Archive Interview: Y10i006
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Speaker 1: | interviewerY10i006 |
Speaker 2: | informantY10i006a |
Age Group: | 21-30 |
Gender: | Male |
Residence: | Northumberland - Darras Hall, Ponteland |
Education: | Higher Education |
Occupation: | Project Manager |
Speaker 3: | informantY10i006b |
Age Group: | 21-30 |
Gender: | Male |
Residence: | Northumberland - Darras Hall, Ponteland |
Education: | Higher Education |
Occupation: | Recruitment Officer |
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Interview Transcript
Speaker 1: |
|
Speaker 2: |
My name is (NAME) (NAME) (NAME). |
Speaker 3: |
(NAME) (NAME) (NAME), nice to meet you |
Speaker 1: |
Good -- good to see you guys, good to see you |
Speaker 3: |
It is |
Speaker 1: |
em, how -- how about your ages, how old are you? |
Speaker 2: |
Oh I'm twenty three years old |
Speaker 3: |
Ah you? |
Speaker 2: |
Almost |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) I was going to say aye |
Speaker 2: |
Almost (pause) I'm going to generalise it as twenty three |
Speaker 3: |
You -- you started |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
OK, OK, I'm twenty two |
Speaker 1: |
Twenty two, almost twenty three or? |
Speaker 3: |
Almost twenty three yes, on the twentieth November, twenty three, better have some good presents lined up |
Speaker 2: |
All right, definitely have good presents. Well I'm twenty two merging into twenty three. However to be honest they're probably going to be hearing this presentation when I'm twenty three years old (pause) (interruption) that's what I'm thinking |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Yes, aye, aye |
Speaker 1: |
When -- when |
Speaker 2: |
Tenth of December, when does the coursework (interruption) get handed in? |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) George's is sooner than yours! |
Speaker 3: |
Yes it is, I know, I know, I say twenty two and he's lying |
Speaker 1: |
Um, where -- whereabouts do you live? |
Speaker 2: |
The famous Darras Hall |
Speaker 3: |
Aye, same |
Speaker 1: |
Where -- where is that? Is it (interruption) close |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) er, next to Newcastle Airport |
Speaker 2: |
It's renowned for several things -- we've got the Darras Hall rapist. It's (NAME) (NAME) or whatever his name is |
Speaker 3: |
Aye |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah he was er, he won the national lottery when he was in jail (pause) came out of jail (interruption) and bought a house in Darras Hall |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Yes it's true, it's true aye (pause) He came out of jail and he had his lottery winnings, so he moved to where we live (pause) we've got um footballers of Newcastle and Sunderland live there (pause) em |
Speaker 2: |
We've got Alan -- Alan Shearer lives round the corner, legend, the legend |
Speaker 1: |
Does he actually? |
Speaker 2: |
Aye, Peter Beardsley like as well, Peter Beardsley |
Speaker 3: |
My house is opposite er Leon Best's, while he's slowly recovering from his injury |
Speaker 2: |
I live on a street full of absolute gangsters (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
(NAME) lives with gangsters (interruption) not even lying |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Gangsters and drug dealers on my street |
Speaker 3: |
And drug dealers |
Speaker 2: |
We -- we have like the quaint household of the street. You know the nice friendly household |
Speaker 1: |
The nice one |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah then you've got the gangster, like the X5's driving past and you've got the Porsche Cayennes like |
Speaker 3: |
People who have done very well in dodgy business anyway living next door to (NAME) (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) Where -- Where were you born? 'Ah I was born in Lemmington, I just moved to Darras Hall with my dad' (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) No he didn't |
Speaker 2: |
Started shooting people, |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) No it does, it does have nicer residents though, it has got it's fair share of doctors and er |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah there's a few, there's a couple, friendly, (interruption) friendly characters |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) And er retired people |
Speaker 2: |
It used to be a nice little retirement town (interruption) Darras Hall |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) It did, it used to be very pleasant until er until it got awful |
Speaker 2: |
And everyone just knocks down all the bungalows, basically every plot of land in Darras Hall |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah absolutely |
Speaker 1: |
Is it quite a nice place though? |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Yeah aye |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Yeah it's really nice we've got a good selection of pubs, we've got like the pon, we've got the pon triangle of pubs |
Speaker 3: |
Yes |
Speaker 2: |
There's three pubs within a hundred metres of each other which is absolutely awesome (pause) so (interruption) you just have like |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) Pretty, it's a pretty good location? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah it is (pause) a good location |
Speaker 3: |
You can walk home from all of the pubs so |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) Exactly |
Speaker 3: |
Which is very helpful |
Speaker 2: |
Just do the general rounds and then amble home afterwards on a -- on a sturdy Friday night session |
Speaker 3: |
Yes |
Speaker 1: |
Ever er (pause) ever stumble into any of the -- the footballers? |
Speaker 2: |
Oh aye |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) try and wind him up |
Speaker 2: |
Just let him beat his lass instead of us (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) See if we can wind the Sunderland players up but er it tends not to work |
Speaker 2: |
Aye (pause) I talk to a couple of footballers now you don't really know what to say when you walk up (interruption) to one |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) No you don't |
Speaker 2: |
You think you've got something really you know you want to think of something different |
Speaker 3: |
Ah you played -- you played very well and they're like 'yeah I know the media and my manager told us (pause) the last thing I really need is your approval' |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) Aye, thank you very much 'The Sun Newspaper gave me a nine out of ten you just clearly gave me an eight there. How dare you? You know?' (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
The Sun Newspaper says that then I'm going to stand by a newspaper article |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah, yeah, thanks to this random guy who's walked to the back with a couple of pints, aye you did all right but y'knaa you could have finished another one |
Speaker 2: |
And then we're sat there trying to chat up the (interruption) like the |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) their birds |
Speaker 2: |
Aye their birds and stuff, (laughter) aye (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
Telling them that we're (unclear) but we're clearly not! (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
Hi I'm (NAME) (NAME) of Darras Hall you know trying to say that to (NAME) (NAME) of Newcastle like |
Speaker 1: |
Going after the footballer's entourage? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah exactly |
Speaker 1: |
Have you always lived there? |
Speaker 3: |
No, have you? |
Speaker 2: |
No I haven't always lived there I'm a Geordie |
Speaker 3: |
Aye, you used to live in em |
Speaker 2: |
No, no, no, Heddon On The Wall |
Speaker 3: |
Heddon On The Wall |
Speaker 2: |
Yes I used to live in (interruption) Heddon |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) You know where foot and mouth started? |
Speaker 2: |
I lived (pause) I lived in the origin of foot and mouth |
Speaker 3: |
He actually start (pause) well his farm next door, he didn't start (interruption) it himself |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Heddon On The Wall farm is where foot and mouth started it yeah |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Actually started it yeah |
Speaker 2: |
No it's Heddon On The Wall because the village was pretty much built on the Roman wall and the majority of the early houses there were built using the stones from the Roman Wall (pause) So we've got quite a depleted wall |
Speaker 3: |
Aye |
Speaker 2: |
It's where the school was so like that's how I met (NAME) over here and er (pause) good times |
Speaker 3: |
I used to live in er in Ilford Road, |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) Oh Yeah |
Speaker 2: |
Or one even that? Where are we West Jesmond? |
Speaker 3: |
Aye, it's one Metro stop up from here (pause) um but apparently according to my parents when she used to push us round in the buggy (pause) I used to have black snots from all the traffic and pollution so she decided it would be a safer place to move out to the country |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) That's such a mother thing to say isn't it (pause) (NAME) has been picking up |
Speaker 3: |
Aye, so er (pause) we got shifted |
Speaker 1: |
Moving out of the er the inner-city? |
Speaker 3: |
mm, hmm |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah Darras Hall's like a nice -- a nice blend between the two you've got the access to the city 'cause I mean a lot of big cities you go to, to get to a place like that you know it's (pause) you're going to have to drive for like an hour or something to get outside |
Speaker 3: |
Ah, it's ideal |
Speaker 1: |
Would you -- would you say there's much of a -- a community feel there (pause) or? |
Speaker 3: |
Yes (pause) (interruption) Yes there is, there is yeah |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) There is, ah I think there is, a spirit |
Speaker 3: |
We had a (pause) we went to school in the area as well so there was only about a five or ten minute walk (pause) em from my house, |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah |
Speaker 3: |
So most of the time it's quiet (pause) and everyone's really friendly and then occasionally it just erupts, but it erupts just horribly because everybody does know each other's business, so it's not like a town when you don't actually know who you bumped into, you actually know |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) You know what you're going to say to each other |
Speaker 1: |
mm-mm |
Speaker 2: |
You do get, you get the nice quaint little people who are there with like their (pause) we've got the Rotary Club |
Speaker 3: |
For the tape, (NAME)'s entered the room |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah hello (NAME) |
Speaker 3: |
Aye, putting the butter into the fridge |
Speaker 2: |
Good lass |
Speaker 3: |
And is leaving (interruption) (NAME) (pause) is the cake coming? |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Hope -- hope (pause) hope this will lead up to cake and custard when the cake comes |
Speaker 3: |
Anyway, where were we? |
Speaker 2: |
Yes sorry Yes you get like the (interruption) pleasant little |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) For the tape, (NAME)'s entered the room |
Speaker 2: |
You get the OAP's and everything like that (pause) you've got the Rotary Club they do their little charitable bit there's a lovely little church there |
Speaker 3: |
It has it's own news erm newsletter as well that goes out every month for all like the local community em (pause) rubbish and er th- that's happened over the last month is reported on, such as em (pause) such as |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah s- somebody damaged the park last weekend using the graffiti tag of (pause) like S dash something or other. It'd be like, ah dear God they're never going to catch the little kids |
Speaker 3: |
Aye, you'd never |
Speaker 2: |
But like it does sort of erupt from there what I said the eruptions that do happen in the middle of Ponteland, you've got like |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) they know -- they know who they are, but they know they're going to get away with it |
Speaker 2: |
They'll beat them to the ground and kick them to a pulp (pause) It's horrible to see this (pause) we stood out by a bar once in the middle of Ponteland |
Speaker 3: |
We saved someone once, um we saw someone getting -- getting beat up and er |
Speaker 2: |
There were about six (interruption) or seven kids around and the man he was on the deck |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) I had -- I had to ring the er ambulance and er direct the ambulance in |
Speaker 2: |
His head propped up against the side of the road, he's completely knocked out unconscious on the ground (pause) his face |
Speaker 3: |
But most of (interruption) the time |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) You know when we were sitting there OK. (NAME) had called the er ambulance right. I had his head propped up and even when we were doing that and the bloke was lying on the ground the charvers who were up the street you know causing all the bother, they were the ones that were sort of they were still standing shouting abuse at us for helping this bloke and was like the sec the police turned up knew who they were they couldn't do anything about it (pause) and we here |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah |
Speaker 3: |
But, overall, |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Definitely |
Speaker 3: |
But hmm aye, erm it does, it does sometimes erupt (laughter) But usually, aye back to this newsletter normally the biggest complaint is like there's no access to the er the disabled um trolleys (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) make a complaint to |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
Waitrose has removed it's extra disabled spot in the car park you know what I mean they'll be an uproar about that |
Speaker 1: |
(laughter) Yeah It'll be like front page news (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
Ah, absolutely, aye |
Speaker 1: |
D- Do you live there with your families both of you is it? |
Speaker 3: |
Yes |
Speaker 2: |
No I don't live with my family anymore, I moved out |
Speaker 1: |
It's a good opportunity for you isn't it? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah exactly |
Speaker 3: |
It was a great excuse for me as well, 'cause obviously I started university at the same time as (NAME) (pause) and um I just used to stay on your floor on -- on (interruption) Saturday nights |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) He'd just sleep on the floor |
Speaker 3: |
We both worked in -- in a local cafe |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah |
Speaker 2: |
Slash child's soft play area |
Speaker 3: |
Slash (interruption) child's soft play area |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) That doesn't sound great over that, (NAME) with a (interruption) cheeky burp on that (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Pardon, pardon, |
Speaker 2: |
We've just enjoyed a very nice Sunday dinner, I apologise to the radio listeners |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) But yeah we so what we used to do was em (pause) me and (NAME) both got like a little sort of a banter part-time job in a -- in a kids play area |
Speaker 2: |
One of our friends used to have a business er |
Speaker 3: |
We used to work every Sunday though and er (pause) I used to stay at (NAME)'s on a Saturday night and we used to go to Wiggle and literally |
Speaker 1: |
Where's this? |
Speaker 2: |
It's Northumbria University it's one of the (pause) yeah one of the big events |
Speaker 3: |
It's like the Saturday night events, it doesn't exist now, but um in our first year it did and er it's not a Saturday night now is it? Friday night now isn't it? |
Speaker 2: |
Saturday night (pause) I -- I don't -- don't even think that went on anymore but yeah we did on Saturday nights and so basically we used to turn up to work in just (interruption) a |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Struggle, struggle |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Yeah I know like (pause) because we knew all the customers there as well you know our bosses were like just pretend the boss is off had an early night and everything, because we knew the customers the customers would walk up and be like, '(NAME) do you want some chewing gum I can smell the red wine on your breath?' |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
Y'knaa I was like 'ah thank you very much!' you know and my hand's shaking while I'm making a cup of tea for them you know just slowly easing up to them. They're like ah it's all right |
Speaker 1: |
Just -- just keeping a low profile? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah the worst thing is in the child's soft play area as well |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Ah massively keep a low profile! You couldn't really keep a low profile for long |
Speaker 2: |
You -- you'd have a have a parent coming up to you as well because it's the child's soft play area as well (pause) my child's been sick and I'm like to be fair with the hangover that I've got I'd be like, 'girls where are you? come on get on it!' |
Speaker 3: |
We -- we did used to have an army of sixteen-year-old girls who we did (pause) somehow manage |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) We got team leader status because we were very good at delegating (laughter) you know |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah literally we'd work out what the problem was then and then suggest that other people sorted it and that used to |
Speaker 2: |
So Anything that would involve me losing |
Speaker 1: |
(laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
Mate you have like, you have the weirdest scenarios y'knaa like a little kid running up to you and they'll be like, 'I've had a poo (laughter) outside the toilet' and you'd be like right OK I go and get something (pause) now -- now where -- where is it you little child 'it's a secret!' and the little kid will run off |
Speaker 3: |
Honestly, honestly this is a true story |
Speaker 2: |
I'd be like oh my God I've got a massive kids soft play area this kid's just came up to me and told me he's had a cheeky poo |
Speaker 3: |
He told me he had er (pause) what did he say it was, it was, it was a secret y'knaa it was a (pause) (laughter) the secret poo that he'd had and um ran off (pause) and we had to search the whole place to find it (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
But you give it a good (pause) you give it your five minute search so it looks really good for health and safety officers |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) For the tape, (NAME)'s entered the room with three small cakes |
Speaker 2: |
Does custard come with the cake? |
Speaker 3: |
Thank you very much |
Speaker 2: |
Oh you'll have to, you'll have to chase up -- chase up (NAME) on that one |
Speaker 3: |
Chase the custard |
Speaker 2: |
Chase the custard (pause) spoon please |
Speaker 1: |
Um so would you say it -- would you say it was quite a, quite a stressful and high -- high demanding job working there? |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) absolutely not (pause) Yeah |
Speaker 3: |
It was as stressful as you made it and we didn't make it stressful at all, we used to have cups of tea all the time during it |
Speaker 2: |
The only difficulty was getting through the ten hour shift in one piece |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah, yeah, timing was difficult as well |
Speaker 2: |
Y'Knaa just talking to irritating customers that are (pause) like we -- we made it fun for ourselves. You got some really idiot customers I mean it's (pause) it was in a rough area this play area |
Speaker 1: |
mm-mm |
Speaker 2: |
Ok and the gate to get in you would push it the gate to get out you'd pull it towards you all right (pause) really, really simple stuff and then you'd get an idiot stand there trying to play with the gate unable to open it so we would say like (pause) you know paradox |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah 'if you could just push it towards you there' (laughter) people would be like 'ah right aye just push it towards us' and push it and it wouldn't go anywhere y'knaa |
Speaker 2: |
They're like (pause) they're like they can't understand the term push it towards you pull it away from you |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) You'd go just pull it away from you there and they'd be like pulling it |
Speaker 2: |
So it was basically just confusing the hell out of idiots that were there |
Speaker 3: |
For the record, this er this cake is delicious |
Speaker 2: |
Aye, very good (pause) It was good fun working there though |
Speaker 3: |
I got a girlfriend out of it as well so (interruption) y'knaa |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Yeah he got a girlfriend out of it |
Speaker 1: |
Every -- every cloud you know (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah exactly |
Speaker 1: |
Um (pause) so going back to er going back to your family and things, how about brothers and sisters do you have them, extended families and that or? |
Speaker 2: |
(NAME) has quite an (pause) (NAME) has an attractive sister |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) Right, for the tape, (NAME)'s sister is a model (interruption) right |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) No, no |
Speaker 3: |
And actually, n- not a lie she actually does model clothes |
Speaker 2: |
Why do people keep serving thick gravy Ok Sunday dinner gravy was in a cup (pause) we've got custard in a cup Ok it's going to go everywhere why can't I proper pour it? |
Speaker 2: |
Ok er back to the topic (interruption) at |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) back to (NAME)'s sister |
Speaker 2: |
Back to the topic of (NAME)'s sister right (pause) in a in a yeah I would basically |
Speaker 1: |
Do you just have one sister (pause) (NAME) or? |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) We do need a spoon (pause) yeah yeah I just have the one sister (pause) a bit of a nightmare, (interruption) she |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) He used to have a cat as well that em that was put down five or six years later than it probably should have been |
Speaker 2: |
Definitely not! (pause) He was a nice family cat for every day of my life |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) No, a chicken. A chicken that had already been eaten like the leftover of an eaten chicken |
Speaker 1: |
Q- Quite a strange looking family pet (pause) would you say? |
Speaker 2: |
No (pause) it was your normal cat (pause) it -- it was a perfectly normal cat (pause) OK you can't say ok that a cat won't look normal at the age of eighteen. It's like an old man that's |
Speaker 1: |
True, true |
Speaker 2: |
Y'Knaa so they're the kind of lines you want to go along y'knaa (pause) y'knaa your war veterans you can't imagine them picking up an AK47 these days and going back into battle |
Speaker 1: |
Probably right there |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah Yeah exactly so my cat had his day and (NAME) saw him in his more |
Speaker 3: |
In it's, in it's twilight years when rigor mortis had already kicked in. However, it was still classified as alive |
Speaker 2: |
Here for the record, I'm struggling with this cake (pause) I need a fork or a spoon |
Speaker 1: |
How about you (NAME), would you say you've got quite an extended family, globally, worldwide is that? |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah um my uncle lived in Dubai for a while which was very |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) Quite diverse yeah |
Speaker 3: |
Hopefully we'll be able to get some em some er cheaper sort of holidays lined up as well and -- (interruption) and get ourselves over there |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) Yeah, a few -- few places to stay |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah, yeah so you know if you want to make any bids for a place, (laughter) stay friends, |
Speaker 1: |
So you've been to Dubai then? |
Speaker 3: |
Yes, aye, aye it was just for about, I think it was nine days overall but absolutely brilliant yeah |
Speaker 1: |
Amazing |
Speaker 3: |
Absolutely brilliant aye, we did um (pause) we did the desert in Jeeps, we did em (interruption) snorkelling, sc- scuba diving |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) (NAME)'s first proper abroad holiday |
Speaker 3: |
And all of that sort of stuff yeah |
Speaker 1: |
Amazing |
Speaker 3: |
For the record, (NAME) is now in the room, eating custard as well |
Speaker 2: |
We don't want to hear her talk though so |
Speaker 3: |
Because that would ruin the interview |
Speaker 2: |
We're talking like extended family there? |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah we're just talking family and -- and your ties and stuff |
Speaker 3: |
Any -- any extended sort of family members? |
Speaker 2: |
My only family member that lives abroad I've got a cousin that lives out in Australia (pause) I went out to |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah basically you know |
Speaker 1: |
All like local, North East and stuff? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah I don't really have massive like (pause) some people have massive (unclear) where they have relatives all over the world and things like |
Speaker 3: |
But they wouldn't recognise him in the street |
Speaker 2: |
Exactly |
Speaker 3: |
So they're not really relatives |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah |
Speaker 2: |
Relatives are the ones that send you cards at Christmas |
Speaker 3: |
And (unclear) |
Speaker 1: |
How about your parents, what er (pause) what jobs do they do? |
Speaker 3: |
Em (pause) |
Speaker 1: |
Wow |
Speaker 3: |
So (laughter) now em, he teaches er three to six-year-olds badminton and cricket as well, yeah so em |
Speaker 1: |
Good for the -- good for the community? |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah ah Yeah well we fund it seeing as um the kids themselves seem to pay |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah you're doing a very (interruption) generous thing here |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Yeah thanks everyone |
Speaker 2: |
Your dad seems a lot happier for it |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah people who think that their kids get taught badminton an hour for a pound wonder how it's funded, now they know but then still complain that their kid didn't have enough attention and can't hit it very well |
Speaker 2: |
Maybe because he's about (pause) three stone over the top y'knaa or something like that |
Speaker 3: |
Probably because he's never ever been sporty in his life |
Speaker 2: |
Because (pause) after the sport the weight loss you've just fed him three cakes and a custard cream or something like that and you expect him to lose a bit of weight and it's not quite (interruption) happened |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Like Sunday dinner and then cake and then custard or something like that |
Speaker 1: |
How about -- how about your mum |
Speaker 2: |
(NAME)'s dad! |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) not for a long, long time (laughter) not that I've heard anyway, em she works in -- in insurance (pause) so she um it's -- it's IT, it's computer |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) Ah OK |
Speaker 3: |
So she yes she does wear the trousers in the relationship, in terms of what she earns and her -- her status in the family |
Speaker 2: |
Ah I got on well |
Speaker 1: |
How -- how about you (NAME)? |
Speaker 2: |
All right em my mam's like a housewife OK I'll just put -- put it as simple as it is, just -- just your -- your full on housewife just (interruption) all the charity |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) She's good at it though |
Speaker 2: |
Just all the charity work on the side as well y'knaa (pause) just so she feels like she's done a bit of a day's work, (interruption) my dad's like |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) She gets (unclear) places |
Speaker 2: |
My dad established himself as like er |
Speaker 1: |
Mmm |
Speaker 2: |
Er (pause) he was just like yeah if I'm going to have some kids I'll let the wife stay at home with them while I work all day long |
Speaker 1: |
Get her to put the dinner on the table then, when he comes back from work? |
Speaker 2: |
Oh aye absolutely yeah |
Speaker 3: |
Oh he's that type of bloke |
Speaker 2: |
Aye, he's retired now though er (pause) yeah he's a bit older than y'knaa your standard dad he's well (interruption) he decide |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Is he, how old is he now? |
Speaker 2: |
Sixty-two now |
Speaker 3: |
Is he? |
Speaker 2: |
Aye he's an old man, he doesn't look it like |
Speaker 3: |
He looks about fifty-six |
Speaker 2: |
No he doesn't look very old because he's been working all his life, he's like still pretty big and everything like he used to be a bouncer (interruption) when he was younger |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Oh aye, he's massive, |
Speaker 2: |
Sturdy bloke |
Speaker 3: |
He is a sturdy bloke, he's a lot bigger than my dad, he'd knock him straight out! |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) But aye er (pause) so yeah like he worked at the garage all of his life then I got offered the chance to like take over the garage as well but I was like still too young for it |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah, yeah |
Speaker 2: |
And like there were a load of trades on the down turn that just sell up and like and him and his brother owned the garage (pause) for like |
Speaker 1: |
Ah quite generational |
Speaker 2: |
Oh Yeah it's been a family business (interruption) for years |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Famous, famous the Barton's garages! |
Speaker 2: |
Aye, aye It's been around for years and years and years like |
Speaker 3: |
The Bartons like |
Speaker 2: |
Because my uncle used to be like a racing driver they used to race like Formula Two race for the first season of Formula (interruption) One |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) Really? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah but that was back in the days when teams used to be independent (pause) like before |
Speaker 1: |
Sure, yeah |
Speaker 2: |
Just too expensive but everyone used to turn up at the car garage and get their vehicles tuned up (pause) like they'd say ah if you've got an Andy Barton's engine in it y'knaa it'd be tuned up really fast |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah |
Speaker 2: |
Then obviously the motor trade just like down turned like y'knaa the late eighties early nineties and stuff (pause) and they just decided to sell up |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Aye he's got chickens, he calls them his girls! |
Speaker 1: |
Living -- living the good life? |
Speaker 2: |
Aye |
Speaker 3: |
They provide him with some nice organic eggs |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah the only stress now is if the -- the chickens haven't delivered enough eggs this week and so he can't |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah he likes the social club aye |
Speaker 2: |
Oh Audrey's not going to get her five eggs this week or half a dozen or however many she has or however she (interruption) can manage |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) There'll be hell to pay (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
Oh aye there'll be hell to pay like yeah |
Speaker 1: |
And er (pause) how did you two say you -- you know each other again, was it? |
Speaker 2: |
How did what? |
Speaker 1: |
How do you two know each other again? |
Speaker 3: |
er |
Speaker 2: |
School |
Speaker 3: |
From year nine at school, we went (pause) me and (NAME) went to different middle schools but we started in year nine which makes (pause) thirteen, twelve, thirteen sort of -- sort of time so (pause) I don't really don't think we were in the same class |
Speaker 2: |
Our pinpoint Art class |
Speaker 3: |
Was it? |
Speaker 2: |
I remember the banter we used to have in Art class (pause) like me and (NAME) like normally (pause) people are like if they got some coursework or some work to do they'd have like (pause) they'd either take it really seriously |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) You should take it seriously |
Speaker 2: |
Aye, you should take (interruption) it (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Take it, take it seriously, get a degree |
Speaker 2: |
But like take it seriously but enjoy yourself at the same time, so we would do what was required but have a laugh doing it as well so maybe we didn't come out with the best marks at the end but we (interruption) did what was required |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) I did, come out with the best marks aye, even amazing at drawing |
Speaker 2: |
We did what was required |
Speaker 1: |
Did the minimum to get by? (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah |
Speaker 3: |
No, no, no not necessarily the minimum to get by, just to the best of standards, we're both not artists so we didn't, we weren't too concerned |
Speaker 2: |
We weren't going to break a bone doing or pull a muscle doing it put it that way but y'knaa we did what was required if they happened to like it sometimes they did, sometimes they'd give us class marks and we didn't put the |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah, yeah |
Speaker 2: |
You get the people that put the maximum effort in (pause) but you know they don't necessarily do what the teacher asked |
Speaker 1: |
It's -- it's a good way to go about it isn't it, you have a laugh at the same time |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's like we just take everything (interruption) as a bit of a laugh |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) We used to er (pause) we used to sit in, we used to draw football um teams out as well and who's going to be and which of our friends is going to be playing here and here, we used to do it with one of the lads from cricket as well we used to put fielding |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah art was (pause) everyone takes art as the relaxing lesson |
Speaker 3: |
When people are really, really serious about it |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah well I was semi serious about it as well (pause) you do some coursework aye and you just turn up with a random bit of coursework and you're -- you're requested to do it and you'll do it in the morning before the class |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Yeah he did he did, he used to just draw a cat |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah just drew a cat |
Speaker 3: |
But -- but we realised we were interested in the same sort of things, like em just playing football, playing sports, same similar sort of banter like what you'd (interruption) have |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) I remember, I remember walking home (pause) like we used to walk home singing Toon songs |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah just banging on about Newcastle all the time? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah so yeah I'd hear the Newcastle chants like basically think the first Newcastle match I ever went to was on (NAME)'s birthday |
Speaker 3: |
It was -- it was my er (pause) fifteenth (interruption) was it fifteenth aye |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Yeah it was your fifteenth birthday (pause) It was great fun going to that |
Speaker 3: |
Yeah we had the game |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah |
Speaker 1: |
Fond memories? |
Speaker 3: |
Aye yeah |
Speaker 2: |
I remember like (pause) rapping on the way home (laughter) with burgers, we were both like (interruption) Eminem |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Massively into Eminem as (interruption) well |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) Eminem was a novelty to us |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah he swears and things man, he's a novelty this guy he's funny as hell |
Speaker 3: |
So we used to learn -- learn the songs and er rap them |
Speaker 1: |
(laughter) (pause) Looking back now, it doesn't seem to -- to wise? |
Speaker 3: |
Well, aye it -- it's -- it's interesting at the time, do you know what I (interruption) mean like |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) Yeah, yeah, yeah |
Speaker 3: |
It's not something that you can do now but when you're fifteen it is -- it is important like whether you know the latest Eminem lyric is important at fifteen whereas |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) No, well we weren't that bothered if we knew or we didn't we just enjoyed having a laugh about it |
Speaker 1: |
Yeah |
Speaker 2: |
You know there are some things that people take really, really seriously y'knaa, we (pause) we'll have a more of a laid back approach about aspects of life and stuff and y'knaa we'll have a very logical approach to everything as well |
Speaker 3: |
We used to harass our Science teachers as well about em whether they knew why something had happened and 'cause we used to learn about space a lot as well in Science |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) And when you're doing something like, when you're doing like Physics and things as well it's like GCSEs and then you're also doing Religious Studies y'knaa they contradict each other so much so, o- once you start going down those lines you're like Oh My |
Speaker 3: |
You can not the lessons themselves don't even don't even |
Speaker 2: |
Like, Like the majority of Physicists aren't even religious and then all of a sudden you go to a class where you've got a religious fanatic who doesn't know anything about Physics telling you about religion |
Speaker 3: |
Aye, you think which one's which? |
Speaker 2: |
And then you think well actually y'knaa it doesn't really make too much sense is like it's all down to education, y'knaa, shows you how powerful it is. Don't fear the man who knows all fear the man who doesn't know |
Speaker 1: |
But um (pause) yeah, yeah so like any -- any kind of embarrassing moments, f- funny stories from your -- your friendship together? |
Speaker 2: |
(laughter) Every, every single night every single night out, (laughter) we'll start with a funny story |
Speaker 1: |
Within -- within the constraints of the er the interview |
Speaker 2: |
There's a lot of funny stories in (unclear) just 'cause we're in (NAME)'s girlfriend's flat at the moment with all her friends having a bit of Sunday dinner today, but like it brings me like a couple of funny stories about things that we've done here, had here and like OK as an example a really snowy day at, it was just after (interruption) Christmas |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Ah right, right, right |
Speaker 2: |
Everybody though that (pause) ah (NAME) thought it was a dirty story coming up here didn't he |
Speaker 3: |
No, no it isn't a dirty story |
Speaker 2: |
Well erm basically |
Speaker 3: |
(laughter) We -- we were walking back after having a couple too many sherries er before Christmas |
Speaker 2: |
Festive (pause) that was after Christmas |
Speaker 3: |
Oh yeah it was after Christmas that's right, there was a there was a few trees er (pause) discarded in the street and we truly believed it was a nice thing to do to bring |
Speaker 2: |
Doesn't matter that they're brown they're still Christmas trees it it's all (interruption) that counts |
Speaker 1: |
(interruption) It's the gesture, the gesture |
Speaker 3: |
But we truly, truly in -- in the state that we were in thought it was nice of us to bring these trees back |
Speaker 2: |
And the trees are bigger than ourselves y'knaa, they were -- they were big trees, sturdy trees, we wouldn't take them |
Speaker 3: |
We lugged them about three quarters of a mile back to er |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah putting the effort in |
Speaker 1: |
Did you not get any -- any funny looks while you were, while you were moving them? |
Speaker 3: |
Oh aye loads of them |
Speaker 2: |
No, no, we just, we just saluted whoever like made a funny comment or gave us a funny look and just smiled at them just continued y'knaa, we just -- just doing our general wittery thing and basically we got to the bottom of the stairs in (NAME)'s house (pause) (NAME) opened the door to us and we're like, 'ah hello we've got presents, (interruption) as Christmas presents' |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) She's like 'No, no you can't -- can't bring those in, |
Speaker 2: |
She's just shaking her head at us (interruption) basically |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) We were like 'no honestly it's all right (pause) they're for you!' |
Speaker 2: |
And -- and (NAME)'s friends know exactly what we're like as well y'knaa, they know exactly what we're like and so they know if they shout at us and tell us no, we'll just do it the opposite. So they were like, they had they had to talk to us like children like, '(NAME), (NAME), it's OK we really don't want presents' and I was like, 'ah, no skin off my back it's all right' (pause) (interruption) as I'm dragging the tree |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) Aye, aye we'll take them, we'll take them up the stairs aye (laughter) |
Speaker 2: |
It's like -- it's like 'we don't -- don't want you to put your back out all right, I know it's a heavy tree look I'll carry it to the top of the stairs for you' and I'm lumping this big tree up the stairs there's splinters flying off it (interruption) everywhere, making such a mess |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) There was, there was such a (pause) covering the carpet |
Speaker 2: |
Tearing the wallpaper off, I was like 'I'm all right I can carry it up the stairs!' |
Speaker 3: |
I was like, '(NAME) come on we'll get them both in the living room it'll be like a jungle, (interruption) it'll be nice' |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) I'll set it up nice and sturdy OK, basically we're told to get out the house, (NAME) is making a (interruption) move (pause) |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) We're told -- we're told that we -- we had to take them outside straight away and (pause) they weren't welcome and we weren't welcome and then in the morning I had to do about an hour's worth of hoovering to get all the -- the pine needles off the stairs and (pause) it didn't seem as funny in the morning |
Speaker 2: |
No (pause) No that was the same night that the er taxi driver shouted at us for erm |
Speaker 3: |
Yes, we were |
Speaker 2: |
(interruption) As he's starting to realise, winds the window back up again (laughter) |
Speaker 3: |
And the window was literally coming back up to us, honestly there was about that much left and it -- it went through clean as you like all over the dashboard, so we -- we departed |
Speaker 1: |
Probably -- probably didn't go down too well with the taxi driver? |
Speaker 2: |
Yeah But when you're in a festive mood (interruption) as well |
Speaker 3: |
(interruption) It was a festive mood! |
Speaker 2: |
It's -- it's all about the spirit you know, the spirit of it yeah. They weren't ice balls (unclear) |
Speaker 3: |
It was just -- it was just nice, nice (pause) you got out your powdery snow |
Speaker 2: |
It's a kind of one where your grandparents would say, 'ah back in the day we did that all the time' y'knaa, your grandparents did it back in the day then surely it's fine |
Speaker 1: |
It's all right to do isn't it? Indeed, indeed um yeah moving away from er the more humorous -- humorous moments um are you both -- both still studying is that right? |
Speaker 3: |
Well, con sort of continually studying, I've just er, we've just passed the part of my, part of the course on my job now because obviously since I've started working -- working in recruitment now, that they've got their own exams and their own sort of em (pause) certificates that you have to have so, since joining there they've put me instantly into another sort |
Using the Interview Interface
- On the left-hand side of the page are the audio player panel [1] and the interview transcript panel [2]. To scroll through the text, use the scroll bar on the right-hand side of the transcript panel.
- The speaker panels on the right [3] provide background details for the interview participants. The colour of the panel corresponds to the colour of that speaker's utterances in the transcript.
- The audio and transcript text are linked in 20 second segments. Click anywhere in the transcript to start playback from that 20 second segment (the audio may take a few moments to buffer).
- Alternatively, you can click the play button (>) in the audio panel to start the interview from the beginning and then click on the audio time-line to jump to that part of the recording and transcription.
- You can also fast forward (>>) and rewind (<<) the audio. It will jump 20 seconds with each click of the buttons.
- Select a theme from the panel on the right-hand side of the page [4] to highlight related key words in the transcript. The transcript will jump to the first relevant key word in the text. Scroll down through the transcript to see further highlighted words.
- Note 1: To preserve anonymity, personal names have been removed. They are replaced by "(NAME)" in the text, and silence in the audio. For the same reason, some references to places have also been removed, replaced by "(PLACE)" in the text.
- Note 2: Obscenities are blanked out in the text, and the 20 second segment of audio that contains them will not play. If the audio stops for this reason, click the fast forward button (>>) to resume playback with the next 20 second segment of audio.