Ian Hislop dismantles the government, piece by piece | Interview

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2022
  • Ian Hislop is the editor of Private Eye.
    His new documentary, 'In Suburbia', is out now on BBC Sounds. Listen to it here: www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001...
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Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @PoliticsJOE
    @PoliticsJOE  Год назад +319

    Want more Hislop? Watch him embarrass MPs in their own select committee here: ruclips.net/video/a3O8mwDFo4M/видео.html

    • @lisastickytuna8668
      @lisastickytuna8668 Год назад +8

      After this? Yes please! 👍

    • @ericajohnson3504
      @ericajohnson3504 Год назад +24

      He was brilliant at that committee 🤣

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад +11

      I think it was edifying for quite a few of them :-D
      They should have him in at least twice a year because he sets them straight on so much.

    • @trevorknight2626
      @trevorknight2626 Год назад

      Hahaha why do the BBC employ only pro establishment and wef marxists turds partly funded by Putin and his allies.

    • @brigitteapplegarth112
      @brigitteapplegarth112 Год назад +7

      Ian Hislop -Delighted to be the 100th thumbs up for one of my favourite journalists! Please do more TV work please….👍💋 And thanks both of you for the interview, made my day after listening to that horrible PMQ mooo-ing time!

  • @tobyjugg6202
    @tobyjugg6202 Год назад +183

    The man is a national treasure - high intellect, great sense of humour, and the knack of going straight for the jugular whenever necessary. I could listen to him all day long.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад

      He works for the state broadcaster and endorsed censorship over 2020 & 2021.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад

      @@ekZ11761 None needed whatsoever. Suggest you read every recent edition of Private Eye that goes on about "misinformation" and has mocked people for criticising the establishment's line on certain subjects. He has done the same on that silly pseudo-quiz show too.
      Private Eye has come a long way from the 1970s when it challenged the establishment to the 2020s, when it has repeatedly endorsed huge sections of it. It plays the party game but leaves certain things off limits.

    • @chickenfooker74
      @chickenfooker74 Год назад

      He's part of the establishment. Wake up sycophant.

    • @HALLish-jl5mo
      @HALLish-jl5mo Год назад

      Hislop is a man who prioritises going for the jugular and sticking it to the establishment over going for the right jugular or being correct. See his handling of Andrew Wakefield and the “vaccines cause autism” claims.
      Private Eye went all in, devoting a 32 page special report, taking Wakefield at face value.
      It took until 2008 for Hislop to admit he was wrong. And then, Private Eye, which frequently criticises papers for the visibility of their redactions, published his on page 29.
      Anyone with even the most basic understanding of the scientific method could have pulled Wakefields claims apart. Even ignoring the fact that a man of “high intellect” should be able to do this on their own, a man of high integrity would have consulted people with relevant expertise. Hislop either lacks intellect or integrity. Probably both.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад +1

      @@HALLish-jl5mo He may have defended Wakefield, but he did the exact opposite in 2021, by refusing to cover the numerous health problems that the jags did cause. These were acknowledged to some extent within the government's own publications but that is likely the tip of the iceberg. He could too have covered the abuses, economic warfare, creeping authoritarianism etc, but he chose not to.

  • @ranapour
    @ranapour Год назад +98

    Ian has a soul and fairness which is great for a journalist.

    • @bipolarminddroppings
      @bipolarminddroppings Год назад

      Journalists should ideally be equal opportunity offenders, calling out nonsense wherever it is found. Unfortunately, these days we have left wing media that won't even entertain discussion around certain topics and a right wing media that will back their side no matter what, with very little in the middle calling out the bullshit on both sides.

    • @888ssss
      @888ssss Год назад

      has this chinless wonder taken his government vaccine is my first question. then ill decide if he is bought or not.

    • @TerryMcGearyScotland
      @TerryMcGearyScotland Год назад +2

      Spot on.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад

      He endorsed censorship in 2020.

    • @TerryMcGearyScotland
      @TerryMcGearyScotland Год назад

      @@thursoberwick1948 Any details/reference for his please?

  • @OTheQuietOneO
    @OTheQuietOneO Год назад +242

    From a relatively young age, I’ve held Ian Hislop in my mind as the moral compass and articulate voice of how people should be. Honest, informed, funny and wholly, wholly good. Revere this man.

    • @HA-in1me
      @HA-in1me Год назад

      Make him a Prime Minister?

    • @EmyrDerfel
      @EmyrDerfel Год назад +16

      @@HA-in1me Don't think he'd want to do it, he'd find way too much in need of fixing and be frustrated by the processes he'd have to go through to fix it, only to face a vote of no confidence from the privileged who would feel under attack.

    • @TheUnshownVideos-Hoaxes-FalseF
      @TheUnshownVideos-Hoaxes-FalseF Год назад

      He changed his tune on the EU before the in or out vote. The BBC told him that if he did not support remain he would not work on the BBC again. No more hobnobbing with politicians and celebs which his huge ego requires to survive. He loves appearing to be the important man appearing before select committees and on TV, he needs to feel important and will do anything to retain his status. Just another TV tosser with a huge but fragile ego. Take his money and political and celeb friends away and he will fall into pieces.

    • @thisismyuniquestory
      @thisismyuniquestory Год назад

      Spot on, me too

    • @kierandick-doyle5647
      @kierandick-doyle5647 Год назад +2

      Agree in principle with this but would like to posit that revering individual personalities are the antithetis of good democracy (see thatcher, blair, trump, boris etc)

  • @chrisblenkinsopp8588
    @chrisblenkinsopp8588 Год назад +7

    Spike Milligan wrote a poem about "Gunner Blenkinsopp"... he was my father! They were in the Wesern Desert together during WWII.

  • @richardmckenzie5030
    @richardmckenzie5030 Год назад +68

    Ian Hislop is always great to watch/listen to

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Год назад +1

      I think is quite painful to waich him these day.

    • @cuebj
      @cuebj Год назад +2

      @@hurri7720 Odd comment. Wonder how watching a TV can be painful?

  • @teviottilehurst
    @teviottilehurst Год назад +42

    Not all pensioners have savings and the UK state pension remains one of the lowest pensions in Europe.

    • @barriewilliams4526
      @barriewilliams4526 Год назад +4

      Who the hell can save money on the state pension? Mine is £9,627 a year, try saving on that.....

  • @myce-liam
    @myce-liam Год назад +179

    Politics Joe is such a gem. Great interviewer, he always asks thoughtful questions, obviously does his prep beforehand, and doesn't interupt the interviewee.

    • @Nickbaldeagle02
      @Nickbaldeagle02 Год назад +1

      Interrupt.

    • @myce-liam
      @myce-liam Год назад +17

      @@Nickbaldeagle02 Thank you Microsoft Paperclip!

    • @lindadoughty9252
      @lindadoughty9252 Год назад +3

      Just one point, you do know that Politics Joe's a collective, not just one person!?. 🤔

    • @myce-liam
      @myce-liam Год назад +12

      @@lindadoughty9252 Yes, believe it or not, I'm aware that the channel isn't run by a single guy aptly named 'Politics Joe'.....

    • @jbloveday9538
      @jbloveday9538 Год назад +4

      Fun isn’t it Liam? Two insulting replies to your nice comment!

  • @SpacialKatana
    @SpacialKatana Год назад +11

    Can't go wrong interviewing Hislop, and this guy didn't. Fantastic, ty both v much :)

  • @Emanon...
    @Emanon... Год назад +402

    Men like Hislop is the very reason democracy still has a chance

    • @markpage7196
      @markpage7196 Год назад +12

      unlike correct grammar.

    • @brendanpmaclean
      @brendanpmaclean Год назад +90

      @@markpage7196
      Or indeed pointless criticism devoid of a capital letter at the beginning of the sentence.
      😉

    • @lfc6times
      @lfc6times Год назад +11

      @@brendanpmaclean 🤣

    • @Ndlanding
      @Ndlanding Год назад +1

      @@brendanpmaclean Sentence? Where's the verb?

    • @ryanharriss7950
      @ryanharriss7950 Год назад +2

      @@markpage7196 🤣

  • @danielbuxton4493
    @danielbuxton4493 Год назад +230

    I think Ian Hislop is just a national treasure!

    • @serinadelmar6012
      @serinadelmar6012 Год назад +8

      Definitely.

    • @paolagrando5079
      @paolagrando5079 Год назад +13

      International. Enjoying him from Italy 😺

    • @888ssss
      @888ssss Год назад

      has this chinless wonder taken his government vaccine is my first question. then ill decide if he is bought or not.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад +2

      @@paolagrando5079 is Private Eye available in your town?

    • @paolagrando5079
      @paolagrando5079 Год назад +6

      @@alanhat5252 do you mean at the newsagent? Then the answer would be no. But you can subscribe and receive it via snail mail.

  • @palmeraj70
    @palmeraj70 Год назад +6

    Well, that was an hour well spent. Peter Hitchens and Ian Hislop, both compelling, in their individual ways.
    Thanks again JOE!

  • @tingewickmax
    @tingewickmax Год назад +4

    I was born in 1956. At that time my parents had a flat, on the ground floor, in Hyde Park Gardens. The basement flat was occupied by Ken Tynan, who enjoyed long conversations with our Siamese cat Thaisan. The flat above was occupied by either Spike Milligan or Peter Sellers. They would rehearse episodes of The Goon Show in this flat. The hilarity that ensued could be heard in our flat below. My parents think that this had a lasting subconscious effect on their one and only son. Can't wait to see a production of your play Ian.

  • @getreal7964
    @getreal7964 Год назад +153

    So love Ian Hislop, he should be interviewing politicians!

    • @rodpickard1763
      @rodpickard1763 Год назад +10

      The right wing wouldn't dare let him

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад

      see the pinned post on this video, it's quite entertaining

    • @philcooper279
      @philcooper279 Год назад +2

      He is a politician.

    • @philcooper279
      @philcooper279 Год назад

      Listen carefully, too this interview, it is one reason, why this country is screwed.

    • @pault1289
      @pault1289 Год назад +2

      @@philcooper279 Hislop is far from a politician. He's a journalist and thinker.

  • @bobcosmic
    @bobcosmic Год назад +71

    Ian Hislop always goes for the jugular !

  • @TomWhi
    @TomWhi Год назад +18

    Love this interview! I’d love to see it more regularly as Liz has just left office and hear Ian’s thoughts

  • @janedavid8701
    @janedavid8701 Год назад +13

    Watching this again today in the light of what is happening in the markets due to the disastrous mini budget, I would like to respectfully request a part 2 if possible. Brilliant interview Oli!

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад

      The economic collapse is partly a result of shutting the world down for months on end. Yet barely anyone has the guts to say it's related.

  • @mcjs8640
    @mcjs8640 Год назад +62

    A wonderful guy, clever, funny and has integrity.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Год назад

      He has some integrity but has his price. They bought him over the MMR scandal.

    • @philcooper279
      @philcooper279 Год назад

      If you say so.

  • @nicke.1904
    @nicke.1904 Год назад +481

    This needs to be a scheduled monthly discussion, they flow so well I could watch these two nonstop 👍👍👍

    • @petedavies588
      @petedavies588 Год назад +3

      A life you need.

    • @teabagtowers3823
      @teabagtowers3823 Год назад +1

      @@petedavies588 It was a 30 minute video you tosser.

    • @cotonbird
      @cotonbird Год назад +2

      @@dredwardclapton2459 Absolute rubbish except for his comments on the windfall tax - the usual biased BBC fare and I can't stand Hislop anyway.

    • @mynameisleeyesitis
      @mynameisleeyesitis Год назад

      Cottonbird thats hilarious you absolute dunce

    • @Louisg191
      @Louisg191 Год назад +1

      Agreed!

  • @applepye87
    @applepye87 Год назад +7

    This was an incredibly good interview with very thoughtful questions. Good to see an interviewer who has done his research! And great to see Hislop speaking so intelligently at great length. Thanks!

  • @KeiranCounsellKC1994
    @KeiranCounsellKC1994 Год назад +31

    I absolutely love Ian Hislop, I hope on day Im lucky enough to bump into him and tell him how much I admire his works

    • @jojonesjojo8919
      @jojonesjojo8919 Год назад +3

      Including "My dad's the Prime Minister"?

    • @KeiranCounsellKC1994
      @KeiranCounsellKC1994 Год назад

      @@jojonesjojo8919 in all honesty as a kid I had no interest in any political content so I have no knowledge of this show xD I was too busy at the time watching ginas laughing gear or tracey beaker xD hell I only vaguely knew who Tony Blair was at the time (2002 ish) xD

    • @kevingrant7098
      @kevingrant7098 Год назад

      That is such a nice thing to say e

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад

      Hislop is a sellout. That much was apparent in 2020 when satire and investigative journalism was needed most.

    • @KeiranCounsellKC1994
      @KeiranCounsellKC1994 Год назад

      @@thursoberwick1948 I dont think hes a sellout atall and im sure there are reasons for why we didnt get the satire we needed at that point, I cant speak for him

  • @williamhunt1776
    @williamhunt1776 Год назад +522

    This conversation is fantastic. The interviewer and Ian have such a rapport, the information is flowing freely. The informal environment only adds to this. It is refreshing to see individuals in the public eye relating closely to the person on the street. It seems we may have not been totally forgotten

    • @danielcrafter9349
      @danielcrafter9349 Год назад +23

      "In the public eye"
      I see what you did, there.

    • @MickeyMouse-ul2zs
      @MickeyMouse-ul2zs Год назад

      Ha ha ha...................one unpleasant far-left 'little-man' talking shite to another unpleasant far-left' little-man'.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад +22

      "The informal environment" in this case is Hislop's office.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад +19

      Reader's comments are a major part of Private Eye, the editorial team very obviously reads it respectfully which you can tell from the responses. Also it's a small building, I don't think there's enough room for the whole staff to be in at once, they have to go out & talk to people.

    • @simonsimon2888
      @simonsimon2888 Год назад

      Attitude problem is yours...in standard of living..sleep on the hard floor or a comfortable bed you need to buy with the cost of living.

  • @ane-louisestampe7939
    @ane-louisestampe7939 Год назад +46

    The interviewer actually listens to the answers - and builds the questions on them. It's a rare pleasure.
    It becomes apparent to me, that too many journalist don't seem to bother listening. They just shoot off their prepared questions, without actually bothering to hear the answer.
    Oh, and of cource I loooove Bishop

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Год назад +3

      You can tell that they’re just going through a series of questions because they rarely have a follow up question and usually fail to notice when someone has given a wrong or contradictory answer.
      People who can grind their way through a degree will often get these jobs because of their degree rather than any real aptitude for it.

    • @fritzhenning1
      @fritzhenning1 Год назад +1

      The interviewer (Marr, Hartley-Brewer, Morgan etc etc) frequently gives the impression that they are the important person in the interview. It is their show and the interviewee is a mere prop.

    • @jamesjoseph7508
      @jamesjoseph7508 Год назад

      Totally agree. Watch any "political" show with a panel of "journalists" and you will see something similar. As one guest is speaking the other guests will be busy on their phones, oblivious to what is being said. When the interviewer then asks for their opinion, said guests will just reel off their take on the subject.
      It is as if they believe they are beyond learning anything new.
      Apart from anything else, it is just pure rude.

  • @billholmes8255
    @billholmes8255 Год назад +2

    Brilliant, thank you both!

  • @alexsexy09
    @alexsexy09 Год назад +78

    Intellect, humour, and bravery to express yourself in public = Ian Hislop. Respect.

    • @markstarmer3677
      @markstarmer3677 Год назад +1

      Didn’t realise this little lefty hobbit was still around.

    • @jameswiglesworth5004
      @jameswiglesworth5004 Год назад +2

      pity he cannot transfer that to HIGNFY, where he spouts garbage

    • @markstarmer3677
      @markstarmer3677 Год назад +1

      @@jameswiglesworth5004 indeed sir

  • @chrissilver7719
    @chrissilver7719 Год назад +155

    Brilliant interview, Private Eye the most honest media outlet in the UK.

    • @simplesimonhadapie
      @simplesimonhadapie Год назад +14

      absolutely it holds everyone of them to account and if its ever gone we will have a huge loss. its a sharp magazine about politics and as impartial as you get pointing out the balls on all sides

    • @terryboland3816
      @terryboland3816 Год назад +1

      @@simplesimonhadapie Except Jimmy Savile of course.

    • @apkk5594
      @apkk5594 Год назад +2

      You're right of course. But isn't it such a shame that a satirical magazine holds this position.

    • @BritishBeachcomber
      @BritishBeachcomber Год назад

      Got to laugh at that. Private Eye is pure satire. It invented the Twitter mindset decades before most people had internet access.

    • @margarettyson875
      @margarettyson875 Год назад +3

      So unlike Ian Hislop not to get his facts right. Really pissed me off targeting pensioners, I receive a state pension, no Triple Lock to protect me from inflation. It will be very much a case of heat or eat.

  • @satyasyasatyasya5746
    @satyasyasatyasya5746 Год назад +480

    Ladies and Gents, *THIS is an interview.* Notice how the interviewer both engages with what is said, refers to what was said, contributes relevant information and moves through topics gently. An interview IS NOT, just asking a question and nodding until the guest is done talking.

    • @Notalloldpeople
      @Notalloldpeople Год назад +41

      Ian Hislop plays his part as an honest interlocutor whereas most politicians are evasive and dishonest.

    • @Threemore650
      @Threemore650 Год назад +3

      It was choppier than the Bristol Channel ... edited to smithereens.
      You didn’t notice?

    • @littlebaby-pigeon7128
      @littlebaby-pigeon7128 Год назад +15

      @@Threemore650 i didnt see that at all. I saw quite an unedited interview, the whole conversation was pretty much included

    • @petedavies588
      @petedavies588 Год назад +4

      Thanks for the schooling. Jesus help us...

    • @Threemore650
      @Threemore650 Год назад +1

      @@littlebaby-pigeon7128 you can see the editing in the first part...
      I switched off after seeing that it was so edited.
      I was probably reading Private Eye before your mother was born.
      Not liking the changes.

  • @christinelightbody3065
    @christinelightbody3065 Год назад +4

    What a load of Crap about pensioners and I take exception to this. Many of us, are very financially challenged and VERY worried indeed. Pension triple lock probably will never be reinstated by this despicable government

    • @domb1994
      @domb1994 Год назад

      He was referring to the large number of pensioners in the Tory party membership, who are, on the whole, pretty well off.

    • @vincekerrigan8300
      @vincekerrigan8300 Год назад

      @@domb1994 How do you know that? They will be people with massive private pensions - the 'triple lock' is relared to the state pension, which is paltry.

  • @huwtindall7096
    @huwtindall7096 Год назад +21

    Ian Hislop is a national treasure. Up there with Attenborough and Fry IMO.

    • @irena7777777
      @irena7777777 Год назад

      Richard Attenborough and Colin Fry are dead

    • @skoot2u
      @skoot2u Год назад +1

      Give over.

  • @RonaldChump
    @RonaldChump Год назад +34

    Pensioners with some savings may get some more interest but it will never match the rate of inflation so they are losing money in real terms. And the pension here is among the lowest in Europe.

    • @PurushaDesa
      @PurushaDesa Год назад

      Same with our meagre welfare, yet the Benefits Street narrative of greedy layabouts wanting too much remains.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад +1

      the "triple lock" links the State Pension to inflation & many private pensions are "index linked"

    • @135Ops
      @135Ops Год назад +3

      @@alanhat5252 Interest rates on savings never keep pace with inflation you muppet!

    • @barriewilliams4526
      @barriewilliams4526 Год назад +3

      @@alanhat5252 In actual fact, very few pensions are index-linked (unless of course it's a government one funded by the taxpayer) as it is just too expensive....

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад

      @@135Ops did I mention savings? It was certainly unintentional if I did & for that I apologize.

  • @Karl_with_a_K
    @Karl_with_a_K Год назад +165

    Ian Hislop is the right combination of politically astute and absolutely hilarious. More Please!

    • @patrickbyrne5070
      @patrickbyrne5070 Год назад +6

      He’s a treasure. Always has been.

    • @Jack-fs2im
      @Jack-fs2im Год назад +1

      @@patrickbyrne5070 ANTI TORY WITH THE SAVILLE CHANNEL IMO

    • @finger3181
      @finger3181 Год назад +3

      Anti tory? Yes. Hence the 'politically astute'.

    • @Jack-fs2im
      @Jack-fs2im Год назад

      @@finger3181 biased imo

    • @patrickbyrne5070
      @patrickbyrne5070 Год назад +1

      @@Jack-fs2im biased against what? Saville was Thatchers good friend. They were thick as thieves. I suggest you do a quick search you’ll see all you need to know. I don’t hate anything or anyone just for sake of it but if you think that stuff was a left wing thing…. I got news. It was mostly a Tory thing. But here’s another… the ‘left’ never called them out either. So. You can be a little fascist friend of the child abusers. You can be an idiot hoping a half decent politician leads opposition. Or… you can remember that they’re all a bunch of self serving egocentric corrupt disgusting pieces of crap.. because.. they’re politicians

  • @davejh3514
    @davejh3514 Год назад +4

    Excellent conversation. Ian Hislop is a ⭐ Please, please, please make it a regular event

  • @leo1314ok
    @leo1314ok Год назад +17

    Brilliant. Love Ian Hislop. He hit several nails on the head in that interview.

  • @m6j159
    @m6j159 Год назад +234

    What an excellent interview! The more I listen to Ian Hislop, the more I like him; a thoroughly decent individual, funny and engaging with a very finely calibrated moral compass. Brilliant man. Thank you.

    • @MrDigimal
      @MrDigimal Год назад +6

      Totally agree

    • @simplesimonhadapie
      @simplesimonhadapie Год назад +8

      i've always had respect for him and even though some little things we don't see eye to eye on doesn't stop him being a brilliant satirist and political investigator and commentator. He will be sadly missed and not properly remembered precisely because of who his targets are the people who wish to be elitist or criminal in public office

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Год назад +4

      Privately educated of course . ?
      Like all our most vociferous lefties . ! ( guilty conscience ).

    • @teabagtowers3823
      @teabagtowers3823 Год назад +8

      @@2msvalkyrie529 Ok and? What is wrong with being privately educated?

    • @Ndlanding
      @Ndlanding Год назад +1

      @@2msvalkyrie529 I think you mean "badly educated", as there's no full stop before a question mark.

  • @KeithRingo
    @KeithRingo Год назад +92

    I love the private eye offices. It looks like they just kind of bring in furniture from home as its out of date

    • @blackenedsprite8542
      @blackenedsprite8542 Год назад +1

      "We were going to have shelves, but they got in the way of all the faff"

  • @cruachan1191
    @cruachan1191 Год назад +23

    Well said Ian, I've been saying something similar myself about Boris's "legacy". Apparently it was OK when he and Ress-Mogg and everyone else ousted Theresa May (which was over Brexit, so ideological differences) but it was a "coup" to get rid of Boris despite the parade of scandals and lies resulting in ~60 resignations from Government.
    And now we've got Truss, who will clearly change her mind at the drop of a hat or say anything to get the biggest cheer from the crowd in front of her, praising his legacy and putting all of his loyalists in her cabinet.

    • @andrewcheadle948
      @andrewcheadle948 Год назад +2

      Think the biggest problem with having Truss as "leader", is her trying to out flank the left by becoming the left!
      Appears a bit strange to me for a right wing "Conservative" party to slide that far to the left that we get a choice now between three left wing parties, all of them being "green" of course.
      Sure, I understand that they wanted to shed their nasty party image, but I don't think becoming centre left is the answer. As there's literally no right wing voice then.
      I'm guessing that if we continue down this road then a right wing party will emerge that makes ukip look like a bunch of choir boys!

    • @dannysatchell3408
      @dannysatchell3408 Год назад

      @Andrew Cheadle What planet are you living on? Can you actually name one policy where Liz Truss is “trying to outflank the left”? She’s so green she’s quietly unbanned fracking. She’s so left wing she’s posturing about no more hand outs despite the cost of living crisis forcing millions into destitution. The Tories have taken a very hard turn to the right over the past 5-10 years. Jacob Rees Mogg and the European Research Group used to be the radical right of the party and they are now in control. UKIP has vanished because it’s ideas have absorbed by the Tories.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад

      @@andrewcheadle948 Boris appointed Susan Michie in charge of the response. I suggest everyone looks up her political background.

  • @daveb3987
    @daveb3987 Год назад +38

    On the point of living more "densely", the issue from my point of view as someone from Australia, living in various cities in Asia and visiting the UK a different times, is that Aus and the UK attempts to live in cities result in a huge loss of green space. Basically, the developers get greedy. There's no wider social plan to make cities liveable.
    Living in apartments should be offset with access to plenty of public green space along with the convenience of good transport and thus access to many services.
    In contrast to Asia where cities are being improved to include what we would consider luxury lifestyles in condos with pools and gyms, surrounded by parks, bike tracks and world class transport, Aus and the UK fail at this dismally.
    I've lived in some of the most densely populated cities in the world, yet feel like there's far more green space and public amenities than I would have in an Australian suburb. This is what happens when we hand things over to developers who support political parties and squeeze every dollar out of property, rather than have levels of government with plans and vision to make our cities truly liveable.

    • @dancarter482
      @dancarter482 Год назад +4

      Problem with England - only really applies there - is it is TINY! I remember a borough in London in the '70's that is now like Calcutta - it HAD green spaces and a community that knew each other .... . Certain warring demographics cannot be expected to live in harmony on a vast continent let alone in pleasant leafy side streets!

    • @kentonian
      @kentonian Год назад +8

      Exactly
      Also consider how much the motor vehicle as taken over. Not only has it resulted in vast swaths of green space covered in tarmac but now we are scared to let children play outside, scared to cycle and much unhealthier.
      If a new city were built now like Milton keens it should have all roads underground with electric only allowed inside the city. High rise surrounded by parks and Forrests

    • @daveb3987
      @daveb3987 Год назад

      @@kentonian agree 100%.

    • @chrisburn7178
      @chrisburn7178 Год назад +5

      @@kentonian Couldn't agree more. Obviously Hislop is talking of emotions rather than practicalities, but the sad truth is that people THINK they're buying a bit of their own space, but they're buying a greedy developer's idea of the minimum they can get away with building and ironically removing much of the pleasantness that would go towards the feeling of satisfaction and contentedness. The biggest part of this is infrastructure, both in terms of lack of amenities within walking or cycling distance, and well-planned safe routes to get there. It feels like decades of poor planning have made people forget the content that comes from walking to school with your kids, jumping on a bike to get some milk and bread or enjoying green space. Ironically all things cities now do better than suburban and other rural expansionist developments. Perhaps that's why we move house so often, because nowhere makes us feel content anymore?

    • @marcowen1506
      @marcowen1506 Год назад +3

      we tried dense living surrounded by green space - the 60s and 70s tower blocks - they were an unmitigated failure. The green space became a crime-ridden no-man's land and tended to cut off the residents, not provide them with an amenity. I'm starting to think that some societies are culturally and politically incapable of the degree of integrated thinking required to produce a liveable city.
      Regarding your experience of Asian cities, I would be interested to know which ones. The Asian cities that I have visited have enthusiastically built over their green space and do not plan parkland when they put in the marching ranks of tower blocks.

  • @wotireckon
    @wotireckon Год назад +11

    I have all the time in the world for Ian Hislop.

    • @philcooper279
      @philcooper279 Год назад

      He is a left wing copy of Boris Johnson.

  • @theascendance
    @theascendance Год назад +8

    Grate! Everybody buy a PRIVET EYE it’s the only news worth buying thank you Ian Hislop

  • @dmacaulay75
    @dmacaulay75 Год назад +5

    Fantastic interview. Ian Hislop is a national treasure.

  • @CrookedSkew
    @CrookedSkew Год назад +1

    Great interview. Thanks. More please!

  • @saturdayplayer2492
    @saturdayplayer2492 Год назад +10

    Ian is always very insightful. He doesn't take B S from establishment figures and this is what is needed at this time.

  • @justinjones8552
    @justinjones8552 Год назад +179

    Not one I thought up, but getting rid of Boris and getting Liz Truss is like tunnelling out of Josef Fritzl’s basement and emerging in Fred West’s garden

  • @stephendixon8575
    @stephendixon8575 Год назад

    Bloody marvellous that - Thank you so much. Really, really enjoyed that …. a lot! Well done, and as mentioned by @Nick E. would be eager to see something similar to this on a regular basis 👍

  • @iangregory3719
    @iangregory3719 Год назад +27

    One of the best political/social interviews I have seen in years.

  • @sy2see
    @sy2see Год назад +34

    I would love to see Ian Hislop pull the Tory MPs to bits. He’s so good at it.

    • @colinbaker3916
      @colinbaker3916 Год назад +3

      He has done that on Have I Got News For You.

    • @davidbetts9332
      @davidbetts9332 Год назад

      Why not the Labour ones?

    • @dondoodat
      @dondoodat Год назад +1

      @@davidbetts9332
      He does that too.
      No need to be so precious.

    • @colinbaker3916
      @colinbaker3916 Год назад

      @@davidbetts9332 He goes for all of them, irrespective of party.
      However, as the governing party, the Tories should expect most of the mockery.

    • @sy2see
      @sy2see Год назад

      @@colinbaker3916 Well said.

  • @gategi10
    @gategi10 Год назад +279

    Brilliant . We need more journalists who tell the truth are witty and predict exactly what will happen to our politics.

    • @pillowdestroyer5694
      @pillowdestroyer5694 Год назад +6

      They all promise the world become prime minister and do absolutely naff all!!!

    • @SammyInnit
      @SammyInnit Год назад +13

      Get yourself a subscription to the Private Eye, best thing I did.

    • @stoopsolo4187
      @stoopsolo4187 Год назад +7

      @@SammyInnit a very informative publication but I had to take a break from buying it because articles I was reading wound me up too much. I started buying again as I was missing important stories.

    • @dambrooks7578
      @dambrooks7578 Год назад +1

      Do you read Private Eye also?

    • @monkeyboy2297
      @monkeyboy2297 Год назад +7

      ​@@stoopsolo4187 totally agree, I'm thinking of buying it again, the problem I have is that they exposed dodgy politicians and business people, but there seemed to be little or no consequences, and I found it frustrating

  • @briansymmes7917
    @briansymmes7917 Год назад +102

    To be fair, dismantling LizTruss is like knocking over a poorly-made sand castle right before the tide comes in.

    • @briansymmes7917
      @briansymmes7917 Год назад

      @Lazer Benabba metro is a great paper, I hear they are up for the Pulitzer Prize this year.

    • @tokinsloff312
      @tokinsloff312 Год назад +3

      @Lazer Benabba Must be a Mail/Express/Sun reader if you think that's nonsense.

    • @murraymarshall5865
      @murraymarshall5865 Год назад +1

      FFS she has been PM for days and most of them have been overshadowed by the Queen’s death, give her a chance before condemning her.

    • @finger3181
      @finger3181 Год назад +2

      She's been incompetent for years. I can't see that changing with the additional responsibility

    • @briansymmes7917
      @briansymmes7917 Год назад +2

      @@murraymarshall5865 she’s had plenty of chances, her record as a minister shows what a disaster she will be as PM.

  • @lukedogwalker
    @lukedogwalker Год назад +53

    Best story I heard about Spike and Co.'s time in the army was when they were supporting an anti aircraft unit, which was positioned on a hill. One of the guns managed to free itself from its tow while it was being positioned, and rolled down the hill right past them. Moments later a breathless officer arrived, and asked them "Have you seen an anti aircraft gun roll past?" Harry Secombe's instant response was "I dunno, Sir. What colour was it?" And Spike later said this was the moment he knew he wanted to work with Harry.

    • @dancarter482
      @dancarter482 Год назад +4

      GOLD!

    • @supertramp6011
      @supertramp6011 Год назад +4

      As the commenter above me stated- GOLD! 🤣🤣

    • @donrobertson4940
      @donrobertson4940 Год назад +7

      Just to clarify -Spike and Secombe meet during the war. After Spike was injured he joined a concert party. That's where he met Secombe. Possibly Bentine and Sellers, but definitely Harry.
      Spikes also credited with the funniest joke ever written. In a goon show.
      Someone answers the phone.
      "Ambulance service'
      'you have to help me. There's someone here - I think they're dead'
      'are you sure they're dead?'
      'hang on '
      Footsteps run off
      Gunshot
      Footsteps run back
      'I'm sure'

    • @donrobertson4940
      @donrobertson4940 Год назад +1

      I've read the op four times and I'm still laughing.

    • @annecarter8409
      @annecarter8409 Год назад

      @@donrobertson4940 thank you 😊 Comedy gold!

  • @billywoodward584
    @billywoodward584 Год назад +22

    I'm a pensioner and I'm bothered, the triplelock is at risk as soon as inflation rates go up under disconnected and dishonest Tories, I still have most of the living cost I had when I was working, I have been stressed and worried by being unable to afford energy costs even before the cost of living crisis

    • @mcallisterwill
      @mcallisterwill Год назад +6

      I think in the context of his full comment, which is missing in the intro, he is talking about those older people who are members of the Conservative Party who are well off and largely unaffected by the issues which should be preoccupying any PM.

    • @aries6776
      @aries6776 Год назад +1

      @@mcallisterwill Yes that was my view, the pensioners among the 140,000 Conservative party members who voted in the Party Leadership election. They are members of prestigious golf clubs, and holiday homes in Southern Europe, although they voted for voted for Brexit.

    • @Clodhopping
      @Clodhopping Год назад

      @@mcallisterwill I think you're being generous here - it's a common misconception that pensioners are loaded having bought houses years ago that are now worth a fortune. All the pensioners I know are skint, living on pennies in badly maintained rental properties. They worked hard jobs for low pay and never had the chance to save.

    • @mcallisterwill
      @mcallisterwill Год назад

      @@Clodhopping are they also members of the Conservative party though?

  • @maxkazzora4234
    @maxkazzora4234 Год назад +3

    Well done for having Ian Hislop on your video. Not only is he funny but is articulate in what he says. Shame he isn’t a MP. He would have my vote.

  • @mrsh810
    @mrsh810 Год назад +5

    Love this interview, so spot on at all levels

  • @anthonylloyd-rees
    @anthonylloyd-rees Год назад +6

    In the mid '60's I saw Spike live in the West End in a play called 'Son of Oblomov" which I thought hilarious so I took a friend to see it the following day, it was almost completely different. I took various friends and work colleagues to see later shows and to my huge delight Spike never allowed the script to interfere with his performance.

  • @MartinJames389
    @MartinJames389 Год назад +57

    I can't agree with Ian Hislop about the inner cities and class dynamics. Living on an inner London council estate, I can say that the pressure of gentrification is intense. This borough was once proud of its identity, now it is divided and we are sneered at by the newcomers with posh accents. Neither are these young "Lupin" types (though there are a few pockets where such people are predominant amongst the incomers) but families with children requiring expensive nursery provision and definitely not going to local schools when older. Others are a bit older and might be called "young middle aged". The pressure in terms of ripping buildings down and building blocks of expensive flats did mark time for about 18 months during the pandemic, but has taken off again quickly. The developers have bunches of planning consents in their pockets and five years to use them, with extensions readily granted.

    • @Jinxy44
      @Jinxy44 Год назад +4

      Exactly Hislops point 👍

    • @MartinJames389
      @MartinJames389 Год назад +5

      @@Jinxy44 I think it's the contrary of Hislop's point. It is the "densification" he claims was rejected by has, in fact, been adopted by the comfortable middle class, or at least a large section of it, to the detriment of all the people driven out and cohesive communities broken up.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Год назад +18

      I think this phenomenon is specific to certain places. One area can experience this while another similar area is unaffected by it. I’m from a small seaside village on the west coast of Ireland with a population of 2,500. It’s close to a larger town of 20,000+. My village has become the place to be for the well to do and upwardly mobile. As such, property prices have skyrocketed. People born and raised there have been priced out of the market and end up moving away. Sometimes they have to commute back to work as waitresses and barmen serving the newcomers. The original locals are looked on as a waste of property that their friends could buy and “Grand Design” the sh1t out of. Developers buy up every scrap of land and instantly get planning permission whereas locals are flatly told that they will never get planning to build anything, either to sell or to live in. Social housing is opposed and even when built, rarely goes to a local.
      Meanwhile, other villages nearby are left untouched for now. Only when one gentrified area has reached saturation levels of well moneyed, uppity tw&ts, and property prices gets so ridiculous that even the well off can’t afford it, some nearby location gets the spillover and the cycle happens again.

    • @thepm3972
      @thepm3972 Год назад

      No answer to why you are not on the picket line. Liked the guy. Unsure now.

    • @saydvoncripps
      @saydvoncripps Год назад +9

      Hello from another, northwest london housing estate. Yes. Our problem is the middleclass. You know the ones, they tell us we dont speak properly and sneer at what we do. They make the rules, the middle class. If you want to know what class you are, just ask them. I live in Barnetm the only tory shit hole in london. And we are drowning in both contempt and well meant patronage. Blerh. They make me sick.

  • @michaeljijus980
    @michaeljijus980 Год назад +10

    Legend & national treasure of Brits.

  • @hallohallo1332
    @hallohallo1332 Год назад

    Thanks for the great interview.

  • @anthonysadler8258
    @anthonysadler8258 Год назад +2

    Hislop is brilliant and his presentation...hits the spot on today...so sad that so so so many will not it is recognise this 10/10

  • @amr5388
    @amr5388 Год назад +33

    I would point out that a victorian suburb is utterly different to a modern one. Victorian ones were essentially a single city borough surrounded by countryside. People still had all the walkable amenities. I think very few people want to live in high rises, but I don't think the modern suburb is the alternative or the rural countryside. As some american urbanists style it 'the missing middle'. Its also the reason victorian suburbs around cities are the most expensive suburbs available.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Год назад +4

      the census of 1901, conducted 2 months after Victoria died, listed 41,458,721 people, it's now 67 million. It makes a difference.

    • @jingshelpmaboab
      @jingshelpmaboab Год назад +2

      @Ben Chuft Wrong. Both are correct and commonly used in UK English.

    • @amr5388
      @amr5388 Год назад +4

      @@jingshelpmaboab thanks Bob, not sure why he's so intense lol

    • @amr5388
      @amr5388 Год назад +4

      @@alanhat5252 absolutely, but still need to build decent places to live and not just attempt to copy American sprawl but worse because the houses are tiny!

    • @Dan_1348
      @Dan_1348 Год назад

      Sounds like I live in a Victorian suburb then. What would be an example of a "modern" suburb?

  • @Gwalion
    @Gwalion Год назад +31

    Top notch nterview. Ian Hislop is an erudite, interesting and amusing commentator.

  • @Sausage1958
    @Sausage1958 Год назад +1

    Love Ian Hislop. Just the plain truth. Oven ready truth for the Johnsonites.

  • @dracosduckus
    @dracosduckus Год назад

    Enjoyed the interview, thanks for sharing!

  • @rodbenson219
    @rodbenson219 Год назад +56

    The interviewer displays impressive knowledge 8:30 onwards. Much better than most mainstream interviews. Well done.

  • @laurieharper1526
    @laurieharper1526 Год назад +85

    Thank heavens for Ian Hislop. I tend to sit and grind my teeth in helpless rage at the spivs and rip-off merchants (as I'm sure many do) and he manages to make me laugh at them. I urge anyone watching who does not subscribe to the Eye to do so asap. Btw, not all of us pensioners with savings living comfortably in the suburbs are content to say "I'm all right, Jack" and watch much of the population go to hell in a handcart. Most of us have children, grandchildren, friends and relatives and people we care about who are not as insulated from harsh reality as we are. Many of us were committed trade unionists whilst we were working (and many, including me, are still members of our unions in retirement). I've been enjoying seeing Mick and Eddie of the RMT sticking it to the MSM and the government. More power to them and their members.

    • @debb6393
      @debb6393 Год назад +11

      Well said, totally agree. Very worrying for younger generation and imperative to remove this ghastly government. I’ve recently got my bus pass as a waspi that was hit with the whole 6 (soon to be 7) years and have seen quite a few I went to school with pass away before seeing their pension. I’d still be working but my company came in with new terms and conditions that our unions over years had fought for(less holiday less sickness) and I was eased out. They’ve strangled younger generations aspirations with 12 years of jobs for the boys and corruption.

    • @lizroberts1569
      @lizroberts1569 Год назад +2

      Totally agree, I’ve always been in a union and urge others to join too. I used to subscribe to Private Eye but I don’t at the moment maybe I should.

    • @cotonbird
      @cotonbird Год назад

      Hislop spouting more nonsense - this is why I don't watch the biased BBC or rubbish like Politicsjoe. As for the smirking interviewer - God help us!

    • @laurieharper1526
      @laurieharper1526 Год назад

      @@cotonbird Don't tell us. Let's guess. The BBC is "biased" in favour of the left, eh?

    • @cotonbird
      @cotonbird Год назад

      @@laurieharper1526 I like the 'us'!! You might just have answered your own question. After all there's nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so.

  • @grahambrown7720
    @grahambrown7720 Год назад +1

    Brilliant interview, start to finish, well done!

  • @jasoncherriman7518
    @jasoncherriman7518 Год назад

    Brilliant. Thank you.

  • @jeffsuter344
    @jeffsuter344 Год назад +62

    Great stuff, Hislop is always interesting and always on point.

  • @gazza595
    @gazza595 Год назад +55

    Love Ian Hislop's stuff in general, I subscribe to PI. But Pensioners? Maybe Ian needs to broaden his experience of pensioners. It's worth remembering we have one of the lowest state pensions in Europe, over 2 million pensioners live in poverty (around 20% of pensioners) and we have among the higher retirement ages. If you're a retired banker living in Surbiton it might be pretty good. If you're a retired building worker from Leeds, not so much. Not everybody has a private pension and a bunch of savings.

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Год назад +12

      The Triple Lock applies only to the State Pension, which everyone can qualify for if you live and work long enough. However, state pensions are problematic because of demographics. Our society is going to fail because its birth rate is below the replacement rate. With not enough people to work and be taxed, eventually State Pensions will become unaffordable especially as neither the corporations or the plutocrats want to pay more tax to subsidise it. It's astonishing but snobbery about the working class families, plus neoliberal policy accelerated that change. We now have an economy that's forcing the wages of working people down, and they can't afford to have families large enough to save things. We need to rethink our attitudes to families, or accept more immigration to do the work and pay the taxes.

    • @gazza595
      @gazza595 Год назад +10

      @@BigHenFor The demographics are, to be honest, no excuse re pensions, or for that matter many other things. Every ten years we have a census. The government is well aware of the trends in population. They simply fail to plan and kick the can down the road at every opportunity. As you say we should have and need immigration. We should have a sovereign wealth fund as countries i.e. Norway but instead we chose tax breaks for the wealthy and gave all of the money from fossil fuels to the wealthy. Now fossil is going away the opportunity is lost. Pensions and many other problems could have been resolved.

    • @jabberwockytdi8901
      @jabberwockytdi8901 Год назад +10

      He's not talking about pensioners in general, but the specific group of pensioners who are tory party members and a large propertion of the final elecorate in tory party leadership elections.

    • @plebjames
      @plebjames Год назад

      @@gazza595 you're both right

    • @bluegtturbo
      @bluegtturbo Год назад +2

      I agree. The Irish non contributory pension is 1000 a month plus lots of other benefits. The UK pension is derisory in comparison.

  • @phil2003ashleigh
    @phil2003ashleigh Год назад +2

    Pure and simply the best political observer anywhere

  • @kaz555
    @kaz555 Год назад +97

    Great interview from the interviewer and Ian. More truth in one man than the government

  • @reallylionbastard
    @reallylionbastard Год назад +13

    Always great to see hislop on youtube. A rare voice of decency

  • @markcollyer7080
    @markcollyer7080 Год назад

    Great interview. Thank you.

  • @peterowen4456
    @peterowen4456 Год назад

    Made my day. Great interview.

  • @beachcomber2008
    @beachcomber2008 Год назад +5

    So many thumbs for Ian. Even so, it's hard not to kick an apologist (and he knows for what). Cheers. The *_IRONY_* of him as PM . . .

  • @keithcroissant5640
    @keithcroissant5640 Год назад +42

    Great satirical paper and man and the interviewer is very good too.

  • @johnpower4705
    @johnpower4705 Год назад +23

    I could listen to Ian Hyslop all day as he talks so much common sense. I have not had a pay rise in 8 years and with the increase in fuel I with others will have even less to spend which will effect the economies recovery.

    • @andregrysify
      @andregrysify Год назад +3

      And if you and all the others get a PAY rise what happens to inflation and the cost of what you produce?

    • @thisismyuniquestory
      @thisismyuniquestory Год назад

      @@andregrysify So you've never had a payrise in eight years?
      Or you're a pensioner and the the Triple Lock protected you?
      Or you're extremely wealthy and an 11% rise in inflation.
      Energy costs of 4.5 times won't affect you?

  • @kateanddavelacey2267
    @kateanddavelacey2267 Год назад +2

    Excellent. Honesty. truth! Make it a regular podcast.

  • @salmonesque
    @salmonesque Год назад +26

    Great questions and fascinating answers from an extraordinary man. Long may he remain greedy for the enjoyment of what he does. It benefits us all.

  • @jamieashton3835
    @jamieashton3835 Год назад +6

    The state pension is the lowest in Europe

  • @halfpintbuckaroo
    @halfpintbuckaroo Год назад +14

    I wish we could see more videos with Ian Hislop on RUclips. Great interview, thank you.

  • @helenswan705
    @helenswan705 Год назад

    Lovely interview, thanks v much

  • @samjordan6509
    @samjordan6509 Год назад +24

    This is wonderful. Really, really great.

  • @daphnescombine
    @daphnescombine Год назад +6

    What an incredibly intelligent conversation between two intellectually sound individuals. Thank you.

  • @paulharrion3398
    @paulharrion3398 Год назад +12

    Brilliantly informative and interesting to hear a decent conversion about politics in the UK. Not a load of soundbites and bollocks nonsense. Well done!

  • @awjelfs5034
    @awjelfs5034 Год назад +6

    They should play this in every school in England.

  • @Azphreal
    @Azphreal Год назад +3

    My favourite Spike joke is 'This is your captain speaking, we are travelling at 35 thousand feet which is not bad for a cross channel ferry' lol.

  • @annabizaro-doo-dah
    @annabizaro-doo-dah Год назад +2

    That's cobblers about John Betjeman who lived his whole adult life miles from anywhere in Trebethrick, a tiny hamlet on the wild north Cornish coast. His nearest neighbour was my great Aunt, 2 miles away. If he wrote poems about suburbia he certainly didn't love it enough to live there!

  • @rchaffer
    @rchaffer Год назад +10

    I love how cluttered, chaotic and genuine his office is

  • @keithraison1212
    @keithraison1212 Год назад +61

    Thank you Ian for your resume of life today, entertaining,humorous, informative, remarkably similar to my own 78 year old view of the situation today. So you are obviously a genius.

  • @bertrandtumelty2963
    @bertrandtumelty2963 Год назад +41

    At 8:30 you demonstrate an excellent knowledge and synthesis of the subject matter in this interview. You blend it well. Far better than a lot of mainstream journalists. Hislop is lucky to have a good interviewer. Bravo.

    • @Ken_oh545
      @Ken_oh545 Год назад

      He says pastoral 'idol' rather than idyll

    • @herzkine
      @herzkine Год назад +1

      Its vrty soothing a half educated guy who can give sonwthing to a discussion, sadly something special in times of trumpism Twitter tik tok lenght

  • @chrisburn7178
    @chrisburn7178 Год назад +71

    Very interesting to hear Hislop talk about the move out of cities and the emotion that drives it. I'm not sure if there's as much truth in the reality of that move as there used to be. More and more suburban or rural expansionist developments sell the "idea" of personal space, but completely fail at connecting that (increasingly meagre) space to amenities, services and green stuff, lacking the amenities themselves and the well-planned walking or cycling routes to get there. Car reliance is so accepted through decades of poor planning that we seem to have forgotten the content that comes with sharing a walk to school with the kids or jumping on a bike to get some bread and milk. Instead too many people rage at the other SUV drivers for getting their parking spot outside the school and then drive 2 miles to work because there's no safe and pleasant way to get there, and even if there is nobody thinks to try. I can't help thinking that this continual undercurrent of dismay helps drive the frantic pace at which we move house; what we bought is a lie and we're too proud to admit it. Ironically as others have said, cities do all this stuff better and better every year, maybe because the young live there and still have enough spirit to demand it.

    • @DrRepper
      @DrRepper Год назад +3

      From personal experience of being an estate agent and mortgage adviser in a Somerset market town during the resent Covid-inspired exodus from the capitol, it's very much the young deserting the cities to have kids in the country. Flogging your flat in Hackney buys you a great deal of house down here and no need to resort to a crappy out-of-town newbuild estate either. You're right about car reliance in very rural locstions, but that's been the case for decades and the fact is that they can afford it.

    • @chrisburn7178
      @chrisburn7178 Год назад +6

      @@DrRepper Interesting to have that real world perspective. Yes car reliance in Somerset must be pretty normal and much more justifiable. I don't suppose you have many areas with ugly "new build" estates clinging onto small established market towns there? Not sure just guessing. Here in Kent they are everywhere and not one of them has proper sustainable infrastructure built in in spite of being near enough for walking or cycling to the local town, and the houses are bog standard. They are branded with names like (I'm sure you're familiar with these) "Meadow View" or "Church Fields", "an exciting new development of family houses". And it's just another sprawling scribble of roads with haphazardly placed houses the wrong side of a main road; you might get a footbridge and a Mace if you're lucky, but no cycle storage, proper segregated paths or integration. It drives me mad that developers take green-field sites with seemingly no responsibility to make them future-proof and car-reliant (and therefore miserable).

    • @maryelizabethord7915
      @maryelizabethord7915 Год назад +6

      @@chrisburn7178 Nearly every market town has an excrescence of new houses. My own home town has got uglier over the years, and we have fewer amenities than forty years ago, sadly. Unfortunately, I think the answer is political. Cities tend to either have left wing councils, or the nasty party have to work harder to get votes. In rural areas, not so much. Pin a blue rosette on anything around here and it gets in every time. Not that a Marrow has won an election, although sometimes I have my suspicions.

    • @73BigMC
      @73BigMC Год назад +3

      The much-touted move from cities is already reversing in the UK, as WFH segues into flexible working because WFH is ruinous for productivity. Plus people realise - as you say - that cities are where the amenities are. Wealthy middle-aged people, especially if they can afford to maintain a flat in London, might stay in rural areas, but that has been happening for generations. It's a bit different in the US, because many large cities are crime-ridden hellholes for all but the super-rich, so the move to smaller cities and rural areas will be longer-lasting.

    • @Fractus
      @Fractus Год назад +5

      @@73BigMC wfh isn’t ruinous for productivity what are you smoking? To be more charitable I’m sure in some industries it is a bit worse but everyone I know gets way more work done and also gets to spend more time with their kids, etc. it’s just so much better.

  • @shameless0voyeur
    @shameless0voyeur Год назад +28

    Loved this, great chemistry between the two. Ian Hislop is quickly becoming a bit of a national treasure

    • @johnt8453
      @johnt8453 Год назад +5

      If Ian Hislop is not yet a national treasure he'll do until he gets there. Wonderful chap.

    • @herbertvonzinderneuf8547
      @herbertvonzinderneuf8547 Год назад +1

      Has been for decades already....unless your politics are true blue.

    • @-Osiris-
      @-Osiris- Год назад

      Becoming? Where have you been for the past 30 years

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад

      @@herbertvonzinderneuf8547 He let us down in 2020. He also works for the Beeb

  • @willwalthamforest8706
    @willwalthamforest8706 Год назад +56

    This guy is quite a good interviewer

    • @DailyCorvid
      @DailyCorvid Год назад

      "This guy" 😆
      "Is quite a" 😂
      "Good interviewer" 🤣🤣🤣
      *Sith Lord Hislop, ladies and gentlemen.* He's our best political mind.

  • @rydermike33
    @rydermike33 Год назад +10

    Wonderful interview. I could listen to Ian for hours.

  • @kennethatkins9250
    @kennethatkins9250 Год назад

    All so very well said .

  • @kabongpope
    @kabongpope Год назад +8

    As always, Ian is a fantastic interview. On point to the end.

  • @andrina118
    @andrina118 Год назад +20

    I Hislop for PM!

    • @maxkazzora4234
      @maxkazzora4234 Год назад +1

      Without a shadow of doubt: he would definitely have two terms in office. Imagine him at PM’s question time against any Shadow leader of the house. He would wipe the floor of any of the current political party leaders. Shame this is just wishful thinking on my part. God help us with Truss.!!

    • @barriewilliams4526
      @barriewilliams4526 Год назад

      Not if he thinks pensioners have savings. My pension is £9,627 If Ian was PM, he would reduce it as he obviously thinks that I get too much, and I have savings too🙄

    • @andrina118
      @andrina118 Год назад

      @@barriewilliams4526 What makes you think he thinks your pension is too much ?

  • @andreamolton8226
    @andreamolton8226 Год назад +12

    Great interview.
    Mr Hislop excellent as usual.

  • @davidjma7226
    @davidjma7226 Год назад +3

    Brilliant interview Joe, I enjoyed every minute.

  • @JG-nx3jg
    @JG-nx3jg Год назад +35

    It's sad that both these men are clearly more intelligent and articulate than our current PM. I feel like Liz is there precisely because she's easily led and controlled by donors and international lobbyists. It was the same with Boris, he was just someone who was in love with the idea of being PM. He was too lazy and disorganised to handle the realities of the job, which again made him easy to control. 'Just pass this through and we'll make sure you're jobs safe for another month, also that wedding you have, don't worry about any of that, we'll organise and pay for it all'.

  • @RunOfTheHind
    @RunOfTheHind Год назад +6

    12:56 to skip the advert.