Category: Show Diary
Scott attempts to sell paparazzi photos of Laura to The Sun after she attends the Sony Radio Awards, then the show features a hilariously uncomfortable Chelsea Football Club interview where players struggle to admit another teammate is good-looking. [...]
Scott discovers a brilliantly named 1950s American toy dog called Gaylord (complete with bone), and launches a running bit asking listeners to call in naked — which, despite it being 4pm on a Friday, yields several willing participants. [...]
Scott attempts to reform a rude motorist with a Susan Jeffers self-help tape prank, and then falls victim to an elaborate wind-up from Jo Whiley involving a fake voicemail message recorded on the street. [...]
A chaotic show filled with genuinely unsettling American gun-rental adverts, an extended debate about what Brazilians are actually named after (with surprising geographical analysis), and multiple callers confessing to creating MySpace pages for their cats — written entirely from the cats' perspective. [...]
Scott and the team head to a pub garden near Radio 1 for a bizarre game involving a paintball gun, an apple, and Laura's head on the line — all decided by a William Tell trivia question. [...]
A chaotic show packed with Dalek voice boxes, a surprising theory about melon-buying habits, and an apology for Jo Whiley accidentally swearing on air during a bingo game. [...]
Scott and the team transform the live lounge into a "livestock lounge" for a wild new game where a blindfolded contestant must identify animals purely by kissing them — featuring a rabbit, a duck, a lamb, and a snake, with hilariously panicked results. [...]
Scott and the team pose as Castaway producers to interview the four Radio 1 listeners in the running to join the island, asking increasingly outlandish questions about nudity, romance, and crawling into a dead moose carcass — while Laura navigates a blindfolded mouse trap minefield in the studio. [...]
Catherine Tate returns to discuss her fastest-selling Comic Relief DVD and gets pestered by callers, plus Scott plays a genuinely disturbing 1950s public information film about the "dangers" of homosexuals. [...]
Scott and the team attempt to prove that Germans have a sense of humour by telling jokes to unsuspecting members of the public in Germany, dispelling the stereotype that they can't take a laugh. [...]

