Maisie Adam

Maisie Adam

Released Thursday, 30th January 2025
Good episode? Give it some love!
Maisie Adam

Maisie Adam

Maisie Adam

Maisie Adam

Thursday, 30th January 2025
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.

Use Ctrl + F to search

0:00

Wonder Plus subscribers can

0:02

listen to episodes of

0:04

Brighton and early and

0:06

ad-free. Join Wonder Plus

0:09

in the Wonder App or

0:11

on Apple podcasts. Go

0:13

on. Hello you. It's that time

0:15

of the week again. Thanks for

0:18

coming back. Mazy Adam, for she,

0:20

it is today the guest being.

0:22

It came to prominence through mock

0:24

the week like you know so

0:26

many people did. She strikes me

0:29

as one of those people who

0:31

wasn't around and then all of

0:33

a sudden is around. and she's

0:35

just established and she's just here.

0:37

The good news is she's going

0:40

back on the road with her

0:42

show Appraisal. It's kicking off again

0:44

on the 1st of February on

0:46

the Isle of Man and providing

0:48

the weather is good enough. She

0:51

will then be going that's a

0:53

reference to the James Bond documentary.

0:55

She'll then be going to Dublin

0:57

Belfast Banga all sorts of places.

1:00

We had a great time chatting

1:02

and only meta once before when

1:04

she came on would I lied

1:07

to you, but... She's just a

1:09

naturally funny person. Please sit back

1:11

and relax and enjoy. Brighton and

1:14

Macy Adam. We've spent

1:16

very little time together.

1:18

Very little. Would I lie

1:21

to you? How long ago was that

1:23

now? I think, yeah, but you,

1:25

yeah. I mean, how many, how

1:28

many do you think you've

1:30

done? Well, we've done, I

1:32

think 19 series. I didn't

1:34

do the first two series

1:36

because they were angusticedeaten. I

1:38

came on as the host

1:40

after him. But we've done,

1:42

have we done 100 or 200

1:44

episodes, something like that? I

1:46

think I was on before the

1:48

pandemic, so I think that takes

1:51

us about four years. Of course, I

1:53

will say for you, I can remember

1:55

you being on it. There are many

1:57

people who when I watch it

2:00

go out. I would have said

2:02

I've never met that person. Oh

2:04

really? That may say more about

2:06

me. But yeah, but how many

2:08

series? Did you say 19? About

2:10

19 I think. That's a lot

2:13

of faces and a lot of

2:15

people. It is, isn't it? Sometimes

2:17

not true anecdotes. So sometimes they

2:19

do lie. Sometimes they do. So

2:21

I think that's... Yeah, we've, and

2:23

yet we must know a lot

2:25

of the same people. Yeah, definitely.

2:28

Definitely. You were just mentioning Jill

2:30

Scott, Jill Scott. Yeah, because she

2:32

was saying that she'd done, would

2:34

I lie to you? And had

2:36

such a good, had such a

2:38

nice time and then we were

2:40

talking about, she's so warm, she's

2:43

so naturally funny. Because also, I

2:45

don't know if you find this,

2:47

but a lot of people in

2:49

comedy, they're funny on camera, but

2:51

they can be quite like, introverted,

2:53

you know, which can still be

2:56

a good thing. Yeah, she's very

2:58

good on that podcast. We see,

3:00

I'm not a football person, I

3:02

know you are. Yeah. But she's

3:04

good on that one with Roy

3:06

King and Ian Wright. Yeah, and

3:08

Gary Neville. Yes, and Gary Neffel.

3:11

Oh, Gary Neh, he seems like

3:13

a nice guy. But I, and

3:15

even someone like me, who's not

3:17

that fussed about football, thinks, oh,

3:19

I like, what's some more of

3:21

that actually? Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Well,

3:23

well, he's interesting, Roy Kean. Anyway,

3:26

never mind who we know. Never

3:28

mind who we know. You are

3:30

here primarily, and there's no shame

3:32

in this to plug. More dates

3:34

on an already successful tour. Yes,

3:36

we are going back out on

3:39

tour. I say we, that's me

3:41

and tour manager Beck, just the

3:43

two of us. on a tour

3:45

of premierings around the country. Is

3:47

the premier in your hotel of

3:49

choice? Call me Lenny Henry because

3:51

I'm all about a premiering. Well,

3:54

you can't begrudge Len because when

3:56

you stay in a premiering, it's

3:58

terrific. You know what you're going

4:00

to get? That mattress. You don't.

4:02

do premiere-ins, Rob? Surely. You're a,

4:04

you're, yeah, you're a man of

4:06

five-star. I think, what's important for

4:09

the hotel for you? I'm thinking

4:11

sauna, spa, yes. Yeah. The ones

4:13

that come with a dressing room.

4:15

Look, this is, there's, this is

4:17

no time for false modesty. I

4:19

will say this. When I'm touring

4:22

with my band. and we have

4:24

been playing somewhere north of Manchester.

4:26

Right. What we will sometimes do

4:28

is we'll drive for about two

4:30

hours after the show, pull into

4:32

a motorway side premier in, where

4:34

all you're going to do is

4:37

sleep. Yeah. Have a sleep, get

4:39

up the next morning, have a

4:41

breakfast, have a breakfast, nice breakfast.

4:43

and head home. In other words,

4:45

we're breaking the journey. Really? Yeah,

4:47

we've done that in the past.

4:49

Oh, the motorway premiere ends. Yeah,

4:52

and I will say I've, I'm

4:54

not going to sit here and

4:56

insult my listeners by saying it

4:58

will be my first choice, of

5:00

course not. Well, I'd like to

5:02

get to the dizzy heights where

5:04

a premiering is, not my first

5:07

choice. I'm going to spend five

5:09

years advertising cruises cruises. I always

5:11

say, usually when I hear Lenny

5:13

on this other side, I always

5:15

go, I think I've got very

5:17

good beds. They have got very

5:20

good beds. You can't knock their

5:22

beds. And if there's one thing

5:24

you want from a hotel. You

5:26

want, yeah, there's nothing worse. It's

5:28

the first thing I do, Macy,

5:30

when I go to her, when

5:32

I'm on touring off. You check

5:35

in the mattress. I sit on

5:37

the mattress. Yeah, got to be

5:39

done, get in there quick. You

5:41

were made to be rechargeable. We

5:43

were made to package flights, hotels,

5:45

and hammocks for less. Expedia, made

5:47

to travel. You and Beck are

5:50

traveling around the country together. Yes.

5:52

So this is the second... started

5:54

my tour at the end of

5:56

last year. Genuinely, I know people

5:58

will sometimes go, oh, having such

6:00

a nice time when they'd rather

6:03

be anywhere else. I love to,

6:05

touring is my favorite aspect of

6:07

being stand-up because you know when

6:09

you work at the start and

6:11

you're doing open mic gigs and

6:13

then you get onto the circuit

6:15

and people come to see comedy

6:18

but they've not maybe come to

6:20

see a specific person on the

6:22

lineup. When you can get to

6:24

a point where people are coming

6:26

to see... you and you go

6:28

to these different parts of the UK

6:31

and there's still people all over that have

6:33

come to see you. It's really special. I

6:35

like the crowdwork element of getting to know

6:37

who my audience is, what have they done

6:40

today, who have they come with, what do

6:42

they do? I like all that. And they

6:44

have a knowledge of you. Yeah,

6:46

yeah. They're already invested in you

6:48

to varying degrees because of course

6:50

in any audience you've got the... the

6:53

husband or boyfriend who

6:55

isn't really a fan. It's

6:57

been dragged along. Exactly. Yeah, yeah,

6:59

yeah. But unlike the mixed bill

7:02

circuits, it's not like you've got,

7:04

you know, when they come back

7:06

stage and go, just so you

7:09

know, we've got three stag dues

7:11

and stuff. And you think, oh

7:13

God, no, you're right, they've already

7:16

come with a, they're already a

7:18

bit on side because they want

7:20

you to do them already. and this

7:23

second leg we're going back to a

7:25

lot of the places that sold out

7:27

the first time, but also some like

7:29

towns that I've not been to before.

7:31

Well I know when you were touring Wales

7:33

in the past, I got very worked up

7:35

about this and I went on a few

7:38

message boards. Oh yeah, that was you. Yeah,

7:40

with all the multiple accounts. Yes, I

7:42

put a bit of hate out there

7:44

because it seemed to me Mazy. Yeah,

7:46

you're doing card if you're doing swansy,

7:48

but you know there are other places.

7:50

with all those different bots. Yeah, yeah.

7:53

So we've got Bangor and we've got

7:55

Aberist with. Lovely. Now you're playing.

7:57

Yes, you are. You're playing Aberist.

7:59

like your work. So it's the gigs

8:02

have a really nice friendly vibe to

8:04

the more ready and this second leg

8:06

we're going back to a lot of

8:08

the places that sold out the first

8:10

time but also some like towns that

8:12

I've not been to. before. Well I

8:14

know when you were touring Wales in

8:16

the past, I got very worked up

8:18

about this and I went on a

8:21

few message boards. Oh yeah, that was

8:23

you. Yeah, with all the multiple accounts.

8:25

Yes, I put a bit of hate

8:27

out there because it seemed to me

8:29

Macy, yeah, you're doing card if you're

8:31

doing swansy, but you know there are

8:33

other places. Exactly, as you well let

8:35

me know with all those different bots.

8:37

Yeah, yeah. So we've got Bangor and

8:39

we've got... abberist with. Lovely. Now you're

8:42

playing. Yes you are. You're playing abberist

8:44

with in February. Yeah. And I predict

8:46

it will be a windy. Really? Well

8:48

I played abberist with any... Have you

8:50

ever been to Abberist with? No, never.

8:52

Oh, it's terrific. It's very dramatic. It's

8:54

a bit like sort of a scarber

8:56

or something like that. Oh, okay. Yeah.

8:58

And you've got a sort of curved

9:01

bay. Yeah. Yeah. when the weather's right

9:03

or wrong it can crash in. Yeah,

9:05

yeah. Really, okay. So I'm really delighted.

9:07

I'm going to go in February then.

9:09

Oh, that's great. I'm going to feel

9:11

the full force of avarice. But the

9:13

audience will be so grateful, aren't they?

9:15

Because seriously, yeah, honestly. And those things

9:17

come into play. They do, they do.

9:19

The last thing you want to be

9:22

doing is a gig on the hottest

9:24

day of the year, right? Oh, I've

9:26

done those, yeah, yeah, when people sack

9:28

it, when people sack it off, it

9:30

off, but now. Very hot gig once,

9:32

no. Very hot gig once, once, once,

9:34

once, at the corn exchange, at the

9:36

corn exchange, at the corn exchange. in

9:38

Cambridge. I used to, in those days,

9:41

each seat there'd be a leaflet advertising

9:43

a DVD or something and I remember

9:45

looking at and they're all fanning themselves.

9:47

Yeah, so they're not, they're not, they're

9:49

not concentrating. You can just see wafting

9:51

happen. Do you like the whole experience

9:53

then of the touring? Because a lot

9:55

of people will say, well I love

9:57

the time on the stage, but I

9:59

could do without the travelling. Yeah, I...

10:02

I guess so. I think, you know,

10:04

it's still, this is only my second

10:06

proper tour, so there's still a bit

10:08

of like a novelty to, I'm not,

10:10

I'm not sick of it yet, you

10:12

know, and also I don't, I don't

10:14

have kids or, you know, a pet

10:16

or anything, I just have a very

10:18

supportive husband who's at home. Including a

10:20

pet in that? No, I know. But

10:23

the kids, yes. Well you see some

10:25

comedians now bring their pets on tour

10:27

with them. Is that right? Who's doing

10:29

that? Who's doing that? Louise or Omelan

10:31

famously. Do you know her? She's got

10:33

a, is it a Bernese mountain dog?

10:35

A gecko. No, it's like, it's a

10:37

dog that's almost like a bear. Really?

10:39

Oh, lovely. She's massive, but she comes

10:42

on stage, not Louise. The dog comes

10:44

on stage with Louise. So I'm aware

10:46

that some people can be very, they

10:48

can be very, they can't leave these

10:50

pets alone. away. Okay but you say

10:52

husband you didn't you recently marry is

10:54

it quite a recent thing? Well summer

10:56

2023 yeah oh yeah summer before last.

10:58

Okay and how is that going? Yeah

11:00

great. Right, I mean, when I met

11:03

my husband, he was managing a cocktail

11:05

bar, so that's how we met. Is

11:07

it? Yeah, so... You were just, you

11:09

were just there. I was just there.

11:11

He was working as a waiter. I

11:13

was about to say, when you hear

11:15

that, you hear a cocktail bar, you

11:17

can't, you can't, you have to sing

11:19

it. You're way too young to really

11:22

know that song. No, but I, I,

11:24

I, I, yes, but... when you start

11:26

telling that story people immediately. So he

11:28

was working with some waiters at a

11:30

cocktail bar. With some waiters at a

11:32

cocktail bar. But it was great because

11:34

when you know we met around the

11:36

time when I was just coming through

11:38

the circuit so we were both always

11:40

coming home at like two, three in

11:43

the morning. So we would have our

11:45

how was your day chat at 3am

11:47

you know where most couples might have

11:49

that over dinner. So it was it's

11:51

always it's always work. We've always been

11:53

used been used to. one or the

11:55

other person being out all the time.

11:57

So no, it's pretty nice. And now

11:59

he works from home, so if I

12:01

do come home, he's always there. How

12:04

does he manage a cocktail bar from

12:06

home? Well, he doesn't manage a

12:08

cocktail bar anymore. He's in, he's five

12:10

years later on. He's got the world

12:12

at his feet. Success has been so

12:14

easy for him. I think he might just

12:16

be living the lyrics. Now you, yeah. Yeah.

12:19

What happens in the song doesn't,

12:21

oh doesn't she leave him? Well

12:23

it's, it's, and even though, how

12:25

do you find a much better

12:27

place? Either, I think they break

12:29

up. I don't think it ends well.

12:31

I don't think it ends well.

12:33

I don't think it ends well.

12:35

I think maybe we should keep

12:38

it at first verse. Okay, yeah.

12:40

So he's working from home now,

12:42

not managing the cocktail bar. Do

12:44

you remember like, we're very different,

12:47

I have... I think the biggest

12:49

streak I've had on Duolingo was

12:51

12 days. He learned coding and he's

12:54

made an app and that's what

12:56

he does now. He does app developing.

12:58

From managing a cocktail bar?

13:00

Yeah. To doing that? That's quite a

13:03

leap. Yeah, he's quite a leap. Yeah,

13:05

he's just he's got one of those

13:07

brains that just gets it. And

13:09

which language were you learning on

13:12

Duolingo? Francés. Oh, trébébienne.

13:14

Well, just 10 days. Duzjou. Well,

13:16

you remember that. Yeah, yeah.

13:18

Just do the apari. Absolutely,

13:21

Mont. Really? We. I study

13:24

from Paris. Did you actually?

13:26

No, I learned that. I was, I did

13:28

the old Doolonger thing for a while,

13:30

wanting to get good at French. Yeah.

13:33

And I always remember, Gertrude de Paris.

13:35

A parry. I study in Paris. And

13:37

I would love to learn to speak

13:39

French. I'd love to do it. I

13:41

really would. I did find with Doolingo,

13:43

they give you sentences that you're never

13:46

really going to say. Find yourself saying,

13:48

the purple chicken is in the tree. Yes,

13:50

it's unlikely. It's unlikely. It's unlikely. I don't.

13:52

I don't. Oh really? Yeah that's what you

13:54

do. I know people have done that. She

13:56

can stay for a week somewhere and it's

13:58

just French all the time. like an adult

14:00

exchange. Yes, there's no sex. No, no,

14:03

not an adult exchange like that. Just

14:05

like a... French exchange but you're not

14:07

a student. Because Mark, I think it's

14:09

Mark Steele, he does gigs in French.

14:11

Can he speak French? Oh my god,

14:13

that is good. Do you think he

14:16

still sounds to a French person when

14:18

he speaks French? Like that. Voulay, Vou,

14:20

Couché Avikbaugh, say sua. I mean how

14:22

do they do there? Do you think

14:24

that he sounds like that to the

14:26

French? He must do, he must do,

14:29

yeah. So this is your only your

14:31

second tour. So when in your view

14:33

did you break through then? When did

14:35

you become? Because I remember I didn't

14:37

know. No. Well, probably. Because they have

14:39

a structure and they say if you're

14:42

doing a 20 you get this and

14:44

you other. Yeah, well and then once

14:46

mock the week I think I've done,

14:48

you know, three or four series and

14:50

been. regularly on it and it's still

14:52

what a lot of people know me

14:55

from and book tickets from. And even

14:57

before then, so when you're doing mock

14:59

the week and you're still on the

15:01

circuit, are you getting more gigs as

15:03

a result of being on it? Yeah.

15:05

Can you charge more money? No. Well,

15:08

probably... Because they have a structure and

15:10

they say if you're doing a 20

15:12

you get this and you... Yeah, well

15:14

I was already doing 20s when I

15:16

got... got mocked the week but I

15:18

um... How does that work now? Do

15:21

they, on the circuit, yeah? When you

15:23

were last doing it, is it set

15:25

that if you're doing this length you

15:27

get this money or are they going

15:29

to say no, well this person gets

15:31

gets more? I think a lot of

15:34

the the club gigs still, it's set

15:36

rates but I think if you're going

15:38

to go and do a gig in...

15:40

sort of those little regional towns, you

15:42

know, on a mixed bill, they might

15:44

have to, they might have to stretch

15:47

a little bit further, but the club

15:49

gigs still very much so, because I

15:51

live in Brighton, so comedian is just

15:53

down the road for me, so I

15:55

still, I still gig there quite a

15:57

lot, just to work up the material

16:00

and get it. get ready to go

16:02

on at all. When you were doing

16:04

those those mixed bills, who were your

16:06

contemporaries that were at the same level

16:08

as you and going forward with you?

16:10

I remember I always remember I used

16:13

to bump into Ester Minito who's brilliant.

16:15

We came up through like competitions together

16:17

and then we both through doing all

16:19

right at competitions got booked with the

16:21

with the... the pro-circuits very well. So

16:23

Estermanita was there, Catherine Bohart. We were

16:26

on quite a few of those together.

16:28

Could you spot who you thought was

16:30

good and who you thought was going

16:32

to break through? Yeah, in fact... I

16:34

was in the same, you know, so

16:36

you think you're funny, the competition in

16:39

Edinburgh. The year I won that, the

16:41

guy who came third is, you may

16:43

know, Morgan Reese, brilliant Welsh comic. Absolutely.

16:45

I'm not sure that I do, I'm

16:47

embarrassed to say. No, he's so good,

16:49

but he came third. I'm not really

16:52

in favour of new Welsh comedians. Because

16:54

he's ready to... Yeah, I think there

16:56

should be some sort of... Yeah. Cut-off

16:58

point, really... worried that they're going to

17:00

come to come to the cruise ads.

17:02

Yes. Yes. Yes. Very much so. Yes.

17:05

But Morgan is brilliant and he smashed

17:07

his so you think you're funny set

17:09

and I remember watching the side go

17:11

well he's he's won it. And yet

17:13

he came third to you. When they

17:15

announced him coming third I was like

17:18

what's happening but we bump into each

17:20

other quite a lot still on on

17:22

on the circuit but he I remember

17:24

thinking like oh he's he's got it

17:26

he's really good yeah okay yeah yeah

17:28

I look him up on the YouTube

17:31

on the YouTube so it was mock

17:33

the week then yeah that that that

17:35

was the thing for you I think

17:37

so it there was definitely of a

17:39

sense of a shift happening just with

17:42

things like people spotting you or yeah

17:44

or you've got a very distinct look

17:46

though well yeah that is true in

17:48

terms of being memo yes yeah you

17:50

know you you're so individual aren't you

17:52

which is great it is it is

17:55

handy oh it's fantastic it's a great

17:57

thing to have that look I remember

17:59

like when I started out I'd always

18:01

try and wear like a loud shirt

18:03

you know when you start you think

18:05

all these things make a really big

18:08

difference but it did you used to

18:10

be on a lineup with like 10

18:12

other comedians and no one would ever

18:14

bother to remember your name so I

18:16

always remember thinking well if they could

18:18

go, oh the girl in the striking

18:21

shirt, or you made a conscious decision,

18:23

that's very smart. So I did, I

18:25

used to do it with like what

18:27

I wore, and then with the hair

18:29

thing it was, I always wanted to

18:31

do a bit of a mad haircut,

18:34

but never really was brave enough because

18:36

I had so much stuff in the

18:38

diary, I was like, but what if

18:40

I don't like it? And then COVID

18:42

happened, and I was like, well, is

18:44

that, is that... how the haircut came

18:47

into the... I had no idea. I

18:49

was always into kind of like... I

18:51

was always into that sort of scar

18:53

mod kind of subculture and then when

18:55

COVID happened and it really was like,

18:57

okay, all your works out your diary,

19:00

nobody's allowed to leave the house. I

19:02

was like, I'll just do it now

19:04

because if I don't like it, no

19:06

one's going to know because we have

19:08

to stay inside anyway. Don't take this

19:10

the wrong way. Did you do it

19:13

yourself? Yes I did. If that wasn't

19:15

apparent, Rod. Well Mike did it, Mike

19:17

did it. I was like, just let's

19:19

just do it. And I liked it.

19:21

And what was it then? Should you

19:23

say, let's just do it? Okay darling.

19:26

Just shave the back of my head.

19:28

That was the main instruction. Don't go

19:30

past here, just do the back. And

19:32

then... I loved it but like you

19:34

know people do take the mick about

19:36

it now I don't have the same

19:39

hair care anymore but it's still it's

19:41

still distinctive but it's um it did

19:43

me wonders for being you know for

19:45

people to clock and and sticking producers

19:47

minds and you know it's interesting the

19:49

number of times you know someone will

19:52

say to me oh I tell you

19:54

what Rob I was I went to

19:56

a comedy thing oh that was great

19:58

I say, who did you see? Oh,

20:00

it was a great girl, did this,

20:02

I said, what was her name? Yeah. They never

20:04

know the name. No, and it's so annoying because you really

20:07

want to... Yeah. My brother's a geography teacher and he was

20:09

like, oh, our staff night out for Christmas. We went to

20:11

a comedy night and he was, he was not quite so

20:13

favoured, but he was like, oh, they were blummin' awful. So

20:15

of course. Oh, yeah, literally, it was like a red rag,

20:17

but I was like, who, tell me, describe them, describe them,

20:19

what did they talk about, what did they talk about, what

20:21

did they talk about, what did they talk about, what did they,

20:23

what did they, what did they, what did they, what did they, what

20:25

did they, what did they, what did they, what did they, what did

20:27

they, what did they, what did they, what did they look like, what

20:29

they, what they, what they, what they, what they, what they, what they,

20:32

what they, what they, what they, what they, what they, what they, what

20:34

And that's why I

20:36

was like, I wish that

20:38

there was a distinctive

20:40

feature because I

20:42

didn't know. Tell

20:44

me about the road to

20:47

success in terms of

20:49

the gigs that went

20:51

badly for you. Did

20:53

you have many of

20:55

those? I would say I would say

20:58

everybody does, but I don't know.

21:00

I mean, there's always the ones with

21:02

a, you know, as I mentioned, a

21:04

couple of stag doosin who

21:06

just, it's almost better if

21:08

there's one big heckle because

21:10

you can deal with it

21:12

when it's just that drunken

21:14

murmuring over what you're saying.

21:17

But what about silence and

21:19

indifference? Yes, I did a,

21:21

my first ever like corporate. do

21:23

was a Christmas party for a

21:25

law firm in one of those

21:28

fancy buildings near like temple in

21:30

London. Yes. And are you on

21:32

a stage or just God no,

21:34

no stage? Have you got a

21:37

microphone? Yes, but I don't know

21:39

if that helped or hindered. but they

21:41

were having dinner on these two long

21:43

tables, right? Two long table in this

21:45

big grand hall. I'm getting tensed as

21:47

you just set up for it. And

21:49

I had to stand outside the hall

21:52

waiting for, listening for the CEO to

21:54

introduce me. And he tapped his glass

21:56

and everybody shushed and he stood up

21:58

and he said, um... I think we

22:00

could agree it's been a wonderful

22:02

year for the firm, but we

22:04

have lost some people along the

22:06

way. So he just then listed

22:08

the clients that they'd had that

22:10

had died that year. And then

22:12

was like, but anyway, less about

22:15

that. Moving on, we've got some

22:17

entertainment. I don't know if she's

22:19

any good yet because she doesn't

22:21

have a Wikipedia, so I've not

22:23

been able to look her up.

22:25

But Mazy Adam. So I walked

22:27

out and started doing my set

22:29

and I was booked for a

22:31

20 Rob and I I swear

22:33

I got through what was normally

22:35

20 minutes and I glanced down

22:37

at my watch and I was

22:39

on seven and it hadn't got

22:41

any laughs yet it was just

22:43

silence. That's the worst silence, the

22:45

worst. Yeah, you'd much rather have

22:47

rowdy, raucous, disruptive even, but stone

22:49

cold silence. So what did you

22:51

do? I just plowed on. I

22:53

plowed on, did every bit of

22:55

material I had. It got, it

22:57

started to get sort of what

22:59

felt like pity laughs. It started

23:01

to get laughs from just the

23:03

kind of supportive-looking women in the

23:05

receptionist. Yeah. But the, all the,

23:07

all the, all the lawyers were

23:09

these older men. who were just

23:11

sort of checking their phones under

23:13

the table. Oh, well, that's a,

23:15

incorporates that, of course, that's a

23:17

big thing now because everybody has

23:20

this access to their phones, yeah.

23:22

Yeah, it was, but I, I,

23:24

I got here and got out.

23:26

Have you learned yet to zone

23:28

those things out? Yeah, definitely, but

23:30

I also feel like I've got.

23:32

much better at corporates in that

23:34

you do not turn up to

23:36

a law firm corporate and do

23:38

your 20 from a comedy club

23:40

which is what I was doing

23:42

right now I know that you

23:44

you know you maybe have to

23:46

tailor it more to law-based jokes

23:48

or you know you brush up

23:50

on your right specifically so let's

23:52

say you're doing the sausage makers

23:54

society. There's going to be a

23:56

whole lot of sausage material in

23:58

there. Yeah, yeah. I've learned how

24:00

to to play them. It's not,

24:02

you don't play it like a

24:04

normal gig. Yeah. But that one

24:06

is accessible hasn't it? It's got

24:08

to be so easy to appreciate.

24:10

It's got to be broader. Yeah.

24:12

But the great thing is that

24:14

everybody has had bad. corporate, doesn't

24:16

matter who I've spoken to, I've

24:18

spoken to, huge names who told

24:20

me stories about when they just

24:22

died. They can be brutal, can't

24:25

they? They can go well, though.

24:27

They can be good. They can

24:29

be good. And depending on the

24:31

industry, of course, you know. That's

24:33

what always shocks me is. You

24:35

get these ones in your diary

24:37

and you'll be like, oh, that's

24:39

going to be hard work. And

24:41

I had the, you know, personal

24:43

injury awards the other month. I

24:45

had the gig of my gig

24:47

of my life, Rob. Who'd have

24:49

thought? The personal injury award. It

24:51

was like Madison Square Garden for

24:53

me. It was, yeah, it's so,

24:55

but you know, you'd have that

24:57

in your diary going, that's going

24:59

to be a tough one. But...

25:01

You just, yeah, you just don't

25:03

know. I once did one for

25:05

very high-class hotels, so the really

25:07

exclusive hotels in London. Not your

25:09

motorway premiereins. And the thing about

25:11

that was... with just how respectful

25:13

an audience they were. Really? They

25:15

listened to every word and then

25:17

they respond, you know, but you'd

25:19

start off, you think, oh my

25:21

God, they're just being incredibly polite.

25:23

So what do you, so it's

25:25

still early for you, isn't it?

25:27

It's still, I hope so, I

25:30

hope this is, you know. So

25:32

what do you, do you plan,

25:34

do you, do you visualize, what

25:36

are you, what are you, what

25:38

were you, what were you, what

25:40

were you doing before? I went

25:42

and did a degree in acting.

25:44

Oh, okay. And I thought that,

25:46

I mean, it's tricky, isn't it?

25:48

Because when I was at school,

25:50

I wasn't academic at all, Rob,

25:52

but I liked being on stage

25:54

and I liked making. king work

25:56

but I soon realized after graduating

25:58

that to be an actor to

26:00

be to be you know in

26:02

in that world is actually very

26:04

different to what what I've now

26:06

found myself doing which very much

26:08

better suited to me because acting

26:10

is so It's so cut through

26:12

and it's so dependent on so

26:14

many other people. So passive as

26:16

a career in terms of, at

26:18

least with, you know, with comedy,

26:20

there's so much more autonomy. This

26:22

is it. You write the words,

26:24

you say the words, you just

26:26

have to get booked in at

26:28

the clubs to be suddenly up

26:30

and away. Whereas acting, I think

26:32

there's so many more hoops to

26:35

jump through if you can put

26:37

it like that, but... But even

26:39

when you're doing the acting work,

26:41

you know, let's say you get

26:43

on something, I mean... It's very,

26:45

it's lovely, of course, I enjoy

26:47

it, but there's so much sitting

26:49

there. Sorry. Oh, Macy. I'm so

26:51

sorry. That just came with the

26:53

mug, I'm so sorry. If you're

26:55

listening to this Macy has lifted

26:57

up, what I think is a

26:59

complementary cup of coffee. It is,

27:01

and it's just gone everywhere, whilst

27:03

you were telling me about your

27:05

acting career. I was merely making

27:07

the, makes it sound if I'm

27:09

going, of course, in 1993. Oh,

27:11

no, no, no! I feel no

27:13

I'm no I'm sorry well anyway

27:15

she has tossed her coffee onto

27:17

the podcasting table where other podcasts

27:19

use this room oh I'm so

27:21

sorry they're gonna think it was

27:23

me no I will I'll leave

27:25

a note saying my bad is

27:27

that not cold yet no it's

27:29

it's it's it's tepid and pleasant

27:31

it's okay but please do continue

27:33

because I wanted I wanted to

27:35

know what your in 1990 Now

27:38

I used to say there's so

27:40

much sitting around and that's what's

27:42

great about about stand-up and even

27:44

you know panel shows and stuff

27:46

it's so much more bumb-bumb direct

27:48

get there jink-jink do it. That's

27:50

the word direct like you get

27:52

the result quickly you know if

27:54

you're doing well straight away because

27:56

you get a laugh or you

27:58

don't get a laugh but with

28:00

acting, I think it's so much

28:02

harder to gauge where you're at

28:04

with how it... So what acting

28:06

are you doing now then? Have

28:08

you just turned your back on

28:10

it? Well I just don't, I

28:12

just don't know. Yeah but now you

28:15

could, now that you have a profile.

28:17

I don't know. Have you lost

28:19

all the desire to do it then? I

28:21

don't know if I've lost the desire, but

28:23

I love... the things that I like about

28:26

comedy I love so much because I know

28:28

where I'm at with it and I know

28:30

how to do it. Whereas with, I remember

28:32

when I came out of acting school I

28:35

was going up for these auditions and first

28:37

of all that's it of like if

28:39

you go to do a comedy gig you've

28:41

written the material you say the material

28:43

as you say autonomy. Acting you're going

28:46

up for roles that you've never dreamed

28:48

of playing. visitor number three in that

28:50

advert, you know? But you really want

28:53

the role to build up your experience.

28:55

And the line that you say is

28:57

visitor number three in the advert is

29:00

never something that you can put, you

29:02

know, real thought, behind method acts. You

29:04

know, you can't get your guts into

29:06

the role of it. But I even

29:09

think, even if you were to get, you

29:11

know, there's a difference between playing,

29:13

let's say you play the Apollo

29:15

with your stand-up show. I think I

29:17

would like the immediacy of knowing

29:20

how well I'm doing. Then I

29:22

say, if you play Lady

29:24

Macbeth at the National Theatre,

29:27

you don't know if you've

29:29

done a good job of

29:31

that until the end when

29:34

everybody claps. And I think

29:36

that's what gets me is. I wouldn't

29:38

know. And maybe that's the silly way

29:40

of looking at it. Would you? Yes.

29:42

Are they concentrating? Are they hanging on

29:44

every word? Yeah. That's quite hard to

29:46

see for a comedian because we don't

29:48

get a lot of silence. No. And

29:50

you have to get used to it

29:52

then in the play in the bits

29:55

where they're listening or in a show

29:57

with music, you know, and they're enjoying

29:59

it, but this... But of course we

30:01

love, finish speaking, ha ha ha. That's

30:03

it, you're almost trained to dread silence.

30:05

Yes. So I think, yeah, like in

30:08

answer to a question, I don't know

30:10

if I've lost a desire, but I

30:12

do know that it would definitely feel

30:15

weird and uncomfortable to do after years

30:17

of doing the circuit, you know, and

30:19

touring with your shows where, as I

30:22

say, they come ready for a laugh.

30:24

And what's the deal with football? What's

30:26

the deal with football in general? No,

30:29

with you. And football's a big thing

30:31

for you. Yeah, I love it, Rob.

30:33

And I've always been around it. But

30:35

I've always been around it. Just enjoyed

30:38

it. I've always been around it. Yeah,

30:40

my family are all leads fans. And

30:42

I grew up going to leads games.

30:45

And I grew up watching football and

30:47

playing it. But it was always, you

30:49

know, when you're watching it as a

30:52

kid, it was always men. Yeah. and

30:54

I think now it's what's so great

30:56

is I was chatting earlier with somebody

30:59

about in 2015 when I was at

31:01

uni it was the women's World Cup

31:03

in Canada and I remember clocking what

31:06

a moment it was to be seeing

31:08

England women on the like normal you

31:10

know terrestrial channels and that felt really

31:12

special because I had you know I

31:15

knew of these names because my football

31:17

coach when I was a kid used

31:19

to sort of reference them but you

31:22

didn't really see them in the way

31:24

that you'd see Beckham and Rooney and

31:26

Lampard so it was really um it

31:29

felt like a real member that was

31:31

the one with Jill Scott actually and

31:33

Alex Scott would have been in that

31:36

team and Karen Kearney so it was

31:38

really exciting and then of course we

31:40

had the Euros and that feels like

31:43

it's really just changed. everything for the

31:45

women's game and I I love it

31:47

Rob because it's it's this it's got

31:49

the exact same I don't like this

31:52

misconception sometimes with women's football that it's

31:54

a politer game or anything or a

31:56

soft the game. It's got all the

31:59

same tenacity, all the same competitive. It's

32:01

still just as thrilling, but there's none

32:03

of the... BS that you get sometimes

32:06

at men's games of you know quite

32:08

a sort of toxic atmosphere sometimes and

32:10

on the picture or in the crowd

32:13

I think in the crowd maybe you

32:15

know I think sometimes you hear stuff

32:17

in crowds and it's it's such a

32:20

shame because it's the most popular game

32:22

in the world it should be for

32:24

everybody and you should be able to

32:26

take and that doesn't happen at women's

32:29

matches no no I mean Don't get

32:31

me wrong, there is chanting and there

32:33

is kind of, you know, jeering at

32:36

the other fan. But not the venomous

32:38

hatred. There's no awful toxicity, there's no

32:40

homophobia, you know, blatantly being chanted around

32:43

the stadiums. There's no danger for fans

32:45

as they're going to and from a

32:47

game, depending on what shirt they're wearing.

32:50

There's a lot of stuff about football

32:52

that I love, but there's a lot

32:54

of stuff that I'd change. in the

32:56

men's game that you just don't see

32:59

with the women's game. So I'm really

33:01

really enjoying that it's having this like

33:03

long overdue breakthrough into people's mainstream. And

33:06

how good were you? Oh no. No,

33:08

I was... Did you play in that

33:10

soccer aid match? Yes. In fact I

33:13

played the day after my wedding. That's

33:15

right. I'm aware of this. Yes. Yes.

33:17

Well you are devoted to football. I

33:20

just want to be around with football

33:22

heroes. It was really just that. So

33:24

that was an incredible opportunity. I was

33:27

really trying hard to keep my cool

33:29

on those days. Yeah, because you go

33:31

for like three days training where you

33:33

will stay at the, or you'd like

33:36

it, Rob Champnez, you must have gone

33:38

there. Never be there. Oh, you've got

33:40

to go. You've got to go. But

33:43

so you spend like three days at

33:45

this very fancy spa hotel, spa hotel,

33:47

and then the games on the Sunday.

33:50

But yeah, trying to sort of keep

33:52

your cool. whilst you go, you know,

33:54

they'll be like in between the training

33:57

sessions. I go, right, it's lunchtime, and

33:59

you go to the buffet in this

34:01

big restaurant in the spa, and you're

34:04

queuing behind Alessandro del Piero with Roberta

34:06

Carlos behind you, and then you go

34:08

to sit with the Usain Bolt. It's

34:10

really mad. It's really, really strange. And

34:13

lemach, of course, football royalty. Well, he

34:15

scored. He, honestly, he is, when he

34:17

walks into that room, the footballers, the

34:20

footballers. He's a hero. Because that goal

34:22

was so anticipated for so long for

34:24

Lee that when he got it, it

34:27

felt like, it felt like that clip

34:29

of Beckham when he scored from outside

34:31

the box. It was so special for

34:34

everyone. But he's like you, he just

34:36

loves football. Yeah. And to hang out

34:38

with those people. I think it's the

34:41

highlight of his year. Yeah, it's really

34:43

special. It's really, you know, how many

34:45

people can get to say that they

34:47

have. played football with the people they've

34:50

grown up watching. It's really really cool

34:52

and it's always a very nice vibe.

34:54

Apparently like back in the day it

34:57

used to be a little bit too

34:59

competitive but I've done too and they've

35:01

both been delightful. I've heard a few

35:04

stories. And it's never from the footballers

35:06

is from the non-ros. Yeah. Take it

35:08

a little bit too seriously. I think

35:11

there's a little bit of that. I

35:13

could have gone pro with vibes. Yeah,

35:15

yeah, yeah. But I won't name any,

35:18

but I do know some name. Yes,

35:20

yes. And of course, it was obviously

35:22

Lee that told me about it, but

35:24

it's not him. No, no, it was

35:27

Lee that told me about it as

35:29

well. Yeah, he delights and telling me.

35:31

If you want to know the names,

35:34

ask Lee Mack. How

35:44

good were you? You were never

35:47

good enough to... No, no, no,

35:49

no. It was never on the

35:51

cards for me to be pursuing

35:53

it. But I just really, really

35:55

loved it. And... Does your husband

35:57

love it? So he didn't and

35:59

then... when we met I got

36:01

him into it. Really? Yeah and

36:03

he's now I mean yeah when

36:05

I'm away on tour he'll be

36:07

going oh did you see that goal?

36:10

Seriously? Yeah it's mad. He tried

36:12

to get me into F1 and

36:14

I got him into football

36:16

and I can't do it. I'm

36:18

sorry if anybody likes F1 but

36:21

it's noisy. But it's also

36:23

you know I like about football the

36:25

fact that these sometimes you

36:28

know some of the best players if you

36:30

think about it of Rinaldo or messy or

36:32

Rooney. They've come, you know, not from money,

36:35

they've come from talent. I didn't grow up

36:37

knowing anybody who was carting at the weekend.

36:39

So it was just, it was something that

36:42

was always around, you know, it would

36:44

be my friends. It sort of seemed

36:46

inevitable that I would do a professional.

36:48

My father was a Carter, his father

36:51

was a Carter. his father before him

36:53

was a carter so in a way

36:55

it was almost a preordain what tell

36:57

me the name of the tour appraisal

37:00

appraisal why have you called it

37:03

that so I figured Rob with

37:05

um I figured that with any

37:07

other job so I've been looking

37:09

enough to be a professional

37:11

stand-up now for five years I mean

37:13

not doing any of those other jobs

37:15

you do when you're coming up through

37:17

the circuit and in any which were for

37:20

you what were the other jobs I

37:22

worked in retail I worked in pubs

37:24

I did litter picking I worked in

37:26

an ice cream van I did anything

37:28

that kept me afloat yes but I

37:30

figured with any other job you do

37:32

get a sort of five-year appraisal and

37:34

then I thought well actually We kind

37:36

of do get that in our industry

37:38

in that every gig is an appraisal

37:41

in all stand-up now for five

37:43

years. Are you not doing any of those

37:45

other jobs you do when you're coming up

37:47

through the circuit? Which work are you? What were

37:49

the other jobs for you? I worked

37:51

in retail, I worked appraisal of sorts.

37:53

So I figured that would be a good...

37:56

I like one word titles for a show. I

37:58

quite like that. It's nice and... snappy but

38:00

appraisal felt right with where I'm

38:02

at in terms of I'm checking

38:04

in and with how it's going

38:07

with how I think I'm doing

38:09

with you know you said then

38:11

do you plan I don't really

38:13

have a five-year plan ahead of

38:15

where I'm going well not a

38:17

plan but but things that you

38:19

would like to do or you

38:21

just I think I think this

38:23

job is so I mean you'll

38:25

know this more than me but

38:28

it changes so much right it

38:30

follows trends and and directions that

38:32

the media is going into that

38:34

I think what could be your

38:36

five-year plan will change within one

38:38

year but I think just just

38:40

bigger gigs and just more people

38:42

growing an audience yeah I'd like

38:44

to kind of blend the football

38:46

and comedy together somehow I think

38:49

there's a lot of well I

38:51

think there's a lot of punditry

38:53

and there's a lot of post-match

38:55

analysis from former players, but how

38:57

like in the men's game you

38:59

sometimes get some decent comedy overlapping

39:01

with it, you know, I think

39:03

we can maybe get that with

39:05

the women's game to kind of

39:08

make it. more accessible for everybody.

39:10

You know, I don't think everybody

39:12

wants the technical analysis. Well you

39:14

would be the perfect person for

39:16

that, wouldn't you? Yes, I think

39:18

so. But if you think like,

39:20

you know, we have things like

39:22

a league of their own. Yeah,

39:24

I think if we can... Fantasy

39:26

football and stuff like that. Yeah,

39:29

yeah, I think there's ways of

39:31

approaching sport from a comedic angle

39:33

that the women's game could definitely

39:35

benefit from. Have you got an

39:37

idea for such a program? I

39:39

don't know. But I don't know

39:41

if that would be... I don't

39:43

know if that would be... Yes,

39:45

I think she's got... But I

39:47

don't know if that would be

39:50

a TV program anymore. I don't

39:52

know. I don't know. What you're

39:54

saying to me is, TV is

39:56

yesterday granddad. I think that's what

39:58

you're saying. I didn't say that.

40:00

I didn't say that. I had

40:02

a moment two months ago where

40:04

I got about 10... texts in

40:06

about two minutes all from comedians

40:09

going have you heard Richard Osman

40:11

on his podcast talking about you

40:13

oh what does he say he

40:15

said that I was the sort

40:17

of last last one to kind

40:19

of make it through being on

40:21

TV because he reckons oh yeah

40:23

and listen well he could be

40:25

easy he knows his finger on

40:27

the pulse doesn't know what he

40:30

seriously has so I don't know

40:32

but I don't know but I

40:34

you know I'm really I tell

40:36

you what he hasn't got his

40:38

finger on his finger on What?

40:40

His diary. Oh really? About two

40:42

months ago. Yeah. We were sat

40:44

here, waiting for him to arrive.

40:46

No. Yes. No. You got ghosted

40:48

by the Osman? Oh. He forgot.

40:51

Did you send him a really

40:53

angry text? Rob. No, because... You

40:55

know what, Maisy? Come on. No,

40:57

we're all human, aren't we? No,

40:59

I think that's what the industry

41:01

needs. We need a Rob Bryde

41:03

and Richard Osman beef. We do.

41:05

And then, in fact, this is

41:07

the way it's going, Rob. Now

41:10

you get celebrities doing boxing matches,

41:12

don't you? Well, I think he'd

41:14

win. You could do that. I

41:16

think of the reach. Come on.

41:18

Yeah, he'll have a... Yeah, he'll

41:20

have a... Yeah, he'll have a...

41:22

Yeah, he don't. He'll have a

41:24

lot of money. Unless I tied

41:26

his shoelaces together and ran around

41:28

versus Osman. He's considering it. No,

41:31

well, that's interesting that he said

41:33

you were the... Well, he may

41:35

well be right. He said as

41:37

well, we're all quoting him. He

41:39

said that he thought that Gavin

41:41

Stacey special was the last big

41:43

thing show that brings everyone together

41:45

to watch it. He can't see,

41:47

you know, what's coming down the

41:49

line that could fill that slot

41:52

as it were. Yeah, I think

41:54

so as well, because how long

41:56

ago was the first episode of

41:58

Gavin Stacey? It's like 17 years.

42:00

That's mad. So it's... people have

42:02

grown up with it. 17 years

42:04

of growth. with TV as well.

42:06

I don't know if in 17

42:08

years people can grow up with

42:11

that anymore. We'll be watching it

42:13

just through our retinas through our

42:15

eyelids. Yes, yeah, yeah, like a

42:17

hologram. And when that happens we'd

42:19

be quite right to demand an

42:21

appraisal of how things have gone.

42:23

Mazy Adam is touring in the

42:25

early part of 2025 and that's

42:27

great news for so many people

42:29

but perhaps... more than anyone, the

42:32

people of abberist with, because she

42:34

is going to abberist with it.

42:36

And Maise, these shows are getting,

42:38

I'm just five star reviews, four

42:40

star reviews, that's in comedy, that

42:42

is, how many comments you see

42:44

that are either three or two

42:46

stars, you're in the paper, because

42:48

I think critics don't like giving

42:50

five stars. Let me tell, let

42:53

me tell these, um... these places

42:55

that you're going to. I had

42:57

it on a thing, here we

42:59

go, here it is. February, I'm

43:01

literally gonna read them all out.

43:03

Oh my God, we'll be here

43:05

a while. And I want you

43:07

to make a sound after each

43:09

one that signifies how you feel

43:11

about playing in this place. Okay.

43:14

Isle of Man. Excited. Okay, so

43:16

you're using words. Oh, sorry, sorry,

43:18

okay, yeah. No. One word to

43:20

describe, and you're going to run

43:22

out of superlities. We start on

43:24

the first of every, Isle of

43:26

Man, excited. Yeah. Dublin. Nervous. They're

43:28

great audience, Dublin. Yeah. You've played

43:30

there before. You've seen the ticket

43:33

sales for it. Oh, does it

43:35

need, do you need... Dublin needs

43:37

a push? Come on, did Bono,

43:39

die in vain, vain, vain, vain,

43:41

vain, come on. Belfast. Intrigued. Is

43:43

that a euphemism for need to

43:45

push on the tickets? Yeah, that

43:47

one does actually. Yeah. Bangor. Fine.

43:49

No. When I said about that,

43:51

I wasn't saying just box office.

43:54

I mean, just how you feel

43:56

about going to that town. Regardless

43:58

of ticket sales. Delighted. Delighted. All

44:00

right. Brisworth. Buzzing. That's the

44:02

8th of February. Then you

44:04

got to Manchester the 9th.

44:06

Salford, Keys. Here at the

44:08

Lowry. Grand. Yeah, you saw it.

44:11

It's lovely. Cambridge? Uh,

44:13

intellectually stimulated.

44:15

Nice. Maidstone. Uh, New. She's

44:17

struggled to come up

44:20

with anything from Maidson. She

44:22

doesn't like them. Milton Keynes.

44:24

Uh, old favourite. Tumbridge

44:27

Wells? Interesting. Canterbury.

44:29

traditional

44:32

Winchester posh.

44:34

Posh. Chelmsford.

44:37

Easy. Yeah, Essex.

44:39

Pamela, Norwich.

44:42

Far. Good though, nice

44:46

audiences. Cheltenham.

44:49

G. C.H.Q.

44:51

Stockton-on-T's. Why

44:53

I? Coventry.

44:55

Too late Aberdeen.

44:58

High up. It is my

45:00

old. You're just saying where

45:02

they are. I have to come up

45:05

with words very quickly.

45:07

Yes, but that's the game.

45:09

I want words that describe

45:11

your feelings up towards

45:14

the place. Too late. Dundee.

45:16

Very, very happy. Good.

45:18

Whitehaven. Favourite.

45:20

Hokeley. Home. I thought

45:22

you're going to say you

45:24

wanted more. Hereford. Where?

45:27

the courtyard. Oh sorry, you mean

45:29

where is Hereford? That's my word.

45:31

Really? Do you know where Hereford

45:33

is? It's on the Welsh-English borders.

45:36

I have done a gig

45:38

there before because I had to do

45:40

a car share. Who were the other

45:42

comics you were class sharing with?

45:44

Allah, the comedian. Yeah. And a

45:46

guy who's moved to Amsterdam

45:49

since Simon, Simon Evans.

45:52

Yeah, some years ago.

45:54

Oh fair enough. Years

45:56

ago. Fair enough. Well

45:59

look. Maise adam.com. It's

46:01

as simple as that. I

46:03

was up all night thinking

46:05

of that domain, Rob. It's

46:07

as simple as that. Go

46:10

and see Maise. It's been

46:12

very nice to spend a

46:14

bit of time with you.

46:16

Thank you, Rob. And I

46:18

look forward to you returning

46:20

to what I like to

46:23

you. Yeah. And if I'm

46:25

in Aberistwith on February the

46:27

8th, I'm not, but if

46:29

I am, or if I'm

46:31

in Salford on the 9th,

46:34

or where do you need

46:36

the tickets? on the 4th

46:38

of February, or Belfast on

46:40

the 5th, I will be

46:42

there. I think so. I

46:44

think so. That would be,

46:47

yeah. So come for Rob

46:49

Bryden, not me. Yeah. I'll

46:51

tell you some things in

46:53

the interval. Thank you, Maisey.

46:55

Don't spill the coffee. I

46:57

won't. I won't. I should

47:00

have a sort of washing

47:02

up bowl underneath. You need

47:04

a bib. over on the

47:06

Rob Bryden YouTube channel. Oh,

47:08

and remember to subscribe. Tell

47:10

us about yourself by completing

47:13

a short survey at wondery.com/survey.

47:15

Bride Nound is produced by

47:17

Talent Bank and executive produced

47:19

by Rob Bryden. He does

47:21

such a vital job. In

47:23

collaboration with Wondery. Don't forget

47:26

to check out our bite-size

47:28

video cast on YouTube slash

47:30

survey. Bride Nound is produced

47:32

by Talent Bank and executive

47:34

produced by Rob Bryden. He

47:37

does such a vital job.

47:39

In collaboration, we go. Tell

47:41

us about yourself by completing

47:43

a short survey at Wondery...

47:45

Right now is produced by

47:47

Talent Bank and Bridenand

47:50

is produced

47:52

by Talon by Rob

47:54

Bryden. by Rob

47:56

a He does

47:58

such a

48:00

vital job. In

48:03

collaboration with Don't

48:05

Don't forget

48:07

to check out

48:09

our Bite

48:11

Size video cast

48:13

on on YouTube.

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features