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Paul English Live

Duration:
37m
Broadcast on:
12 Dec 2024
Audio Format:
other

But it's uncapped, oh, you just let one guy have an authority for that. Yeah, the first cop. But you go for a job. Have you got a sense of smell? They used to have little wardens in local towns or where I live, who walked around my cameras and would photograph people, drop in litter and apprehend them and find them. I haven't heard of it since. That was about a couple of years ago. And since the lockdown, I don't think they've returned. So I don't know what's happened there. They were paid for by local council. So strange, you know, but used to see them wandering around with their camera on their stump. They had COVID cops over in Minnesota going for a while there. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you see your neighbor breaking the curfew or whatever. Yeah, we had that. Yeah, yeah. And they had pamphlets in the local council about it, where, you know, if you see someone having a party and that type of thing, you know, we've got the grandchildren of the Bolsheviks running things. What do you expect? Well, it's right. Well, I think what we have to expect now is a wind down to the show. What do you think? It's I think we probably do wind it down. It's been it's been good, it's always best at the end. And you go, I don't want to go and then you drag it on and all that kind of stuff. Well, the things here, I just want to mention something from America first, PHL. Because I'm going to do a show on nicotine. He says probably in the new year for all sorts of incredibly naughty reasons. Nicotine he writes or she writes is proven to protect our brains from spike protein proteins that spike the immune system cells, allowing six cells to enter. Eat your nicotine. Well, well, America first PHL. That's what I do. Sometimes when I'm choking in the broadcast, it's because I've got nicotine running around in my system and whatever other people may think I'm completely biased for all sorts of reasons, which will become obvious next year. But I love it. I have to tell you, it's absolutely fantastic. I've been looking into it. I've been looking into it. I was talking tomorrow. I went to see miles yesterday and we were talking about it. And he's saying that with smoking, it's the tar, which is bad, not the nicotine. That's right. It's the tar that turns you off. And also the other stuff that they put in the cigarettes to make them addictive. Because they do put loads of loads of other stuff in other than tobacco. And that is the most dangerous thing. But nicotine on its own, yeah, it's OK. The only downside is it can be addictive, but then so is tea and so is coffee. And so is breathing. Did you know that you if you try and stop breathing, you're addicted. You're going to have to take another breath. You know, that's the thing. But by the way, before we go, did you know that my granddad was dragged off by the Bolsheviks? It certainly made his eyes water. Did he? No, no, yeah. Well, the nicotine is really interesting. Dr. Brian Arbus has been the communicating champion of this over the past few years and I've watched most of his stuff. And it took a little bit of time for me to come around to that way of thinking. But I think there's a lot in it. I mean, particularly as it's a naturally occurring thing in many vegetables, particularly the nightshades, which you're warned off of. And so it occurs in peppers, potatoes have got quite a bit. Aubergines, eucalyme eggplants, I think, in your neck of the woods, Patrick. Yeah, they're high in them. And they're very good for you, I would suggest. And there may be some spurious, excessive claims have been made. But overall, all I can tell you is, I do think more clearly. I think I do, although the show might not be testament to that at times. I grant you that, but I do. And I feel calmer with all sorts of things. And although it is obviously class has been addictive. I am with Brian Arbus on this. I don't experience it as that at all. I think cigarette smoking is addictive. One of the things he talked about was when they went to the light cigarettes in the 70s and people wanted a bigger hit, they supplied the bigger hit by putting pyrazines into the manufacturing process, which is a type of sugar. And the sugar you're breathing in and that is probably the primary agent that causes cancers and other things that are strongly associated with smoking, of which I don't doubt. I'm not denying that or saying that gets smoking again. But there's so many fascinating things about it historically. I think I mentioned to you, Eric, this thing about red Indians. Ardis talks about the red Indians who are champions or were champions of tobacco, obviously very high in nicotine. And when they were taking their capital, as it were, literally their cows and horses after the Spaniards have brought them to America across the plains, their animals would often be bitten by venomous snakes. And the first thing that they would do is they would strap a tobacco paltis on the bite wound, on the open wound to get the juice going into the bloodstream. And more often than not, according to him, you would have to do more research. But they did it for a reason. The nicotine would stop the venom killing the animal, which is pretty important because it's probably worth a lot to them in terms of their livelihood or, you know, being able to get on the back of the horse and carry on. So, you know, so there's a culture of that and we've got Walter Riley, I suppose, to blame for bringing tobacco back here and getting the whole thing going. But the other signal to me about it is that there is this movement amongst Canada, America, here, the UK, Australia and New Zealand. This was under SUNAC in the earlier part of this year, forming some kind of an agreement to ban nicotine from the countries entirely by 2030. And I would suggest that this is because it does interfere with their vaccine killing program and it's naturally occurring and there are no bad side effects with it. So what, why not do it and it's relatively inexpensive, you know? I know years ago, they were trying to say that nicotine was causing honey bee population to go to go to become because of the pesticides that we're using nicotine, supposedly, they use that as a reason. I don't know if that how that flies or not, but it's yeah. If they're going to ban it, there's obviously something good. Well, I just think you watch while they're trying to stop and you go, right? I'm having some of that. Yeah, exactly. Do the just like an advert to me. Whatever they want, I'm doing the opposite. That's dumb. Is it? I'm going to be 90% right. It's just so simple, rude, a thumb. It's like with the news that they're lying all the time. Well, they're not lying all the time, but I can't be bothered to work out the 10% of the time when they're telling the truth. It's just to our basket. I've got better things. I've got to go the toilet and things and do the washing. No, I can't sit watching this tripod all day. So they're wrong about everything and you're already 90% right. So there's a good show. Today's tip of the day is like a viz tip, you know, today's top tips. Just say that they're wrong about everything. It generally are, you know, so there's a tip, read a book. Yeah, that's right. And also more. Which one, though, patching, which book? A good one. Sorry, Eric, that's OK. More people have been killed by their own governments. The normal wars put together. Yeah, or by smoking, or by smoking. Well, yeah, I suppose I don't know. But when you look at the First World War generation, a lot of them live to 100 survivors, of course. And they smoke like chimneys to a right old age. So and that's the thing. We're not increasing the age people, their generation that reaching 100 say in the early to mid 70s. There's not so many people reaching 100 now. If you know, I also read that a lot of the third Reich, the fund raising that they did was through cigarette manufacturing and sales. Yeah, substantial amount. And what about what about the crushing loss to the cigarette card collectors? No, cigarette cards. They were fun, weren't they? Collect all the I don't know. Well, you have baseball players in the used to have cigarettes. W.O. Wills or something, caps and full strength, you know, images of the English cricket team from 1905 and stuff like this. Lovely, but all covered in tobacco. Yeah, great. I know that Crimea was where they were getting most of their tobacco in Germany during the 40s, 30s and 40s. Yeah. Yeah. But hey, that was against smoking, wasn't he? He tried. He, he, he, he, well, you might have been. I suppose, but Goebbels was definitely for smoking because it was financing a lot of the propaganda ministry. Well, I actually answer. I can't. It's just like here, just like America, the smoking. You listen to those old commercials, they were sponsoring everything, all the propaganda was sponsored by camel cigarettes. More 10 and nine and 10 doctors approved. The delicious red hot camels. Yeah, I love those adverts. Doctors say smoking camels. It's just a great line, isn't it? Oh, I like to smoke a camel. So smoked camel and chips and tons of money from it. And they could and they don't want that happening. They don't want small movements. I know. Our films crap in one regard with regards to in the past, right? With that, films didn't have mobile funds in them, right? So yours used to get these scenes where Humphrey Bogart had to go into a pay booth to, you know, with his coins and all that kind of stuff, be smoking a cigarette. All these scenes have been lost. Now people just get a little beep. No one's smoking. It's dull as ditch water. I just love all the old stuff. It's just more clunky, more. I'm an analog guy here. I like the analog world. The digital world is now dull, boring, and plastic and, you know, it's just no good. Very, very silly. Actually, and Sally put a post in here. She says, I have a friend with Alzheimer's since he was 65. He was a smoker for most of his life and a switch to vaping after that. And to which America first says vaping is so bad. Well, my wife suffers from a similar condition and that's why I've got into the nicotine. So this may be a spurious thing to say. But Brian Ardis talked about a report and I did find it, but not fully. But Houston University in 2015 or 16, 15, I think it was, they took 30 patients suffering from Parkinson's dementia and Alzheimer's, all basically caused by the same malfunctioning of the chemistry in the brain. It's a thing called tangles. I think that buildup is like a protein. You can't clear it out your head and it basically impairs the electrical function of the brain. And this is why it's this sort of, you know, pain in the ass, as it were, or pain in the head. Anyway, what they did was what they did, Patrick, is that they, they took them and they put them all on 22 milligrams of nicotine a day through patches, I think, at the time, 22 milligrams of nicotine a day. And they did it for two years, which is quite a while. And according to Ardis, I'm just repeating what I heard. All of them lost all of their symptoms after two years because of nicotine. And that's probably why they banned it. And the cunning of reason is they banned cigarettes and then you come up with vaping as an alternative. That's what happened. It's not necessarily a bad thing. It's just the fact of the matter that they banned tobacco and all the public places and they made it impossible to get. And people know there's a benefit to it. Otherwise, they wouldn't do it. It wouldn't feel good, you know, it's like eating, eating feels good. There's a reason for it because, you know, your body knows that it's getting some sustenance from it. So it only makes sense that they come up with something like vaping or patches or lozenges or whatever you do. Well, I think they're different. I think the patches and the lozenges are different. I think the vaping is just, yeah, yeah, well, I'm biased completely, but yeah, they are completely. The patches, I think, the idea is to get the patches. I get a lot of things from people who are using patches. The patches, you've got to get the ones with the least amount of crap in them. They still have other chemicals that they put into the patch and into the pouch and all this kind of stuff. The lozenges that I use have got none of that. Absolutely zero. Anyway, I'm going to do a thing about it. It'd be almost like an infomercial in the early part of next year. Because you know how all those shows in the States get sponsored by something. Well, I'm hoping that this one will, I know it's a relatively small audience. They won't appeal probably, sadly, anybody from it, but I thought it looks good. We might just do some adverts and stuff like that. Well, you might even draw an audience from advertising a product like that. Yeah, maybe. And an advertising place in Fockham Hall, was it a Fockham all times? That's not for the newspaper, you know, perfect. I can see it now, like a sort of Humphrey Bogart character advertising. He's just, well, it's like any of these things, these farming, farming products, the handy crafts that people have, that they're, you know, their little hobbies, or their, you know, their trade, whatever it ends up being. Yeah, we need places for them to advertise the marketplace because people get kicked out of the marketplace. They get de-banked and we need something to be there for when those people leave. Well, I think doing commercial things is good because it is a palliative. It can be, I mean, it's not if it's going bad. The, you also learn about the, the, just the vast bureaucracy that's literally stifling, uh, true, uh, get up and gowness. England, of course, is completely retarded in comparison to America. Well, that's why we need the fearless leaders to do something about it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So we'll do that next people, but the thing, the problem is we've got a, uh, a generation of dolks. I mean, if you look, imagine the pro, uh, the, uh, generation. Or about 50 years ago, if they could look forward and see the dolks that are in power. Now, it's, it's frightening. They're thickest two short planks. And we've read that deliberately. I think we're going to close. I'm finally going to close out tonight's show. We've overrun by 20 minutes ridiculous. There's longer show I've ever done, but of course I'm fueled by nicotine. So I could talk probably for another eight hours to be quiet. I just want to say before I, before I go on Saturday at midnight. UK time. I am filling in for Frederick's Lee Blackburn show on Republic broadcasting network. Oh, cool. That's an hour, isn't it, Patrick? Yeah. Yes. And Malefica Scott said he would come in and be my co-host. Yeah. He's such a tart. I love you. Malefica is aesthetically not really meaning any of that. No, he's a great guy. He's good. Oh, well, that's fantastic. Oh, what will I be doing at midnight on Saturday? Mm. I don't know. If I remember, I'll try and tune in. Yeah, I'll try and pick it up. Why not? That'd be cool. Will it be record? Can you hear it after? Yeah, there'll be a recording of it. I'll post it in the fucking chat and tell. Oh, if you, if you could, please, because it's very important, because it's to be headline, fucking news, of course. So he was listening to it. Definitely. I'll be interested in that. Excellent. Thanks. Thanks, Patrick. Thanks for all the postings you put in the fucking. Oh, you're welcome. Chat. Oh, no, I like doing that. Nicotine junkies arrows. That's me. Excel, you betcha. Absolutely. It's tops. Maybe me so. Yeah, you'll find out. You'll find it. It's absolutely. Oh, yeah, I'm a bit, I'm completely biased for all sorts of reasons. But we should probably obvious to people with a brain. And I know most of you do have one, but yeah, it's really, it's a very interesting development. And we probably, I'd love to get artists on. I don't have any connection. I'd love to have a chat with him. It's great. I mean, some of the tales he tells about the recovery, because he came to the fore because of it using using it to combat COVID, which is to do with venom. He traced it back to snakes. Yeah, yeah, yeah, he's great. I mean, he's on all the big places now. So, you know, what he could. This is still a little uncertain place. We're still a little place. I'm OK with that. But maybe we might get a little bit bigger. We get a new scam. You're talking about you run with Jeff Prince not that long ago. That's the guy that got Alex Jones started. So you know, you're not we'll get there. It's OK. It's for England, isn't it, Eric? It's for England. That's right. Yeah, it's for fog them. It's for fog them. At least for a fog them. Hang on, it's for you. For one, it's for fog them. Just a minute. We'll have to declare war on fog them from Yorkshire. That'll be good. Maybe that's what we should do. Maybe we should sort of inter-county wars again. And they'll all go, well, they're all fighting. Yeah, great. Come on. And then they won't be able to run government. Excellent. What do you think? But fog them is part of Yorkshire. It's just there's a 200-mile gap in between, that's all. Are you talking about the Yorkshire Fockham corridor? A bit like the Danzig corridor. Is that what you're talking about? That's right. And of course, we're Patrick. He's declared independence. So he's a part of Fockham as well, even though it's about 3,000 miles of ocean in between. And a bit of land as well for a couple of thousand miles. It can still be Fockham. You see, wherever you are in the world, you can declare that some will never set on the Fockham Empire. This is good. This is really good. You've reminded me to mention something else as well. Here, right at the tail end of proceedings. Mike, the bowler-hatted farmer up in Suffolk, yes? He's on the show occasionally. Yeah, he is. He's a great guy. I love what they're doing and everything. It's fantastic. We did a lot of raw milk chat. Raw milk's been mentioned here. We glug it down here. It's fantastic. I saw something about raw milk the other day. You leave it. You can drink it after two weeks. But by then, it's actually yogurt. Somebody was explaining what happens to it. It's still good for you after two weeks. I saw that. Yeah, do you see that? I saw that, because I'm particularly fancy, you know, I'll go about once a month to the farm, which is a 30-mile round trip, 50 miles there. And I'll just shove it in the fridge and I didn't realise you're killing all the goodness and the good bacteria while I'm shoving it in the freezer. Yep. And through that? Yeah, you just-- Oh, it's fantastic. You know what? They're meant to cream on the top of it. It's like-- It's amazing. I opened a bottle up the other day. Oh, my dad used to nickel the cream off the top of the milk bottle. Hey, you've got to start making butter. But now, it's 11 o'clock at night. But OK, I haven't got a churn. Better now than ever. You can also make cheese with using vinegar. Apple soda vinegar. That's one way. Is that one of the specialist fucking cheeses that you're talking about? It is, yes, yes. Vinegar cheese. Vinegar cheese, yes. To talk about cheese a lot, you know. It's really good for cheese to call it. We call it farmer's cheese. Anyway. No, it's called Postman's Sock, actually. It's actually-- you put it into a Postman's Sock. It's got that sort of-- That's literally so. Particularly arresting a woman as Eric. I like that. Fantastic. Listen, no, Mike, here's what we-- An idea, I'm just throwing it out to everywhere. There's still a huge numbers, of course, still listing way beyond their bedtime, which is very, very good. I like the idea of a Fockem Festival next year in 2025. Maybe on Mike's farm. Yeah, we need to Fockem Festival. We were talking about the other day. So you get a Fockem flag up. We could even issue Fockem event passports to be kept for life as memorabilia. All this guff, right? It's a branding exercise. They're usually good. Branding it permanently stays in the head. You should. You need some merch. We do. We need some merch. We're going to go and merch you next year. Everybody expects you all to get your hands in your pockets and make me rich. At least the coffee mug with Fockem-- It works for Alex Jones. It'll work for me. Yeah. That's a good idea, isn't it? He's got a steam engine there. He's got everything, so it's marvelous. Yeah, up on his farm. And yes, Fockem Festival, I'd also have to get the newspaper ready for Fockem. Yeah, and Lord and Lady Fockem could open it. And they could be, I don't know, the cutting of a noose or something like that. And we could actually run the radio station from it live on site for the weekend, if it was a weekend gig. And everybody would have to bring sleeping bags or, of course, book into the Fockem Hall of Hotels. But they're very pricey, I understand. But maybe they could be a reduction in rates that night. And we could just make the whole event up. Let's just make it up. That's what we have to do, just make it up. That's a good idea. And they can actually push the pigs out the pigsty. I don't think it's done a pigsty. The smell, I think, people say, what about the smell? I think the pigs will get used to it, actually. Sorry. Sir, look, Aunt Sally would go to a Fockem Festival. So that's three of us, Eric. It's already a crowd. Brilliant. Bloody hell. Yeah. Yeah, that's pretty. And you could have equivalent in wind sconcing, if you wanted, Patrick. Yeah, and Sally's got around 10. Wow. So, actually, we had my son just took it and destroyed it at Festival last year. It was a family tent. He said, Dad, actually, they put it up in the garden. They found all these holes. They tested it before they went. I said, you better test it, because it'd been up in the loft, you know, for a bit. Wonderful tent, though. Great. OK. But I've got a French ricolade, which is cotton, which must be at least 15 years old. Yeah. Well, I'm really on for this. I'm serious, although it's delivered in a kind of semi-serious way. A Fockham Festival, if that's what we were going to call it. And to develop all this branding around what we're doing could be just the kind of sort of-- you see, there's a power in it, because it's quite innocent. But people sort of glom onto it, or they glue themselves to it in a way. And then, you know, really, we should just check-- everything should be about Fockham. I honestly-- it's like a parallel universe. And everybody in this parallel universe is actually real. And in it, we act as if we're really in the England that we want to live in. Of course, we're going to rename it Fockham, I guess, in due course. But that's for later on down a little. You'd like Steampunk. Yeah. You'd be slightly punk with sort of top hats with the binocular things on them. And ladies dressed in Victorian stuff. You know, I think it would work. He's got a steam engine as well, which would actually fit for you with it. Oh, I love that Steampunk stuff. What is that all about? It's something to just do with steam engines. I don't know. It's all this old analog world. I love it. It's human. You connect to it. I mean, Fred Dibner was still alive. We could get him along to open it up. I mean, he said that great thing, didn't he? The world was built by men in overalls and destroyed by men in suits. Spot on. Correct. Spot on, Fred. Great bloke, amazing. No, I really would go. And sadly, seriously, me too. Anybody out there that knows about-- there'll be a lot of work. Really, there will. But if you could get a date set up now, we could start promoting it right through the year. That would give time for the spies to join up. I want them to come, because we could do a conference for all the infiltrators. There should be an infiltrators tent. And we say, welcome, you know? All you sad losers that are working for the other side. But have the first week in June, that's a good time of year. Is it? We have to give it some thought. It's been culled over. Yeah, yeah. Be still snowing over here, mate. Or raining, it'll be raining and everything. I don't know why he's wet. He'd know he's wet better than us. Do you think he'd be on for it? I think he'd be on for it. I think he'd be up for it, yeah, positive. Because let's face it, yeah, he'd be shot there and everything like that. And steampunk, I mean, he's already there. He's got his ball right on me. Yeah. So he's got a ball right. Yeah. Well, we could all wear bowler hats. And then we could all act like droods from Clockwork Orange. Then the first week of July. First week of July, it's still summer, peak of summer, right there. I'm quite impressed with this, Patrick, because you're not even coming. All right. I'll have my own. I'll have my own. What, you do a parallel one on the same day. And then we could link you by satellite feed. Why not? Yeah. Intercontinental ballistic fucking festival. That's right. And of course, because it's a separate country, doesn't come under the rules and regulations of Great Britain because it's a separate country in the same way you, Patrick. Doesn't come under the rules and regulations of the USA because it's a separate country. Fock them is separate. That's right. Well, the entry fee could be that you could get a fucking passport. Can't we do that? Well, you pay what you feel it's worth. Three or 400 pounds each. Yeah, there you go. That's interesting. If you put a premium price on it, it does a different thing anyway. We're talking tactics now about manipulating our audience, which is always good fun, I think. But yes. And I'm coming in my Rolls Royce as well. I'm going to have to do that. Or maybe private jet. Maybe I could drop in free for by parachute. Yeah, we could do that. Do the fuck Bob that you can spend at the fuck unfest. That's right. I've got to do some fuck dollars as well, because we've got fuckbobs. We've got to do them in the dollar style as well. And companies, you can be a bit more creative with the British currency because they have different characters on them. Whereas dollars, they have the same bloke all the time, don't they? They won't have problems. They have different presidents, actually, Eric. They do have different ones. Oh, they used to have different presidents. Yeah, they have them. Yeah, it's fine. Well, we could put some really good things. I'm sure you already have with the fuck, Bob. So you could put, I don't know, Zebedee could go on it, can he? And they'd be a bloop. And you could have one that's worth half a P and put Keir Starmer on it or something. Which is absolutely worth it, absolutely worth it. What was that thing about? Yeah. Well, it looks like it's not a man that was wet his knickers, doesn't he? It was just up to me. And Eric, you could do a stand-up comedy routine in the main tent, come on. It'd be fantastic. It's the Von Asek show. Eric, he's come a long way to be with you tonight. He's a lovely fellow. He's all the way. This is him, Mr. Fockham himself. Is Eric Von-- come on, I can just see it. It'd be great. Like a working men's club. Look, you're cool. Yeah, we could go on it. Well, it'd be the Fockham club. Yeah. Well, could it be Eric as a stand-up? That would be an interesting title, wouldn't it? No, Eric has a stand-up. Well, we could put it onto an old record. Well, America first wants to come. Look at this. Can I go camping with like-minded people? Of course you can. My tent goes off my SUV. Come on, get on over. Maybe we could import thousands of Americans for the event and absolutely just overtake it. Yeah. Make it an international event. Yeah, that'd be a good idea. Yes. I know, we could actually, yeah, have a good idea. I'd just love to be one of those northern working men clubs compares, you know. He's come a long way to be with you. He's a lovely fella. He's great. He's grand. He's very funny. He was here early three months ago. You know, that kind of stuff. It's absolute blather, I love it. It's complete blather. And we could buy vegetables. And we could play Spot the Vegetable, which, of course, would be one of the members of the attendees. Who's the most stupid person? We have some really insulting competitions. It could be one of them. But I like the idea of a radio tent. We could just go live 24/7. And anybody that's there could just get behind the mic and talk for 10 minutes. And just tell them who you are, don't matter. It'd be great. Really loose as a goof stuff. Be fab. Welly throwing competition. That's what I have with the goons. Isn't that a welly throwing competition? Yeah. So we're getting carried up. So the big question is, is this all talk and no trousers? There's a possibility. It might be, yes. Actually, what about homemade beer? That'd go good. So nothing bought. It'd have to be homemade beer. Well, we got long enough. I keep thinking August, late July, August, or something like that. But then maybe people still go on these things called holidays. I haven't seen one of those for about 15 years, a holiday. I have no idea what they are. This would be my day. My main concern, though, is that, actually, I've just realised this would be my coming out party. Because no one knows what I look like. So it's terrible. So I'd probably have to get one of those rubber masks and look like somebody else. No, I wouldn't. I'd turn up. It'd be great. It'd be good. Then I could start using a webcam after that, because my cover would be blown. I don't even know why I've got one to be quite honest. It's just a bad habit that's been gone over years. But, yeah. Oh, look at the bloody time. [INTERPOSING VOICES] Anyway, I've got a bed waiting for me. Oh, yeah. Mate, look, guys. It's been absolutely brilliant. It's been absolutely, absolutely brilliant. I'm going to play out with a song here called-- what is this song? It's a lovely song made by a chap. Keith Mansfield-- now, there's a good name for you. Keith Mansfield. This is called Soul Thing. It's from the 1960s. It's one of those groovy, keyboard-y type orchestral. He used to write-- he wrote the grandstand theme in Keith Mansfield, right? Oh, that'd be good. Yeah, he's quite nice to this. So listen, everybody, fantastic for staying up so late with us. It's way past Eric's bedtime. So it must be way past night, who I guess. And we'll be back again at the same time next week for more hilarious fun. And think about the festival. Seriously, we can make this sort of conversation a bit more action-driven. I love it. I want to go to a party. I don't go out much anymore, you know. And maybe we could have a ball, as well. Can we get a big ball-- I'm really getting carried away. I want to do everything in one day, but we won't be able to do that. Those of you with Rolls Royces, please come in them. That'll be probably everybody, I guess. All rocking up in your rollers. So that'd be good. And yeah, maybe we could get a chawaddy-- we could get a chawaddy-waddy imitation band to turn up. And then we could all leave very, very quickly. Chawaddy-waddy was mentioned earlier in the show. And I cringed inwardly very, very much when it came up. So there we go. Yeah, so cool. All right, brilliant. I'm going to wrap you up. Eric, Patrick, fantastic. I hopefully see you guys this same time next week. And see all you wonderful rumblers and grumblers out there. And think about that festival idea. I think it's a cool idea. It's bloody obvious, but it's going to require some grunt and organization. Yeah. I mean, we could just put a site up for it, and then you're going to have everybody's dog coming. But maybe that's what we want. Better speak to Mike and see what the capacity would be. And then the tickets could be bid for the latest ticket, now £8,000 more than an Oasis ticket. Everybody wants to go to the fucking festival. Why not? Yeah, I would gladly sell my house and all its possessions to go to the fucking festival. And I did. So cool. All right, brilliant. And people will talk about it for minutes to come. So that would be good. All right, wonderful. I'm going to play it with Patrick, lots of love, and all that kind of stuff. And to you, Eric, I know it's not too manly. But you know what I mean, Joey, good stuff. You know what I mean, and all that kind of stuff. I am from up north. And keep good. Keep good everyone out there. Everyone that's contributing to the chat. Fantastic. Love the lot of year. And we're not far away from that time of the year. And this song's got nothing to do with that. But this is Keith Mansfield and Sol Thing. Ciao for now, everyone. See you all next week. Bye now. Good night. Ciao, ciao. 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