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Live From Cheltenham

Episode Transcript

Page 94, the Private Eye Podcast.

Andy

Andy: Hello, and welcome to another episode of page 94 this week, coming to you live from the Cheltham Literature Festival.

My name's Andrew Hunter Murray, and I'm here on stage at Cheltham with Helen Lewis, Ian Hislop and Adam McQueen.

We are here once again to discuss.

The last mag.

The next mag.

We better start with the front cover of this week's magazine, uh, Trump's Gaza Triumph, the main, uh, slogan at the bottom of it world.

Apologizes.

He's not a naughty boy.

He's the Messiah.

Do we all owe Donald a huge, huge apology for all the years of jokes?

Ian

Ian: Yes.

And we're going to issue it through our lawyers.

Um, it's official.

I actually put in a cart in by Griselda.

she's one of our cartoonists, and she'd drawn a figure looking surprisingly like me, in front of a newspaper saying, East, peace.

And the caption was, oh, bloody Trump.

Uh, which I'm afraid summed up quite a lot of it.

there was also a, a, a stopped clock.

I think the speech in the Knesset was.

Quite extraordinary.

Helen

Helen: I watched all of it too, just because I, at no point did you know where it was gonna go next.

Ian

Ian: That's unlike Trump.

what do you think the American audience made of that?

Helen

Helen: I mean, I went to a couple of Trump rallies last year, and I don't think people listen to a word he says.

I think it's just, it's like going to a kind of rock concert or something like that.

Right.

And they would just, there would be occasional bits that you'd do and he'd be like, oh, like, you know, like sort of playing Freebird, but they'd be always doing the wall, Hey.

And then you'd sort of tune out and go and get some snacks in between.

So I imagine it was something rather similar in the NASA, to be honest.

Ian

Ian: his main complaint seemed to be that everyone else had spoken for too long.

I, he literally said, yeah, good speech, but a bit long.

And they'd showered him with praise for hours and hours.

and then he decided the best thing to do was also shower himself with praise.

Obviously everyone's saying isn't, isn't it good?

You know, the first two points of the 20 point plan Yeah.

Have been achieved nearly, that leaves quite a lot to go and, and quite a lot to go wrong.

Adam

Adam: Did you see the truth social thing he put up after his chat with, uh, Putin and he said, this is the great accomplishment of peace in the Middle East, something that has been dreamed of for centuries and you think you've got.

Two and a half of the 20 points.

There's quite a long way to go.

You might not, but it is very much his style, isn't it?

That basically if he says something, that's it and it's done.

Helen

Helen: I mean, he's got two main qualities.

One, he is a, a bully, and two, he's completely unreasonable.

And those, it turns out, were an incredibly good match for this situation.

So the, the, the, the kind of key moment really came when, um, Israel bomb Qatar.

And, uh, tr do you ever see that amazing clip where he just came out and for once he was, he wasn't like camp fake angry.

He was actually angry.

He went, they've been fighting each other for so long, I dunno what the fuck they're doing.

And it was just like, kind of, it had the exact to of your dad going, I don't get who started it.

I will stop this car.

I swear I'll turn it around.

We won't, the services, I'll, I'll drop you off there.

Um, and then there was this extraordinary photo that came out where.

And I wish there was video of this.

He's got Benjamin Netanyahu, um, prime Minister of Israel with him in the, in the Oval Office, and he's holding like an old rotary dial phone and he's got Benjamin Netanyahu on the phone to I think the Emir of Qatar going, I'm sorry, sorry, sorry, sir.

Sorry.

Country center.

I went against her and, and, and that was just the, that was the kind of extraordinary moment I think that Donald Trump felt that he had been personally made a fool of by Israel.

Andy

Andy: we, we are saying this is an actual achievement.

'cause I tend, I tend to take sort of whatever Trump says, not as non gospels.

You know, I say, well if he has, if he is claiming his properties in the Middle East, then he definitely won't have done but, but there does seem to have been a bit of knocking heads together,

Helen

Helen: provisional achievement.

Right.

And he's got the hostages home.

The ones who are still alive.

And also he has made there to be a ceasefire, which has allowed some aid to get into Gaza.

Yeah.

Which is incredibly important.

So even if it doesn't hold that, those are some achievements.

And I think that's, that's the kind of, that's the credit I'm willing to give him.

I I'm, I'm just gonna take a wild outside bet that he probably hasn't solved the Middle East forever.

Just call me a cynic.

Adam

Adam: Yeah, you're a cynic.

Yeah, but it doesn't matter 'cause he's onto Ukraine now that's.

That's, that's the weekend's job is just to sort all of that out instead.

Ian

Ian: Yeah.

He'll add that.

I mean, we did put on the cover, you've gotta hand it to him and then another boy say what the whole of Garza, um, which, which again may happen.

if the redevelopment into Garza Largo actually comes off, um, there will be this, this sort of visionary Middle Eastern dream.

Well, Tony Blair's gonna be running it, hasn't he?

the trouble with Trump is there is no loyalty.

So someone asked him, you know, the moment on the plane where he appears from the toilet door, um, and never quite understood why he has to do this and give an interview.

Head comes around and someone said, are you gonna put, you know Tony Blair in charge?

And he goes, yeah, I dunno.

A lot of people don't like him.

Huh?

We could have told you that for free.

Andy

Andy: Helen, I mean, you cover American Matters a great deal.

Um, and you, you, you fly back and forth quite a lot.

You see a lot of it.

So, uh, one of the things you wrote recently, um, after an exciting experience, uh, at the Riyad Comedy Festival.

Was that America is becoming more Saudi, just as Saudi is trying to become more American.

Helen

Helen: Well, so Saudi Arabia is going through some immensely quick process of change.

You know, it has Deis Islamized de Haris in the last 10 years under its elder millennial Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

I'd like to say that as another, a fellow elder millennial.

Finally, we're getting to run the world and it turns out we're quite bad at it.

Um, but it basically, so I didn't have to cover my hair.

I didn't have to wear an A bear.

They are now having.

Jimmy Carr, the sign of progress.

Uh, you know what they say?

Jimmy Carr, hoer of Democracy.

Um, so, you know, and it was, it was just extraordinary that you had And Louis CK as well.

Um, Jack Whitehall.

Jack Whitehall, yeah.

Um, obviously, basically they

Andy

Andy: now have to suffer like we do.

That's the, you don't, at least if you go to a Jack White hole gig in the uk, you can drink.

I think that is an important, uh.

None of my

Helen

Helen: friends were that sympathetic to me going up there and I was like, I don't think they'll get tortured.

And then I said, well, I'm going to a Jimmy Carl gig.

So,

Andy

Andy: but this, this point of yours about America becoming more Saudi is it Right.

Is a fascinating one.

Under Trump.

Helen

Helen: Under Trump.

So the, my point about that is when you go to Saudi Arabia, now it's full of almost empty malls, as if they're waiting for everybody to turn up.

There's a Jamie's Italian in Riyad.

Sort of just waiting for families to be disappointed by overpriced pasta, right?

If you build it, they will come.

Ian

Ian: There are other overpriced pastors are available,

Helen

Helen: any of them.

But, uh, so at the same time, all of those American brands are obviously piled in.

You know, Christiana Ronaldo was there.

Mr.

Beast is over there.

Last weakness.

Riyad fashion festival.

Everybody's just taking a bit of that Saudi cash.

But at the same time, the other thing is happening in the other direction, which is that America is getting rid of the rule of law, the idea of a kind of fair trial of your peers.

And the other thing is sending random members of your family to do foreign affairs work.

So there's a great line in my colleague Mike Atlantic colleague Graham Woods piece about Jared Kushner going over there.

And the Saudi says to him the idea of sending your unqualified son-in-law to do quite important business.

We're okay with that over here.

We don't think that's weird.

So, you know, you're having this and, and if you talk to people who work with.

Some of those Gulf monarchies, particularly God on

Ian

Ian: Prince Andrew was a trade in for Right,

Helen

Helen: exactly.

Maybe just saying an apology to Prince Andrew.

Um, but they will, they will say that, that, that the, the people in the Gulf like dealing with the Trump White House, because they don't turn up and get a lecture about human rights abuses anymore.

It's just basically like, would you give us some money?

And in exchange you can have a Trump tower.

Right.

It's pure foreign policy.

American foreign policy has given up.

Perhaps it was always a delusion, that idea of being a kind of the world's policeman or bringing a force for liberal democracy.

And now it basically is let's, you know, let's talk business.

So Qatar, for example, is now a huge ally of the US and it's gonna be, well, not only to give Donald Trump that claim, right, but it's, it's gonna be allowed to build an air base on American soil.

So dearly, deeply entwined with Trump's business interest.

He's got huge crypto interests in the Middle East.

Crowd

Crowd: Mm.

Helen

Helen: Um, and so basically the, the person we should be doing an apology to really is naked, corrupt capitalism.

Andy

Andy: Ian, I'll organize that,

Helen

Helen: put, put that on the cover next time.

Andy

Andy: Um, we've got move on in just a, a couple of minutes to our next section of the show.

Are there any, are there any more thoughts that we haven't expressed about Trump yet that maybe you'd like to before we do?

Helen

Helen: I look forward to the day.

I'll never have to have a thought about Donald Trump ever again.

Andy

Andy: Yeah.

Helen

Helen: But I fear it may be for some decades to come.

Adam

Adam: Well, Ian, is it gonna happen?

Is he gonna go for a third term?

Do you reckon, Helen, you've spent time over there?

Helen

Helen: I think he absolutely wants to.

The only thing that's on our side is time.

He's 79 years old.

He's a lot less healthy this term.

And I think people laugh when I say this, but he's a lot less coherent than he used to be.

Ian

Ian: Yeah.

Helen

Helen: But the thing that's fascinating to me is that JD Vance, the vice president and everyone, everyone hates him.

So you're getting that classic second term president dynamic where there's an obvious heir apparent, but also a lot of other people are thinking, I could have a go.

I could have a, and I think that will be.

He has to keep talking about whether or not he's gonna do a third term, and there are Trump 2028 hats that they keep sending to Gavin Newsom of California, for example.

He has to keep that as an idea to kind of keep the party together, because at the moment, being a Republican is incredibly simple.

You don't have to have any particular thoughts on policy.

It's just do you believe in dear leader enough?

And that's the one thing you have to say as a Republican and everything else is off the table.

And of course, as soon as that breaks down and there's some idea of a post-Trump future, there are big divisions in that party about what, what, what they should do in terms of policy.

But at the moment it's a, it's a non policy party.

Adam

Adam: So basically he's just holding things together with the force of his personality.

Helen

Helen: The shit like sort of

Adam

Adam: Tito in Yugoslavia or something.

It's all gonna fall apart after him.

Helen

Helen: Exactly.

Adam

Adam: Right.

Andy

Andy: Well look, we should, we should turn from, from Trump and the Republicans to the uk, uh, from.

From Trump and you know, a party which has no obvious heir, apparent, uh, to labor.

Ian

Ian: I think it's very, very unfair on Andy Burnham whose performance at the Labor conference was quite extraordinary in terms of incompetence.

And if that's a bid to lead.

I was impressed.

Adam

Adam: The thing is, he didn't, he managed not to pose with a banana, which was David Milliman's big, big mistake.

Do you remember that one?

Yeah.

But he's weird with labor.

How you get these, he parents who just turn up and get talked up from about three weeks always as the, as the great big thing that's gonna take over.

And then it just sort of fades away awfully, doesn't it?

Helen

Helen: I'm gonna say something really cruel about Andy Burnham, but I had to live through a previous Labor Party conference where he turned up going, well, if you don't want care you can have me.

But that.

He didn't beat Jeremy Corbin in 2015.

Right?

He had all of the advantages of being this, you know, the establishment center, mainstream, sensible candidate, and guess what?

He couldn't connect with people in the way that Jeremy Corbin did, and he didn't win then.

And now he's on his third go round at having a crack at it.

I just, at some point.

Adam

Adam: He could, he could throw his hat into the ring to lead, um, Jeremy and Saltan and, and Sarai salt's party, couldn't he?

I mean, they're not, they're not doing a great job of it themselves.

The third co-leader.

Great.

Andy

Andy: Um, but I, I suppose the question I wanted to ask all three of you is really how did things get this bad, this fast, uh, for labor?

Because the, the, the levels of.

Unpopularity across the country are, are, they are extraordinary.

And it, it, it's, it's quite a remarkable set of figures when you look at it.

And the really interesting thing is something, something has changed.

So if you look, uh, at every election since 1983 and what happened afterwards to the, the popularity of the relative parties.

Every time, um, the governing party loses popularity.

Their, their popularity slides a few points down the scale, or, you know, five or 10 and the, the Chief opposition party rises up the scale.

This is the first time since, since all those records, uh, since 1983, where both labor and the conservatives have suffered a drop in popularity since the election.

Now that's obviously because of the rise of reform, but it is quite striking to see, and LA and Labor slide has been.

Really precipitous since then.

how has it got so bad so quickly for them?

Ian

Ian: Uh, well, I think it's, it's disappointment.

whereas often someone says, you know, there's a new conservative leader, and you go, oh, well, But with Stawa, people thought this was going to be different.

And obviously if you come in with a, you know, huge majority, there is a big burden of expectation, um, particularly after, you know, a long period of rule by the opposition and they disappointed really fast.

Adam

Adam: But the really odd thing this is, isn't it, they came in saying, everything's gonna be rubbish.

It wasn't like they were promising, kind of like a golden unicorn for everyone.

They basically said The country's in a really bad state.

It's gonna be pretty disastrous.

We're gonna have to really, really rescue it.

You're in for a really bumpy ride.

Still managed to disappoint even after that.

Ian

Ian: Um, and I, I think, you know, a lot of people, a lot of eye readers were, were limbing up to say, ugh, typical.

You know what, you're having a go at the labor government.

Are you, what do you want the Tories back?

Which is what people usually say when there's change of government, of private eye.

This time they just said bloody labor, and he thought then he got in yesterday.

Um, the speed of it was incredible, but it was, I mean, it was the suits and the glasses and the immediate, um, freebies, which was sort of absolutely extraordinary.

I mean, if, if you've come in on a wave of people being disillusioned and disappointed on, you know.

Um, PPE equipment, any number of, um, sort of, uh, sleaze stories.

Then the first thing you do, literally the first thing you do is give an enormous gift wrapped cake, um, to the opposition and to the, um, uh, Tory papers to say, you are just as bad.

And even if you aren't just as bad.

'cause the, the amounts were never quite the same.

You know, we haven't got the Baroness moan figure yet.

But I do, we certainly haven't got the money and we're never gonna, yeah.

Um.

But I think that that was amazing.

And then you went, I mean, we know this, you, you went straight into winter Fuel, so doing exactly what the opposition, um, did, which you criticized, and then choosing as a flagship policy, something that's going to make you unpopular.

These, these are not forgiven easily.

Helen

Helen: I mean, I've got a very simple explanation of this.

So Tony Blair likes to quote Lee Quaye y, who's the leader of Singapore, saying basically, if you've got 2% economic growth, everyone's happy.

If it's under 2%, everyone's unhappy.

And we have had, since the financial crisis, basically stagnant wages,

Crowd

Crowd: right?

Helen

Helen: At the same time, we've had an aging population, which means we just to even stand still in terms of both NHS provision and pension provision, just had to find more and more money.

Out of taxes.

And so I think people just feel like things are a grind.

They don't feel like things are on the, the upswing.

Crowd

Crowd: Yeah.

Helen

Helen: Um, and I, and I don't know if it's, it's a lot more complicated than that in that labor came in saying we are gonna get economic growth going.

And people don't feel that.

Yet.

Adam

Adam: I think that's true because I mean, when Blair came in in 1997, it, there was a feeling and they had more of a feeling of purpose and mission than this government have ever had.

But also there was a sort of upswing in the mood of the country, which I think was largely down to economic things, that the economy was kind of improving at that point.

And I remember at that point, John Major and a lot of people from his administration saying, well, actually it was us.

That did that, we kind of built it, it was like, yeah.

But you did do that after crashing it in black Wednesday beforehand, didn't you?

I mean, you did go dang to go up again.

Yeah.

But, um, it, it's a real benefit from, you know, if you are the person that happens to be standing when the, when the economy goes into an upswing, uh, you can take the credit for it.

Helen

Helen: The sympathetic view is that there's a terrible hangover.

From austerity having basically hollowed out public services.

So they need a huge level of investment, like upfront capital investment.

There's a hangover from the so-called Boris wave of immigration in which Boris Johnson, with his typical attention to detail just had no idea what was going on.

There's the fact that, um, you know, after Brexit, the, the goalpost immediately then moved to the convention on human rights, and that small boats have really not been solved as a, as a problem.

And the fact that if you are under 45, you're paying half of your wages out in rent like lots.

That's the situation lots of people are in, and lots of people are in that situation, not just in London and the Southeast, but, but elsewhere of thinking, will I be able to have the kind of life that my parents had?

Um, you know, that and, and, and all of that is the kind of everything, basically British politics just went wrong at the financial crisis and it's never quite dug itself out of that hole.

Andy

Andy: I hope you're all feeling cheerful about this.

Yeah.

Um, but this, it, it's really interesting because what, what you're saying is kind of.

That this is not specifically a labor thing, it's that labor, you know, made some promises about reform.

Lowercase, uh, are, um, in the hope of getting elected, got elected things.

They have not been able to restart 2%, 3% economic growth a year.

Is this just not going to be a, an easily governed country?

Because we will keep on electing people who promise they'll change things.

I, you know, I suspect reform uppercase are, uh, don't have.

The answers to solve all of these like deep structural problems.

Do you think?

Not Andy.

No, I, I'm sorry.

I'm, you know, I'm, I know I'm, I'm a bit edgy on this podcast, but like,

Ian

Ian: I, no, I like the idea that, that, that, um, they changed their mind on tax.

Immediately, I mean, even before they've got it, usually people wait a bit for a uturn.

But, I mean he has years to promise that he's gonna have massive tax cuts and then he said, oh, well maybe we won't now.

Andy

Andy: Right?

But aren't we just becoming less governable as a country because we've got deep seater problems that there is an easy fix for.

Ian

Ian: but you could say we're gonna try and fix them rather than say, what can I think of that everyone will really hate?

Um, and it.

The collapse in Popularities.

I mean, other governments have come in and economically have not done very well, but they don't have these figures, do they?

Adam

Adam: They have made some weird decisions along the way.

I mean, as you say, the winter fuel thing.

I mean that and then trying to revise Pit Bennet, I mean, to come in and go, right.

Who can we unite the country by Really going after old people.

Everyone hates them.

I tell you.

Ask the disabled as well.

We, we'll target them as well.

That will that That'll work.

Yeah.

Helen

Helen: I think if you look at the fact that the, the, this is gonna be a deeply unpopular thing to say in any room, but check the edge

Adam

Adam: of the audience quickly.

Yeah, I know, right?

Helen

Helen: Fellow under 60 brethren.

But I, I do think that actually that the triple lock is, is unsustainable.

And I'm just, I'm sorry.

Uh, you know, working at, I'm sorry, but I think, oh, there we

Ian

Ian: go.

Helen

Helen: And actually, I, I don't have any problem with means testing the winter fuel allowance either.

And the other problem is that realistically, when you're talking about house.

Building and, and housing costs, that is also an age related issue.

And it was the one thing that I hoped would readjust the balance under labor.

You know, the Tories were very much, their core vote was over 65 and they wanted to protect pension incomes and protect, um, the green belt and all that kind of stuff.

And I thought, well, at least labor will come in.

And thus.

Slightly rebalance it towards working age people, but um, as you say, winter, they, they ham fisted winter fuel so badly in the middle of something else.

I think they're just totally terrified of revisiting any of that.

Yes.

And the,

Ian

Ian: the excuse is always offered.

I mean, it was on that and on the inheritance tax that, um, somehow the, um, comms team had failed to communicate.

What was actually happening and you know, I, I shouldn't have to, you know, um, accept winter fuel allowance.

I mean, you know, this very old person.

Um, I think I should get cold.

Um, you should burn copies

Helen

Helen: of the private iann from,

Ian

Ian: well, you never know.

See how sales are.

Um.

But none of that, um, was explained and the means testing wasn't explained.

And the, and the benefit reform was not explained.

And everyone says, well, it's, it's not, it's not the government's fault, it's their advisors.

It's their PR people.

And in the end, you have to stop making excuses for PR people and advisors and senior figures and all these people and just say, well, maybe the leadership is a bit useless.

Yeah.

Um, and they need to, um.

Explain policies, give people a vision, give people a narrative, give people a reason to vote for them, and those are not negligible skills.

Andy

Andy: Yeah, I mean, Stan does have an identity, you know, he is a human rights lawyer.

Like he's, he's, he's a football fan.

I dunno if you know what his dad did for a living, but he comes from a relatively underprivileged background.

He certainly wasn't sent to Dulwich College like Nigel Farage.

You know, there is, there is a story there, but it's one that he's, he's always been slightly resistant and reluctant to tell.

Yeah.

Um, did something amazingly funny happen in the subtitles?

Right.

All right.

We have a.

I thought it got more than it deserved.

Um,

Adam

Adam: but like someone could just clip that and send it into, we have a funny cuttings thing and get a tenor.

So, uh,

Andy

Andy: but you know, Starr hasn't made a load of money flogging gold services like Nigel Farage.

I mean, there there is a, there is a story that is, that he is able to tell but is seeming resistant to doing so.

I do think also they are operating in an extremely hostile media environment, which, which, you know, is new.

No, I mean, well, sorry it's not new for stama or for labor, but it is, you know, it's nuisance.

The election.

Ian

Ian: Yeah.

Andy

Andy: I mean the rear guard action fought by the telegraph, the mail, the express was, was extraordinary.

Helen

Helen: Adam, you write about it a lot and in street of shame, right, that there is a, there is a phx there that the left has never quite been able to recreate in media terms.

Well, what

Adam

Adam: I'm really enjoying at the moment is the bizarre alliances that are going on, particularly, you know, this, this story endless.

Really, really targeting Morgan McSweeney, uh, of off the back of this book, the Fraud by Paul Holden.

Um, and it's been pushed largely by the male and the Telegraph, but Paul Holden is, is about as Corbe Knight as they come.

You know, he's, he, he works with Andrew Feinstein, who was the guy that stood against K Dharma in Hogan and St.

Pancreas.

I mean, this really is amazing case of my, your enemy's enemy is your friend.

These are, these are sort of, not, not natural bedfellows are they, but they're, they're coming at it from, from both, both sides.

.

Does anyone under fully understand the Jonathan Powell and China story?

Helen

Helen: No.

Adam

Adam: Have we got anyone in from GCHQ tonight?

That's good.

No one put their hands up.

You would've been sacked.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I'm a bit lost in the D, but again, this seems like, I mean, of all the things I'm not think of advice to Kenny Bain off, but if you're gonna target starer on one thing.

I would say that he's probably quite hot on the proper process of criminal prosecutions, just as an ex-head of the CPS.

Yeah, that's probably something he kind of knows the details on.

Helen

Helen: Yeah.

Adam

Adam: and he's

Ian

Ian: not very convincing on it.

Adam

Adam: He's really convincing on anything.

That's kind of what we've been talking about the last 10 minutes.

Isn't he genuine?

Helen

Helen: I mean, genuinely, genuinely loves Arsenal, and if you get him to talk to about it, he'd just be like, yeah, I, I really like Arsenal.

It's really great too.

IJ he just cannot convey even emotion that, you know, behind the scenes is genuine.

Ian

Ian: But you, you people want to believe that, you know, Kirstan was absolutely straight.

And, um, you know, his experience as a lawyer means he really does understand the law and support the law.

And then we end up in a situation with this prosecution where the Deputy National Security Advisor is somehow seriously to blame.

But the actual national security advisor, Jonathan Powell, had no idea.

Oh, goodness knows.

I mean, he's not there to supervise his de, you know, his deputy for goodness sake.

Um, and you think, well, why doesn't he know he's the National Security Advisor?

Presumably what we think of China is.

It's his business.

I mean, he's obviously, he's, he's not elected, um, and he's been appointed, but that is still his job.

Helen

Helen: But it's all built on this giant lie, isn't it?

Which is the fact that actually lots of people, if you talk to people in Whitehall and civil service, they do regard China as a huge threat.

They know it's always trying to hack us.

They know it's always trying to send suspiciously attractive ladies to lib down party conference.

I genuinely think that happened.

Um, you know, but

Ian

Ian: okay, they're not that good.

It was the lib down conference.

Yeah.

Helen

Helen: Gotta spread Jeanette wide.

Um, but at the same time, they also know that we are immensely are supply chain.

Andy

Andy: Uh, did come up as

Helen

Helen: Jeanette Wide.

Andy

Andy: Jeanette,

Helen

Helen: that is the name of one of the Chinese spies.

Who?

Yeah.

Come on

Andy

Andy: guys.

There's not, I'm sorry.

I haven't a clue.

Um,

Helen

Helen: anyway, but that's the fundamental hypocrisy is that everybody acknowledges that China is trying to do, not a hot war against us, but certainly hostile actions against.

British business is the British state, but at the same time, we really need them and we'd quite like them, you know, to be on good trade terms with 'em.

So we have to very delicately walk that tightrope and that to me is in all the back and forth, just exposing the fact that the government can't maintain a consistent position on China.

'cause it's like, please don't make us be mean to them.

We like iPhones.

Adam

Adam: The other thing that's really struck me about that case is kind of how low rent the stuff they must have been getting was because it was like awful.

Now we are going to infiltrate Tom Togan hat's office and see what Tommy Tugs is really thinking about and one

Helen

Helen: of the

Adam

Adam: misinformation that we're trying

Helen

Helen: to extract.

Sorry, can I just pause there?

Because every time you've been trying to get the nickname Tommy Tugs to happen,

Adam

Adam: I'm going to

Helen

Helen: get it there and every time has been ruthlessly cut out, but I admire your commitment

Adam

Adam: every fortnight.

No, but one of the pieces of information they were apparently trying to pick up from these, these, these two guys was um, whether Jeremy Hunt was going to go all the way in the conservative leadership contest.

You think just read a newspaper?

I mean,

Helen

Helen: there's pages and pages about this.

Yes.

Why not pick up a fortnightly News magazine?

It's not James Bond

Adam

Adam: versus

Andy

Andy: Blofeld, is it?

No.

So are we, are we just doomed to keep on electing people, being disappointed and then electing more disruptive actors, if I can put it

Adam

Adam: that way?

Basically you're saying, is Nigel gonna win the next election, aren't you

Ian

Ian: Sure?

Adam

Adam: Yeah.

Ian

Ian: And would he disappoint, do you think?

Adam

Adam: No.

I mean,

Ian

Ian: do you think the depth of talent in the reform party would, would, would maybe.

Put on a better performance.

I mean, local councils, it's going well.

Yeah.

I mean, you've, I mean, nearly, well, some of them haven't resigned,

Andy

Andy: but you've had to, you've had to basically hive off a separate bit of the rotten Boroughs page solely for the amazing performances that Reform councilors have been turning in.

Ian

Ian: Yes.

And um, you know, a lot of people say, well, if you give them more publicity, they'll do even better.

Um, and I say, well, but.

Am I not meant to cover the fact that, um, when confronted by, what's your policy on special needs and potholes, it's Stop the boats.

Um, which again, you can sort of make a case, but eventually they've gotta run something and they've gotta run something less badly than the previous lot.

which again, I mean, I think that will be the test.

So are you saying if people vote for reform.

Will we be disappointed?

My guess is yes.

Andy

Andy: now we, we are at a literature festival and private eye has a, a strong literary tradition.

Dating all the way back to 1961.

So I think, uh, it's time to hand over for one of page 90 vols legendary quizzes.

Uh, and Adam, you are going to be running this one, I believe, the grand private eye literary quiz.

Adam

Adam: Yes, indeed.

So.

Which poet Laureate began a private eye column, which is still running to this day.

Andy

Andy: I'll just have a wrong guest For a bit of sport, I'll say Robert Sie in 1819.

Very

Helen

Helen: nice.

Very nice.

Andy

Andy: Yep.

Dryden,

Ian

Ian: uh, I remember him in the office.

Um, that's not true.

It was John Beman who started the um, Pelosi column.

Adam

Adam: Sorry, I'm just enjoying the fact Kimmy Badden office was saying last week.

Oh, English agrees.

They're no use for anything.

They are brilliant for showing off the things you remember of 20 years later.

It was John Beman, the Nooks and Corners column.

Yes, indeed.

The architecture column, which is still going.

Ian

Ian: Yes.

And he handed over to the very brilliant Gavin Stamp, it's now run by, um, Jane McKenzie.

Yes,

Adam

Adam: indeed.

Ian

Ian: And, it's almost a sort of a cranny in the magazine itself.

some people think it's the best thing in, in the magazine.

I absolutely love it.

Some people say, oh, why you always wanging on about buildings that are falling down?

and the answer is because it'd be nice if they didn't.

Um, and also that they weren't set on fire.

uh, no, no, no.

Go on fire.

Go on the phrase Fire.

Yes,

Adam

Adam: strangely went on fire.

My

Helen

Helen: highly insured pub has gone on fire.

Andy

Andy: Yeah, that page is, it's a funny mix of charming heritage and blatant Aon crook.

Yeah, it's a really odd mix.

Crooks and nooks.

Helen

Helen: Look, the people from the Crooked House Pub have, are they, aren't they gonna have to put that back to the way it was before it went?

Is very funny.

Fire.

Adam

Adam: Very, they have, yes.

And there's also a pub in London where they did that.

They, they, they had to put it back exactly with the 1920s frontage and all the tiling and everything.

One of those victories for Jane and the Nooks and Corners column.

Absolutely right.

Question number two from 19.

77 to 1979, the eye carried very unlikely.

This a gardening column written on the pseudonym of Rose Blight.

But who was the real author?

Helen, I'm gonna throw that one in your direction.

Helen

Helen: I've got this.

My brain is delivering like Julian Barnes or someone like that.

Ian

Ian: No, no.

Noian.

Oh, you

Helen

Helen: think, uh, five James, Jermaine Gr Jermaine Greer.

J

Adam

Adam: Jermaine Jermaine Greer Indeed.

Yes.

Seven years after the female Euch.

That was what she was doing.

Uh, the Revolting Garden, uh, it was called, uh, she was recruited by Richard Ingrams after they appeared on the news quiz together.

Uh, and God, that was must, must a big point that.

She resigned after he wound her up by, uh, threatening to turn it into a cooking column.

Didn't go down so well.

She's gone off.

Did he basically go and make

Helen

Helen: me a sandwich?

Jermaine Greer?

Yes.

Pretty much

Adam

Adam: that, yeah.

I see where that trolling happened.

Yeah.

So she

Andy

Andy: wrote, she wrote a gardening sort of like gardening.

What was the gardening element?

It was called the

Adam

Adam: Revolting Garden.

I mean, basically it was, it was saying, um, tear everything out of your garden and concrete over it.

So it wasn't the traditional gardening column.

But she's

Helen

Helen: retired to run a, a wood in Australia, so right.

Quite

Andy

Andy: on brand.

Leave your bush spray concrete over it.

Helen

Helen: Andy, that's gonna be on the subtitles if you're not careful.

Andy

Andy: No.

There we go.

Got away

Ian

Ian: without it.

Helen

Helen: Concrete over your bush.

That said,

Ian

Ian: thank you everyone.

I think I should be employing the subtitle, right?

Or is this, is this just ai?

Crowd

Crowd: Yeah.

Ian

Ian: Yeah.

Adam

Adam: I can't spell AI properly, so possibly not

Crowd

Crowd: boy has done,

Adam

Adam: see, that's learning, that's machine learning.

That is question number three.

The I resident obituary, EJ Thib went on tour in the 1970s in the person of long serving.

I joke writer Barry Fantoni, who sadly died earlier this year.

Uh, which real poet did he share the bill with?

Larkin, I can see it now.

Helen

Helen: Lads on tour.

LA's on, they're shackles them twosome free.

Adam

Adam: Larkin

Helen

Helen: Simon Armitage.

Ian

Ian: No.

Was it his beat poets?

Was it Horrowitz?

It wasn't

Adam

Adam: Horrowitz, but you're in the right area.

Alan Ginsburg.

Ginsburg.

Not that would've been interesting in the travel lodge in Chippenham.

Okay, we're just naming poets now, shall I tell you?

Yeah.

John was Roger McGough presidential Poetry please.

And beat poet and member of the Scaffold.

Yes.

Okay.

SU's Corner, which novelist on the i's 50th birthday in 2011 was Crowned Britain's biggest sued with, at that time a record.

41 entries, Eni SU's Corner, and an entire corner also devoted to himself alone in 1996.

Ian

Ian: I was gonna say Jeffrey Chard.

But then pseudo intellectual's not really his thing.

Pseudo does John Benjamin wanna

Helen

Helen: jump in on this one at all?

Any ideas?

Jay McInerney featured a lot.

Oh, will Self.

That's a good guest.

Thank you.

Adam

Adam: Well done.

Yes, will sell indeed this audience.

Brilliant.

Fantastic.

Have you ever re rejected a suit for the corner 'cause you felt it was too profound and moving?

Ian?

Um.

No

Ian

Ian: moving on.

No, that's uh, that's what I was just thinking.

I think I did reject when I was a student will self's cartoons Really?

Which he tried to get into.

so it's a student magazine.

I was then running and I feel somehow he's always resented that,

Helen

Helen: yes, it's your fault.

He became a novelist

Adam

Adam: if you just encouraged.

He could have been just drawing cartoons for us all this time.

Yeah.

Instead went off and became a sued.

Yep.

Another one missed.

Ian

Ian: Uh,

Adam

Adam: uh, best known for her long running romantic series, air of Sorrows, charting the Love Life of our present.

Monarch Dame Sylvie Cris First work published in the Eye, charted another Royal Romance.

Who's and which was it called?

What was it called?

Ian

Ian: It was called Love in the Saddle.

Very good.

And it was about Princess Anne.

Adam

Adam: Princess Anne and Captain Mark Phillips.

Yes.

Very good indeed.

Yeah.

Ian

Ian: Um, again, this was Barry Fanna who came up with this stuff.

, they did these.

Accounts of the royal family as though they were bad romantic novels, which is a very good approach.

and for years it was Dame Sylvie Krinn, and now it's Dame Head of Shoulders, who's, um, who's taken on the responsibility of covering.

she now does the King of Troubles.

and they, they're stories about Prince Charles, about Queen Camilla, about his.

Der Barry camp.

Um, so Alan Fitz tightly who, um, is, is the, the last of the Fitz, tightly as, as it as it happens.

Um, who, uh, who develops this rich home life?

Uh, his friend, the Vice Admiral and he big Abba fans, um, uh, try and direct, the Monarch into, um.

Uh, ways of seeing the world that are less gloomy.

and it features obviously Prince Harry and Meghan and, and William and the others.

And it, it's, it, it's a way of, of unserious doing the royal family, which I, I absolutely love.

I mean, uh, writing Sylvie CRI is incredibly easy 'cause it's just, I'm sure you could all do it.

Don't, don't, don't let on, um, uh, because, Royal correspondence are so serious.

they interpret pictures and small details and tiny bits of, gossip and take it very, very earnestly.

And it's, it's a pleasure to think.

It's probably, probably not what this is about.

Mm.

yeah, the first one was Princess Anne.

what was the one after that?

Adam

Adam: I'm looking.

Oh, there were all sorts.

Andre Previn, Anna Ford, Esther Ranson, I mean, we mustn't forget.

Um, never too old either.

The Rupert Murdoch story.

Ian

Ian: Yes.

Adam

Adam: Very, very long running.

How's, is he?

Ian

Ian: Yes.

Um, it is just funny the idea of him going on and on.

Um, and.

his latest wife is a, is a sort of life scientist and biologist who's looking for eternal life.

Um, I'm not quite sure that's what her research says, but I think that's what it's all about.

and because succession.

Which, um, I'm sure you watched, was so, um, strongly linked, um, to keep the lawyers happy, um, to Rupert's own life.

We decided it would be funny if Rupert had no idea that it wasn't his own life.

So when he lists his children, it's, it's Lachlan, it's Liz, uh, it's Kendall Shiv, Kendall Shiv, um, and Tom.

So, um.

Again, it's a, a way of not taking seriously, things that the papers take very, very seriously.

, And the Murdoch trial, um, in which he tried to, , essentially disown half of his, well not half of his children, most of his children bar one 'cause they weren't right wing enough, um, to take over the company.

You'd find difficult that to make up.

Um, and then that failed.

So he's paid everyone off.

and yet he's still

Adam

Adam: there.

And we, as I, I keep saying his mum lived to 106, so he is got a good decade and a couple of wives left in him, me out I think.

Ian

Ian: But I did have a sort of Trump moment of, of when he decided to take on Trump.

You suddenly thought, well, God, isn't Murdoch great?

Adam

Adam: This is what I mean about your enemy's enemy being your friend, isn't it?

Unlikely Alliance?

Will you, um, will you miss him?

It.

Well, he'll outlive me.

One final literary question, Ian.

Um, we've talked about, uh, Dame Seal, we've talked about three.

Um, is there any sort of book, uh, in which perhaps some sort of yearly collection possibly available in all good bookshops and in a signing tent directly after this event?

Uh, in which people could read some examples of this, this magnificent literature?

Oh, you've got me

Ian

Ian: there.

Um, oh yes.

I think I do know what it is.

It's, um, it's the private DiAnn, hey, um, which, uh, is a selection of all the best jokes of the year.

it won't surprise you that K Stama is on the cover.

Charming look alike, mean alike with the figure of sadness.

Um, and, um, it's, uh, yeah, roundup of, of the years jokes.

Everything's in there.

And it's all written by, uh, private ai, um, which is, uh, a new technology that we've developed, uh, that involves human beings.

meeting together in rooms and writing.

it's probably won't catch on and it may be a bit late.

it has been a, a pretty crazy year, trying to keep up with the news cycle, partly 'cause Trump.

Draws, um, the atmosphere out of old news and makes it about himself, but partly because there's just been so much, um, going on elsewhere.

And so it's got photo bubbles, it's got, um, thread pieces.

It's got my favorite joke on the cover.

Meghan launches a Netflix cookery show.

Lovely picture voice off saying, what are you making?

And she's saying, money.

Adam

Adam: And it's even got the joke by Andy that a man was arrested for holding at a, a demonstration.

So, um, mind how you go with your copies?

Yeah.

Um, yes.

Got any more, Andy?

That

Andy

Andy: can get our audience in jail for the evening.

I'm not trying to get anyone arrested.

Well, actually I suppose I am, but not, not read us.

Um, we should, we should come to the questions from the audience because we've had loads in, um, so, let's start with, uh, one from Jasper, noting the demographic of the audience here tonight.

Are you confident that you are growing your younger audience to ensure the magazine's long-term future?

There's one there.

I can see them.

It's all down to you, sir.

Yeah.

Ian

Ian: Well, as, as I always say, um, I quote the example of, um, In communist Russia, Stalin going in, uh, to a church which is full of old people.

And he said, ha ha, what will you do when the old people die?

And the priest said, there will be more old people.

Um, and when people want to come to what the eye has to offer, they're very welcome.

Andy

Andy: And also the readership are, are younger than you would expect, I think.

Andy.

That's

Adam

Adam: just that you are getting older.

Oh

Andy

Andy: no.

Don't it to seem really old when you first joined, didn't.

Right.

Let's have, let's have a, a younger.

Brightly a question.

This one comes from Clive Field, 76 years have you considered increasing the font size of your publication?

Crowd

Crowd: No.

Andy

Andy: Thank you, Clive.

I think we, we have done Al, we have done already, haven't we?

Ian

Ian: And the answer to this is we've done the font size twice, we've increased it.

Um, we've also, I hope you've noticed, run a series of ads for, um, magnifying glasses, reading lights, Specsavers, so the, the answer is.

We do try and make it readable, but I think there is partly people find, as all the surveys show just reading more difficult.

um, but I don't think on the whole, our readers do.

And if we, if we say, look, there's, there's a whole page of type here.

You might have to read it.

I don't think they're gonna be scared.

And certainly not at the Cheltenham Literary Festival.

Yeah.

Um, I do hope, you know, the attention span will be more than, more than 800 words.

Well,

Andy

Andy: can we come on then too?

I really like this question.

Uh, no name from this question.

How does private eye remain relevant in a post-truth world where many get news from TikTok and similar non-New outlets?

Is that.

Something you consider, something you worry about?

What?

TikTok?

Yeah.

Ian

Ian: Yeah.

I just spent a lot of time on there.

Adam

Adam: there is a weird function that the is has kind of taken on in that has become a slight correction center.

I mean, certainly the street of shame pages are just for pointing out what bollocks that story was in the Telegraph last week and that one in the mail and what the story really is behind that.

Yeah.

So there is a.

It's an attempt to become kind of a reliable

Ian

Ian: source

Adam

Adam: of

Ian

Ian: news at the end of it, isn't it?

And I think that is in itself a service.

It's just we run an awful lot about, um, uh, social media and AB about how, um, Twitter works and about AI works and.

I mean, I love the story.

Um, in the last issue of, of, um, the video that Genrich had made, sort of wandering around, um, supposedly in Hansworth where he wasn't, um, saying, I can't see a white face.

And you look at the video and they, they're behind him.

There's three people over there.

Helen

Helen: There's a lot of that isn't there about saying you have to do video, you have to do this, they have to do that.

You have to be on social media.

And actually I think about 10 years ago, people kind of said, I can't believe the eye not going full bore onto this internet thing.

We've always heard so much about.

No, a lot

Adam

Adam: of people are saying that to crack young people, you have to start doing podcasts and things, aren't they?

I mean, mad.

Helen

Helen: But I think that actually weirdly, the internet is now a kind of, it's like tam's water have taken it over, basically.

Right?

Yeah.

Crowd

Crowd: It's just, oh

Helen

Helen: shit.

Andy

Andy: Superb.

Helen

Helen: No, but it's true.

Whereas you, if you open up private eye, then there is, that has been written by actual journalists and, and checked and subbed by other actual journalists and you know, most of it, you could probably be fairly assured, is actually not just.

Some hallucination of some AI bar and, and that's what I think is a slightly, in a way, I also think we're heading for this kind of post-apocalyptic future where people can't pass around copies of sort of underground magazines to each other.

'cause it'll be the only kind of place where you can actually find things that have.

Interesting and true.

Stop edited.

Yeah, stop edited.

Yeah.

We

Adam

Adam: were discussing in the office last week when we were putting the pages together, weren't we?

And we're saying, what, what would, how could we kind of like ape being more like a newspaper website now?

And we thought big post-it notes kind of like all over the pages with really sticky glue on that you really have to kind of pull off to actually get it.

Anything you want us.

See that give much your money.

The, the, the Marrow website, um, uh, experience.

Helen

Helen: Yeah.

You turn the page and every, so the page just goes blank and reloads.

Yeah.

That would be a good experience.

We should bring to the magazines.

My magazines crashed.

Andy

Andy: Right.

We're entering entry time.

So I'm gonna, I'm gonna try and whip through a few more.

Um, if, and it is a big, if as a panel, you were elected as the next government.

What do we mean big?

If Yes, um, what would be your first acts to improve our country?

Resign.

Great.

Right on we go.

Uh, how can we express support for Palestine without being called anti-Semitic?

actually someone, someone did get recently arrested for a, uh, they had a T-shirt that said plaster scene action.

And it was about,

Helen

Helen: was it morph?

Was it little morph?

It was morph.

It was a pro

Andy

Andy: morph thing.

Yeah.

They were briefly, they were briefly detained and then the police officer came over and said, I'm incredibly embarrassed and you are free to go.

Ian

Ian: I, yes, I mean, I think being.

Being slightly careful about the wording.

If you are an Optim student at the beginning of your life, probably not a good idea to be filmed.

Chanting about putting people in the ground, put design in

Helen

Helen: the ground.

Yeah.

I think that's the, yeah.

When they're

Ian

Ian: trying to get people outta the ground.

I mean, just a certain amount of, of care.

Yeah.

Andy

Andy: Uh, what intractable problem would you advise Farage to address in order to win his Nobel Peace Prize?

When he inevitably becomes our glorious leader?

Uh, the crypto?

Yeah.

Well, we know he's got a direct line to Russia, so maybe he'll be able to sort something out over there.

Helen

Helen: start him small on one of those kind of lay landi disputes you get in the daily mail, work up to something bigger.

Andy

Andy: Brilliant.

Um, oh, this is, how do you choose your contributors and do you get MI five to vet them?

Helen

Helen: Yes.

Yes, I've heard that.

Ian

Ian: We've all had the tap on the shoulder.

Um, yeah, no, I, we don't on the whole though, I mean, I have had some ex experience with the security forces.

I dunno if you remember, um, any of you when, uh, the plans for Desert Storm, um, were stolen.

They were left in a Volvo, um, by a civil servant outside the showroom.

And, uh, I had the admiral who was in charge of the de notice committee rang me up.

I mean, this is security at a very high level.

And he said to me, is that Ian?

His Lo?

I said, yeah.

And he said, you know these plans for Desert Storm?

I said, yeah.

And he said, you haven't got 'em.

Old boy have you.

Right.

We're gonna stop there.

Thank you so.

Andy

Andy: So

Ian

Ian: much for coming.

Andy

Andy: Thank you for being here.

Thank we.

Hope we've enjoyed the evening.

Ladies, give it up for the one team from.

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