, this is going to be the salt path.
Yeah.
This is, this is going to sell too many copies.
This is going to be a movie with Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs.
You're definitely, definitely not thinking that you're thinking, is this
worth a £30,000 advance and some marketing money is probably what
you're thinking at that stage.
I don't think you'd even need to pay 30 to be quite honest.
That would be if you really like it and you're thinking at that stage. I don't think you'd even need to pay 30 to be quite honest. That would be if you really like it and you're thinking other
publishers are going to look at this other publicist is going to
see that there's something in this.
Now the contract you signed or the contract that the winds would
have signed, they take on all the indemnity for any lies that are
in their account.
So Pinkerton ran on the house, same with Bachelet, HarperCollins,
all of these companies.
If you sign something like this, the onus is on the author to be telling the truth.
There is nothing beholden on the publishers to have fact checked this stuff.
Okay.
I mean, one imagines you would and you'll certainly do some of your due diligence,
but they do not have any legal issues because Rainer and Moth or however they sign their contracts,
one assumes by the way that the checks got sent to Tim and Sadie Walker, but that's another thing.
So they would assign the contract, therefore everything is on them.
They have said to Penga Random House, to Michael Joseph, everything we've told you is true.
And in the same way when the movie rights are bought and
normally movie companies do quite a lot more due diligence because they're not
paying thirty thousand pounds for something you know they're paying.
As I said it's so weird something being on the screen is so different I mean I was I'm
thinking I'm adapting something at the moment and it would be so different even
though in the book if you can vaguely identify people it doesn't matter you've got to create completely new characters because it's too
close.
So making a movie you're spending millions so you spend three four million probably so
at that point you think maybe we do our due diligence but also the place I'd like to be
is inside the heads of Sally and Tim Walker when the movie deal gets made. Because I think they probably got away with it with the book.
They've done two follow up books, which are Wild Silence and Landlines.
You know, Raina Winscott, very, very nice career.
You know, she's made millions.
You know, they've got a nice house down in Cornwall.
In fact, in the second book is based on the fact that a city trader read the first book,
felt so sorry for them.
He gave them a property in Cornwall to live in if they could rewild it before him. I'd love to chat to him.
Oh, you may well be hearing from him.
Yes, I imagine.
We're going to be hearing from lots more people on this story.
I'd like to have been in the head of Rainer Wynn where they go all this money and you think,
okay, this is going to be on the screen. We have got Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs.
This is suddenly going to, it's interesting, when you do a movie, you know,
it weirdly gets a lot more publicity than a book.
So a book kind of sold forever and ever and ever,
and is much more lucrative than movies for an author.
But when a movie comes out, there's a weird thing
where you get elevated in traditional media.
Okay, but I'm not saying she has done this,
but maybe if this isn't true, by this stage, the
truth, you know how the truth, reality bending, that's what I'm talking about, the truth has
sort of become that for you and you think that that's exactly what happened. I think
you think you sit still and safe and I don't think you're worried because if a person were
to have got away with something or got away with not the whole truth, then I don't think
you suddenly think, oh, this is going to become so much more exposing because
you're not really, oh, Faye, with that whole world and the fact that it is going to become
so much more exposing.
And also you have convinced yourself that you're telling your truth.
And so whatever comes out, oh no, they could actually say, oh, is this true?
And you go, no, it was, I was sort of, it's very vibe spaced, my truth, which some people's
truth is these days.
But the second that it came out on screen, you could tell that the observer who'd done
this amazing piece, I think, well, this is a much bigger story now.
This was previously like a seven-year-old book, which had sold a load of copies, which
had made a lot of book groups very, very, very happy, but was sort of passing into the
ether.
But now, bang, it's on the front pages again.
And boy, is it on the front pages now with, uh, with, with these revelations.
Well, it's only just starting as the week goes on.
And I was, it was amazing.
Okay.
You think that because you're thinking how will it play out?
And obviously the probably the most famous one in the, uh, in sort of recent
decades has been James, James Fray's Million Little Pieces memoir, which,
which that was famous. It went on
Oprah's book club and he was, you know, and then it was found out to be mostly rubbish.
Yeah.
Some readers sued random, I think that was Random House in America,
readers sued them. I mean, I know you can sue anyone in America, but it's interesting
because that's a different, there were other ones, but they haven't resulted in legal,
not all of them resulted in, sometimes there's other ones, but they haven't resulted in legal, not all of
them resulted in, sometimes there's counter memoirs, obviously.
By the way, the next book, if I was Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs, I'd be thinking,
I know the movie I want to be in now.
Yeah, for definite.
I mean, and so the question is what you do at this stage, I mean, they're consulting
lawyers, it's pretty difficult.
They may be a sort of fudge where they say, we look forward and not back and we don't
want to go into the full details. Like everyone, we've made mistakes and we made financial
mistakes and what have you. And they could do that. But I think people are now just going
to want to find out absolutely everything
and they want to have other people on the sofa.
Because right now you've seen Rainer and Moth Wynn many times,
I've seen over the last few weeks because this film came out.
And I think people are now just going to say, well, I don't understand, how could this possibly have been published?
How could also... They're going to say lots of things like that.
And I'm going to speak now to people who are we talking about salt path and they'll say
I've literally never heard of this. And there's two interesting things about that. First,
you were talking about it because in publishing terms, it is a proper phenomenon. I mean,
one of the big sort of 10 books over the last five years or so is like, you know, this huge
thing that came from nowhere, it's made a huge amount of money for everybody. So in publishing,
it's massive. And I'm fascinated by the amount of people when you go online, who say, I said,
literally the first I've heard of this book.
And I say this in publishing all the time, publishing meetings.
I said, it doesn't matter how much publicity you do.
Nobody has heard of any books.
They just haven't.
There's it's a thing.
People who love books is like, you know, professional golf.
If you know about golf, you know, all the players, if you don't know about golf, you don't know any of them, you go, I'll tell you what's. And it's the same with books, you know, so there's a thing people who love books, it's like professional golf. If you know about golf, you know all the players. If you don't know about golf, you don't know any of them.
You go, I'll tie your words.
And it's the same with books.
So there's a huge amount of people who have never heard of this book.
Wouldn't dream of knowing it existed.
Might know, oh yeah, wasn't there a film with that title?
There's a Gillian Anderson thing.
But even that, mainly not because publicity doesn't cut through.
And it will be fascinating to see the sales figures next week for this
book.
Well, I've now bought it because I feel like I have to have a look at it.
And by the way, every penny of that is still going to rain a win and moth win.
It's very, very hard to give an uptick.
Maybe they're creditors.
Yeah, maybe they're creditors eventually.
It's very, very hard to give upticks to books that are five or six years old.
A movie is one way of doing it.
They give you a couple of months of, you know, real kind of uplifting sales.
But if you have a movie and then after the movie, a massive controversy where people
are saying, oh my God, everything in this book is mental, then who doesn't want to read
that?
It suddenly becomes a very different reading experience.
But the money is still the same.
You know, the money is still going to go to them.
Well, we'll catch up at some length, unspecified length, if only with the sales figures on
that one next week. But as I say, that's going to be a really big story and we'll be in watch
how it plays out and who gets who first makes comment, who's first on the sofa. And we
should we'll have to take a look back at that next week.
But it's amazing as well how the phrases fact check and fat check sound so similar and yet
are the exact opposite of each other.
And on that I think we should go to a break.
We should, by the way, afterwards we're talking about more fake reaper, we're also talking
about a rare good old fashioned success story.
A real hit. grows with more bandesiers than a Van Gogh exhibition. The Lions is a rugby at its most mythical, forged from folklore, fuelled by rivalry,
four nations, six weeks, one jersey, and unlike most franchises, this one comes round only
once every four years.
And it's the first tour to Australia in 12 years. Expect packed stadiums, electric
atmospheres, and kangaroo mascots that look like they've seen things. It's pure sporting
theatre, and this time the curtain
rises mid-morning. Which, let's be honest, is the dream. No late kick-offs or caffeinated anthems,
just a front row seat with breakfast from your sofa as 30 men audition for immortality. It's not
just a team, it is a temporary alliance of rivals chasing legacy. You can catch every match live on Sky Sports, available to stream with now.
There's regular cold. And then there's the mountains are blue cold.
Mountain cold refreshment. Coors light. The chill choice.
Celebrate responsibly. Must be legal drinking age.
So you said this would be the summer of you.
But then you remembered? You have kids.
And now you spend every sunny
day at water parks and petting zoos. So be it. We do the prep so you can get your you
time back with freshly prepared ready for you dishes from Sobeys.
Welcome back everybody. After those unfortunately honest adverts. Yeah. The world of music and
the world of AI is a fascinating one. And it's been thrown into focus by this band,
the Velvet Sundown, who are Gabe Farrow, Lenny West, Milo Raines and Orion Rio Del Mar. Good
looking guys. You've seen pictures of them. It's entirely fake. So there's not a real human being.
None of those people are real.
The Velvet Sundown are not a real group.
Every single thing there is done by giving a simple prompt into the
Suno, which is one of the, um, the AI music making machines.
The Velvet Sundown have gone bigger than any of these other AI bands, but there
are huge amounts of them around at the moment, but simple, um, a simple prompt.
More than 800,000 streams on Spotify.
It's over a million now.
They've put out three or two or three albums in the last month.
Their artist blurb on Spotify, which was verified, used to say their sound mixes textures of 1970s
psychedelic alt rock and folk rock yet it blends effortlessly with modern alt pop and indie
structures. There was a quote from Billboard on there, which by the way wasn't a quote from Billboard,
this Billboard article never really existed, that said,
"'They sound like the memory of something you never lived and somehow make it feel real.'"
Now in terms of who they are, or what it is rather, because there is no they.
But I feel like my own reactions to
this are sort of like part of the story in some ways you sort of want it to be an art hoax you
kind and that and that to me feels i'm part of a generation that wants someone to say i've done this
to say and there was someone who came out and said i'm their publicist and then it turns out
he's been debunked lots of people by the way are claiming credit for this which is the only funny
bit of the story which is everyone's going oh no which is the only funny bit of the story. Which is everyone's going, oh no this was me, I
did this and the real people are going, no we faked it. There's something about me that
I want someone to say, there's a point to all of this, I'm trying to make a point about
this or that, but why does it have to be anything? Other people are saying, you know it's fine,
it's good enough, I like listening to it. I played it to your husband, we didn't tell
him it was AI and he was like, yeah, this is absolutely a piece of me
This is absolutely and even but exactly it is because it because it said all the things that you like into an algorithm
And that's the music that it's come up with. It's interesting if you listen to one of the songs which then I think it's
Much like you really can't tell and the mixing is so good
That's what I really noticed about this.
Just the advances from stuff that I heard of AI music,
honestly about three months ago, and what you can hear now
is that so quickly all of these things are being ironed out.
And I really felt that all those little clues really,
they had ironed out very, very well.
Yesterday then I listened to the whole album.
And at that point you were like, this is, there's something weird.
And it's hard to know, Maybe it's because, you know,
but there is something odd about it. Lyrically, certainly. Yeah.
Actually, John Oliver did a thing on last week tonight.
His AI band to get talking about was The Devil Inside. But again,
they talk a lot about dust and wind and I'm trying to work out whether,
are they sort of slightly copying each other, these two AI bands?
There are certainly already AI copies of the Velvet Sundown.
I mean, jeez. Where do we go?
People are becoming angry because it's showing up on their Spotify playlist. They don't really
know why. In the same way that Google are trying to sort of say, oh, we're going to
try and find a way of watermarking images that we've discovered to be AI. People are
saying, well, why shouldn't you just do this? You've got to find a way to do this with music.
And then there are other people who think, well, I mean, why?
Why do you have to?
Why can't you just have, you know, ever since sort of Brian
Eno or whoever came up with the idea of ambient music saying,
oh, this is just, you don't have to sort of actively listen.
In fact, there were composers, there was one composer,
sort of 19th century composer who talked about making furniture music.
Like you didn't have to sort of sit, it wasn't sit up music, it was lean back music.
So at the moment, the Velvet Sundown are on Spotify and they're not labeled as AI and
they're verified.
Deezer have said, who are streaming rivals to Spotify, have said, we've put it through
our algorithm, we are confident it's 100% AI generated. And certainly nothing that's happened in the real world would suggest that
it isn't. Their latest figure say 18% of the music that people try to upload to it is entirely
AI generated.
The other thing I was thinking about when I was listening to this on Spotify was how
much of this is bought listening to this AI thing and it just becomes a sort of weird
advertising transaction?
Well, that's the thing. So there's money to be made on Spotify we
know it's a very very small amount of money that you make on advertising
services if you're a band if you're a record company you're making a fortune
from these places but not bands or we'll get on to the record company question in
a minute because that's an interesting one so if lots of us are going to
Spotify or whatever streaming service and you will have those discover playlists
Which will be you know a mix of new music old music stuff that we know you the algorithm tells us you like already
Are you really useful way of hearing old music and finding new music as well now the velvet?
Sundown are on a number of those playlists and and and some other big playlists as well
So to get onto the discover playlist, it does actually cost you money.
Yeah. So if you're a band or if you're a record company, you want to promote something, you can
get placed on one of these playlists and you get a smaller royalty, smaller than you're getting
already to go on a discover playlist. Spotify very open as well, you know, this is all there
and their terms and conditions. They'll say, look, people have to like it as well. People have to
engage with it and enjoy it. And then it will, you know, go further and further up
our various charts. But if you want to be on this, um, these discover playlists, this is something
that will cost you. And that's something that Velvet Sundown have clearly done and that people
have liked this, uh, this music as well. But the interesting thing of course is if you are, say,
Shed 7, okay. And you've Shed 7 have got all their music
on Spotify and a lot of their stuff will get on Discover Playlist because it's popular.
So they wouldn't necessarily have to be paying to be on these things. But if you're Shed
7 and you're getting your very, very small amount of money per song, per stream, then
your management company is going to have to pay all of you from that and your management
company is going to have to take their bit and the record company is going to have to pay all of you from that and your management company is going to have to take their bit and the record company is going to have to
take their bit. If you have sat down and made an AI thing then nobody is getting
paid apart from you. It's sort of if I say to you you know you can get a smaller
royalty on this you think great I haven't done it I literally done nothing.
These things you can you can make these songs in 30 seconds. Fail But Sundown
feels like it's something that they've spent a little bit longer perhaps on but
you can make these things incredibly quickly and sit back and watch the money come in.
You can have things and again, Spotify absolutely say we have our eye on this stream farms,
which are these depressing sheds all around the world, which are just hundreds, thousands
of tablets and phones all streaming the same thing at the same time to bump your numbers
up because even if you're getting 0.01 pence per stream, you know, it adds up eventually. So there
are ways of grifting this system, there are ways of using that system and there are certainly
ways if you can sit at home, come up with a new song, put it on Spotify, put it on other
streaming things and have 1000 phones listening to it at the same time, there's money to be
made there. Again, if we go back to Deezer, they are suggesting that in this sort of feedback loop of AI made for AI,
sometimes up to 70% of those streams are bots listening to bots.
We talk a lot about can AI make movies? Can AI write books? And those slightly longer form things,
it feels harder, but there is a lot about music, especially as you say, sit back music. That is a vibe. And the one thing AI is very, very, very good at is a vibe.
It's going, I know the sort of thing you mean this sort of thing. And yes, yes,
it is that sort of thing. And unless somebody takes a stand at some point and
labels every single one of these things, when it comes through, we are going to
be awash with it is going to be absolute slop. And I'd be
interested to know your view about where that takes us. Let's just take music because the
films and novels, I suspect, are going to come to this place in about 18 months time.
But music as a test case for AI just absolutely flooding the market. What does that mean for
us as consumers? And what does it mean for a 22 year old in a band right now
working your socks off to write music?
Are you just another job that's getting replaced by AI? Because humans are annoying. I mean,
people in bands are definitely annoying.
Listen, I grew up with one and I love him, but yeah.
Eliminating those pesky humans from that particular money making opportunity,
pesky humans from that particular money-making opportunity, you can see the appeal immediately,
but you can also see just the volume of it
and how it's really easy for the whole tide of that.
And it obviously takes a long time to create things.
Or sometimes everyone says,
oh, you know, I wrote this song in 15 minutes
of finally just came out.
But there are not that many songs that are like that.
And there's certainly not careers that happen like that. And we also know that, you know, people, this idea that
oh no, humans will find you out and they'll, humans can find meaning in, you know, a piece
of toast that looks like it's got the face of Jesus on it. We are designed to find meaning in
anything. In any old thing. Yeah, to see faces on trees, to find meaning in the velvet sundown.
To see ourselves in all sorts of things and they can definitely see themselves in the
velvet sundown.
As always with these sort of things where it's a bit of a crap shoot and maybe people
like it, maybe they won't, is the flooding of it.
People will flood the marketplace.
It's not like some things will try some or what, they might be quite good, doesn't really
matter and we're all debating whether or not it's a
pastiche or a satire on ourselves or whatever it is. It's actually just the
sheer volume. In a funny kind of way it reminds me of that, you know, that's the
idea that most of the traffic on the world's internet now is whatever the
percentage, it's gone way over 60%. It's just things like, you know, vending
machines talking to each other and like, have you got a smart coffee cup? Why is my coffee cup smart? You know, why is my toaster smart? I like the you know vending machines talking to each other and like have you got a smart coffee cup? Why is my coffee cup smart? You know why is my toaster smart?
I like the idea of vending machines talking to each other. I like that. I like to think about
what their problems are. But the idea. Because you know if we're talking about vending machines we're
like I hate it when the thing gets stuck. But from the vending machines perspective that'd be very
different because they'd be like I hate it when something gets stuck because I can see someone's
frustrated but also I've got itches. Yeah. You know I can feel it is there and I can't do anything.
So actually I'm interested in what vending machines say.
That's a novel.
Yeah. I mean, you've made something
rather beautiful out of that.
But I think actually what the vending machines
talk to each other is-
But we will find meaning in anything.
Yeah. Yeah, we will.
That's the point.
And I will anthropomorphize it as them talking to each other.
Yeah.
They're not talking to each other, okay.
But yes, I think that the sheer volume that floods things means it's harder and harder to find things.
And it's harder to find connections with those things
that would you say that take a long period of time to make,
that are faltering, that require refinement
or anything like that.
If you can refine in a millisecond.
Some people are saying,
I'm really angry with Spotify about this
because they don't make it clear.
I think there will be some kind of premium to be had Some people are saying, I'm really angry with Spotify about this because they don't make it clear.
I think there will be some kind of premium to be had for people who really feel that they would be being lied to if this sort of thing wasn't clearly labeled as such.
But actually, the majority of people, just as the majority of people get the news app that's on their phone and are quite happy with that,
which whatever one comes bundle free with whichever type of phone they've got, they're quite happy to listen to lots of this
stuff.
And again, it's odd because as I said, when we were talking about the sort path, people
are obsessed with authenticity, but they are and they aren't.
So they're obsessed with it, but they're actually going to be quite happy.
AI has an authenticity, which is this is AI.
This is a machine that and as long as you're not pretending it's real human beings and people that has an authenticity, which is this is AI. This is a machine. And as soon as you're not pretending it's real human beings and people, that has an
authenticity.
If I can strike a positive note, it would be this, which is I do think in the same way,
listen, I don't want to hark on about the industrial revolution all the time, but in
the same way that if you can mechanize production of something, then 50 to 100 years later,
someone who can actually do it with their bare hands becomes incredibly valuable. There's a premium on artisans. And I do think there
comes a point where people who properly love music, proper music fans, you know, I'm a
I'm a sidelines music fan, but proper music fans, there will be a huge premium on human
made music, I think. And there will be a huge premium on going to see human-made music.
And I think that people will start to appreciate
human-made music a little bit more as well.
It's already a huge premium, it's very expensive.
Yeah, so bands even now,
the way they make the money is touring.
So they've no longer making music,
they're selling records.
And it is harder for an I-band to tour.
Absolutely doable, completely possible,
but less fun because, you know,
it's okay.
Listen to the velvet sundown if it's in the background and everyone's chatting.
If you actually have to sit in the stadium, you are kind of going, Oh, this is sort of
awful, isn't it?
So I do hope and I think that for bands who play live in make and write the right music,
there will be a huge premium for that.
I think the really interesting thing is that people
who are trying to sue are the record companies.
Because the real story of the Spotify years
and the streaming years is that the record companies
have not lost a penny.
The record companies are still making an absolute fortune.
It's just they're not giving as much money of that money
to the bands that they sign.
So the record companies are in a nice place now
where they're going, oh, we're still getting all of this money.
We've done all these deals.
We're not having to pay our workers as much as we used to.
And the record companies are now seeing,
wait a minute, Spotify are now putting these songs on
where no one gets paid.
It doesn't go through a record company.
So we are completely taken out of that equation
because what we do is manage talent and this
Manage computers, which is what's happening. So the record companies are
Launching lawsuits against a lot of these AI streamers and things like that
So it feels like if I was 21 and in a band
You're like kind of banging your head against the wall. You hope that
This whole thing and I think this in lots of areas this whole thing the wall, you hope that this whole thing, and I think
this in lots of areas, this whole thing, the market becomes so saturated so quickly with
slop, which is what we've seen in a lot of journalism and things like that, that actually
this desire to find some truth and to find some human connection will become more and
more powerful. So in the same way that New York Times and Guardian and the observe that
we talked about earlier, you know, they see numbers go up and up and up because people are desperate
for a genuine human connection and desperate for something that hasn't been written by
a machine. You hope that that's what happens in music as well, but it's going to be a bumpy
ride for those few years.
You hope that that's what will happen and you hope it happens with enough people, but
you also sort of have to acknowledge that many, perhaps the
majority, really would be quite happy to read an AI generated article about an AI band and listen
to the AI music and just be part of an advertising transaction. But most of the money in the world,
most of the cultural money in the world doesn't come from those people. Most of the cultural money
in the world comes from early adopters who love something, comes from fans,
and those fans will still seek a human connection. That's not something that bands have ever
massively been able to monetize anyway. They want people who genuinely like what they do and like
them as human beings. Look at this massive Oasis tour, they're making hundreds of millions. Now,
Oasis is, I love Oasis, Oasis' lyrics could be written by AI. They've never said, look,
we're the greatest lyricists in the world. Some of the chord sequences and stuff, lyrics could be written by AI. They've never said, look, we're the greatest lyricists in the world.
Some of the chord sequences and stuff, that could be written by AI,
but you could not invent Oasis in AI.
You couldn't invent the history of that group.
You couldn't invent those guys and how they interact with each other.
That is something you can't invent.
And that is something that people will pay for forever and ever and ever.
You just hope that there are enough people still willing to pay for things and who take 100 quid and take and take and just take the love of human beings
do something extraordinary that they don't need to do but doing just to entertain you.
That would be where I would err on the side of optimism. But my God, there's going to
be an awful lot of this coming on. At the very beginning, we played the Velvet Sundown.
Now, if you're listening to this and go, oh, you didn't play the Velvet Sundown.
We are currently talking about whether we can or not, which seems ridiculous because it's made up, you know, it's just a machine, but you know, it has publishers
and this, that, the other, and you know, putting music on things.
We have done our own just to show what can be done.
I just said, I literally just went into Suno.
I said, I want a landfill indie band from the 2000s. I asked
chat GPT what they should be called and chat GBT said they should be called the Quiet Alibi. And I said, give me the sort of
song that the Cooke sort of written and they said, how about rewind the summer. So this is, and this took, I'm going to say 45
seconds. This is the quiet alibi with
rewind the summer, one more lie.
Listen, it's terrible, but you know, so is almost all music I liked when I was 16.
One thing we did discover is that it just can't handle a British accent.
Doesn't like British accents.
Can't do one.
But you know, a lot of British singers in the 2000s liked to have a slight transatlantic
accent anyway, so I think we got away with it.
But you know, you can sort of make it do anything. And listen, it's profoundly awful.
There's gonna be an awful lot more of it to come,
but I do think it places a premium on people
who can really do it.
And let's hope it does anyway.
And perhaps we'll put the whole of that on
after the final adverts on this thing.
We'll put the whole of Rewind the Summer
by the Quiet Alibi.
Yes, but for now, let's just accept that humans are becoming a prestige product.
And yeah, I'm not saying that's sort of a good way of thinking about it.
And also let's pitch the vending machines.
Yeah, that's actually that was lovely.
Yeah, I'm all out of revels.
Oh, I have plenty of rebels.
Can you get revels still in a vending machine?
Oh, yeah, if you can't, I don't think I've seen revels in a vending machine? Oh yeah, if you can't.
I don't think I've seen revels in a vending machine for many, that sounds like an AI reminiscence.
I don't think I have seen revels in a vending machine for many years.
If you have seen revels in a vending machine at home, please send in a picture.
See that's human interaction.
By the internet.
AI wouldn't do that.
Yeah, via the internet.
Talking of humans as a premium product, can we talk about Hot Ones?
Oh please, let's talk about Hot Ones, which is a YouTube interview series.
And the premise of it is it was created by a guy called Chris Schomburger, but it's presented
by a guy called Sean Evans.
And he interviews a celebrity and the questions are fantastic.
We'll come to that in a minute.
But celebrities have to answer questions while eating progressively spicier chicken wings
with various hot sauces. And that is it. It's
a very, very basic set. It's two black tables with some jugs of water and milk or whatever.
You can bring along various things. And Sean Evans asks the guest questions and it started,
you know, they used to get not very good people on. And now they get huge stars. They get
anyone they want really. They've had in the last six months, They have Lady Gaga, Selena Gomez. They can get anyone they want.
Well, Pharrell's done it, Billie Eilish. I mean it is for every PR
This is the stop. This is one of the ones that
Absolutely, whenever you do any sort of PR thing, there's like a list of places to hit
This is number one on every A-list celebrities PR list, wish list.
They turned down Kamala Harris in the presidential election campaign because they just thought,
oh no, we don't really want to get into politics.
And it's just become a huge thing.
And the moments from it go viral all the time and we can perhaps come to why that is in
a bit.
But why are we talking about them this week?
Well, we're talking about it because I grew up in the format business and grew up in a
world where who wants to be a millionaire and weakest
thing and all these things travel the world and something had to be on a
terrestrial television channel and a hot one started something very differently.
So 2015, as you'll know, anyone who worked in sort of publishing or magazines or
newspapers, everyone decided that to pivot to video.
This was the thing.
Everyone wants video.
We have to pivot to video and we have to set up our own little studio and do this out of the other. And it came from a site
called First We Feast, Chris Schoenberg, as you say. So why don't we do like a thing where
people have to eat, you know, hot wings of increasing strength. Sean Evans, who's working
this, said, Oh, I love that. Let's, let's do it. Did a couple of series where it was
mainly sort of rappers and sports stars. Sean Evans would always want it to be a sports
reporter. So they did this for a while.
The episode that makes that made them really big and you can see that find this on YouTube is very good.
It's Key and Peele, the American comics.
They did one.
It was very, very, very funny and people immediately, you know, the discomfort and eating the hot wings,
you know, you can always tell with an episode of hot ones when people have trouble with the first one,
you know, it's going to be a good episode because by the time we're on the 10th one, I mean, it's absolutely crazy. So it
is now this format that's had, I think, 370 odd episodes have billions upon billions of
views, 2.6 billion views, I think, and they have three seasons a year with about 10 to
15 episodes. What does it tell us about television? Well, I think it tells us that format, you
know, the one thing people always said is there's not yet but there's no formats on
YouTube. It's just, it's just people, you know, talking and you know, playing FIFA and
you know, unboxing things. And actually, this is a thing, Sean Evans, I find a very interesting
guy. First, he's a very, very good interviewer. So the research is actually by the way, his
brother does the research. They do do they do a lot of it together
But his brother Gavin does a lot of the research and the questions are really really good sometimes quite left field
But they do make the people go deep as well
And I mean it people really like being on the show despite the physical discomfort
And I think of when you know when people hear about format they go
Oh good who wants to watch that just people eating ten hot wings and of course that is not what it is about
That just drags you in because it's quite
an interesting thing. But actually sitting there and doing something else while you're
being interviewed makes you a more interesting interviewee and allows Sean Evans to go to
places.
But also we're in a physical challenge kind of culture era.
Yeah.
And there's something about that and there's something about the silliness of it that people
like. But it is also a producer of endless reaction.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And 10 second clips.
But Sean Evans is a lover of broadcast television.
So Sean Evans talks a lot.
He talks about growing up watching TV and growing up watching late night television
and growing up watching those hosts and saying how at home they made him feel and how safe
they made him feel now, how happy they made him feel and families watching TV and stuff like that.
And he said, right from the beginning, I wasn't thinking, Oh yeah, I'm going to
do a sort of wacky YouTube thing.
I wanted to do something that really, really connected with people.
Yeah.
Goes through YouTube because that's where he was.
And it goes through, you know, first we feast and the very fact that he'll
do three seasons a year and there'll be like 10 to 13 episodes a year.
He does it like broadcast TV. And the very fact that he'll do three seasons a year and there'll be like 10 to 13 episodes a year.
He does it like broadcast TV.
It comes out on a Thursday in a 20 to 30 minute segment.
Releases them every Thursday.
Exactly that.
And he's spoken in the last few years about, you know, why am I not up for Emmys?
He hasn't said exactly that.
He said, but I feel I should be competing on the same level with these guys.
He has been now nominated for an Emmy and the show has been nominated for an Emmy as
well.
Yeah, they've been nominated for a couple of daytime Emmys.
Of your daytime.
Yeah, I mean, come on.
I mean, I've been nominated for daytime Emmys.
So it's a really, really lovely show made by someone who loves making it with a funny
format and with great interviews as well. And recently Buzzfeed bought First We Feast, but
Sean Evans and Chris Schomburg and various other people, including the Pod Save America people and
George Soros have recently bought it back. So they bought it for 82 and a half million dollars.
So Sean Evans now sort of has a lot more control over it. And I just think it's, you know, in a changing media landscape and, you know, I work in a
business where lots of people are finding work difficult to come by and to have a show
like this that really is reaching family audiences, that is reaching big audiences, that is made
with skill, that is lit properly, presented properly, researched properly.
It feels like that's a new frontier.
They recently sold the format to Germany.
So there's a German comic
is now doing the German hot ones.
And you know what?
That's the business I understand.
That's the business I recognize.
So this is the first time I really, really can see
something that's come from YouTube
that is doing exactly what my generation grew up with.
But equally, you mentioned the lighting, whatever, but actually what I would also say is the
business that you recognise, when you were talking about selling formats, maybe it had
a shiny floor, maybe it was high production value.
What's funny about their set is that it's, as I say, these two black tables.
And what was great about that was that they could go to where the stars were.
You don't have to say, we need to have you onto our set, unfortunately, it's like, yeah, cause then they can't do it.
But that's the most lo-fi thing in the whole world.
You know, just this very basic thing
that they can set up anywhere.
And therefore you're much more likely to get guests
on different tours and what have you.
But I think that's really interesting that we've,
when I think of like selling a format,
you did think of those, you know,
whether it was Love Island or Millionaire or whatever those kinds of things, those big things, and they kind of look the same with a couple of little local things, but they were expensive. And now you're just selling kind of almost like you're selling a meme, a table with a black box.
It's a sort of cultural IP, really.
Yeah, when we when we sold Total Wipeout around the world, we literally had to send everyone to Argentina because we could only afford to build the course once. So like every country, we like
it at timeshare and people go out for two weeks at a time. Whereas this, I just wanted
to talk about it because I just think it's really well made.
It is amazingly made. The questions are absolutely brilliant. That vibe that you said that he
wants it to be kind of warm and whatever. He said he wants it to feel like, you know,
to feel like watching friends just in terms of the warmth and what have you. But equally, there's lots of very modern things to it that it's kind of very
live stream friendly and you can obviously talk about things that, you know, it welcomes
on interactivity, it welcomes spin-off. Obviously, there's a huge amount of sources that have
come off it.
I mean, that's the thing is immediately they've got this massive selling sources like the
first source in like the first source
in every the first chicken wing and every single episode is the classic one and they
can sell that and the last one in every episode number 10, which I mean, the amount of people
who have to walk out of this show crying at various points or the amount of people who
cuss him out because of the pain, the sheer physical pain they're in is extraordinary.
The last one is called the last dab.
Yeah, again, that's something you can buy as well.
So it's it's, I just feel like it's a creative person. Well, and Chris
Schomburg and Sean Evans, I think it's some creative people who've done something brilliant
and are being rewarded for it. And I wouldn't see any reason why he would not be up for the big
Emmys against the big late night host. Cause this, this feels like it has something. I agree. Even a
few, a few months ago, even only a few months ago,
when this show is already a complete phenomenon
and what have you there, he said,
I'm really tired of explaining to advertisers
that an eyeball on YouTube is just the same as an eyeball
on TV.
And he said, and I think that's really interesting,
that there is still a sort of, on linear TV I'm talking about,
that there is still a kind of reticence on behalf of
many, many advertisers to see this for what it is, whereas the ones who've gone ahead
are actually doing very well out of it.
If you've not watched it, you can watch it with your kids, you know, pick a celebrity
you like or pick a celebrity you don't know.
That's one of the other fun things about it is it's very American.
So sometimes there are people on you go, I don't know who you are, but I like you.
And it's just you'll see a very smart presenter and a very smart producer doing a format.
That's funny doing a format that just delivers time and time again.
And it's an interview show that you haven't quite seen before.
And this doesn't replace what we're watching on linear TV.
It doesn't replace all these brilliant formats that are going around the world, but it
absolutely has its place at the top table.
And I just think it's impressive given where it came from and where it is now.
And it'll be the first of many, I think.
It's got a lot in common actually with some of those kind of late night sections that are
designed for morality, like, you know, day drinking with Seth Meyers or carpool karaoke, as was,
those sort of things that are designed to sort of be almost standalone, although they come in
the format of traditional linear television. This is like one of those just on its own. Well, that's the funny
thing is all of those late night shows realized a while ago, they had to have these big viral
moments. So let's do our cup or karaoke, day drinking, whatever it is. And our culture is
such that people are like, what if you did something that was just that, because actually,
that's the best bit. So when he just let's just do that. So hot ones is just the fire a bit from someone else's
show. And they just go, no, but we'll just do that. It's like, it's just, well, that's what people
talk about on YouTube is that it's like frameworks rather than formats. And that you'll say, okay,
like a get ready with me video is a framework and anyone you can say, so that as soon as you see,
you think, oh, I know the roughly the sort of thing I'm watching and something that could be like hot ones, which is you're thinking,
okay, there's an element of physical challenge.
It's a step, it's progressively gets harder and harder and either they're, you know, they're
being interviewed or something you can see in the same way that so chicken shop date,
which isn't the same thing, but you, you, you roughly know what you're dealing with
and you're thinking, oh, okay.
It's, and they're becoming the new genres.
As the great Swedish philosophers, Roxette said, don't bore us, get to the chorus. And
that's one of the things I like about our accelerated culture these days is we get to
the good bits very, very quickly. And YouTubers just go, no, we are cutting immediately into
the good bit. And the second the good bit is finished, we're cutting out.
Any recommendations, Richard?
Yes, we've talked a lot about fakery, haven't we? So let's continue to celebrate human beings.
I want to recommend Death Valley, the new BBC One murder mystery thing with Gwyneth
Keyworth and Tim Spool who are both absolutely brilliant and the BBC One are on a form with
these after Ludwig as well but it's a very, very charming murder mystery,
you know, detective duo thing.
And it's, yeah, it's, if you like Ludwig
and you like that sort of thing, you'll absolutely love it.
And honestly, Gwyneth Keyworth and Tim Spalder
are incredible in it.
I've got to watch this, okay, thank you.
Human beings, thank you human beings for everything you do.
Everything you continue to do.
Now we are back on Thursday with a questions and answers episode.
We are indeed. We have an interesting bonus episode this week as well, which is,
I just finished filming 110 episodes of House of Games. So our producer,
Joey, that's a pleasure.
Our producer, Joey came up and interviewed everyone on the show about what a day in
the life of House of Games is like. So it's how a show like that is put together
by all the different people in all the different departments and what they do.
So that will be our bonus episode.
I love that episode.
On Friday.
It's terrific.
If you want to sign up for our club,
it's therestisentertainment.com.
Otherwise we will be back as completely as normal
with our questions and answers on Thursday.
On Thursday, all human made. You're one July, like a second skin Assault on your neck, trouble in your grin
We kissed in the backseat, cigarette low
Windows fogged, letting secrets go
Your voice was heat in a motel room
Final slow dancing under the moon
Time pulled the thread, But I still feel tight
Silhouette burned in the porch light
Let's rewind the summer, slow and rough
Trace every curve, we couldn't get enough
Back to the night, your hands no mind This episode was brought to you by our good friends at Sky.
Sky is home to the shows everyone is talking about and plenty you haven't discovered yet.
But what really sets it apart is how it makes your whole entertainment setup feel smarter,
slicker, better.
With the new Skyglass TV you don't even need the remote.
Just say the name of a show, genre or actor and Sky finds it instantly across all your
apps and channels, no scrolling or forgetting where you saw it last.
Even from across the room, voice control works. So, whether you're making tea, loading the
dishwasher or the remote's vanished again, just say, hello Sky, play Poker Face or whatever
you fancy and it's already on by the time you sit down.
Or add it to your playlist, maybe succession for power plays and poisonous one-liners,
or the white lotus for something sun soaked, sharp and unsettling. Either way, it'll be
there, ready when you are.
Skyglass doesn't just make things easier,
it makes finding your next entertainment favourite feel effortless.
Visit sky.com today.