Overheard
conversations from the buses, boardrooms and bars of Britain
Mark Love & Jacqui Saunders
Table of Contents
Cover Page
Title Page
Introduction
Toy Story
Zip It
The Heroic Potato
The Speculators
The Grieving Process
The Fablus Flautist
The Ear Complaint
Yorkshire Watter
You can’t cheat yer Nan
Year Zero
The Dry-Cleaner
The Crunch
Would You?
The Communication Age
The School Trip
The Comedic Properties of Fruit
Winsor
The Chocolate Teapot
Why?
Reclassifying the Kids
The Art of Luvvy
Wolves
Telegraph Road
Stranger in Town
‘Spolicy
The Man Who Has Everything
Snappy Shopper
The Washing-line of Hope
Scusting
Memorable Elephants
The Endless Queue
Two Birds Having It Off
Multicultural, innit?
The Hot Date
S&M in the High Street
Romance
Rice
Taking Stock
Public Inconvenience
Controversy
Potty
Parenthood
Over-inflated
Not the Done Thing
Nah, Mate!
Mothers
The Celebrity and the Portaloo
Tourist Information
Jimmy Scumbag’s Report
Man’s Best Friend
Tea? Coffee?
Innocence
Maltesers
History Repeating Itself
Mad as a Bee
Goths
Arsebergers
It’s the Thought That Counts
Learning by Example
Fast Food
It Takes Me Back
Esmerelda
Good Genes ain’t Everything
A Building Term
Giving Direction
Battery-powered
Generation XXX
Balham?
Gazebo
Dullest Cat Food Story in the World
Front or Back Bottom?
Death of a Hamster
Finding Sense
Don’t Go There
Focking Americans!
Bounced
Conditioning
Cheese People
As if!
Chalk
Casanova on the 137
Biting Jelly
Dimensions
Cannon Balls-up
A Good Investment
No Great Shakes
Greek
Pity
Care in the Community
Where You Hide Yourself
Offender Profile
Unexpected Delivery
The Birthday Buddy
Undersize Me
Caffé Americano
Man’s Other Best Friends
Objects of Desire
Business
Scaring the Extras
A Mother’s Lament
A Really Swish Showhome
Glee Club
Brazil Nuts
Trouble with Snails
Tough Love
The Tourists
Boys Will Be…
The Naturalist’s Needs
A Higher Power
Boing!
Too Much Information
There!
Salt of the Earth to Planet Boyfriend
The Important Stuff
A Traveller’s Tale
Come Together
Catch 23
Andy’s Do
Another Woman
Memories
Americans in London
Meat
Bliss
Microcosm
Enough Underwear
Bad Medicine
Bacteria
Into the Wild
Guántanamo
The Stuff of Dreams
Guests
Cool
A Simple Truth
A Cracking Bit of Cheese
Haggling
The Inheritance
A Generous Helping
The Suspect
The Actor Who Couldn’t
Teutonic Plates
A Song for Pyewacket
Tara’s Terror
Snippets from a Six-Year-Old
School’s Out
Sculptures
Burning Bright
Not Being Minnie Driver
Expressing Creativity
The Alison Technique
The Grass Being Greener
Mixed Messages
Milk with Three
Bladdy Tourists!
Jeffrey & the Tramp
Jessica’s News
Royal Insecurity
The Lost Aisle
Stripping Off
So, Do You Know Liam?
Ageing Michelle
Fashionable
Culture
RSVP
Santi
Taking Direction from Stanley Kubrick
The Bottom Line
The Muralist’s Tales
The Phantom Pregnancy
Two Very Different Travellers
Mental Lentils
In a Hole
Fruit
Expectations
Everybody Loves Madeira
Ten Seconds of Fame
Rabbit
The Rastafarian Good Food Guide
Charity
Get a Job
Headucation
I Wanna be Adopted
Management Material
All Change
Blackies
A Missed Opportunity
The Gen on Jenna
The Pottery Shop part 1
The Pottery Shop part 2
Social Skills
The Art Lover
Coitus Infinitum
Fair Trade
Animal Trouble
Acknowledgements
Copyright
About the Publisher
Introduction
Neither of us is quite sure exactly when we each started making a note of other people’s conversations, foibles and quips, but it began a long time before we met.
The decision to turn our little hobby into a book itself probably started with a conversation with friends. Someone probably laughed out loud or put their hands over their mouth in delighted shock, then said something along the lines of, ‘You should write that down.’
So we did. We employed many techniques: eavesdropping, ear-wigging, a little lurking, nebbing, overhearing and snooping, to name but a few. Occasionally little nuggets have been passed down to us by conspiratorial friends who really should know better.
The result, we discovered, was a kind of kitchen sink snapshot of society caught resolutely off its guard, being real, being funny, occasionally sad—even terrifying. It spans every age, class and racial divide—a nation united in inanity.
It seems that the richest vault of human comedy and drama is around us all the time if we just stop, turn off our phones, MP3 players and laptops, and listen.
So why not just turn off, tune out and listen in? Who knows what you might be about to hear, and what you might do with it.
Mark Love & Jacqui Saunders
2008
Overheard something that you’d like to share? You can submit your own ear-wiggings at:
www.overheardconversations.com
PS Oh, just one more thing before we go…Just to make it very clear that the opinions and views expressed by the people in these conversations are absolutely NOT those of the authors or their publishers.
Toy Story
A town centre toy store, mid-December, and the manager and a Sales Assistant are staring intently at the stock on the shelves.
SALES ASSISTANT: Dunno what it is but Barbie’s just not going this year.
MANAGER: Hmmmm…What if we put Superman on top of Barbie? Do you think that’ll get her going?
SALES ASSISTANT: Nnnh, I don’t know…
MANAGER: No! I know! Put Barbie on top of Superman. Yeah, that should get her going!
Zip It
A shop owner has been questioning her male assistant over a prolonged absence from work.
SHOP OWNER: So you’re saying you were off for three weeks because you had an accident with your zip?
ASSISTANT: It’s not funny! Little accidents can turn into something very nasty. I could have died. I was very ill, you ask Frank.
SHOP OWNER: You could have died? What actually happened?
ASSISTANT: I told you, I had an accident with my zip.
SHOP OWNER: Can you be a bit more precise? This is three weeks, not three days.
ASSISTANT: Look, I got it stuck in my zipper.
SHOP OWNER: You got your thing stuck in your zip and it took you three weeks to get over it? Marge had triplets and she was back at work six days later.
ASSISTANT: I got blood poisoning. I’ve only just got over it.
SHOP OWNER: How do you get blood poisoning from getting your thing caught in your zip?
ASSISTANT: I don’t know! But I did! It was really serious at one point. I almost died.
SHOP OWNER: Well that would have meant for an interesting obituary, wouldn’t it?
The Heroic Potato
A teacher has been leading a general studies lesson on genetic engineering. Kirsten, at the front of the class, folds her arms, purses her lips and shakes her head slowly.
KIRSTEN: I just don’t think it’s right messing ’bout with nature, miss. They should leave it alone.
TEACHER: Okay, but what about some of the positive effects of genetic engineering, like being able to grow disease-resistant crops?
KIRSTEN: I just don’t want a carrot that’s been messed ’bout with on my plate. It don’t have to be perfect and all that…
HALEY: Yeah, it doesn’t need to be straight.
TEACHER: Okay, has anyone here heard of the suicidal potato?
CLASS: The what?
TEACHER: Scientists have created a suicidal potato. Basically it recognises when it’s become diseased and kills itself off to stop the disease spreading through the rest of the crop.
A wave of oohs and ahs.
KIRSTEN: Oh no, that’s all right, miss! That’s more heroic, innit? I’d be proud to have that on me plate.
The Speculators
On a commuter train travelling between West Croydon and Balham, a husband tries to read as he is talked at by his excited wife.
WIFE: Darling, you never listen to me about things like this but you have to listen this time! If property prices in Battersea are going through the roof then it’s obvious that Balham will be next. Where I used to live, Blandfield Road; beautiful terraces, close to the tube, good school on your doorstep, Wandsworth Common just up the road…I’m telling you, if we bought a couple now we could make a killing! We’ve got to do this, Roger, it’s one of those once-in-a-lifetime opportunities…And the real beauty of it is, nobody else knows about it!
HUSBAND: I think they do now, dear.
The Grieving Process
A young girl reacts to the news that mummy and daddy are splitting up.
ELLA: After Christmas, Mummy, can we get a new daddy? Joe was nice…
The Fablus Flautist
A couple fondly reminisce outside Ely Cathedral.
WOMAN: I mean, he was just a wizard on that flute.
MAN: Was he the bloke we saw at the Guild Hall?
WOMAN: No.
MAN: Oh, d’you mean the bloke at…You know, the one we saw at that theatre.
WOMAN: Noooo.
MAN: I know who you mean! That fella we saw at the outdoor concert.
WOMAN: That’s him!
MAN: Oh yeah, he was fablus, wasn’t he? Really fablus!
The Ear Complaint
A man visits his doctor with an ear complaint.
DOCTOR: Have you had this kind of trouble before?
MAN: No.
DOCTOR: Are you a wheezy type?
MAN: I have very mild asthma. Nothing serious.
DOCTOR: Right well, let’s have look then. Good ear first…Aha. And now the bad ear.
MAN: Ow!
DOCTOR: Oh yes, it seems quite inflamed. Does this hurt?
MAN: Ow, yes!
DOCTOR: Right. So have you been using a cotton bud in there or anything?
MAN: No, nothing like that.
DOCTOR: Hmm. Matchstick?
MAN: No.
DOCTOR: Pencil? Pen?
MAN: I’m absolutely positive that I haven’t put anything at all in my ear.
DOCTOR: Well, it’s worth asking. You wouldn’t believe some of the things I encounter in this job. Tell you what, I’ll make you out a prescription for some antibiotic ear drops. That should do the job…Knitting needle?
MAN: I’m sorry?
DOCTOR: You didn’t use a knitting needle at all?
MAN: No, nothing at all.
DOCTOR: Okay then. Right, there you go. That’s two drops, three times daily. Just sort of waggle it around gently with your finger to make sure it all gets in and come back if that doesn’t do the trick, okay?
MAN: Thanks very much…I assure you I haven’t put anything in my ear that I shouldn’t have.
DOCTOR: Oh I believe you. It’s just unusual that’s all…You didn’t have a swipe around with a bus ticket, then?
Yorkshire Watter
An elderly northern man is talking about his youth.
MAN: Me Dad were a miner, so he spent most of his working life down t’pit. But when he were topside, on a Sunday like, he fancied himself as a bit of an outdoors man. When it were fine he’d take us in t’countryside for some fresh air. Said it helped his cough like. Somehow he’d always make sure there were a stream for us to play in and he’d make a big thing about taking a drink out of it. He’d say, ‘Lord there’s nowt finer than Yorkshire watter.’ He drank gallons of the stuff. Anyway, this one day he fancied walking a bit further, so after we’d built a dam and he’d had his usual drink, we toddled off upstream. Course we ’adn’t gone far when we sees this bloody sheep in t’stream, didn’t we? Swelled up like a bloody beach ball it were. Must have been dead for days. He weren’t so keen ont’watter after that, I can tell thee.
You can’t cheat yer Nan
A rather brash young woman is walking through a very select area of west London with her hounded-looking grandmother.
WOMAN: ’ow can yer cheat on yer Nan? It’s not possible, yer mi Nan!
GRANDMOTHER: Shhh.
WOMAN: But how can yer do it? You can’t. It’s not possible to cheat on yer Nan!
GRANDMOTHER: Shhh.
WOMAN: I’m not using you. Yer me Nan! But yer shutting me out. It’s like, cos I’ve decided I’m doing this, yer shutting me out and I’ve got to do it all on me own. Yer shutting me out!
GRANDMOTHER: Don’t you think I’m entitled to shut you out after all what you’ve done?
WOMAN: But yer me Nan! I’d let you stay at my place any time you wanted. I’d let you eat me food, ’ave a bath, anything! Cos you’re my Nan!
GRANDMOTHER: Shhhh.
WOMAN: And I moved out of your house to give you more room. That’s what I did for you! And now yer shutting me out. I’m not cheating you. You can’t cheat yer Nan!
Year Zero
A publisher stands before her assembled staff to deliver a rousing, morale-boosting speech.
PUBLISHER:…so I know we’ve had our problems. I know that the recent redundancies have caused insecurity, as has the speculation about the ownership of the title, but I want you…or rather I want us, to now put all that behind us and concentrate on building a future for ourselves and the magazine. Today is year zero. Nothing that happened before today matters. All disputes are forgiven and forgotten. Clear slates all around and that includes the naysayers too. I want a better attitude, a more positive attitude. No more grumbling in corners. If you’ve got something to say, you can come and say it to me direct, I won’t hold it against you. Remember—year zero, all right? Okay, let’s go to lunch.
SUB-EDITOR: (quietly) Er, wasn’t year zero the process of systematic slaughter of innocent people by an insane dictator?
STAFF WRITER: Yup. Business as usual then.
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