Thanks Nick for suggesting lost voice. Think watching him help me a lot. Thanks Davey, I nicked some of your suggestions.
Don't expect anybody to critique this again, I'm actually quite proud of it now.
Thanks everybody..
1. Leaflet. Staring. Condition.
hi Southport, I was really excited when I picked up a leaflet that said, "in six weeks, Joe Bloggs, will teach you stand-up.
And when I realised it was a stand-up comedy workshop, I felt very awkward. I knew there would be this tension. I knew you would be staring at me, just dying to ask, are you wearing that shirt for a bet?
But I do have a serious and debilitating condition, I'm a Mancunian.
2. Fashion. Brothel. Lucky. Toryplegia
No, I'm only joking. I do genuinely need this wheelchair, it isn't just a fashion statement.
And when I had my accident, 31 years ago it was hard. You couldn't get in a taxi, couldn't get in a plane, and it was murder getting in a brothel.
Today, people's attitudes, public transport and technology are making my life easier and when I think about those people breaking their necks today I think you lucky bastards.
But my real condition is called, tetraplegic. Paraplegia paralysed from the waist down. Tetraplegia paralysed from the net down. Not to be confused with Toryplegia, where they are paralysed from the neck up.
3. Pushed. BNP. Activist. Outraged. Centre forward. SW record. Gave up urinals.
I got involved in politics, because I hated being pushed around.
I became a political wheelchair user, until my wheelchair joined the BNP.
And I became a disabled activist, which is ironic, because I'm not very physically active.
On a disability demonstration, people were outraged, when the police dragged me out me out of my wheelchair to arrest me. I thought it hilarious. The whole point of the wheelchair is to make moving people easier.
The copper asked me if I was a left-winger. I said no, I'm a centre forward.
But I am widely respected in the Socialist workers party. I have the record for the longest sitdown protest.
But when political friends say I'm cool, I just say, it's the way I roll.
I gave up politics to spend more time with my wife because no matter what, she has always stood by me, which has raised a few eyebrows at the pub urinals.
4. Benefits. Nurses. Shoes. Blue badge.
There are some benefits to being in a wheelchair.
Not many of you men have two 20-year-old nurses getting you up in the morning. Unfortunately, they're both men.
See these shoes, they're 20 years old. I can't wear them out.
It's great having a blue badge. Unfortunately I can't drive.
5. Thalassophobia. Scousers. Mancunians. Sand works lorry.
I moved to Southport because I have Thalassophobia. A fear of the sea.
I asked the local why there is no see at Southport, he said because the Scousers will take anything.
I said wait while the Mancunians get here, we'll nick everything.
This isn't a joke this is true. The sand works, used to sell sand, to the Arabs. Can you imagine the lorry driver, well where do you want it dropping?
6. Go. Joystick. Spill it.
Anyway, before I go, I need to tell you what happened to me recently.
I started going in these bottle shops, the beer is really strong, I only need a few bottles, and I don't know which joystick to drive with.
I was coming home in my wheelchair the other night. And these two coppers have the nerve to pull me up for drinking while driving! And I don't usually do that, because I spill it.
So I say, come on now man, I'm in a wheelchair, it's not as if I can kill anybody. But I suppose with hindsight I was in the fast lane of the M6.
But the calmed down and then they asked me, where are you going at 1 o'clock in the morning? I said I'm going to a lecture on drugs and alcohol. They said who's giving a lecture on drugs and alcohol at 1 o'clock in the morning? I said my wife.
And you know what they said to me than ladies and gentlemen, have you been on one of Joe Bloggs stand-up workshops?