Jelly in your pipes,
Jelly in your pipes,
Wibbly wobbly wibbly wobbly
Jelly in your pipes!
Seriously, people, don’t pour jelly into your pipes. It will prove a trifle problematic.
Other matters considered in Answer Me This! Episode 348:
the sorting hat spider
the Harry Potter crab
the Michael Crichtonsaurus
The Great British Bake Off/Pottery Throwdown/Jelly-Off
charcoal vs teeth
the Liberty Bell vs Big Ben (WHICH IS A BELL (and you’re a bell if you point this out, matey))
your neighbour vs kangaroos
kangaroos vs breast implants
Caesar salads
passports: i) front cover of; ii) losing at airports
and
a slightly hairy elephant.
In today’s Bonus Bit of Crap on the App – available for iPadPhones, Android and Windows devices – there’s a counter-claim as to the inventor of the Caesar salad, and Olly purloins a posh example of the dish.
Occupy your ears with our other audio projects: Olly hosts The Week Unwrapped and has returned with a new season of The Modern Mann; Helen’s Allusionist has more eponyms for your consumption; and Martin’s Song By Song currently features Helen’s brother Andy Zaltzman and his wife Miranda, making her podcasting debut.
You can also hear all the AMT special albums and episodes 1-200 if you shop at answermethisstore.com. Don’t forget: to receive one retro episode every month in your feed, subscribe to AMT on your podcatcher of choice!
Thanks to our friends at Squarespace.com for sponsoring this episode, and for giving you 10% off their website-hosting and -designing services for a whole year if you use the discount code ‘answer‘.
Answer Me This! Episode 321‘s questioneers are concerned about networking, Taylor Swift’s ‘Bad Blood‘, and what they’ve found on their parents’ hard drives, as well as:
Mars 2112
confirmation names
butchers’ curtains
business cards
hiding XXX photos
the perils of Windows 10
the Mann school of networking vs the Zaltzman school of networking the ‘Bad Blood’ galaxy of stars
flies
Picabo Street
Andre Rieu
Polari
and
adult colouring books.
Plus: Olly needs to spend more private time with the Victoria’s Secret catalogue; rather than giving Helen your business card, just put it straight into the recycling bin; and Martin the Sound Man wants you to preserve your parents’ sexual memories, and does NOT want any froyo.
There’s additional Bad Blood Chat in today’s Bonus Bit of Crap on the App. When Olly went for an MRI recently, did he wear a white rubber bikini like Taylor Swift does in the video? To find out, fire up the app on your iThings, Android and Windows devices.
If, like Martin, you’re about to build a new website, do it using Squarespace.com, who sponsor today’s episode. Use the code ANSWER to get 10% off their website-building and -hosting services for a year, which include a URL, loads of storage and 24/7 support.
We’ll return on 3rd September 2015 with AMT322. Until then, colour within the lines.
Helen & Olly
••• AMT321 Child-Friendly Rating: 47%. A couple of strong swears, and we don’t know which will be more appalling to your children: the conversation about parents’ saucy photos, or the conversation about networking. •••
In Answer Me This! Episode 317, one questioneer is risking the beauty of his bottom for a bet; one appears to be too close to his sister; and another has an inferiority complex over his local multiplex (an inferiority multicomplex?). We also deal with:
Cornwall vs Greggs
Milton Keynes vs Merseyside
the Mercedes logo vs the peace symbol
Victoria, British Columbia
John Lahr’s remote working practices
dinner party gifts for the booze-free
unwanted text messages D-BOX seats, not to be confused with these d-box seats (link NSFW)
movie premiere attendees
Leningrad
bridegrooms
and
Matthew McConaughey’s norge.
There’s a double bill of childhood nostalgia-themed Bonus Bits of Crap on the App (available for iStuff, Android and Windows devices): Olly reminisces about another junior marketing exercise, and Helen about the Tunbridge Wells cinema now apparently known as a ‘grot spot’.
••• AMT317 Child-Friendly Rating: 62%. To be honest, we can’t remember the swear-situation in this episode, so we’ll be cautious and assume there are some. No bawdy-talk, though. •••
A lot of artists suffer from Difficult Second Album syndrome, but not us. Following our Top 20 smash hit longplayer The Answer Me This! Jubilee, we are delighted to bring you…
The Answer Me This! Sports Day
59 minutes and 33 seconds of all-new material in celebration of the glorious sporting event that will be wreaking havoc with London’s transport system this summer. Buy it now through the AMT Store, iTunes or Amazon.
Join us for a jog through such Olympian questions as what would happen if Boris Johnson dropped the torch, how you can become an Olympic competitor whilst remaining a lazy bastard, how the Ancient Greek athletes prevented their glistening nude flesh from getting sunburn, whether Danny Boyle’s opening ceremony is going to be like this, and why Jewish athletes might be buying haggis shortly before the competition.
We also learn why the men’s Wimbledon trophy is so fruity, how David Attenborough can be blamed for the popularity of snooker, what the chess queen has in common with the Alien queen, what Jack Broughton has in common with Alan Ayckbourn, and what bookies have in common with Abraham Lincoln.
We check in on such record breakers as James Cameron and Lee Redmond, and face the biggest sports question of all: what IS a sport? And do you actually have to get out of your chair to do one?
We must offer big thanks to Sam Pythagoras Pay and Amy Smith for the jingles, which alone are worth the £2.49 RRP. Eg:
NB The Answer Me This! Sports Day is in no way officially affiliated with the London Olympics. They looked at our waist measurements and said there’s no way they could endorse that.
The Answer Me This! Sports Day
July 2, 2012A lot of artists suffer from Difficult Second Album syndrome, but not us. Following our Top 20 smash hit longplayer The Answer Me This! Jubilee, we are delighted to bring you…
The Answer Me This! Sports Day
59 minutes and 33 seconds of all-new material in celebration of the glorious sporting event that will be wreaking havoc with London’s transport system this summer. Buy it now through the AMT Store, iTunes or Amazon.
We also learn why the men’s Wimbledon trophy is so fruity, how David Attenborough can be blamed for the popularity of snooker, what the chess queen has in common with the Alien queen, what Jack Broughton has in common with Alan Ayckbourn, and what bookies have in common with Abraham Lincoln.
We check in on such record breakers as James Cameron and Lee Redmond, and face the biggest sports question of all: what IS a sport? And do you actually have to get out of your chair to do one?
We must offer big thanks to Sam Pythagoras Pay and Amy Smith for the jingles, which alone are worth the £2.49 RRP. Eg:
NB The Answer Me This! Sports Day is in no way officially affiliated with the London Olympics. They looked at our waist measurements and said there’s no way they could endorse that.
SUBSCRIBE WITH iTUNES • AMT ALBUMS • BEST OF • EPISODES • FAQ
• iPHONE APP • ANDROID APP • FACEBOOK • TWITTER • YOUTUBE • MERCH •
Tags:Abraham Lincoln, American football, Ancient Greece, aramith, aristocrats, athletes, athletics, ball games, ball sports, balls, banknotes, baseball, BBC, betting, billiards, Bjork, Blackburn Rovers, BMW, boardgames, bookies, bookmaking, Boris Johnson, Boudin Bakery, bow ties, bowling, bowling balls, boxing, boxing ring, Bristol Rovers, bruise, cameramen, cash, celluloid, ceremonies, charity shops, chess pieces, circumcision, clothes, Coca Cola, colour TV, commentary, commentators, corkscrew, costume, costumes, cricket, cricket jumpers, cricket whites, crickets, curling, Danny Boyle, David Attenborough, decor, depression, diet, diving, duck, Edinburgh, egg, elephants, enswell, equestrianism, erections, etymology, exercise, feminism, fingernails, fitness, flame, food, football, football commentary, football commentators, football teams, foreskins, games, gender, gender inequality, Gettysburg Address, golden duck, grand, grandmothers, grandparents, Greco-Roman wrestling, Greece, Greeks, Guinness World Records, haggis, haymaker, health, healthy food, heirlooms, history, home decor, homoeroticism, horse, horses, injury, ivory, Jack Broughton, James Cameron, jews, Jiminy Cricket, Jimmy Cricket, jockstraps, junk food, Kevin Spacey, l'oeuf, Lady Macbeth, lamb's guts, left-handedness, Leona Lewis, leotard, Linford Christie, Linford's lunchbox, Local Hero, London, London 2012, love, marathon, Margaret Thatcher, Mariana Trench, Match of the Day, McDonald's, meat, medals, metaphysics, Michael Phelps, Minis, money, monkey, mouse, Muhammad Ali, nails, notes, nudity, oil, Olly's grandma, Olly's mum, Olympiad, Olympic flame, Olympic torch, Olympics, opening ceremony, paint by numbers, painting, paintings, pancakes, penis, penises, Persia, phallus, phenolic resin, phonebox, physical exertion, pictures, pineapple, piss, plastic, plastics, podiums, pogo stick, poker, pole vault, polo, pony, Pot Black, prizes, prosthetics, Pugilistic Society, punching, purple, Queen, Raj, record breakers, Robert Plant, Rovers, rugby, runners, running, San Francisco, score, Scotland, Se7en, serial killers, sexism, sexist boardgames, shah mat, shooting, shotguns, slang, slowest marathon, snooker, snooker balls, soccer, sourdough, southpaws, sponsors, sponsorship, sport, sports, sports kit, sportsman, sportswear, sportswoman, statues, steak, sumo, support, sweat, swimming, team names, Ted Heath, televised sport, telly, the Queen, theme tunes, torch, tracksuits, Trainspotting, Tranmere Rovers, trophies, TV coverage, Twitter, undergarments, underwear, unfit, urination, Usain Bolt, Visa, Vladimir Putin, volleyball, waistcoats, Wanderers, Wimbledon, winners, winning, Winter Olympics, wrestling, YouTube
Posted in albums, extracurricular activities, frippery | 3 Comments »