Yesterday’s TV Presenters: A Journey Through Time & Space

In the 80s and 90s a small coterie of TV presenters and game-show hosts strode over British culture like colossi. You may not have liked them, you may have actively hated them, but you could never escape them. Their faces were everywhere: on your TV screen; splashed across the red tops; staring out at you from billboards and bus-shelters. Their names were on everyone’s lips: from the living room to the water-cooler, and everywhere in between.

It’s difficult to imagine such heights of absolute celebrity in today’s fragmented pop-culture landscape. Thanks to the internet, and gaming consoles, and YouTube, and countless streaming platforms, media consumption has become as much a curated expression of individuality as fashion. As a consequence, very few figures in the light entertainment industry today possess the power or influence to unite us in shared language and experience. Simply put: the jig’s up.

I decided to wade into the nostalgic depths of our shared past and track down those once mighty, now forgotten titans of the TV world. To chronicle a lost era. To find out how its stars adjusted to civvy street and oblivion-flavoured retirement in the wake of their celebrity being usurped by the likes of Blippi, Big Brother, and some bloke who goes on YouTube for six hours every night to list all the women he’d like to pump.

Where are they now?

Locating and interviewing every light-entertainment celebrity of the Thatcher years was always going to be outside the scope of this article. There are simply too many of them. Some weren’t available or evaded my efforts to reach them. Some I just couldn’t be arsed speaking to.

Michael Barrymore declined my request for interview, telling me he preferred to be left to live out his days in relative obscurity. He currently lives in Bethnal Green, working as a lifeguard at the local swimming pool. When I reached out to Paul Daniels, he trotted out the lame excuse that ‘he was dead’. And Jimmy Savile, everyone’s favourite eccentric uncle, appears simply to have fallen off the face of the earth. I guess we’ll never know what became of that loveable rogue.

I began by going after the big guns, and there was no bigger gun back then than Noel Edmonds. I’m not talking about his penis, per se, but it’s indisputable that he had a massive chopper, which can be seen, even to this day, hurtling through the skies above Kent, dangling over the edge of his helicopter.

Edmonds’ career began in the 1970s with a show on London Weekend Television called Look at my Fucking Jumper!. Each week Edmonds would wear a different jumper and invite his studio audience and panel of guests to ‘fucking look at it’. From there he went on to dominate the schedules, with show after show filled with pure, uncut, light-entertainment heroin, which the great British public was only too keen to shoot directly into its veins. There was Multi-Coloured Swap Shop, which saw Edmonds trading slaves live on air; TV Addicts, where contestants battled to have sex with men in dresses; and, of course, Noel’s House Party, where Edmonds shared the stage with a fat, pink blob with a fixed manic grin who repeated the same phrase over and over to the audience in an irritating high-pitched squeal. Keith Chegwin sadly died in 2017.

Edmonds’ career wasn’t without scandal. In 1987 a deeply regrettable incident on his prime-time Saturday evening BBC show What a Bunch of Daft Cunts You All Are, Seriously, I Can Barely Stand to Look at You threatened to knock him off the top spot. Rehearsals for a stunt segment, featuring an ordinary member of the public, resulted in the death of that contestant. Barry Barryton, a chartered surveyor from Leeds, had been rigged up for a bungee jump from a bridge, but health and safety protocols weren’t followed, and seconds later Edmonds accidentally launched an RPG at him from his helicopter.

During his time presenting Deal or No Deal Edmonds courted controversy again when he claimed that he could cure cancer simply by growling at it and ‘calling it a cunt’. It was for this reason, among many others, that Edmonds was eventually banned from Great Ormond Street Hospital.

But the biggest uproar came when it was revealed that Mr Blobby was actually a kidnapped Venezuelan sailor, Caesar Consuela, that Edmonds had pumped full of hallucinogens and sealed inside a giant rubber suit, with his mouth connected to an artificial voice box that translated his anguished screams for help into ‘BLOBBY BLOBBY BLOBBY!’ The furore only died down when Caesar agreed to marry Edmonds in a lavish ceremony at Kensington Palace. Unfortunately, he later tragically died when he fell from Edmonds’ chopper, breaking his neck on the bedroom floor.

I arranged to meet Edmonds inside a white, formless void that he called The Eternal Ether of the Hinterlands of Nothingness. It’s in Basingstoke, not far from the train station. Edmunds had his hair brushed back into his trademark lion’s mane and was wearing ceremonial robes that flowed to his feet.

“NO-EL!” he shouted as I stepped towards him, the shock of which rooted me to the spot. “But what if there really was no ‘L’? What then? WHAT WOULD IT BE THEN?”

“Em… Noe?” I shrugged.

He nodded sagely. “And THAT’S why I don’t celebrate Christmas.”

We stared at each other for a moment, the silence stretching between us until it became uncomfortably loud. Mercifully, both silence and tension were broken by the sudden ringing of a phone. Edmonds reached inside his robes and retrieved the handset.

“Ah, Mr Banker. We’ve been expecting your call. Mmmm mmmm. Oh, interesting. Oh that’s hardly fair.”

He lowered the handset from his mouth, arched an eyebrow and whispered conspiratorially to me: “He’s not saying very nice things about you.” Then he continued talking. “Mmm mmm. Yes, I’ll pass it on.”

He replaced the handset inside his robes and regarded me with a look halfway between smug and pitying.

“He says you played a good game to begin with, but things have started to fall apart. So he’s prepared to offer you… £1000.”

I regarded him with a look of my own: resolutely, incontrovertibly pitying. “I couldn’t help but notice that when the phone rang the noise came from your mouth, Noel. And the phone itself: that was your own hand, wasn’t it?”

He stretched his arms out like Jesus on the cross. “YOU FOOL! I HAVE TRANSCENDED OBJECTS! DO YOU DOUBT IT?”

“Em… yes,” I told him.

He chuckled. “So I suppose you doubt that I can cure cancer by dressing up as Scooby Doo and farting in a nun’s mouth?”

I nodded.

“And I suppose you also doubt that ‘Deal or No Deal’ was actually a cover for my real mission to use red boxes to manipulate events in the multiverse?”

“I’m afraid so.”

“Even when I used the movement of boxes in the game where Tariq Ali from Bradford cashed in his 50p box for £75,000 as a cover for creating an entirely new universe where Spit the Dog was man-sized and fully sentient and had a charming hand-puppet called Bob Carolgees the Human?”

“Yes.”

He was laughing very hard by this point. “And I suppose you think that rather than a formless void this white room is actually a secure cell inside a mental institution and my nurse is about to walk through that door at any second and tell me it’s time for my medication?”

“Medication time, Mr Edmonds.”

“Fuck.”

As the nurse dragged him flailing and screaming from the room, the once-great entertainer filled the retreating space with the full force of his madness, roaring out fevered confessions and surreal gibberish. “Tell them I killed Hull! There was somebody at the door that day, alright. By fuck it was me! I was the one who knocked! Knocked him right off the bastard roof! Tell them Emu was innocent! EMU WAS INNOCENT! [Emu is currently serving an indefinite stretch at Broadmoor for Rod Hull’s murder]”

But one thing he did yell piqued my interest, especially when it turned out to be true. “Somehow…” he slurred, as the drugs began to kick in, “…Beadle has returned.”

I had a lot of time to think on my space-flight to Exegol, the planet on which Beadle was rumoured to be amassing a secret fleet of TV crews. I pondered the trail of breadcrumbs that had led me out into the cosmos. Immediately after Edmonds had succumbed to his medication, I booked a visit with Emu in Broadmoor. It was a sorry bird indeed who popped up behind the Plexiglass. One eye missing, bedraggled fur, the unmistakable mottle of herpes over his lips. He looked jaded and defeated. Broken. The governor told me that Emu had been targeted by prison gangs and brutalised in ways that went far beyond simple beatings. Constant violation and degradation. No-one on the outside seemed to care. All had turned their backs on him after Rod’s murder. Only Grotbags still visited.

“How are you, Emu?” I asked. He could tell by the notes of pity and concern in my voice that the governor had talked to me.

“What the gangs do to me, you mean? I’ve had a hand up my arse for sixty years. You think the fuckin’ showers bother me, son?”

It brought a whole new meaning to the phrase ‘doing bird’. I changed the subject, but, unfortunately, to one that was just as uncomfortable for Emu.

“I talked to Noel,” I said.

Emu lunged at the Plexi-glass and tried to bite me through it.

“He confessed to the murder,” I added, in a bid to console him.

Emu lurched to a halt. His head disappeared under the screen for a second, but only because the guy operating him had to scratch his itchy arse and balls.

“No wonder I’ve got fucking herpes,” said Emu, as he re-emerged. “Did that prick Edmonds say anything else?”

“Yes, something cryptic about Beadle somehow returning.”

“Yeah, you mug, that’s who put Edmonds up to it. Pulling the strings from beyond the grave. Except he ain’t dead. He’s in Exegol, in the Unknown Regions. Trying to get a new series of ‘Beadles About’ on the go. Bit risky, you ask me.”

“Bringing back ‘Beadles About’?”

“No, using a Star Wars reference in this article, especially as Exegol and the fleet and all that is in the ‘Rise of Skywalker’, the one that absolutely everyone hated, and probably no-one’s seen.”

“Yeah, I did worry about that Emu, and the fact that I’ve now got to completely break with reality and go on a journey through space. Stretching it a bit, isn’t it?”

“That’s quite an inconsiderate way to phrase it given what’s going to happen to me in the showers again tonight.”

“Sorry, Emu, I didn’t mean to rub your face in it.”

“YOU FUCKING DID IT AGAIN!”

“TIME’S UP!” shouted a prison guard from the corner of the room.

“Well, safe journey to Exegol, Jamie,” said Emu, visibly resigned to his fate. “Clear my name, will you? Anyway, I’m off to the shower block to see a group of men about a frightening number of Pink Windmills.”

As Exegol loomed large in the viewscreen I had time to reflect on one of the luminaries of light entertainment I hadn’t been able to find. Cilla Black began life as Priscilla White, before being resurrected as Cilla Black following a fatal altercation with a Balrog on an episode of Surprise, Surprise. She didn’t die in 2015 as was widely reported, or at least her condition wasn’t as terminal as the wider public was led to believe. Yes, she died, following a vicious knife fight with the ghost of Bob Monkhouse, but she was resurrected again as Cill the Grey, whereabouts unknown. Rumours abound that she’s ever ready to leap into action to protect the ring.  So it wouldn’t surprise surprise me to learn that she’s Emu’s new lawyer. Her shows may be gone, but her spirit lives on in the US versions of her formats, most notably Surprise, Surprise, Motherfucker, presented by the guy who played Sgt Doakes on Dexter, where serial killers are tearfully reunited with the victims who got away, and Blind, Deaf and Dumb Date, where a trio of contestants perch on stools for forty-five minutes in confusion and silence. It’s still better than Mrs Brown’s Boys.

I disembark from the craft on the dark, misty, sinister surface of Exegol. Within minutes a bearded man dressed as a traffic warden is telling the pilot that the spacecraft has violated parking law and has to be seized and crushed. We’re worried for a while – how will we get home? – but the traffic warden soon takes off his hat and glasses to reveal that he’s actually Jeremy Beadle in the process of pranking us. He smiles his giddy, toothy grin as he puts his arm around the pilot, and points at a set of cameras that clearly aren’t there. The pilot bursts out laughing and calls him a ****ing **** ******* ***** *****.

“Mr Beadle,” I say, as I approach him. “You’re alive after all.”

“One of my minions,” a crooked voice croaks from the shrouded darkness. “One of… many minions. Clones, Mr Andrew. Enough of them to spread my practical joke mayhem to every corner of the universe. Oh, Beadle, I’m afraid, is most definitely About.”

And out he steps, Beadle mixed with Emperor Palpatine, a transformation he’s undergone purely to maintain a comedic throughline for the whole Star Wars angle I’ve foolishly chosen, as this article goes ever further off the rails. He tries to zap me with Force Lightning but forgets to factor in his withered little hand, and accidentally cracks himself in the balls with it. Canned laughter accompanies his pain. When he recovers he hollers ‘BEHOLD’ and a multitude of giant TV screens, the sort you’d find in stadiums during rock concerts, emerge from slits in the rocky wasteland behind him. All at once images flicker to life on each of the screens. Horrifying images. Gut-churning images. Disasters, terrorist attacks, massacres, episodes of Mrs Browns’ Boys.

“Ukraine, 9/11, Sudan, Israel and Palestine, every earthquake and tsunami of the last four decades, ALL OF IT orchestrated by ME for a new series of You’ve Been Framed. It’s been expensive as fuck, too. I’ve had to send £250 quid each time. I’m basically funding Hamas at this point.”

Suspicious, I marched up to Beadle and pulled at his face, which came away in my hands, all rubbery and floppy. A mask! The face I was now looking at belonged to Noel Edmunds. He began laughing manically, before launching in to his usual tirade:

“I guess you’re just crazy enough to doubt that any of this is real, and probably think that we’re still in the mental institution and all of this has been in my head and none of it actually happened?!”

“Medication time, Mr Edmonds!”

“Fuck.”


Read Jamie’s interview with the maligned stars of the breakfast cereal boxes HERE

Read Jamie’s interview with Elmer Fudd at Looney Tunes HQ HERE

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Father and Son, Through the Ages

I drove my two kids and my eldest’s best pal to The Scottish Crannog Centre, a recreation of an iron age settlement on the banks of Loch Tay. We would be wading into the distant past, to a time before Netflix passwords and arguments over whose go was next on the Playstation. Before Peppa Pig was a thing. Before ‘thing’ was even a thing. When our species was too preoccupied with the basic tenets of survival to bother much about boredom. I guess if you were living in a time when a wolf or a bear could grab your granny at any given moment and drag her screaming into the bushes, or an errant spear from a rival settlement could turn your whole extended family into a human kebab, or the sniffles could wipe out your entire village, it added a certain frisson to existence that’s sorely lacking in this day and age. Most of our blood-curdling thrills are vicarious these days, which probably explains why we spend so much time doing things like watching horror movies, and buying box sets of Mrs Browns’ Boys.

 

The final stretch of countryside leading to the Crannog Centre was rural with a capital ‘Where the fuck are we, and what the hell happened to the rest of civilisation?’ Roads snaked their way up and down desolate, moss-strewn hillsides with turns so sharp you could cut yourself on them, inclines so sheer we felt like we were in a rocket preparing for lift-off, and passing places so few and far between that a single motorbike coming towards us constituted a traffic jam. At one point we all stopped for a piss – an inevitability in a car filled with penises – and as we stood there in the vast emptiness of the barren hillside it struck me. Not the piss, I hasten to add. Thankfully we’d adjusted for wind direction. No, what struck me was the thought that all of our advancements and technologies – our skyrises, factories, monuments and housing estates – are nothing but a very temporary layer of glitter draped over a hairy, spinning rock – a rock that will one day serve as our species’ tomb. Before long the earth will shake us off and return to its natural state of nutrient-rich nothingness, and our collective stories will be erased and forgotten, as if they’d never existed. Because there will be no one and nothing left to remember that we were ever here.

I get dead cheery when I piss, don’t I?

Depressive thoughts aside, there was something very apt about watching the scenery around us becoming progressively less modern the closer we got to our ancient past. If you’ll grant me the indulgence of a segue, this notion reminds me of a supply teacher I once had in high school English. We were reading Wiliam Goldings’ ‘Lord of the Flies’, and Mr Supply (that probably wasn’t his real name) told us that a passage in which some of the kids crawled from the forest towards the beach signified regression. Just as humanity, and all life on earth, had once ‘crawled’ from the ocean onto the land, the boys’ journey beach-wards represented a reversal of this: a de-evolution back into a primal state.

That was clever, I thought, but I remained sceptical: “How do we know William Golding had that in mind when he wrote it?”

“Well, I guess we don’t. But it fits, thematically. You can make any argument so long as you can justify it in the text and back it up. Which in this case you can.”

“Maybe the boys just wanted to be nearer the beach because it would make rescue more likely. Maybe the writer didn’t intend any subtext at all.”

“That’s the genius of it.”

“Really? Seems a bit pretentious to me.”

“Well, let me ask you another question, Jamie: how the fuck can you remember a conversation you had with me 30 years ago with this much precision? You can barely remember your pin number sometimes. I’ll bet neither of us said half this shit, you fraud.”

“You watch it, pal, or I’ll tell my readers that your real name was something really embarrassing.”

“No skin off my nose,” said Mr Dog-Gobbler.

Anyway, after what felt like an endless voyage through the bleak and misty hills, which I’m sure represented the regression and de-evolution of our species back to a more primal time, we arrived at the Scottish Crannog centre. What’s a Crannog? I hear you ask. Fucked if I know. A farm or something, I think.

“Didn’t I teach you ANYthing about the importance of research in your writing?” fumed Mr Dog-Gobbler.

“YOU WERE ONLY THERE FOR ONE FUCKING DAY! And stop interrupting.”

“I’ll leave for now, but you know I’ve got to come back one final time before the end, right? Because of the rule-of-three? Otherwise, your readers will feel like their expectations have been thwarted. That a loose end has been left dangling.”

“Well, that’s the genius of it.”

“I NEVER EVEN SAID THAT, FOR FUCK SAKE!”

Izzy, wizzy, let’s get Chrissy

It’s a brilliant place, the old Crannog. I’d thoroughly recommend a visit. The main complex comprises a series of circular stone buildings with thatched roofs, each of which embodies and brings to life a different aspect of Iron Age living. You can visit the blacksmith, the wood-dude (the carpenter, I should clarify, lest I leave you with the impression that there’s a building there containing a naked and excited pervert), the cook, and the potter. The staff dresses in period costumes, and in most cases invite you to interact: to help cook food, to whittle wood, to kill and skin small animals (only two of these are true) (wood-whittling is too dangerous for children). There’s also, in the largest of the buildings, space for crafting and storytelling, and a dining hall that can be hired for weddings and functions and the like. They’ve almost finished rebuilding the pier and the grand ceremonial building at its end, after the original structure, and most of the centre itself, burned down in a fire a few years ago. And just along a small woodland trail from the main complex is a small outdoor puppet theatre. Puppetry is, of course, so synonymous with the Iron Age that it’s impossible to think of a soldier launching into battle with an iron sword in his fearsome grip without imagining a Sooty wedged on his other hand. And from there it’s a small step to visualising Sooty quietly whispering murderous filth in the soldier’s ear:

“What’s that, Sooty? You don’t think those enemy soldiers suit their heads? You’d like to get izzy, wizzy and bizzy and chop them all off? What’s that? You quite enjoy my hand up your arse but you wish I’d wear the gauntlet next time? The big spiky one? Oh, Sooty, you little whore.”

That’s all rather disingenuous of me, because of course the people of the Scottish Crannog Centre know, and never claim, that hand-puppetry doesn’t trace its lineage back thousands of years. They just want to entertain children, and I just wanted to crowbar in a rude Sooty joke.

I mention the puppet show (which was charming and funny) mainly because it was the first of the day’s activities to awaken Christophers ‘Christopher-ness’. He was insanely, often inappropriately, interactive with the puppet show, but always entertainingly so, and I think his early laughs there spurred him on to the bigger laughs he’d later seize from the throats of the families in the main story-telling hut, which Christopher and I visited towards the end of the day.

We entered the vast stone building and sat down on a wooden bench. The storyteller began telling the tale of a young peasant girl and a giant who wanted to marry her. I could almost hear the wheels turning cog-like in Christopher’s curious and mischievous mind as he sat, hawk-like, next to me. He wasted no time in hijacking the event. With no trace of timidity, and using a voice that projected like a missile, my eight-year-old son interrupted the storyteller in the manner of a journalist objecting to the offered narrative of an unscrupulous president. “Excuse me? How could the giant and the girl have done stuff together? His part’s too big.”

The sound of my palm slapping my forehead served as percussion to the nervous chorus of laughter that quickly filled the room. I had to admit, though. My exasperated reaction was largely performative, because I thought his interjection was funny as fuck. So, too, did he. You know the cat that got the cream? Well, this little cat looked like he’d abducted nine cows and commandeered a fully staffed dairy.

The story continued. The peasant girl wasn’t interested in becoming the giant’s concubine, and so rebuffed his affections, whereupon the jilted giant cursed her so that she’d be unable to see or hear any other man but him. Just as the storyteller was passing comment on the diabolically fiendish nature of this tactic, Christopher thrust his hand into the air – which is usually a gesture of request but in his case was more of a non-negotiable announcement of the words he immediately began speaking – and said: “What if she was gay?”

More laughter followed, but alongside it unspoken admiration that the lad had shot for simple controversy but had accidentally landed on a perfectly legitimate and illuminating question. Even the storyteller had to admit it was a good point, but she seemed reluctant to launch into an exploration of how gay rights had evolved since Iron Age times, possibly on the grounds that this was story time for a group of mainly four-year-old children and not BBC’s Newsnight. Christopher, emboldened by the laughs he’d received, continued to interject at any given opportunity, often with diminishing returns, and though I chided him, I knew the power of what he was chasing. It feels good to make people laugh. It’s a dopamine high on a par with the best drugs, but chase it without precision, plan, or forethought and you’ll quickly suffer the comedown. Because there’s no worse feeling than trying to make people laugh and failing. I suspect this comedown must’ve left him feeling a little bored, something he subtly conveyed moments later when he stood up and loudly announced ‘I’m bored’ before strolling confidently out of the hut, leaving me to whisper a few ‘I’m sorry’s as I snuck out the door behind him like an embarrassed PR man. We never heard the end of the tale, so we’ll never know how everything wrapped up. But I’d like to think the giant had his big part sliced off by a Valkyrie and gifted to the peasant girl on the eve of her big lesbian wedding.

This is all vintage Christopher. The little boy who, when left alone with my girlfriend, turned to her and asked, ‘So have you had sex with my dad, then?’ The little boy who when we went for lunch at the local church said to the staff, ‘I don’t know why my dad’s here. He doesn’t believe in God and he thinks Jesus is made up.’ The little boy who was waiting to audition for his school talent show, and found himself uncontrollably laughing at an older girl’s terrible singing. He was quickly challenged by a boy who was friends with the girl, who asked him, ‘How would you feel if you were up there on stage and everyone was laughing at you?’ And he replied, ‘I’d quite like it, actually, I’m going to be telling jokes.’ The little boy who laughed at Gandalf’s death in Lord of the Rings and then reacted to Aragorn kissing the forehead of his comrade Boromir by shouting: ‘GAY!’ The little boy who listened to one of my friends say that her little boy would be too scared to watch Lord of the Rings because of the orcs, and replied, ‘I’m not being rude, but your son sounds like a pussy.’

Christopher is, in other words, a fucking legend, but his devilish twinkle and fast mouth have often made me wish that the ground would open up and swallow me whole.

I wonder where he gets it from, though. I mean, it can’t be from… Oh.

Oh dear.

It’s me, isn’t it?

I was probably about eight or nine when my friend and I approached the headmistress to ask if we could devise, draw, write and compile our own paper-based comic/magazine, to be photocopied and distributed to the rest of the school. She agreed, and commended us for our creativity and entrepreneurial spirit. Those vibes didn’t last for long. There was friction a week or so later when we presented her with the finished article and she saw the front-cover, which I had quite reasonably decided should be a comic strip whereupon a grown man boils a baby. The original joke upon which the strip was based – ‘My baby won’t drink his milk.’ ‘Have you tried boiling it?’ – wasn’t mine, but I stood by it, and stood my ground, on the grounds that this was a very, very funny joke. Possibly sensing a baby-boiling epidemic for which she would be held both legally and morally responsible, my head-teacher also stood her ground, and I’m sad to say that on that dark day FASCISM WON. Not one SINGLE child in my little part of Central Scotland got to laugh at pictures of an infant dying in agony. I could sense that the air was ripe for revolution, but I stilled my cosh-hand. First, I would need an army of like-minded ideologues, and they take time to build. But I vowed, there and then, at that very moment, that I would never again let a kindly old lady dictate to me the water temperature at which I could immerse my fictionalised babies. YOUR DAY IS COMING, MRS LAURIE. REMEMBER THE BASTILLE, BITCH!

I was the little boy who, when I was littler still, ran out of a toilet into a packed restaurant and loudly exclaimed to every man, woman, and child: “My papa’s doing a wetty and he’s got an absolutely ginormous willy!” You’d think papa would’ve appreciated the big-up, being able to swagger out there like a Cock Star, but, no. No, he didn’t. Apparently he looked like he wanted to die.

I was the little boy who was told to sit down in primary school because I couldn’t stop laughing whilst reading out a story I’d written in which I’d made almost every single person in my class die in an increasingly extreme and ridiculous manner. The little boy who started singing ‘Mr Robbie did a jobby, on the kitchen floor!’ about our PE teacher, Mr Robbie, seconds before Mr Robbie himself yanked me through the double doors of the gym hall and made me sit out the lesson like a leper in the corner. The little boy who, at aged 10, called our school helper, Mrs Dougie, over to his table in the dining hall and told her the following joke: “What do you call a policewoman with a shaved fanny? Cunt-stubble.” I can still remember the frozen smile on her face as she backed away from the table, looking for all the world like Bishop Brennan after Father Ted had kicked him up the erse. In retrospect, I think my academic progress and articulate manner saved me from the executioner’s blade on more than one occasion. Plus, I was a largely well-behaved kid. Maybe I’d banked up enough points to get away with a few howlers?

I was the teen who made a whole magazine about his diminutive physics’ teacher, Mr Easton, called Papa’s Paper, (derived from his nickname of Papa Smurf, and filled with page upon page of jokes about how small he was) which I distributed around the school and selotaped to the walls outside the tuck shop, and even slipped into Mr Easton’s holdall (which probably doubled as a tent for the little fucker). The teen who was told by his Home Economics teacher that he was borderline bad thanks to a report I’d submitted filled with jokes about hysterectomies and the like. The teen who posted an anonymous letter to the school office revealing some anagrams I’d discovered for some of the teachers. Fraser Lamb = ‘Mr Flab Arse’ was a great one, but I was especially proud of – as you would be too – Richard Mackintosh = Rams hard cock in shit. And all that before Google could do it for you. Kids today don’t know they’re born.

The adolescent who stayed the night unexpectedly at his new girlfriend’s house, having arrived at 2am, and greeted her parents the next day with the line: ‘Thanks for being okay with me staying last night. I don’t like to be alone when I’m going through a heroin comedown.’ Thankfully, they laughed, but they might not have been so amused if they’d known the truth: that I’d driven home drunk from a night out in Edinburgh and my car had run out of petrol a little along the road.

This list could have been much longer. In fact I could’ve filled the internet with examples, a claim I’m sure Christopher will soon be able to make. In short, and in summation, I think the next ten to fifteen years will be very interesting indeed, and probably filled with incidents that would leave the people of the Iron Age blushing.

“The structure of this article was a little loose, son. It’s not good enough just to include a vague reference to the Iron Age at the end and hope that no-one will notice how flimsily you’ve tied the two halves of it together.”

“Get fucked, Mr Dog-gobbler.”