Scott fully embraced the “day before the day before Christmas” energy from the off, repeatedly reminding everyone where they were in the festive calendar and inviting anyone still working to make themselves known. Schools were done, inboxes were quiet, and the show leaned hard into shared Christmas brain, festive logistics and the sense that normal rules no longer applied.
Almost immediately, the show latched onto one of those very Scott Mills debates that refuses to die: how you open Christmas presents. A viral clip from Sheila explaining her horror at discovering some families open everything at once sparked instant outrage. Scott was adamant that presents are opened one by one, with everyone watching, and anything else was “not Christmas”. Ellie backed him, Claire joined in, and listener messages came in thick and fast defending every possible method — including opening one present a day, which Scott treated as deeply unsettling.
This debate threaded its way back into the show repeatedly, becoming shorthand for “we are now fully in Christmas chaos mode”.
Tin Whistles, Secret Santa and the Point of No Return 🎶
The tin whistle saga escalated again — because of course it did. Ellie revealed she’d been given a tin whistle book for Secret Santa, immediately prompting Scott to confirm that this meant the tin whistle era was far from over. Ellie also confirmed the actual instrument was back in the studio, which Scott treated as both a threat and a promise.
Secret Santa fallout continued, with Emilio’s gift situation becoming a running mystery. Scott repeatedly returned to the idea that Secret Santa should never involve everyone opening presents at once, reinforcing his belief that gift-giving is entirely about watching reactions.
Listener messages took the tin whistle chaos to new heights, including one from someone who’d ordered 32 tin whistles for their workplace. Scott issued an on-air apology “to the entire office”, while Ellie laughed and attempted — unsuccessfully — to shut the idea down.
By the end of the segment, it was clear the tin whistle had gone from Christmas party moment to full show lore.
The Good Morning Minute: Christmas Heroes ❤️
The Good Morning Minute focused on people working right through Christmas. Messages came in from ambulance crews, nurses, care home staff, delivery drivers, pharmacists, butchers, bus drivers, supermarket workers and panto technicians.
Scott read out names, jobs and locations, regularly reacting mid-message, while Ellie jumped in to clarify places or shout-outs. The tone stayed warm and appreciative without becoming heavy, with Scott repeatedly thanking listeners for keeping things running while everyone else switched off.
The sheer range of jobs mentioned became part of the point, reinforcing how many people are still going while the rest of the country slows down.
Mariah Carey and Peak Christmas Music 🎄
Mariah Carey’s presence loomed large over the entire show. Scott treated her seasonal dominance as an unquestioned law of nature, returning to her repeatedly as both reference point and inevitability. At this stage, Mariah was less an artist and more a condition.
Scott acknowledged listener messages about the saturation of Christmas music, but brushed aside any resistance, pointing out that by Christmas Eve Eve the decision has already been made. Ellie backed this up, with Scott making it clear that Mariah Carey is not optional at this point in December.
Songs were framed as moments rather than just tracks, with Scott leaning into the shared understanding that hearing Mariah now triggers a specific emotional and seasonal response. Listener messages reflected everything from delight to resignation, all of which Scott treated as valid — but irrelevant.
Elmo Appears 🧸
Elmo’s appearance landed squarely in the sweet spot between festive and surreal. Scott introduced Elmo without over-explaining anything, immediately interacting as if this was an entirely normal Breakfast Show development.
Elmo spoke about Christmas, kindness and festive feelings, with Scott gently guiding the conversation while allowing the inherent absurdity to breathe. Ellie reacted in real time, laughing and leaning into the moment rather than grounding it.
Listener messages came in quickly, many expressing disbelief, joy or confusion, which Scott read out with relish. Elmo responded warmly, reinforcing the Christmas themes of kindness and togetherness without tipping the segment into parody.
Emilio’s Cheesy Christmas Film Quiz 🎬
Emilio brought a Christmas film quiz to the table, focusing on deliberately cheesy festive movies. Scott approached the quiz with enthusiasm and mild scepticism, frequently interrupting to question plots, titles and logic.
Ellie joined in, with answers prompting side discussions about whether anyone actually chooses these films or whether they simply happen to people at Christmas. Listener messages added further suggestions and corrections, expanding the list of films far beyond the original quiz.
The quiz became less about right answers and more about collective recognition of Christmas film madness.
The Handover with Gary Davies 🎧
As the show wrapped, Scott handed over to Gary Davies, immediately checking in on Gary’s Christmas Eve Eve setup. Conversation turned to wrapping presents, with Scott asking whether Gary was a sit-down or stand-up wrapper, and whether ironing boards were involved.
Gary revealed his preferred method, prompting Scott to share his own, including references to wrapping while standing and his ongoing treadmill habits.


COMMENTS