Podcasts about freddos

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Best podcasts about freddos

Latest podcast episodes about freddos

The Scarf Bergara Wore
S11 E18: Jaffa Cakes and Freddos

The Scarf Bergara Wore

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 61:43


Jimmy steps in for Russ and Waggie for this week's episode with Andy as second chair and regular fan guest Gaz Eccleston joining to make sure everything doesn't go to crap. We talk Lincoln, Wycombe, B-Team game, Player of the Month, hopes and dreams for the playoffs and not forgetting Get in't Rezzers.Sign up to get ad free and exclusive special guest podcasts, a monthly giveaway plus first dibs on live events with former players (no extra cost!). Not only that, you'll be supporting the podcast and helping us maintain equipment and the services we need to run the pod.Join our Patreon membership: JOIN HERE Subscribe to our Patreon to get exclusive episodes! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Lita Doolan's Audio Books
Navigating the £10 Christmas Bonus: Spending Ideas and Reflections

Lita Doolan's Audio Books

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 3:15 Transcription Available


Welcome to this special episode discussing the £10 Christmas bonus given to some benefits recipients. With its value unchanged since 1972, many share curious and humorous ideas on how they might spend or save this amount. From purchasing nostalgic treats like Freddos and Scratch cards to discussing more practical uses such as paying off overdrafts or buying everyday essentials, this episode explores a range of perspectives and options. Listeners are taken on a journey through diverse opinions and see how this small bonus can make a big difference—or simply bring a smile. Whether you choose to donate, indulge in small luxuries, or plan for necessities, this episode serves as a reminder of personal choice and joy in spending.

Kirsty and Briony's Comfort Zone

In the early days of the internet Briony dreamed of becoming a Channel 4 forum mod, while Kirsty remembers Freddos being 10p! Music courtesy of Epidemic Sound Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Off Air... with Jane and Fi
Abundant paraphernalia on the bed (with Cathy Newman)

Off Air... with Jane and Fi

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2024 46:30


Welcome to this VERY special episode of Off Air... It's Fi's birthday! Woo! Sadly, Barbara the cat didn't get the memo and has been leaving Fi undesirable gifts around the house... Jane and Fi also discuss political dandruff, designer vaginas and stale Freddos. Plus, they're joined by Times Radio and Channel 4 News presenter Cathy Newman to discuss her latest book 'The Ladder'. If you want to contact the show to ask a question and get involved in the conversation then please email us: janeandfi@times.radio Follow us on Instagram! @janeandfiAssistant Producer: Eve SalusburyTimes Radio Producer: Rosie Cutler Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Fantasy Fitba Pod
Episode 61: Dens Spark ⚡️

Fantasy Fitba Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 66:20


It's 2024, it's our 4th year, and it's time for our 1st pod of the New Year. We look ahead at the Scottish Cup this weekend and a few possible upsets on the horizon, celebrate Curtis Main's triumphant return to Scottish football (closely followed by Greg Stewart LIVE ON AIR), and give you our team of the season...so far. Lots and lots to cover, including the ever inflating price of Freddos. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Apes on Tape
Forever Young - how to keep your inner child alive

Apes on Tape

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2023 92:39


When a friend of Freddos drops in after a decade of not seeing each other, it offers the perfect opportunity to capture a wonderful conversation about what it is to stay young at heart. Ever wondered what revelations come from a mushroom ceremony? We share our insights from a recent one we embarked on just before recording.  We even delve into self-love and the secrets to living a happier life. There's something for everyone in this heartfelt and candid conversation as we reminisce about favourite memories, from our first psychedelic adventure together, to discussing our personal struggles and how sharing can bring humour and lightness to our challenges. Plus, we touch on the art of navigating intrusive questions and finding agency in the face of adversity. This one is not to be missed! Whether you're a longtime listener or new to our podcast, we're confident that you'll find something valuable in this episode. We love to hear from you, send us your thoughts and feedback to apesontape.chat@gmail.com Until next time, love yourselves and each other ❤️ ✌️ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/apesontape/message

Drama School Dropout
Ep 160. Osian Morgan

Drama School Dropout

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 59:28


This week on Drama School Dropout I am joined by the amazing, Osian Morgan. We chat about Waterloo Road, Pobol y Cwm, starting acting professionally at sixteen, the price of Freddos, reboots, keeping secrets, stunts, going from football to acting, auditioning for Les Mis, being released from football, streamlining education, hiding in the roof of a classroom, micro directing, terrible adlibs, people being arseholes in auditions, dicks hanging out and side hustles. Submit your story for Stage Right or Stage Shite: https://forms.gle/1p296t4Uu1F1XVvN9 Host: Ingram Noble Guest: Osian Morgan Producers: Heather Spiden & Ingram Noble Links: Ingram's Instagram & Twitter: @ingramnoble Osian's Instagram: @osian.hw.morgan This Is Where We Get Off Tour Tickets: www.thisiswherewegetoff.co.uk Patreon: www.patreon.com/dramaschooldropout

Aah!fter Horror
S02 E05 - Chin to Nose (The Descent)

Aah!fter Horror

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2023 96:14


This week the Boys speak openly about Mr Blobby; kissing upside down, along with the price of Freddos. "The Descent," directed by Neil Marshall and released in 2005, is a harrowing and claustrophobic horror film that plunges viewers into a nightmarish underground world. The story follows a group of adventurous women who embark on a caving expedition in the Appalachian Mountains. As they descend into the uncharted depths of the Earth, they become trapped and soon discover they are not alone. The film skillfully combines elements of survival horror with supernatural terror as the group encounters a subterranean race of humanoid creatures who have evolved in the darkness. "The Descent" is lauded for its relentless tension, visceral scares, and strong female characters who must confront their fears and fight for their lives in an unimaginable nightmare. What sets "The Descent" apart is its expertly crafted atmosphere of dread. The cave setting creates an intense feeling of claustrophobia and isolation, amplifying the fear of the unknown that lurks in the darkness. As the group of friends navigates treacherous tunnels and faces the horrors that dwell within, the film explores themes of trust, friendship, and the primal instinct to survive. The creatures themselves, with their grotesque appearance and predatory behavior, add an element of visceral horror that lingers long after the credits roll. "The Descent" is a gripping and unforgettable journey into the depths of fear, earning its place as a modern classic in the horror genre. Instagram: @aahfterhorrorpodcastTwitter: @aahfterhorrorFacebook: aahfterhorrorpodcastEmail: aafterhorrorpod@outlook.com

Agony Rants
94: Calpol and Freddos

Agony Rants

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2023 56:16


Gearoid is hungover and forgot there was an Agony Rants recording but Niamh is her usual professional self. She has arrived on time and completely unprepared. They chat about how difficult it is to get sleep and of course the sad death of Sinead O'Connor. In the mailbag they have a follow up from Greg who's boyfriend wants to move to America and they help a couple who have a friend who is dating a prick. If you would like to support the show you can subscribe to HeadStuff+. You can also leave us a lovely review or rating on Spotify or Apple Music. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Working Hard, Hardly Working
Ep.41 Know Nothing About The Economy? This Episode's For You.

Working Hard, Hardly Working

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 49:49


Rupal Patel is a senior economist at the Bank of England and co-author of the best-selling pop-economics book Can't We Just Print More Money, the Bank of England's first book in its over 325 year history. Today, Rupal advises governors at the Bank of England on their policy decisions and is passionate about improving economic literacy amongst young women.Rupal makes sure there is no stupid question left unanswered, from what actually is money, why aren't Freddos 10p anymore to why shouldn't I hoard all my money under the mattress? Rupal is on a mission to make economics more accessible, giving us a fully comprehensive crash course.- how Rupal became Senior Economist at the Bank of England- how are the governors of the Bank of England appointed?- why should we know about economics?- what actually is money?- why shouldn't I hoard my money under the mattress?- does my money actually exist in the bank?- what stops a bank losing all its money?- what you need to know about cryptocurrency- why should we care we could go into a recession? - how should I prepare for a recession?- what jobs are at risk in a recession?- why do we need to grow our economy?- why can't we just print more money?- how do we have a cost of living crisis?- what is cryptocurrency?- why does my house fluctuate in price?- what resources can I use to be in the know about the economy?- how do you get a pay rise?- what is a mortgage?- what are interest rates and how do they affect us?- what is the stock market? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Brand Social Podcast
28. Tristan | Bailey's Bespoke

The Brand Social Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2023 117:42


One hundred British pence. The common pound coin.A quid.There's not much you can do or buy for a quid now.You could rent a shopping trolley for a bit, pay for an hour's parking, or maybe get a cuppa somewhere.But do you think you could build a brand, a business, and a new lifestyle for the equivalent cost of four Freddos?The answer to this question, surprisingly is yes, but you'll have to tune in to this week's episode to find out how Tristan (and his business partner Peter) did it.In this episode we speak to one half (Tristan) of Bailey's Bespoke, the brand that specialises in high quality handcrafted goods, and shows it off with spectacular videography.We discuss humble beginnings, learning new skills, and working while living the ‘vanlife'.Listen in all the usual places, and maybe bring a tape measure so you can fully appreciate the magnitude of Tristan's accidental leather over-order. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Hearts of Oak Podcast
Callum - англичанин в России / An Englishman in Russia

Hearts of Oak Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 63:55 Transcription Available


This episode we welcome Callum back to Hearts of Oak as he joins us to discuss his latest trip. First it was an Afghanistan vacation, then a cheeky weekend in Serbia and now his recent sabbatical takes him to Russia! He is best known for being the co-host on the hugely popular Lotus Eaters Podcast and is now carving out a 'dark tourism' niche for himself by showing us these countries in a way we have never seen before. His report on his latest trip to Russia, including the Donbass region is a must see, absolutely fascinating viewing. The media tell us one story. Callum is showing the other side. Watch the documentaries of his adventures... Russia: https://youtu.be/B0i0zbuCIIM Afghanistan: https://youtu.be/2oMW5pL9Z4w Serbia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0Q_Tp0IVzc&t=3s Our previous interview with him... Callum - رجل إنجليزي في كابول / An Englishman in Kabul  https://www.podbean.com/pu/pbblog-vti5d-b2f6e6  Connect with Callum at... GETTR https://gettr.com/user/Callum TWITTER https://twitter.com/AkkadSecretary?s=20&t=jM2HdR0iXmda0vJHwrTg-w YOUTUBE https://www.youtube.com/@BritannicaPolitica SUBSCRIBESTAR https://www.subscribestar.com/callum LOTUSEATERS https://www.lotuseaters.com/ Interview broadcast live 16.2.23 *Special thanks to Bosch Fawstin for recording our intro/outro on this podcast. Check out his art https://theboschfawstinstore.blogspot.com/ and follow him on GETTR https://gettr.com/user/BoschFawstin To sign up for our weekly email, find our social media, podcasts, video and livestreaming platforms... https://heartsofoak.org/connect/ Please like, subscribe and share! [0:22] Callum, it is great to have you back with us once again.   Oh hello, thank you for having me again. Not at all. You go to these weird and wonderful places in the world, so it's always good to get a completely different viewpoint. So thanks for coming on and obviously the links to not only this trip but all the other ones are in the description. So people can just click and go to your Britannica, Politica YouTube, which actually gave me it gives me so many ads. So it's obviously popular if it's throwing up so many ads   I don't think YouTube's found out yet. I think they're just doing our travel vlog, right? Nothing unusual there. [1:03] I thoroughly enjoyed it but to our viewers obviously you've done, This is your third one, isn't it? because you were on talking about your Afghan trip and then you did a little sneaky week ender in Serbia. And then this is number three. Yeah. In the series.   I'm trying to go to Chitels for fun. So we did Afghanistan, which thanks to Miles. When we went to Serbia, I mean, the main thing there wasn't, I mean, it was Serbian culture and whatnot, but also we went to go meet the migrants. So loads of Afghans and whatnot, they come up through Serbia. One of the main routes because they're not in the EU to then get into the EU via Hungary or Croatia and then to the rest of where we are. So we went and interviewed those guys and those guys are just not great. I'll be honest. I was not filled with confidence meeting those people because they have no interest in us. They have no interest in anything that is with the West. It's literally just gibs. They're not in danger in the slightest. So whatever. There's that. So go check that video out. And the most recent one was I decided I'd go to New Russia. [2:12] So not only old Russia, as we know it, the Russian Federation, but the new provinces. So I went down to Luhansk and saw what life was like there at the moment. Well, let's get into all this. This is an Englishman in Russia and not some of your others. Again, the links for those documentaries there in the description. But I guess Russia is easier to get into than Afghanistan, but maybe more difficult than Serbia, so its kind of in the middle. [2:41] I mean, what do you define by more difficult, I suppose?   Well, you did. It's probably slightly more difficult. Maybe there aren't as big a range of flights and then you still have to go and pay for your visa. So, I mean, you just go to Serbia. I've been to Serbia quite a few times and you can drive there. So it's actually kind of more accessible, I guess. [3:04] But you got there, your hotel. I love the way you... What was it? Big ass bed. Very nice. Big ass TV. Very nice. Carpet. Very nice. I love the surprise to see carpet. But yeah, it was a decent hotel.   It was a very nice carpet. I'll be honest. I wouldn't have mentioned it if it was. I was like, oh, it's great. Like just to have such a high quality, who cares, carpet, right? You just leave it, you forget it for 10 years, turns into a piece of crap. No one ever replaces it. No, this has been replaced recently by the feel of it. But the getting into part, when I went to Afghanistan, you pay for the visa, you pay for the flight, whatever it was. I think it was, what was it? 30 hours or something of flights. So that was pain. But going through security, you turn up, fill in some form, no one reads it, no one interviews you. What are you going to do? Make the place worse? Good luck. But Russia right now, of course, they're taking their security extremely, extremely seriously. For the understandable reason. So I got taken to a separate room after my passport just failed to scan. [4:16] Okay, they take the passport off you. You're then looking around and you notice that the only people with you are a bunch of people from like Egypt and then some Ukrainians. That's gonna be fun. They then move you to another room where you just get told to sit and wait. How long? [4:34] Four hours later. I've been here for four hours. What's going on? Wait. Thanks. Cool. Everyone around you by that point. The Ukrainians have left. They're fine. You're still there with all the Egyptians. And then eventually you get dragged into a third room where you just have to get, I don't know if the word is interrogated, but they want to know everything about your life. And a mate of mine who's also British, who was only visiting Russia, not the new regions, he had the same experience. So apparently this is for, if not EU citizens, at least all UK citizens, which is you get enhanced security, which is they check your phone, they check what you got in your bag, They ask you what you're doing, who you know, they call them up, ask them why the hell you're here, they want to know where your parents live, the whole shebang. [5:20] So yeah, I mean, that's worse than the Taliban, but you know, it's understandable. Taliban is up there. Hey, I'm sorry, DJ Q says Zelensky green question mark. So is that a Zelensky t-shirt you have?   No, I got this before him. He's stealing my look, if anything. Victoria Willing there says, Mcduck is tasty. We'll get on to that in a bit. But one of the big things obviously is cash. So you were showing your hoards of cash on your desk when you got to the hotel. Obviously cash is the only way. I mean, tell us what that was like. [6:00] Yeah. So for the Russians, people seem to think, so I had all the cash and the people thought that everyone just uses cash there. No. As soon as we kicked them off the payment system in the West, they've just logged onto a new one. [6:13] British, it all works, it's fine. And everything they pay with this card, I saw very few people carrying cash. The only people that affects are us. So when we turn up as foreigners, we have to bring piles of cash now because you won't have a card that works. And if you think, oh, we'll just open a Russian bank, put money in there and then use a card. Yeah, you can, but it's not the easiest thing in the world. And also, I don't know, do you really want to go through that rigmarole. It's easy just to carry the cash. So yeah, if you're going to go, definitely take US dollars. That's the best thing. The other thing is euros. I tried some British pounds. No bank in all of Moscow would accept my British pounds. So I tried like five.   What was it like? I remember when I was living in Bulgaria and I could open up a bank account and it had to be US dollar. So whenever you went to get money, you'd queue up, the 20 years ago at the end of ATO, you'd queue up, you'd eventually get your dollars, you'd join another queue, and then you'd get, that would give you a slip to exchange it into lever. And then you join the third queue, and that would give you lever as about 45 minutes. But how do you just go in and you had to show ID and exchange your money? You don't even need ID. You just turn up to an exchange place, as much dollars, um, they'll give you whatever. I think if you did a high enough amount. [7:37] So if you did like a couple of grand or something like that in one go, maybe a grand, they'd ask you for ID and documentation, but if you do like a few hundred here and there, no one cares. So it's, it's very relaxed.   Or if only we were like that. And what, so you, yeah, you got there, you, You checked it. The hotel was an impressive hotel. I mean, the lobby was huge. [7:58] Yeah, it's an old Stalinist building. I think Stalin used to have dignitaries stay there. [8:03] Beautiful building from the outside as well. If people want to look it up, Hotel Hilton, Leningradskaja. Really old. They actually have a video playing in the lobby of all the different people who have stayed there and Soviet propaganda about how great it is, which is really weird. But whatever. One way of advertising your hotel, propaganda films. I think it was number 50 out of like 750. I guess it wasn't packed full of foreigners. [8:30] It was. I didn't see a single Russian person staying though. There was some Brazilian journalist I met on the last day. He was really nice. What was weird there is he was also, because we're sort of set up in this mindset of the West right now, at least generally, you know, we're combating Russia and Russia's bad and the West is good and we're helping, whatever, like your thing, right? But when you speak to someone from Brazil or the world that's just away from this dichotomy, it just didn't give a crap. I was talking to him, he was like, yeah, I just don't care. I'm just, here to cover a story about this, that or the other Russian-Brazilian trade relations. But when, it came to the conflict, he was just like, who wins, wins. Not interested. So when you met anyone in that hotel that seemed to be that position. I didn't find any Westerners. Quite refreshing. So the first thing was going to get food. I loved it. You went to McDonald's via an off license. So I'm off to McDonald's the next thing you are looking at vodka. So you seem to be more interested in getting your vodka fitting in Russia than getting your Big Mac. [9:42] Yeah, well the vodka is two euros. Sorry, two dollars, not two euros. A bottle. You know how you get to check out in this country and you'll see a bunch of confectionary? They just have crates of different kinds of vodka, all for two bucks. So if you're just popping home, why not get a bottle while you're driving? I don't know. [9:58] It works. I mean, I don't know if it works, but it's how they live. But they do survive on vodka. The Balkans survive on brandy and I guess Russians on vodka. But tell us about food. Whenever you did get food, it was Subway. That's not really Russian cuisine, is it? [10:19] No, I get criticised in a few comments. Like in Afghanistan, people were like, why didn't you eat Afghan food? I do. It's just not very interesting, I didn't find, when looking through the footage. It was me staring at a bunch of borscht or pilemi, which is like pierogis. But I don't know. It's all nice. I don't really have anything insightful to say about it other than it's nice. So it just seems like a bit of a waste of time because you don't know what it is. You don't have the flavour in your mouth. Right? But if I could tell you about their version of Subway or McDonald's, you know what that tastes like. You've got a reference point. So I just thought it was a bit more interesting. But some people say in the chat, Freddos are a safe bet. They always are. Still looking for that KitKat. Did you bring any? No, I'm not. Did you bring those? It was KitKats. I think it was Cadbury buttons. The Caramel ones and the Plain ones and some other stuff I gave away. I only filmed the buttons. I'm actually thinking of reaching out. I mentioned that I want to get sponsored by Cadbury. Why not? It'll be funny as hell for them. They've got nothing going on. You want to go to the middle of nowhere and sell Cadbury to random village people? Sure.   On this trip, I actually saw you eating more than I've ever seen you eat in my whole life. I think every next clip was you eating somewhere. [11:40] Hey, boys go eat.   Another thing that struck me was the architecture, the buildings. They look quite impressive. When you think of England and lots of things being knocked down and built up, you kind to think Russia as well, it'll be communist, it'll be massive concrete blocks, which you kind of get over all different parts of Eastern Europe. But it seemed to have a beautiful, architecture, beautiful buildings. I think you commented on that. [12:12] Yeah, I mean, there's a couple of aspects. So once you get into the more rural parts of Russia. [12:18] So Moscow and St. Petersburg are the classic amazing cities, westerners go there for a couple of days and that's their experience, which is fine. And they're the most astounding places. And the Stalinist architecture for all the bastard things that Stalin did, his Stalinist architecture is really good. The Metro is unbelievable in the sense of how beautiful it is. People big it up a lot and I always thought maybe it's overrated. I've been there before this trip, but still, every time I go back, I'm like, that's gold. I hate going to London and seeing the comparison. The Elizabeth Line opened earlier in London and people raving about it. It looks like shit. Sorry to swear, but it is awful. Just modernist nonsense that'll look terrible in 10 years. Everything in the Moscow Metro looks like that five star hotel, but underground. It's amazing how good that stuff is. But once you do get out into... So I went to Rostov in the south, which is a fairly big city, or some of the places around there, Novoshanskoye, or. [13:20] Kimishkish, or whatever the hell it was called, the one in the middle. And then, and then Luhanskoye, yeah, you get the commie blocks, commie blocks, or still a thing. But you, You do get the occasional building that they've just redone and it looks like something from the Romanov era. So they seem to be having the same sort of transition that maybe you've seen in Hungary, or I saw in Serbia where they've got the old buildings, they were run down and now they're building them back up. So the entire Slavic world seems to be experiencing that, as well as the Hungarians, which is nice. [13:53] And we don't have it.   Yeah, same in Bulgaria. You get them all being put back together and rebuilt and remembering their history after trying to forget about the communist past or life before then. They're trying to find it again. And of course, flags. One other thing I noticed, lots of Russian flags and of course, communist paraphernalia. But the two flags that were missing, which I think are our national flags, our LGBT flag and Ukraine flag, it was quite nice. Those didn't exist there.   Yeah, I mean, there's certainly one of the Ukrainian flags. What is funny about all that is that you see, I mean, I don't not understand the reasons as to why, but in Ukraine, you've seen endless videos of them smashing up statues or anything that was Russian or represents Soviet Union or anything like that. Some of them are understandable where it's like, you know, Lenin, screw that guy, Stalin, screw that guy, whatever, right? But then they started smashing up like Russian authors. Some of them were even like half Ukrainian. [14:59] It all just, I think it seems like people in Ukraine are a bit caught up in that. I don't know. But in Moscow and Rostov, from what I saw, there's loads of Ukrainian writer statues or, you know, the Hotel Ukraina, things like this. They've not got rid of anything Ukrainian, because of course they don't really seem to think they're going to destroy Ukraine as a thing or, the Ukrainian language. But you could argue being invaded and therefore have this massive of Ukraine phobia or something. So there's that argument for sure. As for the LGBT flags. [15:34] Yeah, yeah, none. Didn't see any BLM flags either. Now I think about it. But that's part of what I certainly like about Russia. And generally when you look at a lot of the Eastern European countries, that they have pride in their identity, they have confidence in their identity. And in the West, we've lost that. all of kind of big bear Russia and for it can seem like an aggressor maybe to some of the smaller countries. Actually, at least it has pride in its identity.   Absolutely. I mean, that is one of the things people get confused about. There's some aspect of the right, specifically the right I'm going to talk about here, who get a bit obsessed with Russia. Many of them have never been and never going to be going there. So it's a bit strange from those folks because they kind of get caught caught up in the propaganda, I find. [16:30] But for those who have been, everyone can appreciate it. And it's not just Russia. You find this in Poland. You find this in probably Bulgaria and et cetera. An acceptance of patriotism, an acceptance of, like, this is where I'm born. It's my land. That's why it's good. Not because I'm better than everyone else, but because it's mine, which we don't in the West. We actively suppress that. It's embarrassing that we do so. And when it comes to the homosexual stuff as well, my understanding is that in Russia, it's not a crime to be gay. If you want to be gay, that's fine. If you have a boyfriend or a girlfriend, I don't know how accepting Russian [17:05] Culture of that being public. But I know that the most recent thing I saw in terms of legality, just if anyone's game is planning on visit, I don't think you'll have a problem as long as there's no public displays of affection, I imagine. Like, I know that's a most traditionalist place, to put it politely. But when it comes to the legal side, the only thing they have is that they banned, firstly, it was LGBT propaganda aimed at children. That was banned. Come on, come on. Very Hungarian. [17:38] You know, Ron De Santis would probably approve of that original law, which was just, look, you can't have this stuff aimed at kids. If it's a kids program, if it's aimed 18 or below, you can't do that. If you're aiming a program 18 or above the wave, you want to give a crap. I think whilst I was there, they expanded the law now to include 18 and above, which of course is far more controversial and far less about, let's say, freedom in that regard. But that is what it says. One of the things about this sort of traveling, I don't want to pass too much of a judgment on the places I'm going because I'm just trying to tell you what's there. I ain't living there. So I'm not going to sit around and tell you how they should change their laws because It's foreign land, we have no influence, what would be the point? I barely have any influence in my own country. But I guess that's similar to that stance in Russia. It's actually similar to Serbia and certainly similar to Afghanistan. So I think that's what ties those three countries together.   [18:45] Maybe, I just know it's a bit more... Because they don't really have any pride in being Afghan in that same way that the Serbs, the Russians do, in being Serbian and Russian. Yeah, but I think that's something, I'm thinking of the LGBT stuff. Oh yeah, well they're all certainly on that train. I think the Afghans win that competition though, because Allah Akbar. Yeah Allah doesn't do the LGBT stuff very well. No.   One of the few things they'll command him or Muhammad for, but we'll not get into that conversation.   I think they're accepting of T's. I think T is still okay. T? Do you think so? So in Iran, for example, tea is okay, because if you're found being homosexual in Iran, there is a Quranic solution, which is that clearly this man is not a homosexual man, because that would be a crime against nature according to the Quran. So in fact, he is transgender. He was a woman the whole time, therefore it's not gay. So you either accept that bargain and go through the surgery or get killed. [19:48] So that's the tragedy of being homosexual in Iran. But it does mean that the transgender acceptance is a thing. So I don't know if that's your world, Silver lining. I don't know what to talk about. I'm advertising to the transgender adventure brigade out there. Anyway, moving on. The Metro, how much of the Metro did you use? Because as you said, the pictures I've seen, how impressive it is. And you had that little clip of it. But did you go on it a lot? Obviously you didn't, you got told off for filming all this. [20:25] Yeah, I don't know if that's it's a really weird place for filming in that sense. So I've never seen this in any Slavic country except Russia. Russia seems to still have it was explained to me. So, for example, if you get on a train in Russia, let's avoid the metro first. You have to present your passport. You have to go through airport style security and then you get on the train. You can't just tap and walk in. No, very serious about that. [20:51] I thought this is because of counterterrorism. I was told the reason for this, and also the fact that people checking your papers all have these communist style hats with communist logos on still, is because under the Soviet Union, of course. You mean like this? Yeah, exactly like that.   I could have given that to you to keep warm because you kept getting cold. Well, I would have looked like a police officer if I got arrested. But no, they've got these railway workers. There was no freedom of movement in Soviet Union. You have to have papers to be able to move to the next town or wherever, I was told, at least at one point. So that system is still there for the trains. So when you go on the metro, same thing. You walk into the metro and there's meta detectors. And if you're holding a bag nine times out of 10, someone will shout at you in Russian. You freak out. But then they just take your bag, shove it in a metal detector, nothing, you know, it, gets scanned, there's no bombs. They just give it back to you, bugger off. And then there's some lady at the escalators who's just like on her phone on every escalator, I don't know why she's there. Just pointless. But there's like security everywhere. So you don't know what you can and can't film. But then I tried to film too close to the tracks and then three guys came over and all, started shouting at me. I was just like, sorry, not Russian. Leave me alone.   How visible was your filming? [22:16] I always found it's better to be, if you're ever going to travel to somewhere strange and film, do it publicly. If you're seen trying to secretly film, that's way worse because you can explain, oh, sorry, I'm a stupid foreigner from the foreigner land. And in any culture, they'll be like, yeah, whatever, just bugger off and it'll be over. So always just hold up the camera, look like an American tourist pretty much. And that's usually what I do. The only exemptions to that is probably when I was in Taliban land and we try and maybe, not attract attention.   But the black markers. Yeah, I mean, you don't really want to attract that attention. So the only exception. What was it, did people look at you cynically or with suspicion? Because obviously someone from the West must be coming to put something negative out about Russia. Was that part of it? Because you said you had to wait four hours to get in. Is that a kind of thinking behind a lot of the maybe suspicion of the West? [23:25] To be honest, maybe this is just me being lucky. On this entire trip, I didn't find any suspicious people being suspicious of me except security, and that's their job, so fair enough, or in Luhansk. So the civilians there were a bit distrusting because we spoke to people and tried to ask, do you mind if we interview you, ask you these questions, we're showing the questions. I had a guy look over them just to make sure it wouldn't spook the hell out of anyone. He said, yeah, no, those are fine. But no one, no one would talk to us because they're just that scared. I think for a couple of reasons, which is that if the Ukrainians come back and they're on camera saying something nice about Russia and maybe something will happen, maybe they're worried that they'll say something wrong and get in trouble or something. I don't know. That's the only place I felt any problems. I mean, I ran into a guy in a flea market in Rostov and jabbering away in half Russian, half English with this dude and the other people around us, all friendly. Go to an Irish pub, start talking about the situation, all friendly, all smiles. I never had to explain and sit there and be like, oh yes, I am here to film about Great Russia or something to get someone's trust because they're incredibly isolated. Any foreigner who comes there and is like, yeah, I want to show what life's like, they're [24:48] immediately just like thank you for coming. You know, show people. So.   War Museums, you did some filming, some beautiful tanks in different places, but yeah, tell, us about that. And is that a, do you have a specific tank fetish? Oh, who doesn't like tanks? Come on. So, yeah, there's a few places I went. There's the Victory Museum in Moscow, which if anyone goes to Moscow, it's the easiest place to go on holiday. Go for a weekend or two with a loved one. It's a very romantic place to be as well, especially even winter. Definitely take your girl to the Victory Museum, because even though it's military nonsense, you know, women don't generally like staring at, there's enough there to be fun. There's enough light shows and stuff I didn't really have time to show in the video that they have. There's some old remakes of the Reichstag you can go and see. [25:48] Uh any kind of gun any kind of tank there's patriot park i went to that's a big thing in Russia, various uh there's sort of like theme parks throughout the country and it's just piles of every weapon you could think of every tank every plane, railway tanks or railway guns, and I don't know why they're called that it's like a railway car right but covered in artillery and, and anti-tank guns and machine guns. The idea is you drive the train into the town and shoot it up. I don't remember that on Thomas the Tank Engine.   No, but it should have been. A Russian Thomas the Tank Engine is a whole other thing. But that's, you can also shoot any gun you want there. I chose the Mosin. I was kind of annoyed because we just didn't have the time on the way back out. I just, I had to leave because of time. But I'd love to go back to Patriot Park because it was 500 rubles for like 100 rounds or something on an LMG. I had loads of money left though because I just hadn't spent it. I wish I'd just gone back to Patriot Park and be like, chh, dada, dada, dada, dada, dada, for 30 minutes straight, because that's just fun. So yeah, if you like shooting, that's easy too.   Well, did you, I can't remember, you went with someone there, or did you just turn up as a foreigner saying I'd like to shoot things? [27:03] So the trip was a bit weird. I knew a couple of people in Russia from a previous trip. So I met them in Moscow. I met friends of friends of friends. Your network very quickly expands once you just ask, hey, do you know anyone who's around tomorrow? I went to like an Indian market with a lady, for example. That was really funny actually, because we're walking around and I hear the Indian music and I see the brands and the spices. I was instantly transported back to the UK. [27:29] You get what I mean? Which just was so weird because she didn't get it either. She was like, what do you mean it's like the UK? I'm like, you don't know. You just don't know. [27:41] So that was fun. So you start meeting friends like that and then when I got a train I was going to go meet someone else. So I had someone with me at any given time. Some people seem to think, that someone was chaperoning me like it's the Soviet Union. I can't transmit enough how much things have changed since the Soviet Union. It's not like that at all. Even when I went to Luhansk, the Russian soldier guy I had with me, he was only with me like half the time. And even when he was with me, he didn't even know what he was getting in for, frankly. I decided where we wanted to go. I decided what we're going to see, who we're going to talk to, what we're doing today. [28:20] He was a quirky character.   Yeah, I mean, he was just a friend of a friend of a friend was Rostov. Great guy, made friends with him. I said, look, the guy was going to go meet has been blown up by a mortar. I'm kind of buggered. Do you know what he could take me to the new regions? He says, you know, I have a friend introduced me to an Afghani weird character, big moustache, larger than life, goes to Ukraine a lot, has been fighting since 2014, killing people. He did mention to me at one point apparently he fought in Syria which okay because he talks a lot about Wagner. I never really got to the question about whether or not he worked for Wagner but whatever. [29:04] Fit as a fiddle, clearly does a lot of stuff. He's out there right now, he's upgraded his telegram, he's out fighting today I think. But he seemed to just be some guy because he agreed to take me. And then when we got to the border, it was like, don't speak about this, don't speak about that. And I'm like, brother, you don't know what you're getting in for. Because, of course we get taken to additional security and he's like, oh, it's been 10 minutes. I'm, like, no, it's not going to be 10 minutes. We're getting stuck for four hours talking to Russian border guard, then military intelligence, and then even more. We were just like, who the hell are you? And then when we're going around Luhansk, everything's fine. He knows everyone there. He's been fighting and he used to live in Luhansk for years. That's the thing about all the nationalists, the people who are fighting there, they've, all got massive connections to Ukraine, like family connections. This is a real family thing for them. It's not some group of guys who have no connection to the land. All their family live there or their grandparents live there or something. So that's fine. On the way back out, of course same border, checkpoint, more security. I just remember we got off the bus in Rostov, he was just so pissed at me. So he was just like, oh for god's sake. Like it was just some guy, he didn't know what he was getting in for. I was just like, yeah sorry man, it's gonna be a lot of stops. My passport's cancer in this place. [30:28] Yeah, it's free to travel around. If you meet friends of friends, you'll be able to meet someone in any given town. And if they're a friend of a friend, they'll be nice to you. So what was the part that's kind of partially Russian, partially Ukrainian? Is that Luhansk or the other one, Rostov? Yeah, so to explain for people who might not know the situation Ukraine became a country after the Soviet Union collapsed. It used to basically just be a Soviet Republic of USSR, I don't think a Ukrainian nation really existed before in peacetime. You could argue maybe like the kingdoms of the root of, Kevin Rusev's me, but yeah, I did I mean in modern times probably, then stuff happens, politics Russia ended up annexing Crimea and then there was an uprising in these two places called Donetsk and Luhansk, large Russian populations, Stalin's fault as most things are as to why there's so many Russians. [31:34] If I think that the next used to be called Stalino, because of course These people rose up. They've been fighting an insurgency for years with help from Moscow, And then when the Russian army moved in properly, not just, you know, unofficially, they have now annexed Luhansk province, Donetsk province, Zaporizhian and Kherson. So we went to the Luhansk province, which that place has been a battlefield for, what has it been, eight years, something like that. They've now got all of that province under control. We didn't feel any active threat. There was no, like, range for artillery to kill us. To kill us, there was range for missiles to kill us or airstrikes. You can see bullet holes in all the buildings, much for the buildings been blown up. [32:22] But as for what it is, it's according to the Ukrainians, their lands, all of it. According to the Russians, they've annexed it, it belongs to them now. And according to the people who live there, from what I saw, I didn't see anyone Ukrainian. I didn't see anything that made me think Ukraine, everything that made me think of Russia. The flags, the people, the food, the apartments. The place used to be a large Russian area, even when it was part of Ukraine. And since the uprising eight years ago, and then ever since. Anyone who is pro-Ukraine has probably left. I've read multiple stories online of people used to live in these places, more than the stories I've read, but same thing will be happening in Luhansk. If you were pro-Ukrainian or a young person who's Ukrainian or any of that sort, you've probably gone. Why would you have stayed? In which case the result, I imagine if they did do a census, even if it's done by the UN, run by Canadians or Bangladeshis, there's no interest. The demographics of that place have probably hugely changed. So that's an argument for claiming the land, obviously. I did hear a story from a Russian lady who works for a Western organization in Moscow. So she's got access to both sides. One of the things the Ukrainian government's doing, is near the front line, if there's Ukrainians living there, they desperately want the Ukrainians to continue living there. [33:51] Because if the Ukrainians leave, that's yet more territory that has a huge deficit of Ukrainians versus Russians. So whenever some kind of peace deal ends up coming, you've got less of an argument and the Russians are playing the same game. Don't get me wrong, but it's just funny to me how when it comes down to what everyone understands, the claim of a land is just having your people there. And from what I saw in Luhansk, I didn't see anything Ukrainian. [34:20] I know they're going to be Ukrainians that are like that, but that's how it is, man. I hadn't worked out actually before watching your video because in the middle you kind of look at the geopolitics of the area, but I actually didn't realize that Ukraine was, only a province of Russia because other countries like Bulgaria have got a thousand year history, and other countries had to fight and there was, I should think Slovenia had like a three-week, battle with the USSR to actually gain their freedom as a country. But Ukraine existed as a part, as a province, as opposed to a separate country. So it is quite different, Ukraine, when you look at the other kind of satellite states, the USSR. [35:02] Yeah, I mean, it's really interesting, actually, because so Ukraine was basically a province of the Russian Empire, nothing special. And then when that collapse and you get Soviet Union, most of it was in the Soviet Union. Sure, it was made into a Soviet republic. This is mostly just PR. Anyone looking at the history can tell that, but it's an integral part of the Soviet Union. It's not flourishing in that way or independent in that way that Bulgaria or any of the satellites are. Since independence in the 90s, that's when you really start to get this, it's seemingly and someone could correct me if I'm wrong, this actual solidifying of what are we? And seeing because I mean that's where you get the changes of okay no we should be focusing on the Ukrainian language not this bilingual state this hyper focus and celebration specifically of Ukrainian culture to make it aware in people's minds. One of the great conversations I had was with a guy in a bar in Rostov his half of his family Ukrainian living around that region. [36:06] Again everyone you goddamn meet in this area there's cross-border families no one's some kind of rabid nationalist just for their side. It's not like I'm Bosnian, I'm Croatian or something. There's no crossover. No, there's massive crossover in ethnic times. But he mentioned that he used to go on holiday to Ukraine all the time. And he had gone to the 2000s, everything was cool, meet anywhere you want, no problem. And then around about 2014 and there throughout he started just getting random hostility from people he's on holiday with as if you know He'd like murdered 14 Ukrainian babies or something like we talking to them in Russian. They're talking [36:48] Russian to him because they think he's from Ukrainian Russian province and then if I don't hear some the Russian Federation They just stopped talking to him and they start talking Ukrainian and refused to use the Russian language, So what the hell was that about and then ever since this guy was mentioning he's been on so many more holidays, even before the special operation. And it just got worse and worse and worse. I still haven't been to Ukraine. I'd love to go if it's safe. I don't know how badly some people might take the video I made there, but I'm happy to show the Ukrainian side as well. I'm not got problem with that. But my best guess from what I can see and what I heard is that the Ukrainian identity and Ukrainian culture really is something new in historical terms in the way it is now. And that proper split of when nothing to do with Russia is very new. What was it like when you were getting the bus down to Luhansk? You're kind of thinking, well, I'm going to somewhere which is on the edge of a war zone that's disputed territory. Were you slightly apprehensive going down there? [37:54] So when we got on the bus from Rostov, you then get to the old border, and that's what the border checkpoint is, about hour three and a half into that checkpoint I did honestly sit there and think, what am I doing with my life? Why don't I just stay home? Why don't I just play video games? Who cares? Oh God. Cause you don't know. Maybe the phone call gets made and the guy at the top just goes, arrest him. Fuck him. Like, who is this? Thankfully it got to someone and they just said, yes. Um, don't know who, [38:21] Thanks bro. And then when you get on the bus to the war zone and I honestly, I felt great. Um, don't know if there's something wrong with me, but [38:32] there's something about, I was the same with Afghanistan. I don't know how to put this into words, probably. Maybe you've had this in Eastern Europe when it was less lawful as well. There's something about those kind of places where everything's a bit serious in the regard of only serious things matter, life or death matters. Whether or not you've got a vaccine passport, it's like the stupidest question you could ever ask, that kind of environment. I love it. Because it doesn't feel like you're being controlled anymore, even though everything around you is men with guns, army soldiers, people who could probably kill you if they had no reason to but just felt like it. [39:14] It still feels freer in that way. Am I making any kind of sense? Well, I think the seriousness comes from that life can be harder in those places. And I think in the West we have entertained ourselves to death where there actually life is, you're right, more serious. Here life is what you want to watch on YouTube that evening or that day. It's, or how many likes you have for something that's life is reduced down to that trivialness where there it is life and death. It is more serious. It's way more real. And you actually care about like what you're going to eat tonight, for example, such a, mundane thing. But like I genuinely was thinking about, Oh God, what we're going to have dinner. And so the kind of stress you get from that is almost rewarding in a way. I was trying to have this conversation today about like the acceptance of corruption and why it makes life better. I don't mean bribery, but I was thinking about some more. So when I got on the plane from Afghanistan on the way back. [40:13] I get to this front of the queue, blah, blah, blah, blah, sorry, man, I don't speak Pashtun English. Oh, no problem, sir. And then they take my bag, they wrap it up, And then the guy says, vaccine passport, sir. [40:26] I ain't got a vaccine. He didn't need a vaccine to get into Afghanistan. So I look at him and just go, I ain't got one. He looks at me like utter confusion, like he's never had this before. Gets his supervisor up, the supervisor just looks at him just annoyed and just goes. [40:42] Walks off and the guy just goes, oh bugger off. Just lets me through. [40:47] When like someone who's getting paid minimum wage turns down the stupid pointless laws that we all know are stupid and pointless. It's just a much better life. If he was checking the bag and said, did you put a bomb there? And I said, well, yeah, but you know, I want to blow up the plane. He obviously would have arrested me on the spot. He doesn't not care about serious things. But when it comes to stupid stuff like your vaccine pass, no one gives a crap. And they shouldn't give a crap in that country. But you do that in the West. It's still illegal for me to go to the United States because of the vaccine stuff. If I get that some TSA agent is going to be like, we haven't got it, you've got to go back. [41:24] Bro, what the hell do you care? You're getting paid minimum wage to work in the TSA. You give a crap about the vaccine? No, like you shouldn't for Christ's sake. And it's, we had that in the UK as well. It's not even that rare to us. Remember when Boris was caught with his pants down, he was having parties and the day after, none of those rules applied anymore. Security guys didn't bother trying to stop people for not wearing masks. Nobody gave a crap. We had that culture for a day there. That's what I mean. The fact that those petty laws mean nothing. And when I was in Luhansk and you're back in a zone it's, you know, state of war. [41:59] None of that petty crap means anything. I don't know, it's something spiritually that just makes you happier in a really messed up way because you're in a really messed up place. It's liberating. [42:14] When I last time was flying from Bulgaria and you had to wear masks, it must have been last summer, and everyone had to wear a mask. You wear a mask, they all get on the plane and as soon as they're sitting down, they all just drop it down to their chin. Literally, all the Bulgarians. [42:34] Here, people would have it up over their nose. Here, of course, you've got the, Air Stewardesses checking people. I know I've got friends, Air Stewardesses, and they said they spent all their time checking masks. Where in Bulgaria, they realized it just was a load of crap. Therefore, they didn't, they kind of would pay lip service, but really they knew it was nonsense where in the UK they paid not only did they pay lip service, but they believed, everything they were told. And it's that ability to think for yourselves. And it's quite weird when you come from the West. And so that's what I noticed. I guess you noticed that as well, that they just don't fit in and don't accept things just because you're told them. Yeah, I mean, like a chap in the chat is mentioning anarchism. It's not anarchism. Like in it was the same thing with Afghanistan and Luhansk there is utter security in your position, no one's gonna kill you for no reason, you know if you blaspheme or something in Afghanistan you're buggered but don't do that if uh there's an ISIS terrorist in Afghanistan, there's Taliban every hundred meters with guns that dude's dead before he gets to you in Luhansk there are tanks and army soldiers everywhere, someone tries to start something they're getting arrested or shot immediately you couldn't feel safer in terms of like no one's gonna stab me it's not, It's not like you're in Birmingham. There's none of that, personal threat. [43:51] But the actual rules of life matter again, the things the state are doing, is actually something you can respect, security. That's the number one concern. That's what's actually going on. But none of this, oh, nonsense. Mentality exists. Andrew Tate actually described this in a really interesting way. And maybe you'll get it as well. He was in Romania. He walks into the gas station. And the Romanian guy goes, you need a mask and he just, I don't know, sorry, I thought the story wrong. He's in the UK, goes to a gas station, the guy says, you need a mask. He's like, bro, I filled up the car, here's the money. He says, no, you need to wear a mask before I can make you pay. He's like. [44:31] If you take the money or I'm leaving with the gas for free, I don't. [44:35] I'm not putting on a mask. What are you talking about? The dude starts losing it and he's like, no, you have to wear a mask or I can't take your money. Bro, you're getting paid minimum wage to, to work in a gas station? What the hell do you care? Like if Shell have this policy of you worst man, you think the CEO of Shell gives a crap if the new customer walking in is wearing a mask when he pays. No, nobody cares. This rule is meaningless. Everyone in the room knows it. And yeah, I don't know if it's our Protestant work ethic or something, but the Anglosphere worker who's getting paid minimum wage just goes, the rules are the rules, like a German. And he's just like, yeah, must implement the rules. No one's going to make him implement those rules. He does it to himself. [45:15] And then Tate mentions, you do that in Romania. Same situation. You walk in, the Iranian guy will say, sir, you must wear a mask. And you say, I'm not doing it. And the Romanian worker will go, eh. Not because he wouldn't do that if you were like, I'm not going to pay. [45:31] You've got to pay. That's important. But on stupid nonsensical rules, I don't waste my time with this. And we don't have that in the West. It annoys the crap out of me.   I remember some Bulgarians telling me you have to wear a mask because they were wearing one on their chin. It's just like, it's so weird. Do you realize it's just like a piss take? It's like, we don't give a shit. You kind of pretend. It's like, yeah, so weird. But it's that part of the outside. Once you get outside the Western world, that's really the metric. It's not like corruption and bribery or the law doesn't apply. It's the, I'm not listening to nonsense mindset. And you have that in spades in Russia of the people? So I can appreciate that of the people. Sure, there's other problems. Sure, no, I don't agree with those things. But when I talk about this thing, and you'll recognize it as well in Bulgaria, Tate recognized in Romania, really the ex-Soviet nations really know how to go. I don't care what the dear leader's saying. For a good reason. One thing I want to ask you that actually didn't really talk about, I don't think, but I live in London and sometimes it's difficult to find English people living in London. I assume over there in Russia it's still fairly Russian. I guess it hasn't been hit by the multicultural nonsense. [46:59] So this is a big criticism of Putin from the Russian nationalists I found on both the trips I've done there. And it's true, it's a valid criticism, which is that if you go to Moscow, for example, yep, there's a lot of Russians, but they have some of the same problems we have. The reason for this is because not only is the Russian Federation a huge country, huge amount of ethnic diversity just because it's so big, and there are loads of ethnic republics inside that are made up of ethnic minorities that travel all over the place. They also have the Kazakhstan border, which is ridiculously huge. They don't really man it. They don't really have the ability to man it. So that's not happening. In which case, they have loads of illegals, not to mention the legal immigration from those countries, because the quality of life working in Moscow as a taxi driver is way better, blah, blah, blah. One of the funny stories I got told, so there's a huge amount of those people in Moscow, which is visible, especially in the taxi drivers. One of the stories I got told is that the mayor of Moscow was talking about the fact that they're putting up Uzbek language signs below the Russian signs in this district in Moscow because the Uzbeks are taking too long in the metro. They'll get out, they'll stare at the signs, they don't really know where, they're going. So he's putting up the Uzbek language. And this lady's telling me the story and I'm looking at her like, lady, I've been here three days, I can read Cyrillic. You're [48:18] telling me these people live in Moscow and they can't read a Russian metro sign about, which street they live on. It was just kind of strange that kind of cuck-oldery in that sense of having no standards for your ethnic minorities. You treat them like children. You should just give up all of your culture and language and everything else because, oh, well, they can't read the signs. Learn to read then. I mean, it's not a big ask, learning to read. So they do have those problems as well. It's just nowhere near what we have in the UK. And for them, it's really only in these, big hubs like Moscow where all the money is. So, you know, I don't, this is why I mean by like some sections of the right who have never been to Russia, don't know anything about it, will fetishize, Putin and be like, yeah, he's tough on immigration and whatnot. Yeah, it compared to us, sure. But it doesn't mean there's no problems. And it's [49:14] again, same solution, which is just say no. We're not putting up Uzbek language signs. Learn to read, you goddamn losers. That's the correct response. What do you mean you can't read? Education's free.   Exactly. Let's finish off on food. Looking for food you got McDuck. I'm kind of thinking, did you order a big duck and that just doesn't sound right. Tell us about it because these places, obviously, Western companies have pulled out and then you get McDuck. What was that like?   It probably takes a little bit slower. In the Russian Federation, the old Russia, the Western companies pulled out. You've got mainly the ones you'll find in day-to-day life. Ikea isn't there. Very few Russians went to Ikea. It's very much a rich person thing. So it means nothing. You've got McDonald's, which has been changed to its tasty full stop. It's now run by some Russian guy, all the profits stay in Russia. Supply chains are all the same. All the food comes from Russia. Nothing's changed. So great. That's actually a net win for them. They're no longer sending money to the McDonald's USA company. Starbucks, same deal. There were a couple of others you'll find in day to day life. [50:35] Again, all the products don't come from the West. So, I mean, remember the West is basically a service economy for a place like Russia, and in which case they can do the services. It's not hard. In fact, they could pay Russians to do it, save money. [50:49] And then in Luhansk, because that used to be Ukraine and has been for eight years in a state, of conflicts, they care even less about copyright laws. So they opened McDuck, which I still have the wrappers for. [51:02] And that's the McDonald's there. Yeah, it literally has the Disney font, which is illegal. And they have the Disney characters that they put out, which I guess is illegal. What was weird there is that the interior design of McDonald's, remember when it used to be black and white squares or whatever, and then they changed it so it was those wavy patterns, and they had these wooden things behind the benches that would have gaps missing. Yeah, like slats.   Yeah, you know the kind of design I'm thinking of? That's what they have in Ukraine, Luhansk, the Russian territory, because it's just not been touched in like eight years, it's still clean. All the fryers make the same beeping noises. [51:40] You could buy a black bread Big Mac, which I didn't do because I don't like a black bread. But in Russia, they've got the modern ones because it's only a year ago that changed. When I asked people about all of that, no one could have given a crap. This is something I really, I'm kind of annoyed about that the delusion so many people have in the West about Russia, they think it's just like the West, and it's just as effective as if we lost McDonald's tomorrow, people would be freaking out. [52:12] McDonald's was even only in quite good places in Russia. The people who went there, Russian people don't like McDonald's all that much. They've got their own fast foods, which are frankly better. Smoked salmon is so easy to get there for some reason, so cheap compared to your crappy Big Mac. And even then [52:31] If you're a Russian and some company does that, not only do you not care. If they ever came back, you're not going to go back and shop with them because they betrayed your country. So it's a lose-lose on that front. Places like Burger King hasn't left. They're making bank. McDonald's left, but they're open. So our biggest competitor decided to leave the country. What a retard. Make loads of money. And for the companies doing that, the argument is made that, oh, maybe they did it for moral reasons. [53:01] You think any of these companies do anything for moral? Are you high? No. They're not doing it for Ukrainian nationalism reasons either. None of these companies are Ukrainian. None of them have big markets in Ukraine. They've done this because some letter was sent from the White House. All their CEOs are actually that dumb and have just been taken on with the current thing and jumped in on it. I don't think any of these CEOs actually care about the morality question in any of this. And I cannot stress enough things in Russia are not collapsing as a result of the sanctions. I was re-watching the YouTube channel called LaserPig. I quite like the guy. I've got nothing against him. I love his content. Tank stuff. Love that. Anyway, so he did some videos about when the war started and I was going back and just checking out, what people were saying when it first kicked off. And one of the predictions he makes, for example, is like, oh, the conditions in Russia are perfect for being about the same as the Russian Revolution in 1918. You know, it was sort of a weird thing to say then after being there, food's cheaper than ever. Gas is cheaper than ever. I don't know if you saw it's 19 pence for unlimited gas in the Luhansk. I saw you enjoying just watching gas burn.   Oh, it was great. [54:21] Life could not be more normal. I met people who were anti-Putin as well. I met people who were anti-special operation, anti-war, all of that. And I asked them, what's changed then for you? Because I mean, you're not gonna tell me everything's fine because you're some Russian nationalist who just is sitting there writing Zeds on everything you find. And they just, all of them without thought were just like, well, not really anything. The only lady I could find who told me anything changed was she worked in selling high-tech equipment. So like high tech cameras or high tech computer systems, right? And she said, so I asked her, well, OK, that must have been blocked off now, because those companies aren't doing it in Russia. And she says, no. I said, what do you mean? Is it where they fly to Kazakhstan and then the plane flies to Moscow? So the worst thing that's happened to them on a human level is like really high tech stuff is up 20% in cost. And only rich people were buying that anyway, so they don't give a crap. And like when I went to the GUM, the GYM, the richest place, the Harrods of Russia and all the Western stores have a little sign that's saying down due to technical issues. They're all still paying rent. They all still have equipment. They also have the lights on in those stores. They are just waiting for the right time to reopen those stores. They do not want to give up those spots. They make mad money on those things in normal circumstances. And those companies, again, if you're rich and you want to buy Louis Vuitton and you're Putin's mistress, easily done. Kazakhstan exists. We'll fly it in darling. [55:50] It really kind of hurts me that it seems to have done so little, not because I necessarily want Russians to suffer or something, but just because I am being endlessly propagandized in the West, but trust me, something's being, nothing is being done. The average life of an average Russian has not been affected at all. The rich Russians, not affected at all. If someone wants to make an argument about like their banking industry has taken a hit, and maybe there's some long-term effects there, you can argue. Sure, I don't know anything about that, so I'm not going to speak on it. But if someone wants to think that the average life is about to make the Russian population rise up and overthrow, and you're not living in reality, come back down. Okay. For them, life is more normal than it's ever been. Something weird is happening in our country to do with war. Okay. I'm Russian. That happens every 20 years. It's not new. [56:39] So here, while our fuel bills have quadrupled, actually we're still winning. Even though family finances are decimated. It's a weird winning. Very weird. I actually played a game with everyone I met, even the border guards. So I messaged a mate of mine, I was like, so what's the average gas bill? Because I only have electricity in my apartment here. And he's a landlord, so he's got a few apartments and friends. So he told me, okay, so there's this lady who pays this much. That's about average right now. And so I converted it into roubles and show everyone. Same reaction every single time. [57:12] Serious not that serious. Yes. Yes true. Oh. [57:20] Then they'd ask me how much does the average English person make convert it back into roubles, It's not enough for them to think that's normal because they were like you this much of your salary goes on just gas. [57:33] Yeah, there are so many people in this part of the civilization, who I found are still deluded into thinking that they're living some cold, miserable hell, and we're the ones who are doing just a little bit rough around the winter. No, man, we're really suffering and they're not noticing it. [57:54] That's the truth of the matter. You can be mad about that, you can wish it was the opposite, it's not. Just final thought is that what you talked about, they don't survive on McDonald's, not a big thing if they lose these brands. I think a sign that the West has collapsed is people sitting at home being able to order a McDonald's to come to your home. It's just literally bonkers that actually our populations in the West are living on McDonald's. Just, a sad state of affairs. You can get it with a bike directly to your front door. What am I? And you said salmon maybe? No, no, no. Let's go for a Big Mac and fries. Okay. I'm imagining you looking out the window, seeing Deliveroo and just be like, this is the end of the West. Because I eat a lot of McDonald's. I happen to have a McDonald's right next to my apartment. So pro tip, double cheeseburger, small fries, three quid. [58:52] Best cost for money you can get. And I quite like the concept. It's a very capitalistic mindset, maximize calories, lowest cost, all that stuff gets the rightest part of my capitalist brain. Excited. I know a friend who used to work at McDonald's and he loved the calculation of how quickly you could wrap stuff, would save this many pennies and all that nonsense. [59:15] But if you're really deluded enough to think without McDonald's, Russia is finished or Saudi Arabia is finished or China is finished or some other country you don't like. [59:24] Number one, you're high. Number two, what happens when Burger King stays? That's right, nothing. Nothing happens. And we really seem to have a lot less power than we think we do. The idea that Western sanctions will really cripple the enemy in North Korea, yeah. In Iran, apparently it had some large effect. In a place like Russia that has all the damn resources, it couldn't mean less. Like, we've got all this stuff, it's just the services we don't have. High-level things but if you've already set them up for them. Okay, copy paste. Copyright, what's that?   Yeah, and of course they still have access to the Chinese markets. So what Britain says, we're not buying or whatever, that's okay, we'll just go to China.   You guys don't make anything anymore. Like the world really has changed about who makes things, who's important in that dynamic, and we mentally haven't caught up to that. We aren't, leveraging what we have and instead thinking, oh, we can make them suffer with this, and it doesn't work. [1:00:26] Callum, thank you for coming on and sharing your thoughts. I don't know whether an African shithole country is going to be next on your list.   I mean, if you have any recommendations. I think I recommended Zimbabwe. I was thinking about turning up in a Rhodesian light infantry uniform. I just go and see what's left of Rhodesia. But I called a mate who used to be there, he's like, yeah, they'll probably kill you. I was like, maybe not.   Well, the guy you met, the weird guy, the dancing guy, the moustache guy, some undercover terrorist guy. Evgeny. No, no, no. He's like a soldier slash, you know, soldier of fortune. I don't know. I was just thinking whether Lotus Eaters would have paid your ransom. I could see this going horribly wrong. Originally, he didn't ask for any money either. He was just like, yeah, I'll do it for free. By the time I'd ruined his week, I was just like, yeah, here's 100 quid. Thanks for joining us. And our viewers and listeners, obviously Britannica Politica, you can find the videos there in the description. And however you're watching, the links should be in there. Or if you're listening on podcasting apps, the links are also there. So, Callum, Thank you once again for joining us. [1:01:47] Thanks so much for having me. I'll come around next time I go to some hellhole. No, no, you didn't bring any AK-47s back or t-shirts, no? [1:01:57] I got some Hello Kitty t-shirts actually. Maybe I should sell stuff. Have you still got Hello Kitty? Yeah, yeah. Well, I don't know how much of that I could say. So I've got all the Russian stuff, still I've got some merch. Got on my Twitter page. There's a full list there of the things, Afghan, Serbian and Russian stuff. If it has a quote teat selling sold out, it's sold out. If it don't, I probably got it. Message me on Twitter or SubscribeStar. If you want to support me, subscribe to SubscribeStar. But the Hello Kitty shirts. So guy I knew in Afghan, I said to him, like, bring them to the UK. I'll come pick them up. He did that. [1:02:33] Bad news. He's gone bye-bye now. So the shirts I have are the last shirts I'm ever getting. So limited supply.   Like all your friends keep dying in these places. It's weird. Well, I mean, it's not Miami. That is true. That is true. Give us your handle again on Twitter. I think it's @akkadsecretary. It's called Callum. There's a picture of me with Luhansk sign behind me and a couple of Russian soldiers off to kill people. Who knows? And people can click on the subscribe star there and they can actually support your extensive travels.   Yeah. Again, if you go to the YouTube channel, you'll find these things fairly easily around there somewhere. Okay. Perfect. Well, on that, I'll say goodbye to our viewers and we'll see you on Saturday with David Vance and his week's review of the news. So thank you very much for tuning in, for watching. Have a good rest of your Thursday. We'll see you back on Saturday. Thank you very much and good night to you all.

How Did I Get Here? from Discover Economics

Can't We Just Print More Money? was written by Bank of England economists Rupal Patel and Jack Meaning and offers an accessible introduction to economics themed around ten questions including ‘Why are so many of my clothes made in Asia?' ‘Why aren't Freddos 10p any more?' and ‘What even is money?'.Every state secondary school in the UK has been sent a six-lesson resource for GCSE English students based on the successful economics book which features extracts, presentation slides and worksheets, along with a copy of the book itself.Further educational resources and information on early careers can be found here - https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/education

Herald Vineyard Liverpool
Loaves, Fish and Freddos

Herald Vineyard Liverpool

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 30:22


Cal explains as we launch our Sign of Hope library and gives us three encouragements for taking compassionate steps towards others in our city.

Tifo Football Podcast
Brighton's brilliant start, Liverpool's midfield, plus footballer transfer values in chocolate

Tifo Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2022 71:35 Very Popular


Joe Devine, Seb Stafford-Bloor and Jon Mackenzie are joined by Amitai Winehouse from The Athletic to have a little chat about the football. Brighton have made yet another great start to a Premier League season, but what exactly makes them so good? Liverpool have not started as well as most thought they would, and do they need to overhaul their midfield earlier than they expected? Are Manchester City leaky at the back and, if they are, does it really matter when they score a bazillion goals?  We discuss how Southampton's risky pressing very nearly worked against Manchester United.  Plus how many Freddos would potential United signing Antony be worth? Turns out, it's a lot… Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Tifo Football Podcast
Brighton's brilliant start, Liverpool's midfield, plus footballer transfer values in chocolate

Tifo Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2022 66:50


Joe Devine, Seb Stafford-Bloor and Jon Mackenzie are joined by Amitai Winehouse from The Athletic to have a little chat about the football.Brighton have made yet another great start to a Premier League season, but what exactly makes them so good?Liverpool have not started as well as most thought they would, and do they need to overhaul their midfield earlier than they expected?Are Manchester City leaky at the back and, if they are, does it really matter when they score a bazillion goals? We discuss how Southampton's risky pressing very nearly worked against Manchester United. Plus how many Freddos would potential United signing Antony be worth? Turns out, it's a lot… Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

NEW: That Peter Crouch Podcast
That Off-Season [Gooch] Episode

NEW: That Peter Crouch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 49:47 Very Popular


After some deliberation about the name of this episode you'll hear exactly what happens at a football club as soon as the final whistle is blown at the last game of the season. Crouchy discusses pool bombing with team mates, the role of Wayne Lineker and compares Erling Haaland's gifts to Freddos. Chris brings some 'Mayo Housery' to our attention and there is new competition for JLo around who could perform the Laout song. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Chris Moyles Show on Radio X Podcast
Jon Hamm, Karl Urban and the #SPRITECHALLENGE #338

The Chris Moyles Show on Radio X Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 92:02


We've had a busy week this week, not just with guests, but also with the new software that plays out all our jingles and songs! Expect plenty of hiccups and slips. Speaking of hiccups, we did the #SPRITECHALLENGE in the studio, where Producer Matt drank one and a half cans of Sprite, and then tried not to burp. The results were WONDERFUL! Fresh from his second placed finish (first in our hearts) at Eurovision, Sam Ryder came for a chat. We also spoke to Iain Stirling ahead of his new Prime Video stand up show, as well as Jon Hamm ahead of Top Gun: Maverick, where Chris gave Jon a proper UK welcome in the form of Freddos. Karl Urban then visited the studio, promoting the third season of The Boys, before Nick Knowles came and spoke his new decluttering show on Channel 5. But it's not all guests and burping… - “Florence” pays a visit for the first time - Dom's Gym Membership - More WhatsApp messages Enjoy! The Chris Moyles Show on Radio X Weekdays 6:30-10am

Purple Radio On Demand
Izzle's Shizzle: Ep10 - 2002

Purple Radio On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 33:10


Isla and special guest Gracie take it back to 2002, a time when Freddos were affordable, iPods were cool and camera phones had only just been invented. Featuring music from Shakira, Maroon 5 and Red Hot Chilli Peppers.

Apes on Tape
Freddos accident from another perspective

Apes on Tape

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2022 78:53


Benji is absent from this episode, this is a discussion between Freddo and Pete Davies, the guy that was there on the day of the accident. We discuss how it went down, from Pete's perspective, how the day unfolded after Freddo snowboarded off a cliff and the resulting injury that left him paralysed from the waist down. We talk about how it could have been worse, what could have been done differently, and how Pete feels about it 3 years later and if it has affected his life at all. Things get a bit emotional at the end, but this is a valuable conversation between two friends that shared a very traumatic experience.

Apes on Tape
Ep.27- Practise What You Preach

Apes on Tape

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 68:42


This was one of our favourite episodes we've recorded, we reflect on Freddos reluctance to expand his comfort zone, while Benji drags him kicking and screaming on a boat ride that was just magical, plus Benji is beaming from his own experience involving boats and wakeboarding on the lake and the blessing of having wonderful, thoughtful friends. There is also a great video of him taking an almighty stack - which we will upload to our instagram @apesontapepodcast We also joke about of the juxtaposition of gurus who spout enlightened sermons, while being inherently flawed human beings, giving some rather hilarious examples. Can we look past people's personal flaws and still take their sage advice? Are they hypocrites, or just human? And, more importantly, are WE doing the same on our podcast? We delve into some introspection, honesty and "instagram vs reality" moments. Which brings us to the point of while we have blissful pictures of us on a boat, which will undoubtedly make wonderful instagram moments, Freddo opens up about how he has started talk therapy, through a platform called Better Help, and how it has helped him navigate the struggles he's been facing since the void left behind by his recent separation. It was a pleasure to talk about how affordable therapy can be, as it is usually the financial burden that can stop people seeking help. We also end on some hilarious anecdotes of Freddos one and only fight he got in when he was in his twenties, which relates to a wonderful story that Benji tells of Ram Dass and his martial arts instructor, which ends in a lot of laughter at our own expense. If you know someone who would benefit from, or would appreciate this podcast, please share it with them, word of mouth is always the best way to help this podcast grow. Another way to help us grow is to simply take a screenshot on your phone while listening and share it on your instagram story. You can follow us on instagram too @apesontapepodcast and get in touch with us directly, and check out some of the pics and videos we share that directly relate to what we talk about, you'll also keep updated with when we release new episodes.

Football Supporters Hub
Virgins to City and 400 million Freddos

Football Supporters Hub

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2021 58:29


We preview and predict the new 21/22 season across the Premier League, Championship, League 1 and 2. We also discuss the latest transfer drama regarding Messi and Grealish.

Coffee Explorer
Break out the Mixer! Frappes and Freddos in Greece

Coffee Explorer

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2021 15:49


Artemis  Gavriilidou (Gav reeli du)  shared with us how this delightful summer elixir was created in the most pragmatic wayThe difference between frappe and freddoHow the coffee brings us to the table connects us no matter where we areThis episode is part of my Cold Coffee Stack!CoffeeStain PodcastArtemis Drink MixersAndrea's Sculpture website www.woodsculpture.grCiel Coffee by Jen StoneCoffee ExplorerWant to up your coffee game, visit the equator and learn how to really taste coffee?  Sign up for my free, espresso-sized coffee course by emailing Jen@Ciel.World.

B******t Lab
Bribing Her Majesty The Queen with Freddos

B******t Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2021 111:35


Season 2 Episode 12There seems to be a pattern emerging… we don't know what yet..Listen to us and we'll give you a Freddo. JOIN US EVERY FRIDAY AT 19:30 GMT FOR OUR LIVE RECORDING SESSIONS! BY GOING TOO: TakenOffAir.Com/LiveFollow us on Twitter @TakenOffAirLike us on facebook.com/TakenOffAirFollow us on Instagram @SweptasideproductionsJoin our Reddit!: /r/TakenOffAirSupport us at Patreon.com/TakenOffAirBuy us a Coffee: Buymeacoffee.com/takenoffairEmail us: TakenOffAir@gmail.comvisit our website: www.TakenOffAir.comEpisode Edited by Ashley Pinkerton (@Rashleypink)Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/Takenoffair. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

B******t Lab
Bribing Freddo with Freddos

B******t Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2021 114:13


Season 2 Episode 11look at this.. the description is back up the right way, looks like Stefan has fixed the issue. We can't recall what the fuck we talked about this episode, as we've been toooooooooooooooooooooo busy with other stuff.. So here is the episode we've promised you. JOIN US EVERY FRIDAY AT 19:30 GMT FOR OUR LIVE RECORDING SESSIONS! BY GOING TOO: TakenOffAir.Com/LiveFollow us on Twitter @TakenOffAirLike us on facebook.com/TakenOffAirFollow us on Instagram @SweptasideproductionsJoin our Reddit!: /r/TakenOffAirSupport us at Patreon.com/TakenOffAirBuy us a Coffee: Buymeacoffee.com/takenoffairEmail us: TakenOffAir@gmail.comvisit our website: www.TakenOffAir.comEpisode Edited by Ashley Pinkerton (@Rashleypink)Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/Takenoffair. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

B******t Lab
Bribing Elon Musk with Freddos

B******t Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2021 122:09


Season 2 Episode 9Join us this week where we harass Elon Musk to get us on Mars as we don't have the money for their services so we attempt to bribe with Freddos instead 'cause Freddos is our currency for our sustained economy, we welcome Jordan back from his little holiday, and Jay ignores everyone to read Facebook comments.JOIN US EVERY FRIDAY AT 19:30 GMT FOR OUR LIVE RECORDING SESSIONS! BY GOING TOO: TakenOffAir.Com/LiveFollow us on Twitter @TakenOffAirLike us on facebook.com/TakenOffAirFollow us on Instagram @SweptasideproductionsJoin our Reddit!: /r/TakenOffAirSupport us at Patreon.com/TakenOffAirBuy us a Coffee: Buymeacoffee.com/takenoffairEmail us: TakenOffAir@gmail.comvisit our website: www.TakenOffAir.comEpisode Edited by Ashley Pinkerton (@Rashleypink)Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/Takenoffair. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

I Just Called To Tell You A Joke
203. My Friend Michelle

I Just Called To Tell You A Joke

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2020 2:12


In this episode I call my friend, Michelle, and I tell her a joke. This is the cheesiest joke ever, and bless Michelle for laughing. Can't wait to try out that new picnic rug and steal all her Freddos. Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/ijustcalledtotellyouajoke. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

B******t Lab
EP 16: Freddo Economy.

B******t Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 113:09


Join Jay, Kyle and Stefan for an episode filled with insensitive jokes, the economic downfall of Freddos, and ghosty happenings along with a secret that wasn't supposed to be told. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app (https://anchor.fm/s/26b4b4e8/podcast/sponsor/acugj9/url/https%3A%2F%2Fanchor.fm%2Fapp) Support this podcast

Table Manners with Jessie and Lennie Ware

It's lockdown. But that isn't going to stop us serving you Tables Manners, even in special circumstances.I've moved the family out to an Airbnb to make sure Corona can't get her mitts on Lennie, Dr Alex is on the frontline, so it's a quiet (and clean) house for mum and means this is our first episode recorded remotely.Via the internet the wonderful, funny and gorgeous Grimmy joined us for a virtual dinner with mum and I. We talk bulk buying Hobnobs whilst in isolation, growing up in Manchester, eating luxuriously late now he isn't on breakfast radio and living on Freddos when he made it to London. Although gutted to not have him over and give him a kiss, cuddle and chicken soup it was a Zoom revelation and a welcome relief from a heavy week! X See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Wise Men Say
Episode 505 - "Marriage. Six Kids. Freddos - The Banter XI Of The Decade"

Wise Men Say

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2019 74:32


Rory Fallow and Matthew Keeling bring us a special end-of-decade episode with their 'Banter XI Of The Decade'As Matthew says: "If you want a serious conversation, you're in the wrong place." See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Wise Men Say
Episode 505 - "Marriage. Six Kids. Freddos - The Banter XI Of The Decade"

Wise Men Say

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2019 74:32


Rory Fallow and Matthew Keeling bring us a special end-of-decade episode with their 'Banter XI Of The Decade' As Matthew says: "If you want a serious conversation, you're in the wrong place."

News With Jokes
680 Million Freddos

News With Jokes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2019 25:44


Jokes, jokes, jokes as James Cook, Craig Deeley and Phil Pagett look through the British newspapers of the 11th October 2019. Follow @newswithjokes for more, or @jamesecook, @craiguito and @Phil_Pagett for individual nonsense.

british jokes james cook freddos craig deeley phil pagett
The Jason Manford Show
The Jason Manford Show - Steve Edge & Catherine Bohart

The Jason Manford Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2019 73:54


Today, Jason was joined by friend and regular co-host Steve Edge. Plus Catherine Bohart popped into the studio too. Here's what they talked about this week: 1 - Nightclubs and Discotheques 2 - Conversations with the Queen 3 - The good old days with 10p Freddos 4 - A Crisp Education 5 - An update on the campervan trip 6 - UFO Sightings 7 - Armed Robber vs 11 Year Old with Squash and Bread 8 - Supermarket Battleground & Run For Your Money 9 - Your New TV Show Ideas 10 - Catherine Bohart joins the studio! 11 - Tales from 8 Out of 10 Cats 12 - Stand Up Comedy Steve 13 - The difference in hecklers across the UK Jason Manford, one of the UK's most loved comedians, is on Absolute Radio every Sunday from 8am. If that sounds a bit early on a Sunday for you, then catch the best bits of Jason's show on this handy podcast.

The Wyness Shuffle
26 Dream Rings and 104 Freddos

The Wyness Shuffle

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2019 64:33


LFC Daytrippers
FB4 Daily -Pepe, Bobby and Freddo Bars

LFC Daytrippers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2019 27:39


The reds are back for pre season and Milner is still a machine!!Gav looks at a few injuries Klopp has to deal with, that never ending Pepe link and has a word about James Pearce. Oh, isnt the price of Freddo bars a disgrace? Brought to you by More than a game.

LFC Daytrippers
FB4 Daily -Pepe, Bobby and Freddo Bars

LFC Daytrippers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2019 27:39


The reds are back for pre season and Milner is still a machine!!Gav looks at a few injuries Klopp has to deal with, that never ending Pepe link and has a word about James Pearce. Oh, isnt the price of Freddo bars a disgrace? Brought to you by More than a game.

The Alpha Project Podcast
A.P.P. Ep 186- Caramel Freddos, Karma & KD's Achilles

The Alpha Project Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2019 95:05


This epsidoe is a one punch knockout, ah no its not actually.

The Property Nomads Podcast
Attention ALL Landlords and Lettings Agents - The Tenants Fees Ban is NOW HERE!!! with Matthew Justice

The Property Nomads Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2019 43:46


This week, Rob is joined by residential lettings manager, Matt Justice BSc, to discuss the Tenant Fee Ban which is being introduced into England on June 1st, 2019. Their discussion covers everything from its positive aspects to its negative attributes, and the wider implications of what promises to be one of the most controversial pieces of legislation to hit the rental market in decades.   Sign Up For MSOPI Here: https://bit.ly/msopi-nomad KEY TAKEAWAYS  The premise behind the ban was to do away with fees charged to tenants by agents for things such as referencing, inventory costs, deposit registration, replacement keys etc. The ban aims to do away with all these costs for tenants. When it comes into force, tenants will only be liable for the rent, a holding deposit, and a security deposit. An overview of the Tenants Fee Ban: Tenancy deposits must not exceed the equivalent of five weeks rent unless that rent exceeds £50,000. Holding deposits will be capped at no more than one week's rent. The capped fee for changes to the tenancy agreement is to be no more than £50, unless the landlord can demonstrate that higher costs were incurred to do so. The Consumer Rights Act 2015 is amended to specify that the letting agent transparency requirements should apply to third party websites so that renters are aware of any fees from the very first instant.   As Matt points out, the deposit situation is different for HMOs, and must be understood completely by landlords, as charging the wrong amount will result in hefty fines. If a tenant has incurred bills or fees from utilities during their tenancy, then the landlord is entitled to settle such bills using funds taken from their security deposits. Matt believes that the ban has been introduced because of areas like London, where tenants have been subjected to exorbitant fees. In some cases, application fees alone have been greater than the first month's rent.  The problem with the ban is that some of the agent's fees are completely justified, and the only way to really recoup these costs is for the rents to increase.  Sometimes legislation seems to be in reaction to a sensationalised, and somewhat singular case of a landlord or lettings agent abusing their position. In Rob's opinion, more research should be done about the broader picture before legislation is introduced, ensuring that it is warranted, wise and active instead of reactive.   One way of circumventing the referencing fee issue is to offer optional referencing. Passing on the entire search fee, or a percentage of the cost to do so, may be necessary to ensure that the landlord still gets a reliable tenant, and the lettings agent still covers the cost of the search. If rents are increased due to the Tenant Fee Ban, then it will cost the tenant far more in the long run, especially for long-term lets. If these higher rents cannot be met, then it will cause massive social problems   BEST MOMENTS ‘It's going to be an eye-opener' ‘Sometimes when the government do a blanket ban on things, they don't always specify what they mean' ‘If the costs have got to be covered, naturally where's it got to go?' ‘Think about people kicking off at the cost of Freddos!' ‘I don't want to say that it'll be catastrophic, but it could potentially be catastrophic' ‘We don't want to lose landlords, and hopefully landlords still have use for lettings agents!'   VALUABLE RESOURCES   The Property Nomads Podcast – iTunes The Property Nomads - Stitcher Symonds And Greenham Arla and The Tenant's Ban The Tenant's Fee Act matt@symondsandgreenham.com - 01482 444 200    ABOUT THE HOST Rob Smallbone and Matt McSherry, the hosts of The Property Nomads Podcast, are on a global mission to guide your success. Success can happen in many ways, shapes and forms. Think about what success means to you. More properties? More clients? Financial freedom? Time freedom?  Rob & Matt are just two guys who want to make a huge difference to people around the world. They are here to guide your success in property, business and life and to inspire you to achieve your goals, dreams and visions. They've travelled, explored, and invested. And they're not planning on stopping these activities anytime soon. Buckle up, sit tight and enjoy the ride that is life.   CONTACT METHOD LinkedIn Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Dads' Hour
Episode 145: "The Freddo Man"

Dads' Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2019 28:43


**The Dads are back! ** **Chris Cairns** joins **Iain** & **Mick** for this week's episode. On the agenda: - How many Freddos can you buy for the price of a Milk Tray box? - How much should you bill your children? - What career paths is Iain blagging now? All that and more on this week's Dads' Hour! Originally broadcast **February 22nd 2019**. Follow **@MrMickCoyle**, **@Ian_Chris**, & **@ComedyCairns**. Produced by **@John_Fogarty**.

We Are Birmingham Podcast
You don’t even get very many Freddos for a quid anymore

We Are Birmingham Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2019 59:34


This week Chris and Matthew review the games against QPR and Bolton, discuss the atmosphere, or lack of, at St Andrew's and have a quick chat about recent transfer links. Music: The White Noise – Call Me Back and The Real Cool - Be Quiet

The Totally Football Show with James Richardson

Jimbo has Emma Saunders, Jack Lang and Lynsey Hooper to keep him company on our final show before Christmas as we discuss the new regime at Old Trafford, look ahead to the weekend’s fixtures at the top and bottom of the Premier League, and bemoan the escalating price of Freddos  RUNNING ORDER:  • PART 1a: Solksjaer in at United (01m 00s) • PART 2a: Burton face City in the League Cup semis (11m 30s)
 • PART 2b: Spurs 2 - 0 Arsenal - and why would Poch want to leave? (14m 20s) • PART 3a: Wolves v Liverpool preview (21m 00s) • PART 3b: City v Palace preview (26m 40s) • PART 3c: Is Puel next for the chop? (30m 20s)  • PART 3d: Arsenal v Burnley preview (33m 40s)
• PART 3e: World Club Cup update (36m 30s) • PART 4a: Innocent Bonke and who is Domingos Quina? (38m 20s) • PART 4b: The rest of the PL weekend (44m 20s) 
• PART 5a: The rising price of Freddos and Euro news (49m 20s)
 • PART 5b: The odds with Paddy Power’s Lee Price (54m 30s) • PART 6: Exeunt omnes (56m 30s)  GET IN TOUCH:
 • [follow us on **Instagram**](https://www.instagram.com/totallyfootballshow/) • [find us on **Facebook**](https://www.facebook.com/thetotallyfootballshow/) • [send us a **tweet: @TheTotallyShow**](http://www.twitter.com/thetotallyshow) CHARITY NEWS:
 • we’re working with **CALM**, the Campaign Against Living Miserably, who are dedicated to preventing male suicide.  [Head to the Calm Zone](https://www.thecalmzone.net/) 
PARISH NOTICES:
 • we’re sponsored by [**Paddy Power** - home of the Money Back Special](http://www.paddypower.com/)

The Big Question Podcast
112 - It's like living in Tupperware, the wall of gammon & I'm fifteen times more Spanish than you

The Big Question Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2018 45:07


The Wall of Gammon - You wouldn't want to let any of these near any big red buttons Freddos should be 10p again kim jong un - Sure he may mistreat and murder his people but his hair is pretty swish

Team CVM podcast
S2-Ep42: TG - chocolate Freddos - safe spaces

Team CVM podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2018 9:51


Primordial Radio Podcast
EP60 - Do Not Make Us Run...

Primordial Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2018 54:41


The latest podcast is business as usual with Moose and Dewsbury bringing you all the scintillating updates from the worlds of event planning, tour planning and broadcast engineering that you'd expect. There's also news of the latest addition to the Primordial merch store; CHOCOLATE! Because reasons. Along the way, they discuss post-gym beers, the Primordial hammock room (needs to be a thing btw!), the price of Freddos, and the pointlessness of existence, but in a positive way. Honest.

The Conversation Hat
Price of Freddos [Se2ep6 ft Ali Warwood]

The Conversation Hat

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2017 34:24


Our guest this week is comedienne and host of Cambridge's Commoner's Comedy Club, Ali Warwood. This episode features the bizarre 3-part sketch entitled Voicemail 1571, written by Liam and reacted-to (live) by Roman Armstrong. ============================== Our plan is that this show will always be available for free, but super fans are encouraged to support The Conversation Hat via Patreon. You will get early access to new episodes and a special, patron-only episode once a month: www.patreon.com/conversationhat Super Loot want to deliver a box of nerd merch and geek chic to your doorstep each month, and will do so for a hilariously affordable price: www.superloot.co.uk/?ref=988 Sign-up to our mailing list: eepurl.com/bNX8A1 Remember to subscribe on whatever podcast app you're using now so you see new episodes when they go live. ============================== The Conversation Hat is hosted by Ben Pierson and Liam Taylor, and edited by Laura Elmer. Logo by Cheyenne Betts. Additional artwork by Lauren Garnett. Music by Liam Taylor The Conversation Hat is managed by Odd Creative Ltd.

Words with Cris & Drew
033 - REMUNERATION

Words with Cris & Drew

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2017 67:00


Concerning the value of Freddos, slap-up meals and why you should never lie to a dolphin...

Illustrated Game Podcast
Season 5; Episode 6: Freddo

Illustrated Game Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2016 52:32


Joe Devine is joined by Alex Stewart, who had no headphones, so apologies for the occasional echo. Chat concerns Joe Hart, goalkeepers, science, and Freddos. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Health Binge
The War on Freddos

Health Binge

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2016 47:11


Drawing ever closer to the final week of the show, the guys take stock of Stephen's progress so far as they talk their way through quick and easy recipes, the food diary, and the all-important weigh in. Expect a couple of laughs and almost negligible amounts of fitness tips and advice. Stephen reviews Northpark's fitness app, Push Ups Workout, as well as continuing to pursue his own personal push up goal.

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows
To 10 To Kako - Stefanos Triantafyllos And Freddos - 11 - 09 - 2015 - PART B

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2015 20:55


Εκπομπή με τον Στέφανο Τριαντάφυλλο περί παντός επιστητού. Highlights: Φανέλα Άρη Πρωτοσέλιδα "Ποδόσφαιρο" Βέλγιο - Τί φάση; Παντελής Διαμαντόπουλος Βέλγιο - ΤΙ ΦΑΣΗ; Μάγκατ

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows
To 10 To Kako - Stefanos Triantafyllos And Freddos - 11 - 09 - 2015 - PART A

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2015 24:34


Εκπομπή με τον Στέφανο Τριαντάφυλλο περί παντός επιστητού. Highlights: Φανέλα Άρη Πρωτοσέλιδα "Ποδόσφαιρο" Βέλγιο - Τί φάση; Παντελής Διαμαντόπουλος Βέλγιο - ΤΙ ΦΑΣΗ; Μάγκατ

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows
To 10 To Kako - Stefanos Triantafyllos And Freddos - 11 - 09 - 2015 - PART C

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2015 27:25


Εκπομπή με τον Στέφανο Τριαντάφυλλο περί παντός επιστητού. Highlights: Φανέλα Άρη Πρωτοσέλιδα "Ποδόσφαιρο" Βέλγιο - Τί φάση; Παντελής Διαμαντόπουλος Βέλγιο - ΤΙ ΦΑΣΗ; Μάγκατ

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows
To 10 To Kako - Stefanos Triantafyllos And Freddos - Part A

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2015 21:19


Επετειακή εκπομπή για τα 10 χρόνια του SPORT 24 με τον Στέφανο Τριαντάφυλλο. Highlights: -Οι τίτλοι του Παντελή Διαμαντόπουλου -Ερχομός Μπερμπάτοφ - Διαγωνισμός για παρατσούκλι -Συνθήματα ομάδων & υποδοχή μεταγραφής Εργοτέλη -Καλύτερος ξένος παίκτης που έχει έρθει -Τι να προσέξει η Εθνική Ελλάδας μπάσκετ - Ανάλυση. -Νατουραλιζέ παίκτες, και Τζον Κόρφας -Το κορυφαίο email ever -Αποχώρηση Διαμαντίδη -Νικητήριο παρατσούκλι για Μπερμπάτοφ

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows
To 10 To Kako - Stefanos Triantafyllos And Freddos - Part B

SPORT 24 Radio 103,3 Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2015 24:56


Επετειακή εκπομπή για τα 10 χρόνια του SPORT 24 με τον Στέφανο Τριαντάφυλλο. Highlights: -Οι τίτλοι του Παντελή Διαμαντόπουλου -Ερχομός Μπερμπάτοφ - Διαγωνισμός για παρατσούκλι -Συνθήματα ομάδων & υποδοχή μεταγραφής Εργοτέλη -Καλύτερος ξένος παίκτης που έχει έρθει -Τι να προσέξει η Εθνική Ελλάδας μπάσκετ - Ανάλυση. -Νατουραλιζέ παίκτες, και Τζον Κόρφας -Το κορυφαίο email ever -Αποχώρηση Διαμαντίδη -Νικητήριο παρατσούκλι για Μπερμπάτοφ

Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 07)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2011 3:36


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 07)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2011 3:36


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 11)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2011 3:40


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 11)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2011 3:40


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 10)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2011 3:51


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 10)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2011 3:51


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 09)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2011 4:44


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 09)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2011 4:44


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 08)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2011 3:45


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 08)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2011 3:45


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 06)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2011 5:00


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 06)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2011 5:00


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 05)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2011 4:01


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 05)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2011 4:01


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 04)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2011 2:51


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 04)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2011 2:51


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 03)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2011 3:17


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 03)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2011 3:17


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 02)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2011 4:07


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 02)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2011 4:07


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 01)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2011 3:37


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 01)

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2011 3:37


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 12).mp4

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 7:50


Freddos Stories
Freddos Stories (season 01, episode 12).mp4

Freddos Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 7:50