Grenville Morris was the all-time record goalscorer for Nottingham Forest and retired in 1959, making him a notable person from Builth Wells.
S12 EP48: Stop me if you've heard this one before
Rob Beckett negotiated a business class upgrade on a comedy tour, only to be caught red-handed by the acts he was hiding from the moment the curtain closed.
Parenting Hell with Rob Beckett and Josh Widdicombe
S12 EP48: Stop me if you've heard this one before
Rob Beckett negotiated a business class upgrade on a comedy tour, only to be caught red-handed by the acts he was hiding from the moment the curtain closed.
TL;DR
Rob Beckett and Josh Widdicombe kick off with a chaotic tour of notable people from their hometowns, before diving into listener correspondence covering school WhatsApp group mishaps, the "Imagine This" feature (picturing a field mouse rocking out to Queen), playground shagger voicenotes from rural Scotland, food confessions, and Rob's classic story of secretly flying business class while his fellow comedians sat in premium economy just behind the curtain [1] — Rob Beckett "Rob Beckett negotiated a last-minute business class upgrade on a South Africa comedy tour without telling his fellow acts. He hid in the ai…" 44:20 . Perfect for fans of warm, rambling British comedy chat — the key takeaway is that parenting awkwardness extends well beyond the school gates.
More misadventures in parenting, life, and beyond with Rob Beckett and Josh Widdicombe, featuring a playground shaggers voicenote, the 'Imagine This' feature, and plenty from the listener inbox.
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The episode opens with a trio of US-market sponsor reads. Tremfya is pitched as a prescription treatment for adults with moderate-to-severe Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, covering both self-injection and intravenous infusion options. Carvana delivers a theatrical medieval-court advertisement for its car-selling service, complete with a queen and feasting imagery. Sallie Mae rounds out the pre-roll with a practical pitch for its college scholarship and loan platform aimed at parents helping children navigate higher education.
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The episode proper opens with a kids' intro from Molly Ruth, aged four, from Builth Wells in Mid Wales, whose grandmother is a devoted Parenting Hell superfan. This innocent submission sends Rob down a Wikipedia rabbit hole, reading out the most obscure notable residents of Builth Wells with increasingly mystified reactions from Josh. The only person Josh recognises is Kevin Sheedy, the Everton and Republic of Ireland midfielder — notable, but hardly a Welshman. Josh's own village, Haytor Vale in Devon, barely registers a Wikipedia page, let alone a famous resident. Rob's Mottingham fares somewhat better — W.G. Grace, Dennis Healey, and Rob Beckett himself appear, though Rob's photo is him visibly drunk on the television show Drunk History. Producer Michael, born on the Isle of Wight, offers Anthony Minghella and Mark King of Level 42 — including the detail that King insured his thumbs for a million pounds — before the segment is mercifully declared the most boring four minutes the podcast has ever produced.
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A brief mid-episode ad break features two very different spots. First, a medical PSA about Peyronie's disease — a condition caused by scar tissue under the skin of the penis — encourages men not to feel embarrassed and to visit TalkAboutPD.com for information about non-surgical treatment options. This is followed immediately by a Taco Bell ad framing their new jalapeño citrus salsa as so good that food is merely a vehicle to deliver it to the mouth — an unintentionally fitting metaphor given what follows in the episode.
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Rob explains that his daughter's school is running personal survival lifesaving swimming lessons, asking pupils to bring ordinary clothes to practise swimming in — simulating the experience of falling in fully dressed. A parent's confused query on the group chat sparks a thread Rob can't resist joining, suggesting his daughter will be attending in dungarees and a turtleneck. One brave soul replies 'exceptional buoyancy' and then nothing. Josh suggests replying 'boys will be buoyancy' — Rob refuses. The exchange spirals into a broader observation about the inherent awkwardness of a professional comedian trying to be funny in a civilian parent group chat, which Rob compares to a trained singer at karaoke: technically competent, tonally wrong, and slightly tragic. He admits he only really uses the group when he desperately needs information, at which point he becomes a 'thirsty, dehydrated man in a desert'.
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Josh reveals that Stuart Goldsmith, host of the Comedians' Comedian podcast, cited him in a recent episode with Sarah Pascoe as having said 'if a joke reveals a wider truth then it is true.' Josh had to text Goldsmith to query whether he ever actually said it. Rob's advice is categorical: if someone is quoting you saying something that sounds intelligent, cling to it. This segues into a fascinating exchange about the nature of comedy. Rob articulates his theory that good comedians find subjects the audience has strong unacknowledged opinions about and highlight them — but great comedians then relentlessly exhaust every angle of that discovery, 'slapping every conceivable bit of arse cheek' around it until nothing is left unexplored. Rob also references an AI Instagram account that scraped his book and now annually posts the thrilling quote 'Rob Beckett on Brothers: I had 4 brothers, it was a lot of fun' — a sentence which is merely the opening of an entire chapter.
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The Home Depot advertises a sale of up to 15% off HDX storage totes and shelving solutions, framing them as ideal for organising every room from garage to attic. State Farm follows with a pitch for its 19,000 local agents and Personal Price Plan, encouraging listeners to bundle home and auto insurance for savings — amusingly positioning itself as a 'smart move' alongside the listener's choice to spend time on podcasts rather than doomscrolling.
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The 'Imagine This' feature invites listeners to submit a brief vivid scenario and hear Rob, Josh, and Michael each describe the specific image their mind produces. Listener Joe from Walthamstow submits a field mouse rocking out to the band Queen. Rob's version is grounded in reality — he actually has a bird feeder camera app and pictures the mouse standing on it at night, holding a sunflower seed in a yellow jacket, dancing to music from the feeder's speaker. Josh goes full cartoon: a lone mouse in a field on its hind legs, one arm in the air, watching the full band play on a stage — with a notably alive Freddie Mercury. Michael's is the most elaborate: a Wind in the Willows-style anthropomorphised house, a record player, and a Hugh Grant Love Actually dance, until the mouse turns around to find a surprised vole watching. Rob identifies a subtext of shame in Michael's version.
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Rosa's sparse submission ('a pair of talking slippers on an old man's feet') sparks the second Imagine This segment. Josh places his old man in a rocking chair, half-asleep, wearing classic tartan slippers worn through at the toe — the rip forming the mouth through which the slippers converse with crossed legs. Rob situates his man at Christmas, asleep in a corner chair that shouldn't be there, Christmas hat askew, gravy on his belly, wearing novelty football slippers with faces on them, just quietly chatting to no one. Michael's vision is the darkest: a claymation Aardman-style slipper face on a tired old man, not saying anything, in an early 1980s council house that probably contains asbestos. Rob observes that Michael's imagination runs to shame and death, prompting the producer to reassert that he is, in fact, fine about being bald.
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Rob revisits the 'Solidarity or Solid Karen' feature, noting a flood of requests to rename it from listeners called Karen, before reading Pete's submission. Pete was at a beach with friends, keeping an eye on four children near the sea, when another family's five-year-old wandered down, hurt themselves, and started crying. The parents noticed but simply waved the child back. An elderly couple walking past scolded Pete and his friend sarcastically for 'letting them cry it out' — not realising it wasn't their child. Pete's response — 'that's not our kid and she's not even my wife' — dispatched them swiftly. Rob and Josh diagnose the elderly couple as solid Karens: they failed to actually help, choosing condemnation over information. The correct approach, they conclude, is 'subtle shaming by looking like you're helping' — alerting the relevant parent under the guise of concern.
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Ollie's gut health product line is advertised, targeting parents looking for probiotic and fibre supplement options for the whole family. The ad covers daily probiotics and fibre gummies formulated for children, directing listeners to ollie.com. The standard disclaimer clarifies these products are not evaluated by the FDA.
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Rob introduces a listener voicenote from someone who grew up in rural Scotland, where, as they note, 'the dating pool is small.' The listener describes their school's only male teacher, a divorced and mysteriously charismatic figure called Mr. Simpson, who started dating the mother of a pupil named James. Every morning Mr. Simpson and James's mum would walk James to school and then engage in full, unabashed snogging in front of the assembled class queuing to go in — 'very unacceptable, probably quite traumatic for James.' Sometimes she'd return at lunchtime for more. The update: they married and then divorced again. Rob and Josh contrast this with their own children's mortification at even a raised voice at school drop-off — Rob's kids shut him down if he plays the music too loud in the car, let alone what they'd make of open-mouthed kissing.
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Sparked by the idea of the school gate snog, Rob and Josh fall into a genuinely curious discussion about kissing. Rob reflects that kissing might be more intimate than other sexual acts — you literally cannot be closer to someone's face. He imagines announcing to his wife Lou that they should 'have a snog for a bit, nothing more' mid-documentary on the sofa, purely for its own sake. Josh thinks back to how exciting snogging was early in a relationship and concludes the tragedy is that the novelty inevitably fades. Rob's assessment: 'you've just snogged too much, that's the problem.' When Rob asks Josh when he last 'snogged with tongues', Josh deadpans that it was around 6am that morning while his wife was asleep.
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Rob reads listener Sean's food confession: quality vanilla ice cream with the little vanilla pod flecks in it, eaten on cold garlic bread (the supermarket French stick variety, cooked and then cooled). Josh initially assumes this is a pregnant woman until Rob confirms it's a man — 'the kind of sick shit a man would do.' The debate over whether it's conceptually disgusting or unexpectedly workable concludes that Heston Blumenthal could theoretically serve it for £20. Listener Veronica then shares that after her 3-year-old caught her squirting cream directly into her mouth from the fridge, the child now requests 'just some mouth cream' as a legitimate snack option, listing it alongside jelly and yoghurt. Tom from Congleton offers the episode's most unfiltered confession: eating a whole trifle 'like a big yoghurt', and using a white chocolate cookie as an edible spoon for Milkybar yoghurt, signing off as an 'overweight consumer of the electric spinach' — the meaning of which is never fully clarified.
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Rob introduces listener correspondence about bumping into people you don't want to see on holiday. The standout submission comes from an anonymous 18-year-old on her first major trip to Asia with her boyfriend. She spots her university tutor — a figure already established within her flatmate group as 'a bit of a monster' — at the departure airport. There are agonising glances on the flight but neither speaks. At the destination airport, the tour guide waiting to take them up part of the Tian Shan mountains mentions he's waiting for two more people who booked the same experience. It's the tutor and her husband. Six hours crammed in a car together, three nights camping on a mountain, and the tutor doesn't even correctly identify who the student is — thinking she's someone else entirely. On return to university, the student posted about the experience on the course Facebook group and received a formal reprimand for sharing her lecturer's 'private life'. She was known for the rest of the year as 'the girl who went on holiday with her tutor'.
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Rob tells what is quietly one of his finest anecdotes. Booked as a last-minute middle act on a comedy tour to South Africa, he negotiated a business class upgrade by arguing he needed rest either side of the trip. The other acts flew premium economy. On the way out, he hid in the lounge and arrived unseen. In Cape Town and Johannesburg for three days, he avoided mentioning it. On the way home, he slipped away from the group at the airport under the pretence of buying presents for his kids, headed to the business class lounge, and encountered former footballer Tim Sherwood, who was there for Premier League commentary duties. Rob timed his boarding by waiting for Sherwood to leave, hoping the larger celebrity presence would absorb any attention. He waited until the gate was clear, boarded last, made it all the way to his back-of-business-class seat — turned around — and found Simon Evans, Marlon Davies, and the entire promotion team sitting in the front row of premium economy, directly behind the curtain, staring at him. The steward closed the curtain. Rob treated it, from that moment on, like the Berlin Wall.
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A previous episode apparently featured a very old helium balloon, prompting listener Ben to enter a potential record-breaker. His uncle brought a balloon to the hospital when Ben was born in August 1990 — making it nearly 36 years old. That same balloon was brought back out 34 years later to announce the birth of Ben's own son. Ben wonders if it is the world's first multi-generational balloon, and expresses hope it will survive long enough to be passed on to a potential grandchild. Rob is baffled and delighted in equal measure, asking what kind of 'metal plastic bastard' material balloon manufacturers were using in the early 1990s to trap helium for four decades.
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Listener Louisa nominates her best friend Rose's business Plum and Pigeon — a Manchester studio producing handmade dresses with made-to-measure options, particularly noted as a useful option for postpartum occasions when off-the-rail sizing is awkward. The business ships worldwide and can be found at plumandpigeon.com or on Instagram. The second shout-out comes from Mayor Garland in Penge, who runs Garland Ceremonies, offering personalised, non-religious baby naming ceremonies in London and the Southeast — open to babies of any age and welcoming to older siblings. Rob closes by noting W.G. Grace was from Nottingham — seemingly one last Wikipedia correction — before Josh signs off to go to bed and listen to the cricket.
- Premium economy
- An airline cabin class between economy and business class, offering more legroom and some extra perks but without lie-flat beds or full business class service.
- Slap bass
- A bass guitar technique where the player slaps the strings with their thumb and pops them with their fingers, producing a percussive, funky sound; associated with Mark King of Level 42.
- Solidarity or Solid Karen
- A Parenting Hell podcast feature where listeners submit situations involving intervening in other parents' business, and Rob and Josh judge whether it was genuine parenting solidarity or unnecessary busybodying ('Karen' behaviour).
- Imagine This
- A Parenting Hell podcast feature where listeners submit a vivid but brief scenario, and Rob, Josh, and Michael each describe in detail the specific image their mind conjures.
- Playground shaggers
- A Parenting Hell listener correspondence topic for stories about adults — typically teachers, parents, or school staff — engaging in romantic or sexual relationships within a school community.
- Tian Shan
- A major mountain range in Central Asia, spanning parts of Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, and China; referenced in the episode as the location of a listener's remote camping tour.
- The British Raj
- The period of direct British rule over the Indian subcontinent from 1858 to 1947, referenced when Rob Beckett notes that track athlete Robbie Brightwell was born in Rawalpindi (now Pakistan) during this era.
- Aardman
- British animation studio famous for claymation works including Wallace & Gromit and the Creature Comforts adverts, referenced by Michael when describing his image for the talking slippers scenario.
- Comedians' Comedian Podcast
- A long-running podcast hosted by Stuart Goldsmith in which he interviews stand-up comedians in depth about the craft and psychology of comedy; referenced when discussing a misquote attributed to Josh Widdicombe.
- Whistleblower
- Someone who exposes hidden wrongdoing or secret information, used playfully here by Rob Beckett to describe Josh Widdicombe's comedy as 'whistleblowing on life' by revealing unnoticed universal truths.
- Heston Blumenthal
- British celebrity chef famous for experimental, science-driven cuisine; used as a shorthand in the episode for the idea that any bizarre food combination could be legitimised by a high-end restaurant.
- Anthropomorphised
- Attributing human characteristics, behaviour, or environments to non-human beings or objects; used by Michael to describe his Wind in the Willows-style image of the field mouse's home.
- Personal survival lifesaving
- A swimming curriculum topic where students practise surviving in water while wearing everyday clothing, simulating the experience of accidentally falling in fully dressed.
- Vale
- An archaic or poetic English word for a valley, used in place names such as Haytor Vale in Devon; Josh and Rob briefly debate its meaning during the hometown trivia segment.
Chapter 2 · 02:01
Kids Intro & Notable People: Builth Wells, Haytor Vale, and Mottingham
The episode proper opens with a kids' intro from Molly Ruth, aged four, from Builth Wells in Mid Wales, whose grandmother is a devoted Parenting Hell superfan. This innocent submission sends Rob down a Wikipedia rabbit hole, reading out the most obscure notable residents of Builth Wells with increasingly mystified reactions from Josh. The only person Josh recognises is Kevin Sheedy, the Everton and Republic of Ireland midfielder — notable, but hardly a Welshman. Josh's own village, Haytor Vale in Devon, barely registers a Wikipedia page, let alone a famous resident. Rob's Mottingham fares somewhat better — W.G. Grace, Dennis Healey, and Rob Beckett himself appear, though Rob's photo is him visibly drunk on the television show Drunk History. Producer Michael, born on the Isle of Wight, offers Anthony Minghella and Mark King of Level 42 — including the detail that King insured his thumbs for a million pounds — before the segment is mercifully declared the most boring four minutes the podcast has ever produced.
Claims made here
Kevin Sheedy played for Everton and the Republic of Ireland in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Rob Beckett is listed as a notable resident of Mottingham on Wikipedia, with his photo being a drunk image from the TV show Drunk History.
Anthony Minghella is an Academy Award-winning director from the Isle of Wight, known for directing The English Patient.
Mark King, bassist of Level 42, had his thumbs insured for one million pounds because of his slap bass playing technique.
Parkhurst Prison on the Isle of Wight has been downgraded in security category, meaning it no longer houses the most famous high-security prisoners.
No one from Haytor Vale has ever been famous. Rob Beckett pulls up Wikipedia notable residents for Builth Wells, Haytor Vale, and Mottingham and the results are a masterclass in British obscurity. The only common thread: most of them nobody has heard of.
Mark King, bassist of Level from the Isle of Wight, had his thumbs insured for a million pounds due to his distinctive slap bass technique.
Chapter 3 · 08:30
Ad Break: Peyronie's Disease PSA & Taco Bell
A brief mid-episode ad break features two very different spots. First, a medical PSA about Peyronie's disease — a condition caused by scar tissue under the skin of the penis — encourages men not to feel embarrassed and to visit TalkAboutPD.com for information about non-surgical treatment options. This is followed immediately by a Taco Bell ad framing their new jalapeño citrus salsa as so good that food is merely a vehicle to deliver it to the mouth — an unintentionally fitting metaphor given what follows in the episode.
Rob Beckett cracked a joke on his school's WhatsApp group suggesting he'd send his daughter to swimming survival lessons in dungarees and a turtleneck. One brave soul replied 'exceptional buoyancy' and then silence fell. The whole exchange spirals into a meditation on the tragicomedy of being a comedian in a civilian group chat.
Chapter 4 · 09:48
The School WhatsApp Dungarees Incident
Rob explains that his daughter's school is running personal survival lifesaving swimming lessons, asking pupils to bring ordinary clothes to practise swimming in — simulating the experience of falling in fully dressed. A parent's confused query on the group chat sparks a thread Rob can't resist joining, suggesting his daughter will be attending in dungarees and a turtleneck. One brave soul replies 'exceptional buoyancy' and then nothing. Josh suggests replying 'boys will be buoyancy' — Rob refuses. The exchange spirals into a broader observation about the inherent awkwardness of a professional comedian trying to be funny in a civilian parent group chat, which Rob compares to a trained singer at karaoke: technically competent, tonally wrong, and slightly tragic. He admits he only really uses the group when he desperately needs information, at which point he becomes a 'thirsty, dehydrated man in a desert'.
Rob Beckett's school WhatsApp group has 67 members, with roughly 70% women and the remaining 30% men who never write anything.
Rob Beckett estimated that around 70% of the 67 members on his school WhatsApp group are women, with the male minority staying entirely silent.
Chapter 5 · 13:40
The Comedians' Comedian Misquote & Rob's Theory of Comedy
Josh reveals that Stuart Goldsmith, host of the Comedians' Comedian podcast, cited him in a recent episode with Sarah Pascoe as having said 'if a joke reveals a wider truth then it is true.' Josh had to text Goldsmith to query whether he ever actually said it. Rob's advice is categorical: if someone is quoting you saying something that sounds intelligent, cling to it. This segues into a fascinating exchange about the nature of comedy. Rob articulates his theory that good comedians find subjects the audience has strong unacknowledged opinions about and highlight them — but great comedians then relentlessly exhaust every angle of that discovery, 'slapping every conceivable bit of arse cheek' around it until nothing is left unexplored. Rob also references an AI Instagram account that scraped his book and now annually posts the thrilling quote 'Rob Beckett on Brothers: I had 4 brothers, it was a lot of fun' — a sentence which is merely the opening of an entire chapter.
Claims made here
The Comedians' Comedian Podcast is hosted by Stuart Goldsmith and focuses on interviewing comedians about the craft and psychology of comedy.
Stuart Goldsmith on the Comedians' Comedian podcast quoted Josh Widdicombe as saying 'if a joke reveals a wider truth then it is true', a quote Josh says he doesn't remember making.
Stuart Goldsmith quoted Josh Widdicombe on his Comedians' Comedian podcast as saying 'if a joke reveals a wider truth then it is true.' Josh's reaction: he doesn't think he said it, and more importantly, he doesn't know what it means. Rob's advice: cling to it regardless.
Josh Widdicombe was quoted on the Comedians' Comedian podcast as saying 'if a joke reveals a wider truth then it is true' — a quote he doesn't remember saying and doesn't understand.
A great comedian doesn't just find the truth an audience didn't know they held — they then slap every conceivable angle of that truth until nothing is left unexplored. Rob Beckett's theory of comedy, delivered with characteristic flair, doubles as an accidental compliment to Josh Widdicombe.
Chapter 7 · 19:25
Imagine This: A Field Mouse Rocking Out to Queen
The 'Imagine This' feature invites listeners to submit a brief vivid scenario and hear Rob, Josh, and Michael each describe the specific image their mind produces. Listener Joe from Walthamstow submits a field mouse rocking out to the band Queen. Rob's version is grounded in reality — he actually has a bird feeder camera app and pictures the mouse standing on it at night, holding a sunflower seed in a yellow jacket, dancing to music from the feeder's speaker. Josh goes full cartoon: a lone mouse in a field on its hind legs, one arm in the air, watching the full band play on a stage — with a notably alive Freddie Mercury. Michael's is the most elaborate: a Wind in the Willows-style anthropomorphised house, a record player, and a Hugh Grant Love Actually dance, until the mouse turns around to find a surprised vole watching. Rob identifies a subtext of shame in Michael's version.
A listener asks Rob, Josh, and Michael to picture a field mouse rocking out to Queen. Rob sees it on his bird feeder camera wearing a yellow jacket. Josh imagines a cartoon mouse alone in a field with the full band playing onstage. Michael pictures a Wind in the Willows house with a record player and Hugh Grant dance moves interrupted by a surprised vole.
Chapter 8 · 23:15
Imagine This: Talking Slippers on an Old Man's Feet
Rosa's sparse submission ('a pair of talking slippers on an old man's feet') sparks the second Imagine This segment. Josh places his old man in a rocking chair, half-asleep, wearing classic tartan slippers worn through at the toe — the rip forming the mouth through which the slippers converse with crossed legs. Rob situates his man at Christmas, asleep in a corner chair that shouldn't be there, Christmas hat askew, gravy on his belly, wearing novelty football slippers with faces on them, just quietly chatting to no one. Michael's vision is the darkest: a claymation Aardman-style slipper face on a tired old man, not saying anything, in an early 1980s council house that probably contains asbestos. Rob observes that Michael's imagination runs to shame and death, prompting the producer to reassert that he is, in fact, fine about being bald.
Listener Rosa submitted the scenario of talking slippers on an old man's feet. Josh sees tartan slippers with elastic, ripped at the toes to form a mouth, chatting on crossed legs. Rob places his old man asleep with a Christmas hat, gravy on his belly, and novelty football slippers with faces having a full conversation.
Chapter 9 · 25:45
Solidarity or Solid Karen: The Beach Crying Child
Rob revisits the 'Solidarity or Solid Karen' feature, noting a flood of requests to rename it from listeners called Karen, before reading Pete's submission. Pete was at a beach with friends, keeping an eye on four children near the sea, when another family's five-year-old wandered down, hurt themselves, and started crying. The parents noticed but simply waved the child back. An elderly couple walking past scolded Pete and his friend sarcastically for 'letting them cry it out' — not realising it wasn't their child. Pete's response — 'that's not our kid and she's not even my wife' — dispatched them swiftly. Rob and Josh diagnose the elderly couple as solid Karens: they failed to actually help, choosing condemnation over information. The correct approach, they conclude, is 'subtle shaming by looking like you're helping' — alerting the relevant parent under the guise of concern.
Chapter 10 · 29:00
Ad Break: Ollie Gut Health
Ollie's gut health product line is advertised, targeting parents looking for probiotic and fibre supplement options for the whole family. The ad covers daily probiotics and fibre gummies formulated for children, directing listeners to ollie.com. The standard disclaimer clarifies these products are not evaluated by the FDA.
In rural Scotland, the dating pool is small. A listener's school had one male teacher, Mr. Simpson, who started dating James's mum. Every morning they would walk James to school and then full-on snog at the gates in front of the entire class. They eventually married and then divorced — because of course they did.
A listener from rural Scotland described how a male teacher at their school started dating a pupil's mother and would visibly snog her at the school gates every morning.
Chapter 11 · 29:08
Playground Shaggers: The Rural Scotland Teacher Voicenote
Rob introduces a listener voicenote from someone who grew up in rural Scotland, where, as they note, 'the dating pool is small.' The listener describes their school's only male teacher, a divorced and mysteriously charismatic figure called Mr. Simpson, who started dating the mother of a pupil named James. Every morning Mr. Simpson and James's mum would walk James to school and then engage in full, unabashed snogging in front of the assembled class queuing to go in — 'very unacceptable, probably quite traumatic for James.' Sometimes she'd return at lunchtime for more. The update: they married and then divorced again. Rob and Josh contrast this with their own children's mortification at even a raised voice at school drop-off — Rob's kids shut him down if he plays the music too loud in the car, let alone what they'd make of open-mouthed kissing.
Chapter 12 · 32:40
Snogging: An Unexpected Philosophical Detour
Sparked by the idea of the school gate snog, Rob and Josh fall into a genuinely curious discussion about kissing. Rob reflects that kissing might be more intimate than other sexual acts — you literally cannot be closer to someone's face. He imagines announcing to his wife Lou that they should 'have a snog for a bit, nothing more' mid-documentary on the sofa, purely for its own sake. Josh thinks back to how exciting snogging was early in a relationship and concludes the tragedy is that the novelty inevitably fades. Rob's assessment: 'you've just snogged too much, that's the problem.' When Rob asks Josh when he last 'snogged with tongues', Josh deadpans that it was around 6am that morning while his wife was asleep.
Chapter 13 · 35:06
Food Confessions: Ice Cream on Garlic Bread and Electric Spinach
Rob reads listener Sean's food confession: quality vanilla ice cream with the little vanilla pod flecks in it, eaten on cold garlic bread (the supermarket French stick variety, cooked and then cooled). Josh initially assumes this is a pregnant woman until Rob confirms it's a man — 'the kind of sick shit a man would do.' The debate over whether it's conceptually disgusting or unexpectedly workable concludes that Heston Blumenthal could theoretically serve it for £20. Listener Veronica then shares that after her 3-year-old caught her squirting cream directly into her mouth from the fridge, the child now requests 'just some mouth cream' as a legitimate snack option, listing it alongside jelly and yoghurt. Tom from Congleton offers the episode's most unfiltered confession: eating a whole trifle 'like a big yoghurt', and using a white chocolate cookie as an edible spoon for Milkybar yoghurt, signing off as an 'overweight consumer of the electric spinach' — the meaning of which is never fully clarified.
Listener Sean submitted the revelation that he eats quality vanilla ice cream — the kind with actual vanilla pod flecks — on cold, already-cooked garlic bread. Josh assumed it was a pregnant woman. Rob insisted there are some things you can pass judgment on without trying. Both then acknowledged Heston Blumenthal could probably put it on a menu.
A listener named Sean confessed to eating quality vanilla ice cream on top of cold garlic bread — a combination Rob and Josh struggled to comprehend but acknowledged could theoretically work.
After Veronica's 3-year-old caught her squirting cream directly into her mouth from the fridge, the child now lists 'just some mouth cream' alongside jelly and yoghurt as a legitimate snack request. Rob and Josh agree this is simultaneously disgusting and completely relatable.
After a parent was caught squirting whipped cream directly into their mouth from the fridge, their 3-year-old now regularly asks for 'mouth cream' as a legitimate snack option.
Chapter 14 · 40:20
Seeing People on Holiday: The Uni Tutor Tent Nightmare
Rob introduces listener correspondence about bumping into people you don't want to see on holiday. The standout submission comes from an anonymous 18-year-old on her first major trip to Asia with her boyfriend. She spots her university tutor — a figure already established within her flatmate group as 'a bit of a monster' — at the departure airport. There are agonising glances on the flight but neither speaks. At the destination airport, the tour guide waiting to take them up part of the Tian Shan mountains mentions he's waiting for two more people who booked the same experience. It's the tutor and her husband. Six hours crammed in a car together, three nights camping on a mountain, and the tutor doesn't even correctly identify who the student is — thinking she's someone else entirely. On return to university, the student posted about the experience on the course Facebook group and received a formal reprimand for sharing her lecturer's 'private life'. She was known for the rest of the year as 'the girl who went on holiday with her tutor'.
Claims made here
British athlete Robbie Brightwell was born in Rawalpindi, which was part of the British Raj at the time of his birth, and is connected to Congleton.
At 18, on a first big holiday to Asia, a listener clocked their university tutor at the airport. Panic. Awkward glances on the flight. Then at the other end, the tour guide revealed he was waiting for two more for the same experience. It was the tutor and her husband. Six hours in a car, three nights in a tent. The tutor thought the listener was a different student entirely.
A listener on a backpacking trip in Asia discovered their university tutor had booked the exact same remote mountain experience, forcing them to share a car and tent for three nights.
Chapter 15 · 44:20
The Secret Business Class Story
Rob tells what is quietly one of his finest anecdotes. Booked as a last-minute middle act on a comedy tour to South Africa, he negotiated a business class upgrade by arguing he needed rest either side of the trip. The other acts flew premium economy. On the way out, he hid in the lounge and arrived unseen. In Cape Town and Johannesburg for three days, he avoided mentioning it. On the way home, he slipped away from the group at the airport under the pretence of buying presents for his kids, headed to the business class lounge, and encountered former footballer Tim Sherwood, who was there for Premier League commentary duties. Rob timed his boarding by waiting for Sherwood to leave, hoping the larger celebrity presence would absorb any attention. He waited until the gate was clear, boarded last, made it all the way to his back-of-business-class seat — turned around — and found Simon Evans, Marlon Davies, and the entire promotion team sitting in the front row of premium economy, directly behind the curtain, staring at him. The steward closed the curtain. Rob treated it, from that moment on, like the Berlin Wall.
Claims made here
Rob Beckett negotiated a business class upgrade on a comedy tour to South Africa by arguing he needed rest due to work commitments before and after, and the promoter agreed because they needed him last minute.
Tim Sherwood was in South Africa doing commentary work for Premier League football coverage when Rob Beckett encountered him in the business class lounge.
Rob Beckett negotiated a last-minute business class upgrade on a South Africa comedy tour without telling his fellow acts. He hid in the airport lounge, waited until Tim Sherwood boarded to time his own entrance, and made it all the way to his seat — only to turn around and find Simon Evans and the entire promotion team in the front row of premium economy, staring straight at him. The steward closed the curtain. He never looked back.
Rob Beckett secretly upgraded himself to business class on a comedy tour flight to South Africa while the other acts flew premium economy, and was caught the moment the curtain closed.
Rob Beckett encountered Tim Sherwood in the business class lounge in South Africa, where Sherwood was doing Premier League football commentary, adding an unexpected celebrity cameo to Rob's clandestine upgrade story.
Chapter 16 · 49:20
The World's Oldest Helium Balloon
A previous episode apparently featured a very old helium balloon, prompting listener Ben to enter a potential record-breaker. His uncle brought a balloon to the hospital when Ben was born in August 1990 — making it nearly 36 years old. That same balloon was brought back out 34 years later to announce the birth of Ben's own son. Ben wonders if it is the world's first multi-generational balloon, and expresses hope it will survive long enough to be passed on to a potential grandchild. Rob is baffled and delighted in equal measure, asking what kind of 'metal plastic bastard' material balloon manufacturers were using in the early 1990s to trap helium for four decades.
Claims made here
A listener's helium balloon from August 1990, brought to hospital at their birth, survived intact for nearly 36 years and was reused to announce the birth of that listener's own child.
Listener Ben's uncle brought a helium balloon to hospital when Ben was born in August 1990. That same balloon, still inflated enough, was brought out 34 years later to announce the birth of Ben's own son. Rob immediately asks what kind of 'metal plastic bastard' material they were making balloons from in 1990.
A listener's helium balloon, brought to hospital at their birth in August 1990, was still intact 36 years later and was used again to announce the birth of their own son.
The same balloon used to announce a listener's birth in 1990 was reused to announce the birth of that listener's own child 34 years later.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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Irish footballer who played for Everton and the Republic of Ireland in the 1980s; the one notable person from Builth Wells that Josh recognised.
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Comedian who was on the same South Africa comedy tour as Rob Beckett, flying premium economy while Rob secretly flew business.
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Former footballer and TV pundit, encountered by Rob Beckett in the South Africa business class lounge during his secret upgrade adventure.
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Academy Award-winning director of The English Patient, cited as a famous person from the Isle of Wight.
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Tall Irish comedian described by Rob Beckett as a 'lighthouse' who absorbed all crowd attention at the Arsenal Champions League final.
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Labour politician and chancellor, described as a 'big dog of the 70s political scene' and a notable resident of Mottingham.
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Bassist of Level 42 from the Isle of Wight, famous for slap bass technique; noted to have had his thumbs insured for £1 million.
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Comedian being interviewed on the Comedians' Comedian podcast episode where Josh's alleged quote was cited.
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Host of the Comedians' Comedian Podcast, who quoted Josh Widdicombe saying something Josh doesn't remember.
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Small business offering non-religious baby naming ceremonies in London and the Southeast, run by listener Mayor Garland from Penge.
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British pop/funk band associated with the Isle of Wight, fronted by bassist Mark King who had his thumbs insured for £1 million.
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Small business run by listener Rose in Manchester making handmade dresses, given a shout-out by listener Louisa.
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Stuart Goldsmith's podcast interviewing comedians about their craft, discussed after Josh was misquoted on it.
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Producer Michael's home island; discussed as having a surprisingly decent list of notable people including Anthony Minghella and Ellen MacArthur.
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Location of the comedy tour where Rob Beckett secretly flew business class, and where he spent time at a casino complex avoiding going 'outside'.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Mark King, bassist of Level 42, had his thumbs insured for one million pounds because of his slap bass playing technique.
Kevin Sheedy played for Everton and the Republic of Ireland in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Anthony Minghella is an Academy Award-winning director from the Isle of Wight, known for directing The English Patient.
Grenville Morris was the all-time record goalscorer for Nottingham Forest and retired in 1959, making him a notable person from Builth Wells.
Rob Beckett is listed as a notable resident of Mottingham on Wikipedia, with his photo being a drunk image from the TV show Drunk History.
Stuart Goldsmith on the Comedians' Comedian podcast quoted Josh Widdicombe as saying 'if a joke reveals a wider truth then it is true', a quote Josh says he doesn't remember making.
The Comedians' Comedian Podcast is hosted by Stuart Goldsmith and focuses on interviewing comedians about the craft and psychology of comedy.
Rob Beckett negotiated a business class upgrade on a comedy tour to South Africa by arguing he needed rest due to work commitments before and after, and the promoter agreed because they needed him last minute.
Tim Sherwood was in South Africa doing commentary work for Premier League football coverage when Rob Beckett encountered him in the business class lounge.
British athlete Robbie Brightwell was born in Rawalpindi, which was part of the British Raj at the time of his birth, and is connected to Congleton.
A listener's helium balloon from August 1990, brought to hospital at their birth, survived intact for nearly 36 years and was reused to announce the birth of that listener's own child.
Parkhurst Prison on the Isle of Wight has been downgraded in security category, meaning it no longer houses the most famous high-security prisoners.