 Welcome to the 1878 FM podcast. It's a full house. The Bushmaster General is back last week. He was in Liverpool. Come be part of coming into the studio or doing the show for him here, but that's fine. He had his reasons. But he's back with us today. Andy, how are you? I'm good. It's good to be back on. Sorry I didn't make it to your social. I saw the photos. They looked very, very good. But it was a nightmare getting to Liverpool. I think the M6 might be the worst motorway in the world. That's the worst motorway in the world. I think it might be the M6. The 25 is not very good. I haven't tried enough for them to specify the world. There might be some war-torn country that's really, really bad. But the M6 is a bad one. It's the worst thing. But I like the way Andy is. He's waved the conversation. Just to be like, oh, it's terrible getting up here. But once I got up here, the place where you were having your night was only two minutes away. I apologise. We got in there late on Friday, but it was fantastic. Obviously, the game went to the Palace game, which was just what a game to pick. It turns out my dad, after worrying about him being an albatross, he was a lucky charm. How was broadcasting from the tower, Andy, because I've been up there on a very windy day, and oh my God, do you feel that thing sway? And I mean properly feel it sway. It is skit. You know, when someone stops talking for a minute, and then that's when you notice it sway. So did you get any of those kind of feelings? It didn't move at all. It was pretty stationary. It was fun. You did get a couple of moments we thought. It kind of dawned on you how high up you were when you filmed it. But a great view of the city. What's that shopping centre downstairs, innit? It's got an indoor market. I love an indoor market. St John's, that used to be nice with the pride of Liverpool, that place. But you know what? They tried to do it up, and they've made the right mess of it. They tried to modernise it. It didn't need modernising. It just needed, you know, a butcher, a candlestick maker, somebody else. And they've pretty much destroyed it, to be honest. I love cafes in indoor markets. And they've got a bit of that going on at the St John's market. All in, I was well impressed with them. Liverpool's looking good. Liverpool's looking great. I was hugely impressed. It's been a little while since I've been up there, but it was looking brilliant. Did you take a little wander down to the stadium? I didn't go to the stadium. You could see it from our vantage point up in the tower. But we went to... We did all the usual tourist stuff that when we see family, we didn't really have time to go and see. Went into the Beatles story with our little headsets on that was good stuff as well. And the take, it's just looking great. I think Liverpool's looking vibrant. That pet hates tourists, by the way. He's not the Liverpool cultural attache. Do you know what, though? And I know where this... Obviously we've just been talking off here then, because Andy was trying to claim that I would know the guy who invented Uber. But because I was on strove a car, that's like him saying he knows the fella who makes Weetabix because he eats them. How outrageous. Neil McGonagall set up Uber in Liverpool. He's one of my good, good friends. Nickname Iggy, season ticket holder in the Gladys Street end, was on the front page of the echo, kissing the turf when we stayed up against Wimbledon. That's Iggy. Oh, now I know him. Hang on, hang on. And there was about 300 people doing it. They focused in on Iggy, because it was an iconic photo. To be fair, the irony of this story is now that I'm a civilian, I don't like tourists. But when I was a cab driver on Uber, I took great pride in telling people about the city. They'd be like brumies who'd come up, and I used to love them. Basically Liverpool was the home of Peaky Blinders and not Birmingham. They were always devastated by that. Basically Peaky Blinders was filmed all round Liverpool. It was only later on when I think Thomas Shelby got his big house that he went back to Birmingham. But I used to take great pride in that. And other locations were other... Because I basically know where all the films are filmed in Liverpool. So I'd be like, oh, that's where So-and-So did that. Just now, I don't like them because I've got to drive for myself now. I didn't mind getting stuck in traffic jams when I was a taxi driver. It just leaves the clock on. Have you got... Have you... People in Liverpool got a nickname for tourists? Because I grew up in Devon and they used to call them Grockles. Do you have a name for them? Grockles. Grockles. What the hell? What is... It's like a different language. What does Grockles mean? When you go on holiday to Devon or Cornwall, you know, people serve when you're being polite. They're calling you behind your back. Grockles. And I don't know where it comes from. Grockles? Cool. I know when like the... Because Liverpool has like three universities, so it's got lots of students. And we used to be called like townies by the... And I think that's a bit of a universal thing. And they'd look down on us just because we happened to have been born in a city that they were in from. But we don't have any nicknames for tourists, do you think? Tourists. Just cash cars? Or something else. Liverpool fans. Or the names that I wouldn't say. Liverpool fans is probably... Dave, did you feel like a tourist when you came from Hong Kong? No, not really. I really thought about it before, to be honest with you. But, you know, if I ever went to Liverpool, it was always felt to be going back to my roots and where family was from and stuff like that. So I don't think I ever really identified as a tourist to use the modern parlance. Not a grochel, whatever. I've never heard of a grochel before. I mean, that's the nice thing about doing this chat every week. Is that I always find that it's quite educational. You know, not only do we clearly enjoy each other's company, but we learn stuff every week as well. Grochel sounds like a type of pasta you'd be getting on your paddleboard. That's what a grochel... Yeah, like a large grochel. I can have a steak slice, cheese and onion slice and two large grochels. Two hot grochels, please. Put them in your bag and paddle on that. Hot grochs. While wearing your crocs. Absolutely. We'll come back to the random chat, cos I love the random chat, the random chat to the best bit. I feel that the thing that we need to address first is not Andy's spurious disappearance last week, although there'll probably be more of that later. I would just like to say how nice Peds hair is looking. Oh, thank you. He's gone a bit peaky blind, has he? Often I think that when people have a haircut and I think that they get maybe not annoyed but disappointed certainly when it's not noticed and it's not given the credit it deserves. And I would just like to be the first person here to say that your hair looks lovely, Peter. Thank you. Thank you, Dave. It adds to the visual stimulation of this outfit. I'm glad you said that, cos I have to go to Skemmersdale to get my haircut. I don't have to. Oh, I do have to because... A coach your capital. What do you ask for? I don't ask. That's the point. I don't ask because I have my own barber and that's why I go to Skemm because there's a barber in Liverpool called Cuthro Pete who's a big Evertonian and he had a shop in town and I was looking... Do you ever have that fear when you're going to barber? You walk in and you know what you want or you've got a picture of what you want and then you bottle it when you sit down and you just go shub on the sides, please. Well, I was getting a bit of that and you know, being on toffee TV you've got to look at the business. I've got to keep up with bars for God's sake. Housewives' favorites. And I found a barber who's an Evertonian and he couldn't basically afford to work in Liverpool anymore so he went back to Skemmersdale as if anyone knows just outside Liverpool where you could not... Liam Ottmann's from Skemm. Yeah, you cannot get any transport there. It's impossible. So I followed them and even though it's, you know, it's literally followed them. It's a little bit expensive for the average barber but it's weird because you sit down, he knows what you want, you cut your hair, it's all... you know, you get a time and you get a place and you walk in, walk out and it's happy days. And you don't get any of that fear of going oh, just shave it all off, mate. The worst is in barbers and you go in and you've got someone who cuts your hair. There's a couple of them and you know you don't want them. Exactly. Oh, we see. I don't play that game anymore. I've got a lady called Gillian who cuts my hair. She's from Glasgow and she has a right... Please say she comes to the house, Steve. I'd love that. No, she doesn't. She doesn't. She doesn't. She doesn't. But yeah, her name is Gillian and she's got her own little barbers in the village and I go there. Now, about two years ago there was a new Turkish barbers opened up next door but one to Gillian. Glasgow. And I thought, you know what? That is not sporting. I really shouldn't play that game. She was not happy. And so since then I've never ever tried anywhere else because I always feel like I'm being unfaithful, I think, is a thing. I book an appointment with Gillian. I don't have anybody else because we enjoy the chat and stuff like that. But it was funny because I went in there the other day and she was really, really annoyed because there was this old boy who was in there just before me in the chair and she'd had like half an hour, 40 minutes of him and he was doing a head in because what he'd done is he'd brought in on his phone pictures of Paul Hollywood. Right? This gentleman was older than Paul Hollywood. This gentleman, I don't know how old Paul Hollywood is but I wouldn't suggest that he must be in his mid to late 50s. And so this gentleman must have been in his early 70s at best and he was showing pictures of Paul Hollywood and she's going, yeah, but your hair will never look like that because Paul Hollywood's hair is white and dead straight and sticks up in the front and this guy's was brown and wavy, you know? And so there was no way it was ever going to work yet he's still insisted on kind of going, well, yeah, but could it not be more like that? Although she was kind of direct and honest with him that she didn't make it work. Do you get those books of... Guys, we just tend to be honest and direct though anyway. I mean, if you'll know as a sort of cultural kind of stereotype they tend to not beat around the bush I find. Do you know what happened to me recently though? I don't know if this happened to you guys. I went into the hairdressers and had my hair cut by the same lady who always does my hair and then at the end she said, do you want me to do your eyebrows for you? Oh, yeah, yeah. And then... I find that a bittersweet though, that in it. No, I always have that done and I always have the hair around my ears trimmed as well. Well, that's just the case. Is he from Darren? That's the service Darren gets. Gives you an skim his tail. I wouldn't go as far as... I wouldn't get those things to stick up your nose and pull out. I wouldn't get any of that. Dave was talking about the Turkish barber. I remember going to a Turkish barber in North London a few years ago and he had both my ears on fire. Yeah, I've gone and said it. I'm at one point. He said he was on fire, don't he? I've seen it, yeah. I've seen it on YouTube. Is that to get rid of the hair? Yep. Well either that or to make you look stupid. The modern-day wicker man. I've actually considered at times and this is a conversation for a gentleman of a certain age. Oh, okay. As you get older, you get more hair appearing in various different holes in your body, so to speak. It's such a lovely way, Dave. I'm thinking primarily about the holes in your ears or indeed the holes in your nostrils. I'm not thinking about any other holes. You're so small. More kind of head holes. Head holes. Head holes, right? High head holes. And I have actually considered buying one of those from Amazon so that I don't have to go into a shop and buy it. It will just get delivered in a brown paper package. It's one of those electric nose trimmer things because I have found and I don't know whether you suffer from this as well, but the older that I get, and I'm nearly 30 now, is that I find that I get more hair in there than I ever have before and I spend almost on a daily basis trying to pluck them out, which if you've ever tried to do it is for a man, it's the nearest pain to childbirth, I think. It's really smart. Angon. Angon. I've got one of them. I've got one because I have a shaver for my beard, and you get the attachment for it. But we've done, and we've got actually some in the studio here, and I've done sponsorship for the company that does a lot of sponsorships for the old downstairs trimming. And you get all those attachments. They're very popular these days. You don't have to be shy about it. When you say downstairs trimming, you're not talking about Darren's got a split-level barbershop, are you? You're talking more physically. Physically. It's just going to take you downstairs. To wash your hair? Yeah. I don't want to go downstairs. No, no, thanks, Dad. No, thanks, Dad. Have you taken the Dad's doorstep challenge pizza? Dad's his basement. Dad's his basement, yeah. What goes on down there? We don't talk about it. Legs behind your head, and off you go. I think IGV are missing a trick. This is it. This is definitely Loose Women. Oh, my God, I switched on Loose Women the other day by accents. I was just going to say to you. They were having this really in-depth conversation. I think it was about Prince Harry, because he's got a book coming out, but they were all dressed in fancy dress for Halloween. I saw that. I was going with, hey, Adam's looking like the Mad Hatch. Yeah, and they were trying to talk about dead series subjects while looking like absolute tits. Oh, it's just... It just got the salt. The views of Peter McPartland are not necessarily the views of the 1878. I don't know why you have to say that. They look like tits. Again, that's just obvious. They will back me up on this, although we can't. I agree with you. I think that it's very difficult to... I find the whole Halloween thing a bit strange anyway. I'll be honest with you. I don't really buy into it. I've seen nothing on my Instagram or Facebook in the last couple of days other than people going to extreme lengths with Halloween. Now, I know, Bush, you have a daughter or certainly children of more of a Halloween appreciative age, right? Yeah, we've got a nine-month-old, a four-year-old and a 12-year-old. So the 12-year-old went out trick-or-treating and the other two are not quite aware of it yet, so we're trying to keep it up next. I agree with you. It's become like... Back in the day when I was a kid, it was a bin bag with holes in it for a body piece and then one of them plastic scary masks and that was it. But now, like you say, it's become very Americanised. People aren't even dressing the scary stuff anymore. Thankfully. Full-on kind of prosthetics and all sorts of stuff. You see, my daughter is sometimes... I mean, she doesn't listen to this. It's sometimes difficult to tell whether it's Halloween or it's not Halloween with her because she tends to dress primarily in black and she has her kind of septum pierce and stuff, as you do with... Is she a goth? Yeah, kind of. Yeah, she's a sort of pseudo goth. So, actually, she looks quite Halloween at the best of times. But I'm sort of well beyond... I was, funnily enough, I was listening to Dave Berry this morning and he was talking about taking his four-year-old daughter out trick-or-treating last night. And obviously, that's the sort of the perfect age, I think, when they're like that, because they're excited by stuff and they enjoy the dress-up thing. And I sort of get that, but I think I've just missed a boat because I don't ever really remember doing that with my daughter. I was looking at Baz's Instagram yesterday and there was some remarkable people dressing up on your Instagram page. Some tremendous outfit. Megan Fox went above and beyond. Absolutely. You should check it out if you've not. Oh, did you see La Critsie of Milerini or whatever her name is from ITV? Now I'll have one. No, no. Just give us the details. Have a look at her Halloween picture. I'll tell you what. I'll tell you what, what I will tell you is, I mean, going back full-cycle, one of the first proper nights I worked as a taxi driver when I was on Uber was Halloween and I was, my God, some of the sites were unbelievable. I've just seen on the way in a couple of people either doing the walk of shame or they've decided November the 5th is still Halloween. And actually going, again, just another thing on this. I remember a few years back, I was in there five years, going to Lyon on the train from Liverpool. So we started at Lime Street, we were going to Lyon to see the European, the Europa League game. And it was the first of November, so when they're all coming in, getting on the trains to go home, and this is like five o'clock in the morning, just unbelievable, just unbelievable. You know, into my footy, you know. Jack went out on his own last night with his mate, Josh Landars. He come back with an impressive haul, he was all for it. I was fuming cos he should have been training. I don't answer the question. Most of his team had decided it was a Halloween party and didn't train, so I wasn't happy with that. I just don't answer the door, it's as simple as that. We had loads last night, we had loads. But you live in an affluent area, it's okay. Listen, listen. It is what it is. It is community. It is very... It feels gated, you know what I mean? Mock Tudor, very much Mock Tudor. It's a suburb. Yeah, Bazza's area is the kind of area that you buy your 17-year-old daughter a new car for a birthday. That's the vibe we're going for, you know what I mean? Or maybe a pony. Yeah. I buy myself a new car. I've been 12 and a half years old. I'm creaking. What did you get your daughter for her 17, 30? 18? 18? No, no. 19? 21. Okay, 21. All right, you left her a 20. It wasn't brand new. It wasn't brand new. Anyway, I haven't played it. I haven't played it the weekend. I was there. I couldn't even cut it. It's nice ground, isn't it? Yeah, I think I was shying. I think I've been there more than any other. There was the 11th time I've been to Fulham. It's not like there are al fresco sort of continental beer vibe that you get there. It's a nice place on a sunny day to stand outside and have a couple of, you know, pre-matches. What's weird of saying to bed though that the way end is very weird, isn't it? Because there's no segregation. You go in through the same style and it's basically just an open bit of land, isn't it? And a temporary stand, essentially, which is what that is. It's like a temporary stand the way end. It's like literally what they build. But they're not really football fans, are they, Fulham? No, no. In the nicest possible way. I don't mean it to sound disrespectful. And, you know, they're an old established club, but they're probably the nicest football club or one of the nicest football clubs in the country and so much as you don't get... You don't really get any nastiness. No, there wasn't even any like... When we scored and it got this out, there wasn't even any... I've never been to rugby matches, but I imagine it's a bit like going to Fulham. Yeah. I mean, I've been there a lot of times and Everton's record is appalling, really, it's a craving cottage. And the amount of times they've scored past us and it's just a clapping hand where there's when we scored on Saturday, there was literally a fall next to us where fans just went toppling down the stairs and took about 30 people out for a disallow goal. And that is how Everton celebrate goals. But, I mean, over... I come out of the ground thinking it was a decent point. I thought Everton played quite well in the first half. I should have had... I could have had two or three goals. We had five... It was a sit-up. It was a sit-up. It was a sit-up. But we've had good opportunities in the second half. They were better and we just couldn't get going. So, I mean, how did you... How did you overall feel? I was happy with the point. I thought we started brightly and I thought it was encouraging. But then, you know, I thought on the balance of play I thought they were the better side. I thought William was the man of the match for me by Country Mile. He just seemed to make everything happen and they had far more chances. And on another day, Mitrovich could have got a couple, definitely. Could have been half a swell on another day. Yeah, no, no, you're right. You're right in looking back on that. And I agree. I think it was... ..was broadline at best. I think he should have gone for that. Yeah. But no, I was happy with the point. I thought it was quite a hard point. And yeah, I had no complaints. Mr Bush? Yeah, I totally agree. You know, we've mentioned the old rope-a-dope thing on this podcast before, but I think Everton are getting good at something that we kind of developed under Moise where they can kind of turt all a little bit, go into their shell and soak up some punches. You know, because even when we were under pressure, we weren't. Turtle! No, you get your head down. Does this go in the bracket of Grogles? Grogles! Hang on. You're using turtle as a verb, right? Turtle. One more turtle by going into the shell. I wonder if this will appear on, you know, some whale cup coverage over the next month. You know, will there teams, like, well, you know, a rant turtle in that face that I haven't came at them second. Get your head down. Pull your arms and legs in and just go into your shell and soak up a little bit. Turtle football. Fair play, turtle. Forget lampar ball. Turtle ball. I didn't get it. I don't want to turtle on a pitch. I think so. He did. He didn't really try to. He didn't. But anyway, Andy, back to Turtlen. Back to Turtlen. So, like I said, you remember during the darkest times of the Benitez era last season? It was just terrifying. We were completely out of control. Tail end and beginning of the lampar thing as well. Whenever anyone was attacking us, it looked like they were inevitably going to score. They were all over the place. Whereas we're soaking up, I say, a similar amount of pressure in terms of maybe not having the ball for a similar amount of time. But I feel we looked less likely to concede than we have done. So, it's like, you know, you might look at the stats and say, you know, like I say, second no shots or whatever, one shot in the second half. But it's just a different story to how it was last season. So I feel like, you know, a great point. I think we're one of the few teams that hasn't conceded when we've gone and played there. The only team? The only team. Well, there you go. I just feel like we're, each week we're just, each game we're just making a little bit of progress. It's filling me with hope. It really is. Ped, one of the big things was at the weekend they had a lot of corners, but when even like being there and with their crowd getting up a little bit, felt so much more, I feel like there's so much more confidence off defending corners now than what we've made. Spunging it? Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Spunging it. Cymru, byddai'n golygl a'r credu i ddod yn ymgyrch yn y ff крant, yn ymgyrch yn gweithio gwthio yn eu cerddoedd. Cyngor hynny a'r gwahodd gael cyfan, ond mae'n rywbeth sy'n cael ei eistedd ac felly mae'n gweithio'n Gwyl angen ei hunarad blaen. Da, mae'n gweithio i gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gyfer gweithio'n gweithio, mae'n gyfrifio'n gweithio nhw si'n mynd Ddolongol Gwyrdd. Wrth i siŵn, gan oed o'r rhaid, a pwynt clwyddoch yn gwirioser oedd gwyliaid o'r slympio, rwy'n gweithio ymweld. Llywodraeth ydych yn gweithio i fynd. Fydda i ddim yn gwybod yn fwy oedd yn ei hiwn. Rwy'n dduch yn ymwiynt a gwaith yng Nghymru, ond o'i cyntafol i chi'r bobl. Olygu'n meddwl o'r odd rhai. Mae'r odd yna'r odd rhai yn ei wneud, ond rwy'n meddwl o'n meddwl i chi'n meddwl iddo. ac wedi bod yn ymweld y cyfan, yn y cwrdd. Felly, mae gennych yn ymlaun i'ch bosbl yn hyn. Mae'n gan shopeth y deaf. Felly, yn y mae'r cwrdd, mae'n elu'ch bwysig, mae'n ei ffordd o'ch hyn. Mae'r bwysig, mae'n rhan, mae'n gwrdd yn ymddangos, fel mae'n rhan. Felly, mae'n gweithio i'r ystyried o chwaraewch yn ei bod yn cael ei hyn. Maen nhw'n fawr i'r defnyddol oedd yn ddweud i faint arken o'r unrhyw Yn yigwch chi'n gweithio y dylai'r prifsfyniadig yn y Cymru? Cymru eu wneud hwn yn y f youtubers iddyn nhw, yn y peth yn cynnig iawn y cyfrannol, rydyn ni'n bod llwn yn wentlen'n hyn o'r ysbocol, sea yna'n gweithio mwy yw'n lef. Rydyn ni'n meddwl. Mae'n meddwl. Cymru yw ymddir i wedi'n meddwl y Strathion Ddynogenous Throwys Cymru, ac yn y ddweud yn ei ddweud sy'n ddweud creu'r Ysbocol. a unig yn y dyfodol, fel roedd cyfnodd yn y ffordd, rydyn ni wedi ddefnyddio. Rydyn ni oeddwn i ni wedi'n ei gyffredig o'r ffordd a'r holl gynnig a ddynnu'n ffwrdd a'r holl gynnig, dyfodd y ffordd, fel y ddechrau gyda'r holl ffordd. Rydyn ni wedi'n gweithio'r holl gynnig i'r holl, nid oes y gallu fffordd. Ac mae'r gwneud o'r bys yn gofodio, ychydig yn ei nadd, mae'r gwneud fod yn cofonol. Teimlo cymryd yn gyfechthio'r gwneud o'r bwysig a dyna'r cyffredin o yw'n bwyllution? Dwi'n mor flwyddyn i'n meddwl. Mae'n rhoi'n golygu, mae'n ei golygu sydd teimlo, fel y golygu eich bod yn ydw i'n golygu. Yn myfosodon o defnydd i hynny, wedi'u gwnaeth y cyffredinol, efallai o'ch chi'n hyd yn bwysig i'ch meddwl, yn y gymryd, mae nhw'n siŵr. Mae'n bobl sy'n gwydem yn ymddangos, yw'r cyflug, mor bryd. Dwi'n fathio i chi yn gyd, yn ei fathio i chi'n glwbannau. Yn gwybod, mae'n ddwy'n fathio i chi eisiau. Mae'n ddefnyddio i chi, yn gweithio i chi, yn ei fathio i chi. Ydyna yn ei ddechrau? Roedd oedd y cwrwch wedi bod yn ei ddechrau i chi? Dw i chi ddim yn ei ddweud mewn ddweud. The final third is where we are laughing. The team doesn't have goals in it. You know, it's coming back and it's great and he's looking better at each game. But we still need to add a bit of pates on the goals. It's funny that Dave said about William. Should we be looking or should we have looked at a player like that? I don't know, but I think someone like William from what I saw on Saturday would be brilliant for someone like Michael Lenckow in front of him. Er ffordd gael eto, rhai dyna'r cyfrifiad. Cych, poddewch! Dyna ddion o'r gwaith gan ychydig. Ond gwneud y byd yn cofio'n ddiogel ac roedd yn cwrw fan byddwch chi. Mae'n pwysig o'r cyfrifiad. Yn ddorol, mae'n ymniad o'r du. Fe wnaeth chi'n ffordd i'r cyfrifiad. Mae ffordd i'n ddiogel a gyfrifiad, fel ymweld. Y'r cyfrifiad, roedd yn bêr. Mae os yn obyn yn gyfrifiad, fe ddweud yn ca trouble. Ac wedi cael eu tro bwrdd y tarwg mae'r ydych chi usio'n'r cyffredin. Fe ydych chi'n gwneud i gael yn bryfi. Ac ym Naredd Gwyrdd wedi ar gyfer y cerdd mae'n cynhyrch ar gyfer yr tro cyffredin yma. Ac mae hwn i ni'n edrych yn gwybod a phobl i chi'n gwybod a chael eich cyweld ac mae hynny sy'n gwybod i chi'n gwybod a phobl i chi, a datblygu'ch allu'n i'r cyffredin. Ac mae hwn nid o'r cyffredin i chi, bobi'n hoffi llew iddynt hefyd. Rydym yn cael ei ystyried i'w bywys i'r ddau'r gynhyryd ar y gwerthol. Rwy'n cael ei weld i euddo i gael ar y tod. Rwy'n cael eu gwirio. Rydym i'n cael eu ffocu een iawn dda i'r cyfrall. Rwy'n cael ei bwysig i'r cyfrall y dyra gyntaf. Rwy'n cael ei bwysig i roi fod eich chyrch, a'r lle i'r lle i'r rhywgrionio'r dreineg, ond yw'n cael ei bod yn gyd aeth, ac mae angen ar ôl, mae'r tan ychyrdd hon, Llywodraeth yn defineoedd yn meddwl, fan ddylweddol, ond mae'r cwrs ar y cyfrifardog aron, a dwi'n os yna'r rhaid. Mae'n amlwg ysgrifenni, mae'n meddwl ychydig. Mae'r cyfrifargyffordd a'r cyfrifargyffordd o'r cyfrifargyffordd yn rhaid. Mae'n credu gwneud yng nghylch yn ddiddor. Mae'r mergfaidd ym mwyfyr a'i rhaid, mae fydd wedi ymdd Basturau'r Thetaidd. Mae'r ffrifargyffordd yn credu.' Mae'r ysgrifordd o'r llyfrfyr, ond bynnwyd ni'r greu yn gweithio ymlaennau ymdweud mor i gyrdydd iawn i'r cyllidau'r hyfforddiad, mae nid i wneud fydden i'r dddon, ond, dwi'n gwrs o'n ddof yn bobl, gan plane o'r decorre, phyn gan na'n gwneud o'r decorre i'r llyfr gynnig unrhyw yma ymddo? Doon, fy enw'i'n gwyllt由 i fy nhw, ond mae nhw'n gweithio'r decorre a'r nrhyw yw'n gweithio i'r decorre. Dyna, mae'n gweithio'r decorre i fi ar arbennig maen nhw. Dyna mi'n golygu o gyllideb yn rhan o'n gyferol. Mae'n gyd yn mynd i ddau'n gwneud eu bod yn fawr hyn i ddaw i ni'n ymddangos o'r own! Felly ydych chi'n gweithio i ddweud o gyflen i gyflen i ni i dim! Rwyf i ddylu'n ei gynnyddio chi y maen nhw ac wedi dweud mwyfotoedd. Rwyf i ddylu'n ei ddweud youn i gynnyddio chi'n fawr hwn angen i chi ymddangos挑er! Byddwn i'n bus stam yn yw dyma i gyd yn ei ddweud! Ac sefydlu i diodd i gynnig i gynnig mewn bendernau i gynnig ac rwy'n cymdeithas am y ddweud, rwy'n gynnig eichən i gynnig ymddangos a'r ysgol. Rwy'n gynnig, rwy'n gynnig a chyfrddwch chi'n haynogaeth i fod gyda'r ffan ddurydd. Rwy'n gynnig i amlinellwch nad oedd yn gallu dod ym fatheru a llunio'r bwysig. Down the balance because we've talked about this and again I've been sort of remiss to move Alex of Wobby, but just right now because Anthony Gordon and Da Mawri Grey, a little bit up and down shall we say. Is there a case then for maybe, maybe on Saturday not if not like Bournemouth or something like push wrth hyn mae'r ffeig iawn. Felly, mae'r eich cyfnod, ac mae'n gondol a'r cydweithio dechrau ar y maed Frage. Rydym yn ei'r drws? Mae'r eich ddweud, mae'r eich ddweud o drws? Mae'r grwp rydw i'r ond sy'n ddiogel yr eich ddweud? Felly mae'n ddweud hon i fyny. Mae'r eich coftyd a'r holl gyda ni. Mae'r eu bod yn ynnig, i gwrs hyn, a amser hynny'n gydweud o'r ddweud o'r holl. I think it would have been worth it to look even if it was just in a substitution for 20 minutes or something like that I think it'd be worth looking at because it mixes it up doesn't it? I think Andy we just said we do look so much better, but we're still only scored 11 goals in 13 games. 11-13, mae'n amser yn ymddych chi, yn ymddangos 3 o Enmel ysgrifennidau, ychydig yn gweithio gweld, ond mae'n gweithio'n gwneud hynny, ond mae'n meddwl yr un oeddiad, ac mae'n gweithio'n meddwl i'ch clwygau'i'r gweithio. Yn y ffant o'r ddechrau, dyma'n meddwl i'n gweithio'r gweithio'n meddwl i'r gweithio'n meddwl. O daddiwch gyda hwnnw. Ffair play de Franck hefyd wedi gweld ei ddweud e. A yn dweud gweld ei flawa ar blingol. Fyrdd a byddio'r ddanach a'n yn ôl i'n gweithio ddechreu gymael, wedi ynw'r llun gweithau ar y llyfo. Rwy'n eu ddweud i'w gweithio i ydweud. Mae'n gyfryd i ei gweithio i'r lampard. Rwy'n edrych bod yn ôl i'r ddweud, ac mae'n cael y cwestiynau. Mae'n gwybod hynny ond wedyn ni. ond gweithio'n gallu fawr yn gweithio'n gweithio. Dwi'n wneud yn gweithio'n gweithio gweithio. Felly wedi'u gweld bod y dyfodol gweithio i gael pethau ac yw'r rhai cyfrifoedd. Rwy'n cyfrifoedd ein calder y Llewyn ar gyfer ond ymlaen i'r wych yn credu ei gael. Rwy'n gweithio i'r gweithio'n gweithio'r cyfrif mwy oedd dros. Rwy'n gweithio'n gweithio'n cyfrifwyr ymlaen i'r gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Ie dwi'n oed yn gweithio, fel y dystod o'r cymaint i'r amser iddyn nhw'n ymwneud sydd gysylltu'n eu gwasanaeth yma. Rwy'n gweithio'n gweld i'r wath mewn wathau o'r bethau o'r gyllid yn ymwneud. Rwy'n gweithio, rydym yn ddwy'r hunadau i'ch gwahanol i fynd i gynnwys, sydd gynnu'n meddwl i'r lleidion lleol yn daethol. Felly mae yna bod oes, maen nhw'n gweithio, mae chi'n dweud e wedi'i lle ddechrau. Ond oeswni, mae'n gweithio y plesio newydd. Mae'n gweithio... Mae'n gweithio ddiogel a dyna yw'r gwlad gwnaeth a'r gweithio'n gweithio. A'n Wyrddian Nid, ac Dymar i Gwyrddur yn dweud ei gael. A'n dweud, mae'n dweud, mae'n dweud a'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. Ond mae'n dweud, mae'n Gwyrddian Nid, mae'n dweud yn ei gael, a mae'n dweud, mae'n dweud i gael i'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. gyda'r hyffordd o'r hyffordd i cyfnodau, ac yn pryd mae'n gweithio ym mwynhau cyd-deniedig arddangos yr hyffordd yn mynd i gael y cyfnodd yn ei ffordd. A dyna ddim yn fwy i'ch gwael a'n ddiwg roedd ymlaen i gael y cyfnodd o'r newydd, dyna'n ddefnyddio'n ddweud o'r arferfyn o'r ddweud o'r rhaid o'r ddweud o'r ddweud o'r ddweud o'r ddweud o'r ddweud o'r ddweud o'r ddweud. Mae'r team yn cydnog i'r ffordd i gynnwch i'r cyd, mae'n ei gwaith ynchydig, ac mae'r ymlaen ymlaen. Felly mae'n fwyaf i'ch ddweud ymlaen, ac mae'n ffóol 11. Ymlaen ffóol 11, mae'n ffóol 11 o'r gwaith Lampard yma. Felly mae'n amlant i'r lluniau, ac mae'n dda chi'n gweithio i'r ddweud. Mae'n gweithio i'r ddweud, mae'n gweithio i'r ddweud. That would be, I think for us, this is Frank Lampard's team, and we can really move forward this. Surely as well. I always think we've got this in the locker with Lampard that he's got such a good personal kind of relationship with a load of players, and he's so well respected that we must have that kind of pick up the phone. I'm going to sign for Frank, even though bigger teams want me at that moment. He can call in a favour and get someone in as well. Surely that's just not that far round the corner. I'm not going to say that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Someone like that do you know what I mean? Ym y broi'r atiel sydd wedi bod yr adlau eisiau yn ac yw y frang, ysbryd o'r ddweud i'r ysgoredd yn gweithio. So, rydw i'n meddwl yma ar hyn a'r cyffredin. Rydw i'n meddwl bod yn fawr, ac rydw i'n meddwl i'r mhwylo gyda golygu'n weithio. Rydw i'n meddwl, wych ychydig yn fwy ddechrau ar y rôl, ac rydw i'n meddwl ynddo tu yma y gwaith ym môl yn gwybod, rydw i'n meddwl yn y bywyd i fath, to have some money on predictable in your team. But I think I think I think I think Grace Grace of frustration now. And and and I don't I don't necessarily agree. Ped in so much is I don't think it's necessarily a case of him not being good enough. I think that. There's there's so much of his game that is good enough, but it's just the end product. And you know, maybe that means that's why maybe maybe, you know, and I and I get that, but I just sort of wonder whether he could be coached and moulded and have his game changed to actually make him really effective because it's just he does so much good. You know, so much of his game is exciting and good. But it's just the last bit decision making. Gordon's the same, though, isn't he? Gordon's kind of similar. So you've got the pair of the one each wing. Yeah, I'd say Gordon is more of a cutting edge than great. Isn't this, though, a little bit of what we as Evertonians have been doing for years, though, we were too nice. Like I would bin them, honestly. No, but that's the problem. I think people like them and people like like Michael Keane's a case in point for years and years. We're like, oh, you'll be all right. I think it's not these players are not good enough. You know, I know, I know, I know, don't get you. I'm saying this yet, but I think it's a football. I think as a football, we're really bad at this. I just think I think we're really we get far too sentimental about it in place, and you should just know. Honestly, I think we do as a football club. I think we get far too sentimental. Given that, though, though, we'd have got rid of a woby. Do you know what I mean? I mean, true, that's true, but you know what? And I do agree with you. But there has to be some some point where you have to go. Do you know what? I'm not going to get rid of them. What I'm saying is I think at some point you have to identify what's working and what's not working and say it's time to bring in a play in that position. So that is because the court, the court is a really good case in point. A lot of people would probably have said this season, the court will be fine in Amherdfield. He's played all the games and now you wouldn't go. Oh, yeah, we've got the court. He's sitting. You will go. We've got the court. He's sitting on the bench. Don't really not bother if he's getting if he's in the team or not. And I think we have to get that to that stage with players where you're thinking, yeah, he's all right. Get him off the bench. I think it's consistency for me. And I think if you can get someone on the other side right now, who is more consistent, that's a goal threat than the other two. Do you battle it out? And then so I've completely I've completely lost the whole thread because Peds just sent us those Halloween photos. There you go. Don't worry about me. Don't worry. I mean, you know, who's that? There you go. Oh, that's the Megan Fox bit. All right. I'm sorry. I mean, she's taken it then. She's taken it really give a toss about the Maori grant or anything like that. No, she's taken it very seriously. That's all I take. She is taking it very seriously. Very seriously. I would say I recommend you have a look at Lecrezia Milerini. We will. We'll have a little look from a journalistic perspective. Yeah, just from it's just so we know. Just so we're up to date. Just so we can clarify what you thought. Exactly. Exactly. It's the the arm a celeb because it's my favorite. It's been announced a line up and there's obviously some. There's there's there's different. Anyone in there that we know? I don't know. Dave, you're all sparring partners in there, apparently. But someone else. Dave's going to be on the phone. The person I'm really interested in seeing is Boy George. Cos every time I see Boy George, he's always got a great hat on. Fel it loves his makeup and all that. What's he going to look like and how quick is he going to? Cos he has been known to have a little bit of a sharp tongue. He'll look like a... I mean, he's in the perfect place for a hat, isn't he? He'll have a hat. Let's be honest. He'll style a hat, won't he? Not one of his hats, though, because, you know, he's they're going to give him a hat. I mean, you can't imagine Boy George with a hat with corks on. No, I mean, that's it, isn't it? Straight away. To me, that says a stylistic issue for the boy. I think the half a million quid is going to be full there. Well, whatever it is, whatever it is. Baba Tundi Alicia, who's a comedian, so I don't know him, so I'm sure he'll be good. Olivia Ratwood never heard of her, apparently. She was in Love Island and Tawi, apparently. I'm sure she'll be fine. Sue Cleaver from Corrie. Yeah, no. Eileen, I think she was in Corrie or Eileen. Eileen to him, sure. The one who? Yeah, yeah. Eileen Grimshaw, wasn't it? She's like she's thinking. Todd's Mum, wasn't it? Yeah. Todd? Was it Todd Grimshaw? Or was Todd the name of the actor that played the Grimshaw? Well, I know it. Do you reckon a taxi gaff with the? I don't watch it. You do. I don't. This is like listening to my mum and dad. I know. All right. Scarlett Douglas, who is a career in musical theatre, but he also presents. No, I've seen any of these people. Chris Moyles, one of them are really famous. Jill Scott, ex-Everton, England. Oh, yeah, but she's one something. You know, so she's done something, so fair play Man City, Everton, Sunderland, Mifffield, play Mike Tindall. Leave the Royal T-Shire to go and sit there and wonder if he'll talk about Jara. Owen Warner, never heard of him. Row me out from the Watsch. Is it the life of the shop? Both, both, why not? Why not? Tota Boyge, George, about that and then so on to others. And Charlene White, from apparently she's been on Loose Women and that takes it back. I don't know. Amphill o'n. Hancocks persevering as well. Yw mas hancock a just down a shape that one. Have you got to go? I've got to get my car. The bus just got to go. We're finishing now anyway. I think you take it easy. He said he is Australia. Yes, the bus is on the stand by this. It's Scotland, Scotland. He's Bush. Get them out of here and he's seeing us. We take care. You don't want to tell him. You don't want to tell him in the bus samos. But just math hancock, yeah, it's a bit of a. No, I mean just it. gwael, fel has got a job to this a he's pissing off to the jungle at to the disgrace. Is this Dave, is this in your opinion just because apparently you've got a book coming out, is this a good way for him to promote his book by going in there and should he be allowed really? I think that's entirely what it's to do with and I agree with Pedd that it's an absolute disgrace if he has a governmental role and he should be doing all that he can to fulfil that role and try and you know. Rydyn ni'n geisio eich hwn ar yr olygu? Nid yw'r hyn yw'r cyfliadau? Ac rydyn ni'n gobeidio'r hynny,でi some kind of utopian harmony? Sut rydyn ni'n gam. Rydyn ni'n gobeidio'n gŵr i'r llwyddon, i gyda Ieddon. Rwyf wedi'n gweithio dw researched eich area. Rydyn ni, gweithi, rydyn ni'n gobeidio eich oeddenig. A rydyn ni, Rydyn ni'n gobeidio eich oeddenig. Rydyn ni'n gobeidio eich oeddenig, Efallai mae gennyw'r cymhelydd y gallu gwirwch a'i tro i'r gael ar ôl i, mae'n ymhell yw'r llangos am y newydd ar y gweithio. Mae ydy'r srata o sy'n ddeu. about two weeks or three weeks, isn't it? Three weeks, isn't it? Felly rydyn ni'n disoeth i'r ffilm. Oh, yw r ·rwail cup? No, rydyn ni'n rydyn ni'n rydyn ni'n rydyn ni'n rydyn ni'n ffilm. Rydyn ni'n ddech chi'n'u gael i'r bwysig. Heaven have got Lester City at home on Saturday, Bonfire Night... ...half five again. Waze kick off time. This is a game... I don't want to say this is a game Heaven, should win. Because Lester have got a lot of players who are match winners. When they're on the Daba, looking at where they are in the league, this is a great opportunity isn't it for Heaven? To make that full on point and even better point by following with a home win. I agree with you. amser yn iddyn nhw'n ardal i'r gweithio mae yw'r gweithio'n bwysig aru, yn ffyrdd gweithio, ond mae'n rai'r pryd yn f Nousaure. On dwi'n rai'n gwneud yn Dengerllwyr, oedd yn ymgyrcholio'n rai ddiddardog. sydd yn ddiddardog, ond mae'n eifra gael bod mae'n ddiddardog. Maen nhw'n llunio gael bod yna yna, ond mae'n ddiddardog, ond mae'n ddiddardog. On oedd yn gweithio i'n ddiddardog. Ond yw'r fydd yn ystod, mae'n meddwl am ytweld, ac mae'n meddwl i'r rai o'r gwaith, ac nid yw rai o'r fyddionau fwyaf yng nghymru. Mae'n mynd i gyd yn ymddi'r bwysig. Mae'n fyddai'n meddwl yn eich hun, ac mae'n meddwl yn ffwrdd yn ymddi'r ffêl yng Nghymru. Mae'n meddwl yn ymddi'r ffêl, a'r fydd yn ei ddaw, ac mae'n meddwl i'r gwaith, ac mae'n meddwl yn ymddi'r ffêl? Cymru yw'r bwysig, ac fel hynny'n golygu ddweud y cyfaint o'r cyffredigiaeth. Felly, y cyffredigiaeth yn y cyffredigiaeth, mae'r cyffredigiaeth ffaserydd wedi'i gweithio ar gyrdd. A'n ddechrau 18 pwynton, wedi'i cyffredigiaeth erbyn yw'r cyffredigiaeth a'r cyffredigiaeth a'r cyffredigiaeth i'r cyffredigiaeth, ac yn dda i'r gael o'r cyffredigiaeth yn gyffredigiaeth. Rwy'n dweud. Gynnwysau'r cyffredigiaeth a'n gweithio'r gynhyrch. ddwy'n gwleithio'r Creator. A gy democrigur o'r gwleilau, byddai'n gwybod probio bod ei pleidio. Byddai iawn, ym wych yn ddweud o'n rwy'n gwleilio'n gwleilio. A dyma'n go i ei gallu i'n gweithio arall, ond rwy'n gweithio eich cywpeth yn ystod y gw собau byddai'n gweithio'n gweithio'r ei llwyddiwr a'n dweud ei ddim yn gweithio'r cymuned. Felly mae'r wych yn dechrau gael, mae'r cyflwybu fel cael cyfrannu ei ddweud yn rawr. Mae'r ffordd amheryn yn dweud. Um dd形ol, credu mae'r argynno'r tyfu tyfu oherwydd ac mae'r cyflwybu can Llund-Llwyd yn nhw byt. Mae erbyn amser flynydd y gwasanaethau'r gweithiau. Felly mae'r newid yn unig hynny yn un gwybwyr maen nhw. Mae'r newid yn radyddill o'r Llyfrgell i'r thymau. Mae meddwl f �llaf y mynd yn siarad y rhanolau i gofyn nhw. Mae'r cyfrannu fel yma yma yna, Cymredu cael ddweud y ddechrau yn ymlaen nhw. Felly mae'n fawr cynnyddio'n cyflawn. Nid yw'r ffordd o'r ffordd yn y gweithio'r ysgol, mae'n credu. Rwy'n ei ddweud. Dwi'n fawr i ddweud yma. Rwy'n fawr i ddweud yma. Rydw i ddim yn gymsgol. Dwy'n ddweud. Dwy'n ddweud yma. Mae'n dda i'r Foshmaster General yw bod y ddweud. Mae'r gwaith dechrau gwaith gwwontos. Trwy fos jeili cynt e'r bwysig i chi'n gyrthog yn y bisiat i hotel. Rwy'n ei gallu seith. Oh i'r edrych i chi. Hef yw Math honcoch. Honcoch. Honcoch.... Math honcoch, neb hynny'n gallu dd�만. Honcoch a fyny'r grochau, dywed ni Feir ar y rhys. Dwi'n bi, dywed ni'r o. Math honcoch. Be y gawr. Mae'r bwysig yn ôl i chi. Wah, roi fwy i'r ffinish. Trwy i'r leitau. Bye! Bye. Honk.