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The Public Nuisance Podcast
Host Sean McComb interviews various guests
The Public Nuisance Podcast
The Public Nuisance Podcast #033 “Boshhhhh” with Ryan Curtis, Paul Harkin, Big John & Johnny Fisher
Welcome to a new episode of The Public Nuisance Podcast with me, Sean McComb.
This week we welcome The Lads, Ryan Curtis, Paul Harkin, Big John & Johnny Fisher to the podcast.
We cover Fishers Tour of Belfast, Murphys or Guiness, Sean drinking wine in Canada, Boxing, Cricket, MMA, Riots, Ryan’s Furry Shoes and much more.
New episodes every Tuesday.
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Sean McComb
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Killen Studios
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That Prize Guy
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Website: https://thatprizeguy.co.uk/
The Public Nuisance, sean McCann. Welcome to this episode of the Public Nuisance Podcast brought to you from my sponsor, that praise guy right here at the headquarters. The man is doing millions of pounds in praises every month, helping charities, helping communities. What more do you want? Thanks for visiting, love it lads, what a group, what a gathering we have here today. Thanks for having, thanks for being part of it, thank, you.
Speaker 4:You couldn't find anyone else worthy of bringing on, so you got us on. Yeah, 100%.
Speaker 1:I had to pick you two off a streak because I'm one of those people. Should I know, you should I know you should.
Speaker 3:I know you. Only one of them wants it. I told, I told.
Speaker 1:Big Johnny should go around Belfast today just getting random photos of people and be like can I get a photo?
Speaker 2:of you, and they'll be like what? And then?
Speaker 1:other people will be looking from the outside in going. Should I know this guy?
Speaker 2:and it's you getting photos of them do you know what I mean.
Speaker 1:So tell me, lads, how have you found Belfast? I know you're. I've seen you on your social medias ranting and raving about Belfast and how good it is listen.
Speaker 4:We're fortunate, or unfortunate enough, where my work at the moment is taking me around the world, the whole world. And then when you Belfast which you probably wouldn't if you're from London, you probably wouldn't be on your list of visits. When I come here the first time last September, I was amazed how clean it was, how friendly the people were, how walkable it all is, and coming here the second time has cemented what a great city it is, and I would advise anyone, if you've got a spare weekend, come and come and visit belfast, because you will have a great time and it is. It's been truly fantastic, and I'm I don't tell no lies, I can't lie with things like this. It's a wonderful place and, uh, it just feels so at home here, which is weird.
Speaker 3:I've been here three or four times now been to watch.
Speaker 1:Uh, he's been a tannery. If you've been to Landry, yeah, I've been here.
Speaker 3:I've been here three times, actually four times To watch boxing as well, and the boxing obviously Is a great, great thing, but, as you said, the friendliness of the people Is probably the the best thing. And, yeah, it's a great place To come and visit.
Speaker 4:Because from us in England, like obviously you hear about Belfast, the first thing that comes into your mind is troubles.
Speaker 1:You know like, and a lot of them a lot of them.
Speaker 4:Troubles obviously spilled over into London, where we are, and you automatically think of troubles. But when you come it can be far from that no.
Speaker 5:It's mad that people still have that perception yeah but even in Dublin, you know people even in Dublin they think like, oh, you better watch when you go up there. Know, I had that perception myself before I started coming up here and having all my friends up here and stuff you know be like, oh jeez, if you go into a wrong area up there, if you're a Catholic or whatever.
Speaker 1:Like you know it's not going to be good, in fairness, when you go into certain areas. If you're in the heart of an or pub in one of those areas, it's the same everywhere, but I mean.
Speaker 5:I could bring you into an area in Dublin and if you weren't? With me like it wouldn't be good, and I'm sure you boys.
Speaker 3:There's things in London where you can go, places like that it doesn't necessarily have to be the traditional troubles like over there, exactly In any area of any part of the world.
Speaker 4:There's going to be trouble, but we're British, we're Protestant. We felt just as much at home last time when we came in the Protestant areas of Belfast as we did in the Catholic areas of Belfast, yeah of course 100%.
Speaker 2:You know, we went with Paddy the Dagger. Yeah, I was going to say big party, we went with Paddy the Dagger.
Speaker 4:We visited both sides.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 4:And from my point of view, we was welcomed in both sides.
Speaker 1:We went into I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird, I'm Baird.
Speaker 5:I'm Baird. I'm.
Speaker 3:Baird I'm, baird I'm.
Speaker 2:Baird.
Speaker 1:I'm Baird I seven years ago and I tried to go back in and they said you're bored and I said that's not me, that's my brother. I blame everything on the older brother because, they look like and they said, no, it's definitely you. So I just have boycotted it ever since, so I may be allowed back, there is a good bar.
Speaker 3:I'll still listen you're a felon in the felon's bar, yeah.
Speaker 4:And how.
Speaker 5:This is probably a place that you have to deal With a lot of bad shit To get barred from. Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 4:Yeah, wanking in public Normally gets you barred From many places yeah.
Speaker 5:Like the pub in.
Speaker 1:Shameless Not in Belfast, but it's good. No, it's an open door.
Speaker 4:Yeah, but what I love about Belfast forget about everything else is like you can walk everywhere, basically. Yeah, 100%, and like where the Duke of York pub is, that little street there? What is that street called all around?
Speaker 1:there it's a cathedral quarter.
Speaker 4:Yeah, just like when you see that you think, wow, why? It's like old Belfast with the cobbles. All the old buildings but old bars and everyone's welcoming.
Speaker 3:I like going to Dublin. It's great, but you can get trapped in the touristy bits here You've got that little bit if you need it in the first you go around there, but it seems a little bit more accessible than.
Speaker 4:Dublin. We go to Dublin on Friday. When we're in Dublin on Friday, we go.
Speaker 3:Oh, I'd much prefer.
Speaker 5:Dublin to Belfast, we'll do Podcast Oil catches on my podcast.
Speaker 3:We're a different tune when we come to you.
Speaker 4:Fucking glad we're out of Belfast.
Speaker 1:You were drinking Murphy's, john. Yeah, we were talking earlier. Just what did you prefer? Murphy's.
Speaker 4:Whenever I've come to Ireland, or even back at home in England, I've always preferred I like Guinness, don't get me wrong, but I prefer a Murphy's. Now, since I've put it online that I've had a Murphy's, a lot of people are saying try a Beamish.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Beamish is lovely.
Speaker 4:So I'm going to try after we finish this, I'm going to go back to the Duke of York, I'm going to try a Beamish and I'm going to try a pack of the Glen's of Antrim pickled onion crisps.
Speaker 5:Because they're supposed to be elite. I know the crisps food.
Speaker 1:No, the Duke of York, they do a variety of stout, so maybe you could do all three the Guinness, a Murphy's and an English.
Speaker 4:That'd be a good one, yeah.
Speaker 1:See which one you prefer.
Speaker 4:I know so far Murphy's. It would take a lot for me to beat a Murphy's, yeah, Although.
Speaker 3:I do like a Kilkenny as well, be drunk after three. I probably I was.
Speaker 4:I had two in, uh, the duke of york yesterday lunchtime not eating anything and I actually felt myself getting a bit, you know I wanted to pick the glass up and throw it at someone. Um no, I actually felt a bit, uh, not woozy, but just happy, yeah. So then I found a calf rose's calf had, uh, chicken, curry, rice and chips delicious, proper calf, yeah, really nice do you do you ever drink that?
Speaker 2:no, no, only beers.
Speaker 4:I drink like Peroni, corona, stella he likes a nice Melbic, nice wine nice wine, red wine.
Speaker 1:I had a bad experience when I went to Canada to box in 2010. It was a dinner show and after my fight the show was sort of finishing. I think it was like second last fight and I drank a full bottle away and I was only 19 or 15 at the time.
Speaker 1:Fuck me, lad, I had to be carried home it took me and I had the worst hangover for two days. We were travelling from, I think, st Catharines in Canada to Sornia in Torrio. It was like a seven hour drive and I just threw up for fucking 48 hours straight.
Speaker 4:Red wine can do that.
Speaker 1:I had an experience with my mate Steve.
Speaker 4:Potts 500 game player for West Ham. Big shout out to Steve Potts. He'd come in. It was baking hot, he'd come in. I said come in five minutes with his wife and family and we drank about eight bottles of red wine between us. And that's the only time ever this was a morning. They were sick everywhere, all red everywhere, and the only time I've ever not gone to work.
Speaker 1:You thought you'd kill someone.
Speaker 3:I was shaking, like anything but red wine can do that to you. We used to have an old banged up Mondale. I nearly flipped that over. You tried to flip the car over as well, I was so drunk.
Speaker 4:But you know why? Because he was drinking it like it was water. It was baking off Red wine.
Speaker 1:you've got to sip, as he knows.
Speaker 4:So since then I didn't touch red wine for about two years, but I had a nice glass last night. Yeah, it was lovely. I'm a sucker for it Red wine should be cultured, not loutish.
Speaker 2:Yeah, 100%.
Speaker 1:Because people would have a wham with their dinner.
Speaker 5:Yeah.
Speaker 1:But see, Irish and British people have the wrong perception.
Speaker 3:I think they'll go and fuck In general.
Speaker 4:yeah, you go to Europe you go to France we don't know how to drink properly. We don't know how to drink properly Like one thing I noticed from being in Europe and stuff.
Speaker 5:It's like they don't get why you would drink before you go out to drink.
Speaker 3:Do you know what I mean? Yeah, free drinks, Even in Australia. It's not the same.
Speaker 2:I was talking he's 18, right, and he's saying, no, we're not, We'll just get on the train and go. And I'm like what do you mean? You don't drink before you go out. They just meet on the train. I'm like we used to drink for hours before we went drinking.
Speaker 3:When you go on lads holidays to line up or whatever as well, I'll just remember all my mates.
Speaker 2:I'll have a drink until 1am. They'll be drinking seven o'clock anymore. Like I couldn't imagine doing something like that on holiday.
Speaker 4:I haven't been drunk for ages years probably and the only time I will get drunk is at home where you can feel you're safe and secure.
Speaker 1:You know you're in your comfort zone if anything was to happen, you've got that.
Speaker 4:You know someone can hopefully put you up to bed, yeah.
Speaker 5:I'll try to do that. You can just go out and flip a Monday Drunk a bottle of Disaronno in about seven miles.
Speaker 3:Eh yeah, and that's not a good thing.
Speaker 4:I poured it all in a pint glass.
Speaker 3:I don't know, I got you up the stairs. Good job, I'm fat, because otherwise I think you could have killed me.
Speaker 1:You got me up the stairs. I see in Wano, how much pints do you think you could do in Wano. How many pints, how many p.
Speaker 4:Listen, as I said, I'm not a massive drinker, but every now and again I'll overindulge, like I do in food. I overindulge in food a lot more than what I do in alcohol. But, if I was at home, you could probably do nine, ten points.
Speaker 3:William would do more.
Speaker 4:William had my youngest son.
Speaker 3:Johnny's brother. He works in insurance in London so part of his job is meeting clients and getting deals. I've had to tell him a few times. Is meeting clients and getting deals? I've had to tell him a few times.
Speaker 4:He's a good boy. William's got a good job, but he knows how to. He sunk 10 points one night. Next day he ran half marathon. He's got record time Because he's young, he doesn't have time, he's only 21.
Speaker 3:He's 21. I don't know, by an accident, the Belfast Marathon, is that right About three weeks ago, four weeks ago?
Speaker 2:Now the.
Speaker 4:Belfast Marathon. Is that a 26 mile marathon? Yeah, 26 mile marathon. So what happened? No, no, but some of them.
Speaker 1:Do them a bit shorter. So, we were doing the relay and I was only supposed To run 5.5 miles. So I was at a Wadden the night before. Obviously I had a few drinks. I was still out there at like five or six in the morning, went home, went to bed, woke up at half nine. The morning had started but I was on the last leg.
Speaker 4:Yeah, lucky you.
Speaker 1:But see where I live. I couldn't get out because the road was closed off, because the road was all closed. So I was like, fuck, how am I the button? So my wife was like fuck, I don't know.
Speaker 3:So we were asking the people, the stewards who were on the street look, we need it.
Speaker 1:You can't get out there's runners coming by and they're going to be coming by for the next hour. So so I says my wife fuck it. I was eating a packet of like chili sensation crisps and I was like, fucking, I'm away, what are you doing? I said I'm running a 13 mile around and I was fucked. I I think I was still drunk the whole time.
Speaker 5:I was on.
Speaker 1:Fucking feet. My feet were mangled up.
Speaker 2:See, that's the thing.
Speaker 4:Sometimes You're running them slates Sometimes like you in that instance and like William, my son, in that instance it's probably the alcohol keeping you going. Yeah, 100%.
Speaker 5:And it'll be later on in the night when it all hits you.
Speaker 1:After. When I finished, it was so dehydrated I was like fuck, I need to go and get a pint anyway.
Speaker 2:It's crazy the way the mentality.
Speaker 1:The first thing you think of is I need a fucking cure. Even after running 13 minutes.
Speaker 4:But you've got some good pints in Belfast. A lot of people have said try Harp Lager.
Speaker 1:Yeah, the Harp. Is that from Belfast? That's what I would drink, yeah.
Speaker 5:I would drink Harp. I was very surprised when I first came up here and started saying I was all drinking that because alcoholics, like homeless people on the street, wouldn't drink Harp.
Speaker 1:Harp's unbelievable. It's a great pint. It's a great pint of lager. It's the equivalent.
Speaker 4:They'd be like look at that man around there. Is he just like a Forster's?
Speaker 1:Like a Forster's probably, yeah.
Speaker 4:I think personally. I think personally. Thank you. I saw the bar with a harp sign so I'm going to go to Duke York, then I might go and try a harp.
Speaker 1:It's a lot easier to drink than a Foster's.
Speaker 3:I think, yeah, it just goes down easy, yeah, 100%.
Speaker 5:I would drink at Dublin. You'd be fucked out, yeah.
Speaker 4:What would you drink in Dublin then? Just the standard, I suppose Guinness. Yeah, what would be the go to point?
Speaker 5:a lager like if it was a lager, it'd be probably like I don't know. I don't really drink, I don't know people seem to like, and you know the, is it like Italian ones would? Be, but then you'll always just have people that are going to just drink yeah, but they're all brewed in England.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I know, these are brewed in England.
Speaker 5:I'd say probably.
Speaker 1:Heineken.
Speaker 4:As far as there's a Heineken, I'd pause. Yeah, but it's brewed in England. It's brewed in England. Yeah, yeah, it's brewed in England. I suppose Guinness is brewed or is it, I think, the biggest brewery in no? So we're all fed a load of mystique.
Speaker 5:it's mad that when you you know I wouldn't be I'd be more like Paul just drink wine with males. I don't really drink much, but if I was drinking, it'd be just a glass of wine with a male. But you know, if you're in another country I've had had a pint of Guinness and fuck me, it's bad.
Speaker 2:I've never had a Guinness in my life, you know? Nah, no, I've tried it, but I've never ordered or had a full pint of Guinness.
Speaker 4:Yeah, it's true, the baby Guinness is a good yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5:They're not cheap, but they're good. Black out, though, after a couple, you know, it seems like people always have the same places to go to in Belfast for Guinness.
Speaker 2:Yeah, for the last couple of years They've got a pub in London. You?
Speaker 3:know, what I mean.
Speaker 5:So here's what it is anyway, at least in my experience from talking to people who drink Guinness, it's like it's always the shithole pubs, with the old men at the bar and if they're drinking.
Speaker 4:Guinness Smell. A shite off them. No, you're right. Old school, and if they're the best restaurants as well.
Speaker 3:you know the ones that aren't too fancy or too much listen we get asked.
Speaker 4:You ask oh, michelin star, this michelin star that I much prefer the family restaurants.
Speaker 1:I've been there, yeah generation after generation.
Speaker 4:I don't like all that fancy stuff.
Speaker 1:Yeah you want to just stick to what you know, you see, listen. You go into a restaurant and the experience is nice, just the experience I'd rather have the experience of the good food.
Speaker 3:They're more interested in saying oh, we have to cook it this way. I'll do this to it.
Speaker 4:No, that's not what you want, you just want it to taste good, I think people are seeing through that a lot, because people are liking traditional food, old-fashioned food, marco Pierre.
Speaker 3:White said it. I saw him say it. He said that the Michelin star chasing that has become more about the gastronomy and how they cook it rather than what actually experience.
Speaker 5:You know it's like who cares what, like how long the steaks been lying there we're simple people.
Speaker 1:We want to. Yeah, simple food. Have you ever had an ulcer fry? I saw them in the uh calves is that like the equivalent of learning english full english fry has like stuff on it that no other fry has.
Speaker 2:You can't even get it in Dublin. What can you not get in Dublin? Potato bread.
Speaker 5:We have black cream white cream, but it has potato bread. Oh my God. Yeah, does that have white pudding up here, though? We do, oh do we?
Speaker 4:I had one in Dirty Nellies in Southsea.
Speaker 2:Do you remember I was? I went there and had an Irish breakfast. You booked a train mate before you leave. Tomorrow, also free.
Speaker 4:Also free. I think there's a nice cafe. What is potato bread.
Speaker 1:Potato bread is the nicest thing you'll ever eat.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I've had potato bread. You can't even describe it. You can't describe it. Just get it tomorrow, laced in butter. Just get it. No, you're right, we shouldn't have a breakfast in a hotel and sausage all the eggs, your potato bread, soda bread.
Speaker 2:You'll probably want to move here after but I said that.
Speaker 4:You said that you'd probably want to move here. I think a lot of people from Britain are moving over here, isn't it? It's cheaper there's a lot of landlords from London who've just bought houses it'll bring another problem in itself, the more of us that move over look at fucking Spain and all that, all the protests for tourism and stuff, because all the houses.
Speaker 3:People are just leaving England. A lot, yeah, but you say about the protests in Spain.
Speaker 4:A lot of that's bullshit, because we've been to Mallorca a couple of times and a lot of people now are saying there's not many protests. There's only a few people driving it on the news.
Speaker 2:It's not as bad as what you see. You see, they're talking about the protests in Ibiza, but Magaluf.
Speaker 4:Magaluf is not as busy as what it should be because of a lot of protests.
Speaker 3:It's turning people off going and now all that's got to happen is businesses are going to close.
Speaker 2:The protest was about people who buy houses in Spain and they don't use them it's not about people visiting, for we get a lot of people down the mainland that are buying houses here. What do you think we get in?
Speaker 4:London. You go around London, chelsea, kensington no one's in them houses.
Speaker 1:They'll be bought by the Russians, the Chinese, the Arabs. You know what?
Speaker 5:I mean, we have the same problem. We have the same. Everyone's got the same problem. Is it Indians or Chinese who own the crazy amount of London?
Speaker 3:I think China owns more. It's China is yeah, yeah, yeah, a lot of the high-end places, because they're the only ones that can afford it. A lot of the English people.
Speaker 4:They can't afford to you know.
Speaker 5:I was on Liverpool and Dublin too. Yeah, Dublin it's a problem we've all got.
Speaker 4:Yeah, you know what I mean.
Speaker 1:I think Montmorency someone had a gaff up in Cromlin for €7,280 a month. What?
Speaker 5:What Seven grand a month In Cromlin In Cromlin, in Dublin, yeah yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:And it was a five-bedroom cafe.
Speaker 3:But I was like what the fuck? If you go an hour and a half two hours up from London, though, you're going to approaching places like Loughborough and Peterborough and you can't get value for money.
Speaker 1:You get 100 grand for every house At.
Speaker 2:There's good value, but Bangor alone. There's not good value in houses here Because of the Manford. You've got to go rural to get value for money. There was a house that went up on property a pile they already had, and everybody was sharing it. Huge, big, beautiful house. It was Porto Bogey. Did you see it with?
Speaker 1:the football pitch. I've seen someone from property policies. If I beat this guy who owns this house and penalties on his people, yeah, yeah, yeah so that house, right, that house, it's 430 grand.
Speaker 2:Which you put that house anywhere in north ireland it's about a million and a half, but because of where it is, it's right, right in the sticks, as johnny said, like peter brought around that way I think you're only like 40 minutes into london.
Speaker 3:Yeah, that's why I don't want to live there right, you know, and getting properties there as a second home, but that's what they'll get angry at themselves. We're talking about people buying second homes and letting them out.
Speaker 1:It will start to trickle, They'll start to filter out of London and then it'll become a place that people don't want to live. It's actually happened where we live.
Speaker 4:It's just very hard now. If you're a young person, young couple, it's very hard to get on a property ladder.
Speaker 5:If you've got a.
Speaker 4:I'm not being derogatory, but if you've just got like a normal working job, where you work work your socks off.
Speaker 3:Yeah, it's very hard. And then if you want to try and get on in this country, in Great Britain, you get taxed to the hilt.
Speaker 4:You know, someone might want to go and work extra hours. Just live the hells.
Speaker 3:They can do it. They're at a level when they can do the loopholes and get through the loopholes, but normal working people In Britain.
Speaker 4:We can only speak about Britain. If you're rich, you haven't got any problems. If you're the poorest, you probably haven't got any problems Because you're being looked after.
Speaker 5:It's the ones in the middle that want to work Hard working people, they say the middle class.
Speaker 3:Is just wiped out. Yeah, it's just yeah.
Speaker 1:Working people as well, see the thing is, see a lot of the times see people who do work their ass off and they've got decent jobs, but they're just caught in the middle, somewhere they're not seeing no benefit A lot of times it's not their fault.
Speaker 1:They may have just had no direction growing up to go into the rig of fucking education. But they've got themselves. When they've got older, they realise themselves they want to work and they're just on a normal job, let's say a call center or a sales job and they're working their ass off.
Speaker 3:But even 10 years ago they just can't get by a salary 10 years ago which was considered a high salary in london.
Speaker 4:It's probably you're just about getting by on it now if you've got a family of four, it's inflation and stuff and everything else. You know what I mean. That calls it on purpose, to be truthful I've been here for the last three years.
Speaker 1:the fucking inflation's going to drop. Yeah, and I'm waiting on it.
Speaker 4:Yeah, well, it probably has dropped, but it ain't dropped in the supermarket or the house prices.
Speaker 5:Nothing's dropped that way, like especially even in Dublin now like you buy something and like I don't know what I bought. I bought like a sandwich or something the other day and a pack of crisps, and it was like I was having the enora when I was like that's what I'm saying, you talk about fry-ups.
Speaker 4:You could be out and go in England and get a breakfast for a fiver. Now you can't get a breakfast for under 15 quid.
Speaker 5:You don't get a fiver. Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 2:That's why the pound is worthless. Yeah, yeah, what the fuck's that.
Speaker 1:I don't even recognise it, do I when I was?
Speaker 2:going to or four quid and I got me a taxi down the street, got me something to eat and got me home. See if I have an I-10.
Speaker 5:I took my I-10 for see if I give him a ten or nine, but tell me to fuck off so in Dublin, before we went into the aura, we had the punt and it was like you were still smitten pumping. Fuck, I wish and you could literally have one a day. It was a pound and you'd go into the shop and you'd be only short of telling the shopkeeper to fuck off out that you were buying the whole place. Get out, because you could just buy like you could buy anything.
Speaker 5:You know what I mean. And now, like I said, you wouldn't even get a bar to chocolate for like.
Speaker 4:Do you know what? We're sounding old now, aren't we? Back in the day Back in the day, even Johnny's sounding old Look.
Speaker 3:I feel old, though, because I've got Emre and William, who are 21, 23. Like, it feels like an age away when I was 21. Four or five years change, but we all get old eventually, don't we? Yeah, that's it.
Speaker 1:See like when you're boxing, like you're very, very young for heavyweight. It's crazy to think that even Tyson Fury what is he? 34, 35? He's 35 this year. He's fucking young for heavyweight.
Speaker 2:That's insane.
Speaker 1:The people and most other weights start to filter out of the sport that age it's different for heavyweights. There's a big thing, obviously. Anto Kakachi just won a world title, right.
Speaker 4:Yeah, good book age. Yeah, but like a heavyweight, that's the age you should only start that's your prime.
Speaker 3:You have 10 years left.
Speaker 1:Yeah, to hit your 10 good years. Yeah, that's crazy. I remember just talking about before the people giving you hate, the stuff you haven't even developed in the heavyweight area I've got a lot to learn and, uh, this is the.
Speaker 3:This is the beginning, really, because I've not been winging it as such. But you're like I had 10 amateur fights and you're just climbing and going step by step every time like you're not babbage out in 30 seconds and you've got to go up the next level and it's like you gamble a little bit.
Speaker 1:It's snakes and ladders yeah, some snakes and ladders, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4:And we said you're only learning your artist lessons in the toughest way possible. 100 and in a year's time.
Speaker 3:The picture changes so quickly in heavyweight boxing as well you just if you're, if you're exciting and you can put bums on seats.
Speaker 4:You're always going to have a place yeah, because it's a business for you you always earn a living that's the important thing, and sometimes it's not about winning title after title after title, it is just being exciting having that journey having that story you know and everything that goes around with it, and like we still talk about Billy Walker from like London back in the day and he never won a title.
Speaker 2:But people talk about him as the one bomber because he was so excited.
Speaker 5:You know what I mean, because what I do say to people is you're an entertainer first, before you're the fighter, and people a lot of the time like when you don't really have like something that people want to see they'll say it's unfair, like they don't have a good voice or a good personality, but at the end of the day it's a business, you need to resonate with people.
Speaker 3:That ain't about being saying you're not.
Speaker 4:Yeah, exactly, just be yourself If you're a normal bloke.
Speaker 3:people resonate with you the story of Johnny.
Speaker 4:Johnny's not the typical boxer. He's got a history degree like his A level. Results were sensational. It's not the normal boxer, but if Johnny can get to where he's got to, other people can get to where they've got to.
Speaker 1:Yeah, 100% like what you're doing.
Speaker 4:You're inspiring people with your story. Yeah, you know, I'm not saying Johnny's the same as you. No, of course it's just people.
Speaker 5:People sitting at home can think oh, if he can get there and you've got, we like it, but we should watch it.
Speaker 1:It just has to be related. I feel like every boxer always uses the same story. They've had this hard upbringing.
Speaker 3:I couldn't do nothing. I didn't need to box.
Speaker 1:See boxing.
Speaker 2:it's a working class sport, honestly you've came from football or your father came from football John you've probably came from football.
Speaker 1:Who the fuck?
Speaker 2:goes to the boxing club. See if I had my way. My son is fuck. Goes to the boxing club. See if I had my way.
Speaker 1:My son has not gone to the boxing club, I'd give him a dartboard.
Speaker 3:I told you how many people are doing that now.
Speaker 4:Sit in the pub and have a beer while you're you know, we know Luke a little bit and he has brought people to darts you know, you've even got your mums now and it's adorable, it's adorable back in the day.
Speaker 4:It'd just be people like us for our dance, because there's just certain people who transcend sports isn't there because I know fuck all about darts, but I know him and I know Pete Taylor obviously as well, but it's just what sport needs every now and then they'll come along, people who have an opportunity not to box.
Speaker 1:Yeah, why would you get such a fucking hard sport? Do you know why I give credit to Chris Eubank? Because he didn't need to.
Speaker 4:He was well off and kind of been. You know he's dead multi-millionaire, but they're fucking hungry, you've had a great.
Speaker 3:It's a great my plan was to be a barrister conversion course and my manager now I was just trying to get work experience with him when I was doing a bit of spying with Joe Joyce and I said, oh, please take my email, see if we can do it. And then one thing happens after the other, and I think that's the beauty of sport as well, you just run with it you don't think too far ahead.
Speaker 4:It gives you opportunities where life wouldn't give you opportunities?
Speaker 5:yeah, I don.
Speaker 3:It's very good for character building.
Speaker 5:That's what I believe. I probably don't want my kids to be truthful.
Speaker 4:You don't want your kids to do it. But it'll give them something that they can't learn anywhere else. I'm going to put my son on there for disappointment. They learn stuff in that boxing gym that he can't learn anywhere else.
Speaker 2:I would love my son from a young age to be into it.
Speaker 1:Do I want him to put his life on the line? No, of course, absolutely not. I think the benefit comes from.
Speaker 2:You'll have an obsession with it if he develops that obsession and he wants to find himself. That's not my decision.
Speaker 5:You know what I mean because it just gives you so many things. Like people even with the accent people would say to me like, oh jeez, like MMA has given me way more than it's took away from me. Even with the accident, you know what I mean even if I was still in the wheelchair, it would have gave me more than it's taken away from me life is dangerous.
Speaker 4:Yeah, you might not go to MMA because your mum says it's too dangerous. Stand on a street corner. Someone come up and stab you exactly, or you might walk out in the road, get run over. You just can't look at life like that.
Speaker 3:As you said, you don't necessarily have to have your son go and be a boxer or your daughter go and do it, but being in that boxing gym, mixing with the people the authority that the coaches have people from all different walks of life.
Speaker 4:Listen boxing gym Catholic.
Speaker 5:Protestant, muslim, black and white, and you're all in the same.
Speaker 1:Tony Barry says in a report you'll have a police officer, you'll have a police officer and you'll have a fucking gangster. All in the same gym and it's a mutual respect.
Speaker 4:No, it is. Unless you've been in them gyms, you don't realise that I don't think any other like combat sports is completely different.
Speaker 3:Schools in England and Ireland and Britain and Ireland.
Speaker 1:They need to, they need to take note of what the value of a boxing gym is.
Speaker 3:Because there's still that stigma around boxing and fighting and MMA.
Speaker 1:You've done talks in schools before and some of the teachers you can tell are turning their nose up, but they don't realise the values it brings.
Speaker 4:There are teachers who know that it can be valuable, and they're the ones that need to do something, and we know it's dangerous, but, as we just said, life is dangerous.
Speaker 2:It's the impact that it has on community too. Like it's putting them into that and those things are so essential in all communities. Like it's the people who dedicate themselves running the gyms and stuff All of it. They're valuable.
Speaker 1:It's so small and so successful because of the grassroots boxing that obviously the city council have invested loads in like helping boxing clubs.
Speaker 4:There's a boxing club in every area yeah, but then the council knows what it can bring. And if they didn't have them boxing clubs, exactly what are them children going to be doing?
Speaker 1:it. The coaches are all volunteers. No one does it for money. It's for the love of the sport. They're the people you've got to take your ex off to 15, 10, 20 years time.
Speaker 3:Them kids are in that boxing club and the adults of Belfast or London.
Speaker 2:You need them with them values because they know they've experienced it first hand and that's, I'm sure. When you're boxing too, you're going to be doing the same thing, hopefully they don't learn from all your side.
Speaker 5:Just that little sound of money at life.
Speaker 4:One thing a boxing gym or MMA gym, combat sport gym teaches you there's always someone bigger and badder than you.
Speaker 1:Always I've been humbled.
Speaker 3:I'm humbled so much in my career. You take it on the chin and you move on.
Speaker 2:You can imagine like if you were going into that from you know, with a bit of an attitude before you when you were a young age.
Speaker 5:Some people need that like absolutely it's a bit of humility, especially when you're at them, teenage years, when you think you're the bollocks. Do you remember?
Speaker 3:Philip Hergovich came to spar at Origin and I thought he asked me to go and spar in Texas with him after that and I thought, all right, we'll just have a. It's only a four-round spar and I was getting absolutely pummeled, philip.
Speaker 4:Hergovich, lovely bloke, we got on really well with him. He's a nice man. But that first spar he's up there thinking. Because we had a few people, nothing bad happened.
Speaker 3:I don't spar easy.
Speaker 4:I never spar easy, but it's just pummeling, pummeling and I went to Texas for two weeks and I got better, I went over there and I'm thinking he ain't got a better handle these two weeks because Hergovich goes for it, but by the end of the two weeks he was handling it. Yeah, brilliant, Come through it.
Speaker 3:Do you know what I mean? Yeah, I boxed on the back foot a little bit too much With Hergovich.
Speaker 4:We realised that I was trying to box on the back foot with him too much, but when Johnny fronted him up, that's when Johnny had more success, a bit more success.
Speaker 3:I wouldn't say I was winning the spas, but I gave a better go of it. So, in a way I've come full circle and realised what I am and what my style has got to be.
Speaker 1:Obviously I'm a complete. I'm a super six foot, fucking super lightweight, like I'm a boxer, yeah, but I have a way of what's the point? Moving back to get to the ropes and punch no yeah, why not just punch from where you are exactly so, let them come in the range and meet them, exactly right. So I have this thing where, like, never back off, never back. Even though I'm a counter puncher, I'll still wait within you can't punch you, but you're not giving ground.
Speaker 4:That's what johnny did in his fight, if we're being honest.
Speaker 1:But that's that's a good learning curve for you, because a lot of people I, I, there was a lot of people I used to call a rat. They'll only throw in their back in the corner.
Speaker 2:Yeah, go go back they go back and then they'll punch and I go, he's a rat. It's actually in their corner. They're not in the middle. Why not just punch them where?
Speaker 1:you are Because you're going to waste the time they get to you on a pace where you can't move.
Speaker 3:If you told a boxer like someone who's on the back foot boxing to go forward and crunch someone and be a pressure fighter, they're going to find it difficult.
Speaker 1:But my natural urge everything about me says just go and meet in the middle, so I can't try and curb that too much, because I find that less tiring than going on the back foot.
Speaker 3:That's your asset. Your asset is your power going forward, and I'm never going to look pretty with it, but it's effective it's all fuck, it's all fuck.
Speaker 1:And it's exciting for people to watch Lee Murray in the second row. Yeah, okay, turkey himself has said he doesn't want to see any of the chasing around the ring fights.
Speaker 2:It was after that New York card, wasn't it?
Speaker 1:Yeah, as I say, I'm a counter puncher, but I don't move.
Speaker 3:You're not giving the ground away for no reason.
Speaker 5:I use my brain, yeah, but it's exciting as well, though, if you watch.
Speaker 1:Sonny Edwards. He moves and boxes, but he's not running away. No, no, no, he's interacting with his movements.
Speaker 3:If I'm being honest, I like boxing, but I won't sit sometimes and think I'm really excited or enjoying it.
Speaker 1:I'm not a true when you're watching it. I'm not a through and through boxing fan.
Speaker 4:Some fights, I think this is boring I admire the skill but I'm not entertained. But that's why boxing has slowly been dying.
Speaker 2:Because of that, because a lot of the fights have been boring but, now hopefully the fight fans just want to see boys beat their head each other.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's what people want to see, that's why weight colour boxing is better than professional boxing, yeah, weight colour boxing, that's all big bombs being thrown, having a swing both things off, that's it like everybody.
Speaker 5:Like I used to say in MMA as well like with a lot with the grappling, a lot of people don't understand what's it like.
Speaker 3:It's so high level but a lot of people don't understand so when they're watching it they're thinking oh it's just, you see me. I wouldn't want to watch the grappling.
Speaker 1:I'm not taking anything away from what them guys do, because that's bloody hard but for me as a spectator.
Speaker 5:That's it, and I always recognise that as well because, like everybody understands knockouts yeah, do you know what I mean?
Speaker 3:So that's like one thing that I always it's like test cricket and 2020 cricket yeah. People don't appreciate the intricacies of it 100% what? There's two different types of cricket.
Speaker 5:So there's five-day cricket and test cricket and I love cricket, well breaks and quick cricket anyway, but the Irish.
Speaker 4:Ireland have got good teams and Ireland's part of the England cricket ball, so any of the players that are really good for Ireland, they play for England, like Owen Morgan the one day captain for England, but he's Irish.
Speaker 5:Irish is you yeah?
Speaker 1:they've got good one day.
Speaker 2:I think if more Irish people knew that Irish people were playing for England.
Speaker 1:I didn't even know. I know Owen Morgan is one of the.
Speaker 4:Owen Morgan is one of the best players we've ever had for England and he's Irish, pure Irish. But he's never hid from the fact that he's Irish. But it's just because the Irish cricket, board, cricket ball, they're aligned with the England, rightly so, because they haven't got the money to stand on their own.
Speaker 5:He doesn't play for Ireland.
Speaker 4:They can play for Ireland after you play for England, you can go back and play for Ireland in the 50-50 and they're in the 2020 and they're not bad sides, but at the moment they're not really. Their test side isn't as strong as what it could be so England. So England and Ireland are helping each other, so we're getting the best Irish players, but England are putting money into it as well, so hopefully in 10, 20 years' time you'll have an England v Ireland having a proper test match. So it's all for the greater good.
Speaker 1:Do you have any team you support, like club teams? West Ham's our local team. We don't really get worked up over football.
Speaker 3:I don't support West Ham.
Speaker 1:I mean cricket, Is there only.
Speaker 3:No, it's just England.
Speaker 5:Cricket. Who do we like? There's no cricket here. Well, we're in the Sydney Sixers.
Speaker 4:I was actually bowled aboard the SCG in Sydney, so we went and watched the Sydney Sixers and they were back again. But listen.
Speaker 3:Essex are our local team oh.
Speaker 2:Esse, we just like watching cricket England is enough I can't imagine the excitement.
Speaker 1:I know everyone loves a beer, but here it's. We're so popular, like obviously in England, so cricket in the ashes in the summer in England everyone will be on the beers ashes in the summer, in the ashes, in the ashes.
Speaker 4:It's amazing. Do you know what I?
Speaker 1:love about it. It's always fucking sunny yeah, I don't care it's, even if there's a cricket game in Ireland for some reason, sonny cricket is a great sport we know a few cricketers.
Speaker 4:We're grateful of that and I just love cricket. I've loved it growing up. Johnny's loved it, would you be good at?
Speaker 5:leading that. Yeah, cricket players that you call athletes. Yeah, sam Billings, we know he's a really good athlete.
Speaker 3:Ben Duckett, we're friends with Ben Stokes, who's probably the most famous cricketer in England. Made one of the top ever, isn't he?
Speaker 1:yeah, ben Stokes, he's unbelievable.
Speaker 3:It's becoming more of that sort of sport now as well.
Speaker 2:The athletic side of it is coming out more and, like we was at Lord's, it's school sport especially in 2020, like in that sense, like where it's like more grandma school and stuff yeah, but listen, we was at
Speaker 3:more of a class on the horse.
Speaker 5:Is that the football? That's the upper class, but we was at lords we was at lords for the world test final.
Speaker 4:Australia versus South Africa with budgie smuggler and l's put us on the, because Lord's is very posh. They put us on the social media site and a lot of the comments were yeah posh, posh. But a lot of the comments were what is this coming to? Having us on the Lord's because we're like working class and then, like people are going. Well, you've got to move with the times.
Speaker 1:You've got to move with the times, because it's almost as if you're working class you're not learning yeah, you're not learning.
Speaker 3:Lord's is a little bit like that.
Speaker 4:Lord's is a little bit like that, but what a place. We sat right there, not Lord's itself, but the people that some people still try and keep it just for the upper classes?
Speaker 3:how the fuck are you supposed to best at Old Trafford?
Speaker 4:it's how it should be proper cricket brands with proper fans still an upper class don't get me wrong. Lord's was great and it's great with the history and the tradition. You never want to lose that. But you've also got to soften a little bit when.
Speaker 1:I went. I was in Pakistan, I went to Pakistan.
Speaker 4:I bet that's unbelievable watching cricket over there and there was kids in the street and I was so poor through the streets it's different. There's no rules, all got cricket, bats and bowling. It's like Thailand.
Speaker 1:They're flying about mopeds there's like a family of six on a moped, and there's kids in the street playing cricket, cricket is like religion.
Speaker 3:India and Pakistan, it's like religion that's why a lot of English and Australian players are going to play in the IPL. Their money and their following social media, because they become superstars.
Speaker 4:You go and play in the IPL. You might go from 20,000 followers to a million followers. Do you know what I mean? So, although you're earning money, it's also a good.
Speaker 3:You become a superstar they wouldn't be able to walk the streets of India. They'd recognise everyone, did you?
Speaker 1:ever play in the rounders.
Speaker 4:Yeah, how about you played, you played.
Speaker 1:I've heard of Restovo. It was big bang rounders yeah we played rounders. You just stood up. Either you had a baseball bat or a hurley stick and you just whacked it rounders is growing in the universities.
Speaker 4:I think there's a lot of these softball rounders.
Speaker 2:It's like cricket, not cricket, pickleball and paddle in it.
Speaker 4:Paddle was the fastest growing sport throughout the history of fastest growing sports yeah, sports, that's why tennis are worried because they reckon in 10 years 5-10 years it's going to be taken over.
Speaker 1:Tennis is so fucking hard that's what I mean.
Speaker 4:Even I could play paddle, that's why, people could get involved. You know it's like the receipt.
Speaker 1:Do you know what it's like crossfit?
Speaker 2:and hyrox, hyrox.
Speaker 3:Crossfit's got too much equipment, you can't do it.
Speaker 1:General Pop can't do it, so Hairaxe is just blowing up and everyone's running.
Speaker 3:Now they're running clubs.
Speaker 2:No, they're not, don't talk for them, not for me.
Speaker 1:You're fucking running no, john, you can get on a Segway and do it. We'll get you a pair of rollerblades, john.
Speaker 3:I said get some Heelys on big time that's a pair of rollerblades.
Speaker 4:We had a bloke in the Chinese last night, didn't we and he? Was trying to say Bosch, but he was saying Boosh.
Speaker 3:What's his name?
Speaker 5:Celtic brother.
Speaker 2:Celtic's brother with an X.
Speaker 4:Celtic's brother, big shout out.
Speaker 3:Just for you, mate Boosh.
Speaker 5:He'll love that you knowosh he'll have that, he'll have that on his channel.
Speaker 4:It's a wonder you ain't out there now looking in, to be honest he said to Paul it's great to see you in person.
Speaker 5:But it must have been like he was. He was just looking in Paul's window every night. Yeah, in person.
Speaker 3:I've must have been like he was.
Speaker 2:He was just looking in Paul's window every night yeah, in person I've never seen him before in my life, but he's seen me like yeah it was good funny night last night yeah, it was good that's what life's all about enjoying yourself when you can do. You know what it's like sitting by the fire that night at Shandu's wedding. Yeah, just everybody having a bit of steak like that's.
Speaker 5:It's one of my favourite things that you know sitting around with people, good people who you cared about, and everybody's having a laugh and just just cracking jokes and everybody's getting a rickety laugh yeah that's what life's about taking a mickey out of each other is probably one of the best pastimes, 100%. They just you know especially he talked about this last night.
Speaker 4:Yeah, If you're mates with someone you can, ever you can take this.
Speaker 1:The bigger the insult, the closer the friend, that's what he left.
Speaker 3:I should have looked at the table.
Speaker 2:That's what he was saying last night About certain people who are surrounded by people who are afraid to make jokes about you yeah you can't be like that. You can't have that in your life.
Speaker 3:No, you need people that just keep going. You need your mate. If you can't be like that, no your mate will always tell you what's what.
Speaker 5:Yeah, because all that worries is if they don't or not. You know what I mean? No, they're not. Do you know what I mean? They're not.
Speaker 1:And you don't have to believe him because he ever since I met this man, he wearing sandals don't worry about that, it's just comfortable.
Speaker 2:I'm just letting you know. Everybody's, everybody's saying it when I came here today.
Speaker 1:He says you better not be wearing no sandals.
Speaker 3:I never used to wear socks and sandals.
Speaker 4:I thought them idiots wearing it, but I've started doing it now because I can't, I have to bring, I have to call him out.
Speaker 2:Just bend the fucking sandals, the sandals them sandals actually I'm not taking any advice off you, you, the shoes, you wore with the fluff, the fur on the background I have a pair of.
Speaker 5:I have a pair of guilty loafers and there's like a foreground around the edge of them and I wore them. We were at a wedding and I wore them to the wedding. For me. Everybody was just like they're like two dead rats on your feet.
Speaker 4:I must admit, my youngest son, william Johnny's brother. He always wears Crocs and I always take the piss out of him. What are you wearing them for? What are you wearing them for? They're so comfortable. We was in Dubai once, me and Charlotte, and my feet were killing me. I ended up buying a pair of Crocs, walking about in them, so they were bloody comfortable.
Speaker 3:I've got the Crocs at the winter ones, at the wintery boots. It's like 17 in the Christmas shoes.
Speaker 5:It's so funny because right they were alright to wear it at the beginning then, like it was like it was just so, fr, but at the end of the day, like you were, saying you were saying wear whatever you want.
Speaker 2:I'm going to take the big thing, but all I care about is being comfortable, apart from your loafers with a fur.
Speaker 5:That's another one sure I couldn't give a bollocks, I was getting hell through the hole. It's not like if you really cared about somebody saying something about wearing them. You're never going to wear them in the first place and you'll never be yourself.
Speaker 1:Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 5:You'll never be yourself, Like it's not like I thought like you know, when I bought them and everything else, of course, people are going to lift you up for wearing shit.
Speaker 4:I bet you paid a few quid for them. I know, yeah, there were a few quid.
Speaker 5:I stole them all and got them for free Fuck. It's about 800, quid them yeah?
Speaker 2:Fuck me, have you still got them? Yeah, yeah, do you want?
Speaker 5:to land them, We'll get them on the land. Come up with a land-snide bumper We'll put them up.
Speaker 1:I've been watching this. Stick them on the top of the furrow.
Speaker 4:Imagine that you get in London where gangs are.
Speaker 3:They throw their trainers over telephone yeah, yeah, yeah, throw them over Someone for you means a house.
Speaker 2:You don't want to be around this fucking hood, here the land wouldn't even want them.
Speaker 1:No, the land would just go nowhere.
Speaker 3:That's the Tony Buffer.
Speaker 1:Do you? Have bonfires, bonfires, is that on Halloween night?
Speaker 3:No bonfire night. 5th of November.
Speaker 4:Why does that?
Speaker 3:Because he blew up Parliament.
Speaker 4:He tried to blow up Parliament. He tried to blow up Parliament, guy Fawkes. Yeah, guy Fawkes, you've not heard of that over there.
Speaker 5:No, because I watched.
Speaker 1:V for Vendetta.
Speaker 3:Yeah, V for Vendetta.
Speaker 4:That's who he is, but I've got to be truthful. When we were kids, bonfire night was huge. Everyone had a bonfire, barbecue, fireworks. It used to be massive. Yeah, Now Halloween's sort of took over more than bonfire.
Speaker 5:Halloween's an Irish tradition, yeah, but you know what it is. That was well. More than anything is, the kids won't go out and collect the wood these days. I remember being a kid. No one wants to make a guy.
Speaker 4:No one wants to do the hard work having a bonfire.
Speaker 5:No one wants to do the hard work having a bonfire.
Speaker 1:People don't want to get their hands dirty.
Speaker 3:People will rather go and get sweets from someone's boss, and it is a shame, because when we were kids, bonfire night was huge. Yeah, even when I was a kid.
Speaker 4:We all still like celebrate it, if you could call it celebrating, but it's not.
Speaker 3:You don't have a big.
Speaker 1:Thing.
Speaker 4:It's not like a festival Everyone used to. In towns they still do big bonfires, but it's dying out.
Speaker 5:Yeah, it's hard to see good traditions, but obviously as well, because people are all.
Speaker 4:fireworks are dangerous, it's all the health and safety Fucking worries me.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it's all the health and safety.
Speaker 4:You can't have fireworks in your garden. You've got to go to display.
Speaker 3:but I don't want to go. Yeah, they do a lot of displays, but yeah, we always just do it in our garden.
Speaker 4:I mean we have nearly set our sheds on fire.
Speaker 3:A couple of times I've got my hair on fire, Jesse, oh yeah.
Speaker 4:Firework flew at us, bloody hell.
Speaker 1:There was rats last weekend, paul, I mean, as you see, the guy was walking up with, like a 40-shooter, fireworks to shoot at the police.
Speaker 4:So the police had. There was just a wee turn just outside Belfast. How far away is that?
Speaker 1:I saw a vehicle drive past me yesterday with all the railings on it, it's not far. It's 30 minutes from Belfast, but they were having rats because they were foreigners or something like that One of the locals had this 40 shooter firework and he was walking up to shoot the police. He had it back to front and he was shooting all his own people and he had no idea.
Speaker 5:some fuck someone's recording out the window look at this and they're shitting. Turn around and he's going turn around and he doesn't even realise and everyone's running to their legs and it's funny.
Speaker 1:To be honest, it sounds like somebody who it's a stereotype fuck, that's the only stupid protester that it's a stereotype. That's the only.
Speaker 4:That's the only problem With these riots and things like that. We've had them in England. Before they start off.
Speaker 2:Genuine For a purpose.
Speaker 4:But, then they end up Destroying people's properties.
Speaker 1:And local businesses.
Speaker 4:It's ridiculous.
Speaker 1:Remember in London they were at Oxford Street, they were going on the food truck and taking all the shoes and the fooders.
Speaker 4:It just becomes A fucking shiters. It just becomes an excuse it just becomes a fucking shit show. It becomes an excuse. It's just the best excuse.
Speaker 5:So then it just gets away from the reason.
Speaker 3:It gets away from the reason because two people have done something, it doesn't mean that everyone else is fucking exactly.
Speaker 2:It's just the mob mentality in it. Yeah, that's exactly it.
Speaker 3:That's fucking but that's human mentality. For you, it's just an excuse, isn't?
Speaker 4:it. It's mob mentality, and a lot of disenchantment brings all that. People are not happy with their lives. Yeah, cars.
Speaker 5:They're just a raise in the ground Busting the finish.
Speaker 2:We're fucking, smashing windows, fucking hate them.
Speaker 3:You've got to be quite a disenchantment to figure it out.
Speaker 1:Yeah, we're going up the footlocker. I yeah, we're going up the food locker. I'm looking for a size 8. I've got a size 8, they're fucking chill.
Speaker 4:We had it in London about a year or so ago people going, oh you go out on the streets and protest about the immigrants and all this, but it'd become more than that. It'd become destroying people's lives, yeah, you can't you know, you should be able to protest. You know what I?
Speaker 5:mean yeah, but there you go.
Speaker 1:That's another story. We'll wrap it up here, lads. But listen, lads, it's been a, it's been a great chat and uh, I think the chat beforehand was even better.
Speaker 4:You should have.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that was these boys will have some of that Homer.
Speaker 1:Simpson. He's back on.
Speaker 2:I'm off now, lads that's all I'm talking about, lads, stop, you can not see. I'll see that later there.
Speaker 4:For the purposes in the room. Johnny is not a virgin.
Speaker 3:Virgin. No more Last night. No, what is his name? Celtic's brother, boosh, celtic, yeah, boosh, I was saying that last night he gave you 20 quid for it, Bro did?
Speaker 2:you hear this, by the way. So the guy that they're talking about that was in this place, one of the guys that we came up with, one of my mates. He'd said to this guy that was in the Chinese that he was the prize guy, just to piss.
Speaker 2:So he sent my mate Paul over. He sent him over to my mate Paul and was like he's the real prize guy. So he came over to Paul. Paul played along with it. He says prize guy, paul's the face of it, but I'm the real guy. And he was like and then my other mate goes, sure, give him some money. The kid was like well, if you have some money I'll take it so Paul made me give him 20 quid and signed it Paul.
Speaker 4:Harkin. No, he said I'm not going to use it. Can you sign it? Yeah, but he's got a frame.
Speaker 2:I said to my mate I was like bro, People are going to say fucking pretties, guys are out signing money for people, he'd be on the red tube channel.
Speaker 1:All right, mad, mad, mad. Thanks for having us on. It's been a pleasure.
Speaker 2:It's been good.
Speaker 4:Boosh, boosh, boosh, yeah, boosh, it's not even boosh anymore.