<A pompous jingle is played, accompanied with a dodgy
looking TV logo.>
- Announcer:
- This is... Err... The Television. Viewers on digital can now see Jeremy
Beadle being torn apart by a pack of rabid dogs. But on analogue now, the
regions news.
<Cut to: two very dodgy presenters sat next to each
other, in a cramped set that is painted bright yellow. There is a woman and a
man.>
- Woman:
- Good evening and welcome to Newsquest, with David Moralis and me, Lynette
Prosser.
- David:
- Stay with us for the next thirty minutes.
- Lynette:
- Coming up...
<Cut to a shot of a coal mine>
- Lynette:
- Pleberton coal mine shuts after four hundred years of production.
<Cut to shot of a school>
- Lynette:
- Education chiefs slam teachers in a Hogwarth school.
<Cut to a dog licking its privates>
- Lynette:
- And what now for Dolly the Dog. That's news, sport, views and house fires,
coming up in the next half hour.
- David:
- All this and more, in tonights Newsquest.
<Titles: all colours are tinted brown. Theme, a cross
between the music used whenever Helen Daniels fell off the sofa in Neighbours
and a cat being strangled, plays. Titles show a pack of dogs running around a
greyhound track, followed by some people walking down a street. A huge great
big 3 moves slowly across the screen for no apparent reason. We see a view of
a monument, then a shot of a camera man being run over by a tram - something
which the producer was assured would look 'dead good'. The music climaxes and
we cut to an aerial view of the studio, with a huge desk with about ten people
sat at it, a camera (with camera David) and some dodgy bloke holding a
clipboard. The music ends and we cut to Lynette.>
- Lynette:
- Good evening. Our top story: Pleberton's last coal mine closed its doors
today for the last time. The closure ends a four hundred year old tradition of
coal mining in the area. Outside the colliery is Mark Pugwash.
<Lynette turns to look at a TV screen showing Mark
Pugwash, stood near a coal mine.>
- Lynette:
- Mark, what's the mood like now in Pleberton?
- Mark:
- Pretty sombre really. There has been four hundred years of mining in the
area and the village has been very much dependent on the employment the mine
provides.
- Lynette:
- What reasons did Blogcoal, the owners, give for the closure?
- Mark:
- The reasons are purely financial. The company's results showed that the
mine made a 14m loss last year alone although some locals here claim that this
could have been avoided if the company had actually bothered employing some
staff.
- Lynette:
- So the mine didn't have enough workers to cope with the demands of
production?
- Mark:
- Well to be fair, it didn't have any workers bar a manager, his secretary
and a tea lady. The entire work force was made redundant three years ago in an
attempt to save some money.
- Lynette:
- And what does the future hold for the unemployed in the village?
- Mark:
- Probably a few trips to the Job Centre.
- Lynette:
- Mark, thank you.
<Mark nods. Cut to David in studio. He looks up,
startled.>
- David
- Education chiefs in Hogwarth have slammed teachers at a local school for
failing to drink tea in their tea break. The council's Director of Education,
Derek Picard, launched the attack at a council meeting last night. Mr Picard
proclaimed he had no faith in the teaching abilities of staff who didn't know
what beverage was appropriate for a tea break, Our education correspondent
Alison Vyne reports.
<Cut to classroom. Reporter stands in middle of room.
Pupils are hard at work.>
- Alison:
- Hogwarth High is a peaceful, bog standard comprehensive school which has
managed to get embroiled in a bitter battle.
<Cut to view of a sixties office building. There is a
sign saying 'Hogworth District Council'. Alison provides a voiceover>
- Alison:
- It was during a council meeting here last night that Hogwarth's Director
of Education, Derek Picard slammed teachers for not drinking tea in their tea
breaks. Teachers at Hogwarth High School have called Picard a "waste of space"
and are demanding to know why such a trivial, pointless issue has taken up
important council time.
<Cut to bland office. Middle aged balding man is sat
at a desk. A caption saying "Derek Picard, Director of Education" is
shown. He speaks in a gruff, Yorkshire accent.>
- Derek:
- I mean... If these poncy, suvern teachers don't know what tea is, then
they shouldn't be in'th job. Tea is fur tea breaks. Nowt more. Nowt less.
- Alison:
- <Unseen> But surely there are more important things that the council
and teachers have to worry about than the beverage that the teachers are
drinking in their break times. Hogwarth has some of the worst school buildings
in the country, and some of the worst exam results in the region.
- Derek:
- True but if we t'improve the system, we've got t'look at the small
problems first. Start down at the roots like.
<Cut to outside school. Thirty year old Lynette is
standing. Caption proclaims her to be Bridget Keebie, Head of Hogwarth
High.>
- Alison:
- Bridget Keebie, head of Hogwarth High School, what do you make of Mr
Picard's comments.
- Bridget:
- I think it's a blatant piece of self promotion for Picard Tea, of which Mr
Picard is a major shareholder.
<Cut back to office>
- Alison:
- Some people have accused you of just trying to blatantly promote Picard
Tea, of which you are a major shareholder.
<Picard freezes momentarily.>
- Derek:
- Rubbish. Complete rubbish. <Muttered> Can you stop filming now.
<Back to outside offices>
- Alison:
- Whatever happens now, one thing is for sure - coffee drinkers aren't going
to be too keen on drinking coffee in tea breaks.
<Cut back to studio. Shot of the two presenters
together. David looks up suddenly. He looks startled and stares at the camera
with a powerful "I weren't up to owt mate" glare.>
- Lynette:
- Now its time to catch up with some Millennium People. Tonight, the
dustman.
<Cut to a view of some bloke getting out of
bed.>
- Dustman:
- <Voiceover> The day starts at around 4am, when I get out of bed.
<Cut to kitchen shot.>
- Dustman:
- I get up and have some breakfast before going down to the depot.
<Cut to view of depot>
- Dustman:
- There are six of us in the team: me, Briggsy, Smithy, Spenny. Thanny and
Marmaduke Rosemont III. We go out on rounds, emptying bins most of the
day.
<Cut to view of a café.>
- Dustman:
- Sometimes we stop off for a café.
<Cut to home.>
- Dustman:
- By the time I get home, I'm knackered and just want to go to bed. But it's
a good life is being dustman.
<Cut back to studio.>
- Lynette
- What a lucky man he is. Next week we in Millennium People, we take a look
at the life of the council worker who spends most of his time putting new
lamp-posts up. But now some of the regional news in brief.
- David:
- There have been severe traffic jams in Dullswitch following a tanker
spillage. Emergency services are currently cleaning up several tonnes of
vegetable oil.
- Lynette:
- Councillors in Fodton have voted to allow a fourteenth century bus shelter
to be sold off and dismantled and shipped to America.
<Cut to pic of rotting bus shelter.>
- Lynette:
- <Offscreen> The decision was taken despite an enormous protest from
local bus shelter lovers.
<Cut to picture of a steel girder bridge.>
- David:
- <Voice over> The Wearing Bridge has been recommended to be made a
listed building following a decision by English Heritage. The organisation is
looking at buying the bridge and opening a gift shop and 500 seat café
on it.
<Cut to some ferries>
- Lynette:
- Glexy Ferries are to expand the number of services on its routes in Glexy.
The move will lead to the creation of four new jobs in the company.
<Cut to picture of a dodgy looking roadside
café.>
- David:
- And its official - Battersby's Little Chef is the best in the country. The
Little Chef on the B12568 won the accolade despite immense competition from a
Little Chef on the A1(M) in Durham.
<A short burst of theme tune is played.>
- Lynette:
- Now its Tuesday, so as ever, its time for consumer issues in "Your Right
Or Mine", with Jenny Billabong.
<Cut to aerial shot which then zooms into Jenny who is
at right the other side of the huge desk, in between Lynette, the sports guy,
the 'What's On' presenter, the tea lady and some random stranger who walked in
by mistake.>
- Jenny:
- Good evening. Tonight on "Your Right Or Mine" we look at a disturbing case
of the potentially fatal door knockers, currently on sale in markets and
shops, across the region. The door knockers have the potential to render the
user unconscious if the user hits him or her self over the head with one. With
me in the studio is the managing director of Knicker's Knockers, Mr Ernest
Knicker.
<Cut to a shot of Mr Knicker sitting next to
Jenny>
- Jenny:
- Mr Knicker, with door knockers this fatal, do you really think you should
be selling them.
- Mr Knicker:
- Well to be blunt and honest here Jenny, I don't think that many people
will go around knocking themselves over the head with a door knocker.
Certainly in my fifty years manufacturing knockers, I have never come across
an incident like this.
- Jenny:
- But surely by selling a violent item like this, you are condoning violence
and encouraging people to knock themselves out?
- Mr Knicker:
- Well like I say, they are door knockers. The overwhelming majority, if not
all of the people who purchase these items do so to attach to their doors so
they can tell if someone is at the door.
- Jenny:
- So no withdrawal?
- Mr Knicker:
- I don't think so.
- Jenny:
- Mr Knicker, thank you. Back to you David.
<Cut to David who is drinking a from a cup. He puts on
a surprised grin, throws the cup over his shoulder.>
- David:
- Thanks Jenny. Err... <Scrabbles with script> Ah, now, if you'd seen
a giant hippopotamus, you might think you'd just had too many home made gins,
but not a couple in Justsam. Instead of drinking coffee to sober up, they
wrapped the hippopotamus in cling film and had it flown to Siberia. Jamus
Jones reports. <Slight pause.> Oh. Well I'm told we can't go to that
story owing to the fact that we did it last night. Err... In that case, lets
go over to our sports and house fire correspondent, Gordon Fogalsey, for the
latest sports news.
<Cut to Gordon>
- Gordon
- <Dull, boring, monotonous voice with lots of pauses.> Thank you
David. Well... Last night was a busy night... with all six of the... regions
football teams not playing. In rugby... league, there was added excitement in
the Wolves-Bashers match at Wickersby... when both... teams managed to loose
the ball... <Cut to picture of a pitch with lots of people just wandering
round aimlessly.> The two teams managed to play on after... a frantic
search... buttocks... revealed that the ball... could not be sound found. The
players continued by kicking an old lager can... thrown at one of the props
after ten minutes of searching. <Cut back to Gordon.> Now then...
drinking alcohol could... make you a worse... cricketer according... to latest
research from academics at Maddington University. Jamie Kwai reports.
<Cut to a view of a science lab and random views of
cricket.>
- Jamie:
- <Voiceover> The research team at Maddington University has spent the
last three years collating its information on the effects of alcohol on
sportsmen and women. The team, which was also behind the discovery that the
most efficient way to stack oranges is in a pyramid, started the research
after the team leader, Professor Conway Robertson, noticed that drunk
colleagues at a student-staff cricket match, seemed to have more difficulty in
throwing the ball straight.
<Cut to Conway Robertson, who is sat in a lab
surrounded by books and Bunsen burner, which is burning pointlessly.>
- Conway:
- We found that people who had had two pints of Theakston's Old Peculiar
were generally slower at throwing and catching a ball. By four pints, 45% of
the players were swerving as they threw the ball and failing completely to
catch it. By eight pints, most of the men were more interested in chatting up
the 67% of the women who were throwing up in the nearby toilet block, while by
eleven pints, 72% of the participants were asking for ambulances and stomach
pumps.
<Cut to view of some toilets.>
- Jamie:
- While critics have called the research a fragrant waste of time, the
research team have defended the research saying that it provided vital
information into the reaction of sportsmen and women with alcohol. Meanwhile,
in an unlinked event, students have been asked to avoid the university sports
centre's toilet and shower areas whilst a nasty smell is removed from the
area. This is Jamie Kwai, Newsquest in Maddington.
<Cut to view of sports bloke and Lynette
together.>
- Lynette:
- Well Gordon, it looks like there could be some surprising events on the
football pitch this weekend...
- Gordon:
- Could there?
- Lynette:
- Err.. The proposed mass streak at the Rovers match?
- Gordon:
- Oh yes. So surprising, I've known about it for six months...
<Cut to Lynette>
- Lynette:
- Err... Yes... Well... Here's the weather with Brendan Jones.
<Cut to Brendan at the Weather Desk.>
- Brendan:
- Thanks Lynette. Well its been a quite nice day today - especially on the
Adrian Hills near Maddington, where our weathercam was earlier.
<Cut to view of some hills.>
- Brendan:
- <Voiceover> With such good weather in prospect, its also not
surprising that Middleson Borough Council chose today to unveil its new snow
plough.
<Cut to snow plough.>
- Brendan:
- <Voiceover> The new snow plough <pause> is a Tripplemax
<big pause> Double Automatic <sound of an asthma inhaler being
used> Mega Plough 2000 <we hear someone tripping up over a wire and a
muffled expletive> capable of poughing up 2000 tonnes of snow a minute. Now
then, the weather looks quite changeable...
<Cut to weather map. We see Brendan stumbling in,
inhaler in hand>
- Brendan:
- ...over the next few days with some gusts off wind blowing in from the
south of the region. There will be some sunny patches in the north, but its
going to be mainly cloudy and dry. <Weather map changes> Now tomorrow is
a different tale, with stuff dropping down from the sky left right and centre
<the weather map falls down to the floor, revealing two people snogging
behind it - Brendan fails to notice and continues waving his hands over the
map.> as some heavy rain clouds sweep across the region. Temperatures, well
about <someone ushers the snogging couple off and holds up a small piece of
blue paper behind Brendan - a small amount of the map is displayed on the blue
paper and on the bloke's blue shirt.> thirteen or fourteen. Outlook for the
week, missley with some skity bits. David.
<Cut to David, who looks like he's sniffing something.
He looks up, very startled.>
- David:
- Brendan. Thank you. <Shuffles papers> Now then, last week we told
you about Dolly The Dog, the worlds first cloned dog. But how has she been
coping with being an identical clone? Our Animals and Food Correspondent,
Gladys Pugh is live at the kennels.
<Cut to the kennels.>
- Gladys:
- Thanks David! Well here she is! The pioneering dog herself! Hiya Dolly! So
Dolly, how do you feel.
- Dolly
- Wrouff.
- Gladys:
- Really? How lovely! Now joining me is Dolly's owner, Mark Stevens! Now
Mark, how's Dolly been?!?
- Mark:
- Not too bad. Trouble is every time she sees her mother, she thinks she's
looking in a mirror!
- Gladys:
- Haha! Well thanks for joining us and with that, we'll go back to the
studio!
<Cut back to shot of Lynette and David's empty
chair.>
- Lynette:
- Thanks for that Gladys. What a lovely tale, what do you think David?
<pause> David? <pause> Yes that's what I think too. Well that's
about for tonight, we'll be back the same tomorrow when we'll be looking at
the cat that when it wees, spells out holy messages. Until then, good
night.
<Lights fade, theme tune plays. You can just make out
Lynette having a huge argument with someone and storming off. The other people
sat at the desks just look on and shuffle paper...>