The Young’uns Podcast: Christmas 2018

To bastardise Band Aid: the greatest gift you’ll get this year’s online. It’s the Christmas 2018 Young’uns Podcast, festooned with festive fun from our 2016 We Three Sings Christmas tour. Play along with The Young’uns Christmas quiz, trying to guess the film, song or sitcom from our attempted re-enactments. There’s lots of music from The Young’uns as well as from our Canadian friend Allison Lupton. There’s dancing elf/reindeer hybrids, traditional English Carol based observational comedy, spurious conjecture about birds, a wealth of wassailing, and a musical interpretation of a Grimms’ fairy tale. Also, a special thanks to the wonderful talents of Matthew Crampton.

Merry Christmas from The Young’uns. The three of us will of course be spending Christmas together. This year it’s David’s turn to stuff the turkey, and Michael’s turn to be the turkey. Fear not, Youtube videos to follow soon. Merry Christmas and a happy new year.


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Blogging On A Bike

The last time I attempted to ride a bike was about ten years ago in Holland. It lasted for all of twenty seconds before I narrowly missed a dog and hurtled into a wall. How did it go so wrong? Well, most people reckon it’s to do with me being blind, whereas I blame it on the fact that it was a Dutch bike. Ten years later and I think it’s high time I gave it another go. This month The Young’uns played a festival on the remote Scottish island of Colonsay. The festival organisers supplied us with bikes to get around the island. Join me and fellow Young’un Sean Cooney as I endeavour to better my previous attempt and cycle for longer than twenty seconds without killing any animals or colliding into walls. Listen to discover whether I succeed.

BBC Radio 4 News

Greetings from Toronto, Canada. We are playing a festival tonight called Brave Festival, which is described as “a festival of risk and failure.” So they’ve picked the perfect band, as we can fail with an unparalleled ease. In keeping with the festival’s philosophy, Michael will be doing all the talking and trying to tell jokes, and we’ll be attempting to sing all our songs in Klingon.

In other news, I was on BBC Radio 4 this week. I was playing the role of head cow in the Archers. I got to be milked by Ruth, which is an experience I will treasure as long as I live. I was particularly happy with my third moo. Needless to say, I’ve immediately added that to the top of my show reel.

No, alas, I jest. That dream has yet to be realised. The real reason for my Radio 4 appearance was with The Young’uns, talking about how the North East has been a massive influence on our music. It’s for a programme all about the Great Exhibition of the North festival. The programme is presented by BBC 6 Music’s Lauren Laverne from one of my favourite bands, Kenickie, and features a whole host of musicians from the North, including one of my other favourite bands, Maximo Park. So that’s three of my favourite bands represented in one programme, because obviously The Young’uns are also one of my favourite bands, principally because they are the only band that pays me money.

You can listen to the programme here.

I Beat The Frog, But Can I Beat The Gong?

After my victory at Manchester’s comedy competition, Beat The Frog, I travel to London for the famous King Gong comedy competition, where I come up against my most ruthless and brutal audience yet. But can I survive five minutes on stage, or will the audience hold up their red cards to herald my dismissal? And if I do survive, can I go onto be crowned King Gong and win the coveted prize of an uninterrupted spot at the comedy store? Download today’s audio blog post to find out.

Fax Finding Mission


Tickets for my Hudddrsfield gig, on Friday 13th July, can be got here.


The three of us (as in The young’uns) are on a fax finding mission. We have spent the day trying to locate a fax machine. Why? You might ask. Then again, you might not, but for the purposes of fleshing out this blog beyond one sentence, let’s work on the assumption that you’re curious to know.

We’ve got a couple of days off from gigging, and so bereft were we by the notion of being apart, that we’ve manufactured a cunning plan in order to allow us to spend even more time together. Obviously we needed an excuse to placate our loved ones who were expecting us at home, so we’ve told them that unfortunately something important has come up, meaning that we’ll have to spend more time away. We told them that we’ve been COMMISSIONED to present a Dave Gorman style documentary where a British folk band go on a crazy adventure to find as many fax machines in one week as they can. Obviously this isn’t true. Sorry if I got your hopes up there, and you were salivating at the prospect of watching us traverse cities in search of out-dated communication devices. It was just an excuse to spend more time together, and the fax machine based reality TV show alibi was the first thing we thought of.

In reality, the three of us were always scheduled to be together this week, as we’re currently doing performances in schools; it’s our cynical attempt to build a future audience, cleverly disguised as a gesture of altruism. Our hunt for a fax machine is purely utilitarian, rather than a thrill-seeking exercise. It’s all thanks to the Canada Revenues Agency, who, for some incomprehensible reason, refuse to communicate through email, insisting instead on fax.

The Canada Revenue Agency obviously go by the acronym CRA, although, sticking a P on the end of that would provide a much more accurate description, as our dealings with them have been completely farcical. Incidentally, to the best of my knowledge, there isn’t an existing word in the English language that describes the act of insulting an organisation through bastardising the company’s acronym. I think a good word for this could be acronymony (a merging of acronym with acrimony). I’d appreciate it if you’d further the cause to get my word added to the dictionary by simply using this term the next time you find yourself insulting an organisation through their acronym, which I’m assuming you all do probably about once a week.

Trying to locate a fax machine that we can use is proving very difficult, primarily because it’s no longer the 1980s, but try explaining this to the Canada Revenue Agency. They insist that a fax machine is the only way we can send our documents to them. When we suggested that maybe we could use email, there was a long pause before we were placed on hold by a confused and panicky lady who said they’d try and speak to someone higher up. We were then put on hold for half an hour, listening to a mix of Nik Kershaw, Jason Donovan and T’Pau. Eventually they came back to the phone and told us that there was no one who could answer our enquiry right now because they were out of the office,, but not to worry, as they’d get someone to get back to us ASAP, if we could just leave them with our pager number.

Michael has just returned to the van after a trip to the store Office Outlet. They said that they would be happy to send the documents to the CRA as a fax. It turned out that the reason they’d be happy about this is because they were planning on charging us £62 for the privilege. The acronim for Office Outlet is OO, which is the sound that people make whenever someone in one of their stores tells you how much it will cost to send a fax. Partly because of the ridiculously hefty price, and partly due to the visceral thrill that can only be got from a stimulating fax machine hunt, Michael decided to forgo Office Outlet’s offer, and so the search continues.

The whole thing is a pointless exercise anyway, as we don’t even technically have to pay any tax to the Canadian Government, but we still have to fill out a tax waver. In fact, we have to fill out four tax wavers, because they insist that we need three individual tax wavers and then one joint waver as the Young’uns. Then on top of that we need to fill out four tax returns, again, three individual and one for the band, even though there isn’t any tax to be paid. So that’s eight lengthy and painfully detailed Canadian tax documents we have to complete, just to simply state that we don’t owe the Canadian government any tax. And all eight of these documents apparently have to be sent via the medium of fax.

The Canada Revenue Agency clearly didn’t get the memo that tax doesn’t have to be taxing, and nor does it have to be faxing. Presumably the reason they didn’t get the memo is because it wasn’t sent by fax. Or maybe this is all a clever ploy from the CRA: to make the process of not paying tax so laboured and frustrating that you end up just saying, “sod it,” and paying them the bloody tax anyway, just for an easy life.

I don’t feel worried about slagging off the Canada Revenue Agency, as there’s no chance of them ever reading this, given that it requires someone at the tax office having access to the Internet.

Eagle vs Frog (part 3)

It’s the third and final part of Eagle vs Frog, recounting my dramatic adventures into the world of gladiatorial standup comedy competitions. It’s April 2018, and it’s time to return to Beat the Frog. This time I’ve prepared in advance for this battle – I have made a jokes spreadsheet, for goodness sake! How could it go wrong?

Download part 3 here


You can listen to part 2 here
Go to part one

Eagle vs Frog (part 2)

This is the second part of a three part audio blog series, Eagle vs Frog, talking about my formative standup comedy attempts. After the harrowing dramas of 2014 and 2015, it takes me until May 2017 before I perform at another gladiatorial comedy competition. In today’s instalment, I reveal what happened on that night.

Go to part one

Eagle vs Frog (part 1)

Last Monday I attended the gladiatorial standup comedy competition, Beat The Frog, at Manchester’s Frog and Bucket comedy club. In the third and final part of this audio blog series, released this Tuesday, I will recount what unfolded on that night. But first, in parts one and two, I regale you with tales of my very first standup comedy attempts. Part two to follow tomorrow.