 How was Charlie Charles Bronson? He's lovely guy, he's just... Were you at his wedding? Yeah, I'd done his wedding at my pub, both of his weddings at my pub. I've been to see him a few times. We had a little if-you-wear meeting when we first met. We didn't really get on. But I'm afraid the crime now with Charles Bronson, I'm afraid, is they are now genuinely entitled to say, we can't let him out, he's mad, right? Because anyone that'd done 27 years in solitary confinement would be Cuckoo, whoever... The Pope, me, you, Mother Teresa. Anybody? Right. And so, they're within their rights now to say, of all the naughty things he'd done in prison, using him as a deterrent, this is what we're gonna do to if you mess about in prison, you're never, ever, ever coming home. You're never coming home, he's mad. And all these people that are going free, Charlie Bronson, would you like him living next door to you? Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, he might be great. Saturday, odd, for no reason at all, and their crime is this, he wasn't mad when he went in. So that's their crime. They're not wrong in saying he can't come out now. And all these people are going, well, he ain't murdering anyone. He ain't, but he's... As up to 10, sure. He's, he's mad, you know what I mean? You know, he's done some nutty old things. I love him, I love him. But he can, he can see his own plight that he's made there. As he potentially, if he did get out, would kill someone? I don't know if he'd sit out or be thinking of killing someone, but he's so strong and, and, and, eggshell ready to snap. Yeah, he could, you know what I mean? I don't want to be the one that goes, don't give me a problem. But, yeah, their crime is this, they are right in saying he shouldn't come home. And I know he ain't killed no one, but they're wrong and he weren't mad when he went in. I actually made him not, yes. Break him, mentally. Yeah, of course.