My pick from this week's bunch...
Quote: blahblah @ March 8 2012, 6:40 PM GMT
(Russian accent) People say the Russian people did not vote in election? Rubbish! I voted two hundred times
Quote: Steve Sunshine @ March 8 2012, 7:39 PM GMT
So Cameron's going to war on Cheap Booze & fags is he?. Yeah they tend to make me a bit fighty as well.
Thieves stole weights belonging to Worlds Strongest man contestant Wayne Russell. Police are asking witnesses if they noticed anything strange at the time, such as anyone pulling a getaway car with their teeth.
Quote: Big Jack @ March 8 2012, 10:25 PM GMT
(2)The UKIP Party Conference was so poorly attended because of their policy of not letting anyone in.
(3)In South Africa a man has been hospitalised after he was head butted by a giraffe. That's not news! Man head butts giraffe - now that's news...
Loved the giraffe, along with the Steve Sunshine's strongman/getaway car gag. Nice and silly...
Quote: Nodz @ March 9 2012, 9:20 AM GMT
OLD DEAR:
It'll take more than a council payout to get me breastfeeding. And my 43-year-old son feels the same way.
Here are my rejects - I'll include a couple of the ones that made it, so you can see how they were reworked...
INTRO:
A new charity reports that almost half the adults in England have the maths skills of a primary school pupil. The pupil in question, an 8 year old from Devon, is said to be utterly exhausted and just wants to sit down for a bit and watch the X Factor.
JACKAPP:
I was shocked when I heard that a patient in an NHS hospital was discovered with a rat chewing on his neck while he was under sedation. These alternative therapies are getting WAY out of hand.
JACKAPP:
If privatisation of the police service actually goes ahead, it would mean that anyone with enough money would be able to buy their own police force. Presumably from PC World.
JACKAPP:
It's just good sense to prevent olympic athletes from shaking hands to prevent the spread of viruses, the last thing you'd want is to be involved in a 100 metre dash for the toilet against Usain Bolt.
JACKAPP:
Unbelievable! Hackers took control of NASA's computers thirteen times in the last year, how hard is it for NASA to install some security software? I mean, it's not exactly rocket science, is it?
JACKAPP:
Kids today don't know anything about the Falklands war, they just don't get the importance of the whole issue. What they don't realise is that if the Falklands had actually won the last war, we'd all be waddling and speaking penguin now.
JACKAPP:
Great news about Englebert Humperdinck, if we want to have any chance of winning Eurovision then we need a really big name to represent us.
JACKAPP:
The last time Keith Allen interviewed a celebrity for his TV show, his subject, Keith Floyd, died on the day of broadcast. So, you can imagine my disappointment the day after I watched 'Keith Allen Meets Nick Griffin'.
JACKAPP:
Ofsted inspectors have complained that music lessons in schools actually lack music. It was a similar story with sex education at my school - not one bit of music, not even any of the Bom-Chicka-Wah-Wah stuff...
CORRECTION:
Newsjack would like to apologise for reporting that as many as 20 million people could be suffering from a previously undiagnosed life wasting disease. The report should actually have stated that Lady Gaga is the first celebrity to attain 20 million followers on Twitter.
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I agonised over the NASA one. Is it too obvious? Probably. But I still like it. I tried changing the end to say brain surgery instead of rocket science, which I think may have worked better, but also may just have confused people...
The Englebert Humperdinck line was one they went with, but they switched it around and it works better their way. The Danny Care intro was used in the show pretty much word for word.
I liked the idea of the Lady Gaga correction, but the exceution let me down, I couldn't nail it, really.
Here's the And Finally I sent:
That was Newsjack from all the way back in March 2012, when a trade embargo with Argentina meant that Fray Bentos ration books were issued for the first time in 30 years, and tins of corned beef were changing hands on the black market for more than £1000 per kilo, making it worth more than gold, oil, and the entire Greek economy.
It was also the week that the police force were criticised for their plans to allow private companies to carry out police duties. The fears were largely unwarranted though, as it was pointed out that News International had their own private police force for years, and nothing bad had come of that.
Next on BBC Radio Four Extra, a gripping drama set in the shadowy world of News International's private police force, it's If You Want To Run The Times, Ask A Policeman.
So they took the Argentina part, trimmed it and reworked the ending, making it a little snappier.
I wasn't entirely sure that Fray Bentos was Argentinian so I Googled it, and Hey, it's not, it's Uruguayan. So I almost didn't send it, in the end I figured it would be one of those popular misconceptions that everybody believes. Hurrah!
The NI part may actually be defamatory/libellous, so no wonder they didn't touch it...
Cheers...