 So, sy'n cael ei bod yn ystyried o'r ffaint Ciali Bronson ar y cyflodd Llywodraeth? Mae'n gynnwys i'r ffaint, fel Ciali… Mae i'n Ciali wedi bod yn ymdau i'r penpalau a phanol. Mae'n gweithio fod yn ei chyfnodau yma, mae'n cymryd yma yn y bwysigol, Cwisio ydych chi'w'n gwaith i'w pram o'r ac i'w baby? Mae'r bwysig yn fwy o'r 19 yma. A dweud i'n ym mwy o'r cyflawn. Ac yn fwy o'r oedd yn yr oedd yn fwy o'r gyda'r i. Yr aelod yn fan hyn o'r cyfrannu'n amser, a'r hynny'n cefnod dros yr oedd. Cyml angen i'w'r gweithio'r cyfrannu. Mae'n gweithio, mae'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Felly bydda i lythw i ddiolch yn ymgrifydd. Mi arwain i gyrfa ymdau. Fy hwnnw, Wath, rydyn ni weithio, i bryd y gyrfa. Mae'n gwrs iawn i gwrs. Mae'n meddwl oedd. Yn y gallai hynny, mae e'r ffassef hon. A hynny'n gwrs ei ddweud. Dwi gwrs i dda, byddwn i'r ffordd mewn gwneud a'r deimlo. So dyma, be allan hynny. Ac eu ddefnyddio i fynd. Mae nhw'n gwneud a'n gwneud. I thought, I don't know if I'm going to make that. Then you were, I forgot about it. Then I get to another letter. Richie, you haven't fallen so and so yet. You've got to be getting in touch with him. Blah, blah, blah. When all that and obviously, maybe I'm being incarcerated by the, it was my big thing the way I'm, you know. To me I just said, oh, fucking camera bother I'm doing it. So I just forgot about it. I forgot about it. A few weeks later or whatever, I get to let that. I found you. Fi o man. Is that your fucking game? Disrespecting people. Blah, blah, blah. And then put the guilt trip on me. It's about so's ass piss. It's that fucking blah, blah, blah. And I thought, I thought, oh, you're talking, oh, yo. So I wrote my letter back. I said, oh, the fuck do you think you're talking, oh, yo. I'm not at your beckon call. It's nice to be asked, but, you know, I'll do me one thing, I'll do me one man. And all the fuck do you think you're at? I said, you never will be fought. Nobody, bombs. I said, you will be fought, bombs. You never fought anyone who could fight. You never fought anyone with the caliber of I've fought. I've fought at much higher level than what you've fought. You've just knocked the idiots out. I said, you wouldn't have stood up when we met, so just, you know, putting the type of thing. I knew what it is. So I thought he would have been doing these press-ups and saying, I'll fucking kill him. I'll kill him. So anyway, I was waiting for a letter back, but I didn't get one of him. I got contacted off one of his really close pals who's dead now. And he told me to phone, so I phoned him and we had a big chat. And I said, yeah, I'll fight you, Ali. He says, he said, Charlie's going to get parole. It's definitely, it's on for parole. And it's going to, and he wants to fight you. I said, yeah, I'll fight him. He says, but it's going to be 70, 30 split. He said, because he's the big name. The media, the TV, the papers, they'll go crazy for him. My man will be in case he's incarcerated for all that time. They'll come out to fight one legs and all that. So there's big names involved, wanting to be involved. Like, oh, I should say it right, sure. Joe Pyrlant, wanting to be involved. Running about the big marquee tent in London and all that, you know, all the big, it's going to be massive. And I thought, well, 70, 30, I thought it'll be a few quack, Ali, and a nice few quid out of this. And anyway, cut a long story short, he got a knock back on his parole, that was fucking gutted. It was gutted, me like. So never spoke for years and years after that, and then got in touch. And we would just, we'd just, whatever it would be, whatever it would be, no hard feelings. Friends again after that. And I guess he's going to be, he's up for parole again soon. And I think he deserves it. He's been in that. I've had a lot of people on this show who's close with Charlie as well. They actually see he's an ace man. They see he's actually an ace. Great man, the stuffy putting them, let this to me. Sentimental stuff. About my mum dying, about my sister killing herself. And I really, not spoken by a mad man, spoken by someone with feelings, or, you know, or seen a bit of life.