Then he talks about his night out with the jury, including one juror that's a hype man for a log flume. Acaster talks about his cinema experience and how he disrupted The Theory of Everything with harsh truth fortune cookies. He explains that it came right after he had to move because he had shouted his postcode at a rival gang. Then he talks about his experience with jury duty. After walking on stage, he engages in celebrity gossip about the Chilean miners. He admits that he's been undercover so long that he doesn't know who he is anymore.Īcaster contemplates the origin of the universe in a voiceover.
He talks about the one year anniversary of his divorce, when he drove to the beach to put his head in pictures you put your head in. To cope with his divorce, he started a podcast using the audio from the wire he wore while talking to the drug gang, and he plays the podcast for the audience. He also talks about his love for mathematics and how squares can be used to close a cardboard box. He talks about his drinking habits and ponders the nature of Dr.
Acaster talks about some of the troubles that one faces in gang life, the problems with conga lines, the connecting fabric between oven gloves, and unbreaking the ice at the end of a conversation.Īcaster laments that his wife left him on National Fondue Day.
He explains that he started his career as a standup comedian to infiltrate a drug gang that operates backstage on comedy shows. Acaster changes the subject to childhood and says that he wanted to be an undercover cop as a child, so he told grown ups that he wanted to be a drug dealer.
Then he discusses his love of loopholes, gives examples of the loopholes he exploits, and tells an anecdote about how he was wronged by a loophole regarding free bananas so he got revenge by starting a banana store that exclusively sells bananas. Acaster begins the show by talking about audience placement at a comedy show.