Not Going Out (2006) s08e05 Episode Script
Charlie
1 We're not going out Not staying in Just hanging around with my head in a spin But there is no need to scream and shout We're not going out We are not going out.
Charlie's got his school report.
It's brilliant.
Shouldn't I be the one getting the kiss? We're switching things around this year.
You get put in a box and stored in the attic.
With the others(!) A.
A.
A.
He's got the Scouse hat trick.
Hang on, what's this? "Miss Anstis, English, C.
" We don't want all As, do we? We don't want to have to start doing a paternity test.
"Despite reasonable grades, "I am concerned that Charlie is in danger of becoming the class clown.
" Oh, ignore her.
Miss Anstis is a bit uptight.
We need to go and see her, find out what Charlie has been up to.
We? Schooling is usually my thing, like getting rid of spiders and keeping the kids alive.
I get involved in school stuff.
I helped raise money with that cake stall.
Helping is baking and selling, not buying and eating.
- I'm not kidding, Lucy.
- OK, fine.
We'll go and pick up Charlie together tomorrow and go and see Miss Anstis, but I'm telling you now he's absolutely fine.
Tell me that when he's living under a bridge sniffing glue.
I just about tolerate those Haircut 100 albums, but will you please update your drug references? I missed those little toilets.
Oh, bring back memories of school days? No, I mean literally missed them.
It went everywhere.
Yeah, all right! Have you tried to pee and crouch at the same time? Yeah.
I wonder what that must be like(!) Mum, I'm just going to see Izzy.
That's sweet.
Yeah, and yet when I do that to women Right, come on, we need to get to Florence Nightingale.
The classrooms - they're all named after British historical figures.
What happened to classrooms having numbers, and canes, and little piles of sawdust covering up sick? Well, things have changed, which you'd have noticed if you were a bit more involved in school life.
I am involved.
Excuse me, I'm looking for my son's teacher, Miss Anstis.
I am Miss Anstis.
Sorry, didn't recognise you without your cakes.
- Wait here.
No messing about.
- OK.
- I was talking to Charlie.
- Right.
I knew we shouldn't have touched that bottle that said "drink me".
So, er, Charlie's school report? I'm afraid Charlie does have a tendency to draw attention to himself.
Today, for example, he disrupted lessons by coughing.
Coughing? She means on purpose, Lucy.
It's a classroom classic.
They were doing that back in my day.
Back in your day they probably had TB.
Charlie was trying to make the class laugh.
He does that sort of thing a lot.
Do you know what he called me last week instead of Miss Anstis? Miss Ant's Tits? No.
He called me Morag.
- Well, that's not nice.
- That's my name.
Obviously he found out and decided to say it for silly, comic effect, and I think it's disrespectful.
Course it is, and just now when I said ant's tits.
Just because your name sounds like - Not saying you've got, you know - Fingers on lips.
I've tried to explain to Charlie that it'll be him that suffers in the long run.
Course it will, Miss AnSTIS.
For instance, we're about to be visited by the children's author Johnny Lucas for a storytelling contest.
Each class selects a child to read a story.
The winning school gets £1,000 worth of books and the winning child gets a trip to Legoland.
I was considering Charlie to read for our class.
Oh, that's great.
As I say WAS.
I'm afraid Charlie's story just went for cheap laughs and was entirely inappropriate.
Perhaps I should read a little bit to you.
I must warn you, the language is very vivid and you may deem it unsuitable for a child.
Oh, well, at least he's written a warning.
"'Hooray, ' cried the little boy, "as the witch was bludgeoned to death when the woodsman smashed up "her stupid, ugly, smelly face that looked like a cow's bum.
" "Bludgeoned.
" That's a good word.
"Then the little boy took the woodsman's axe and chopped "the stupid witch's stinky, old, fat, blobby body up "and put her in the pot of boiling water.
" I blame Heston Blumenthal.
"One by one he threw the bleeding body parts into the cauldron.
" Cauldron spelled with two Os.
"First he threw in her fat arms, "then he threw in her horrible hairy legs, then he threw in her "stinky, slimy intestines, "and her massively monstrous butt cheeks.
"Then, finally, he threw in "her foo-foo.
" How many Os in foo-foo? OK, look, so his story was a bit rough around the edges, but he's seven.
He's not TS Eliot.
I know he's not.
I'm not an idiot.
No-one expects him to be as good as her.
Didn't you hear it? Chopping up her gizzards and cutting off her legs? Who cares? She's a witch.
It's not like he kidnapped the local choirgirl, put cigarettes out on her arms, then buried her in a shallow grave.
Where does Charlie get his dark side from? Look, are you bothered that he's trying to be the class clown? What about the, you know, foo-foo? OK, maybe that was a bit silly, but it's our fault for teaching him such childish words.
Yeah, let's teach him some adult terms for it, then he can start doing stag dos(!) Half the world's got one, Lee.
Why is society so scared of it when we talk about it? The problem is we live in a patriarchal society.
- Bollocks.
- See? You don't mind mentioning those.
A Nancy? You are a doctor and you call it a Nancy? It's my parents' fault.
They were a bit Victorian in their attitudes.
As far as they were concerned, it was called a Nancy.
It was a terrible thing full of teeth and monsters.
Still, at least I was prepared when I met Anna.
Bet you never mucked about at school, did you? Oh, I wouldn't have dared.
It was a boarding school.
Cold showers and ritual beatings.
Yeah, but look where it got you.
Yeah, married to Anna - cold showers and ritual beatings.
I mean, you've got a really good job.
I bet your Jack toes the line.
He'll end up doing a really important job, like Prime Minister or TV weatherman.
You've got quite a limited idea of important jobs, haven't you? Stop worrying.
What's so wrong about being a bit of a class clown? Because I don't want him to end up like Well, like me.
I thought you were proud of your background? School of hard knocks.
Ferret and dripping for breakfast.
O-levels in greyhound management.
I didn't get any O-levels, actually.
Whilst you were off to your fancy university, hobnobbing with the toffs, I went to work in a biscuit factory.
Well, you were sort of hobnobbing.
Look, why don't you sit down with Lucy and tell her in a calm and sensible way that you're worried that Charlie might end up like you? As soon as she imagines that apocalyptic scenario, she'll have to see sense.
So what did you call a Nancy when you were growing up? Well, I don't know about your other O-levels, but I can see why you failed biology.
What's in the box? I've been up in the attic to get some of my old school reports.
Can you come and sit next to me for a minute? Why, is there a spider in there? This is the report I got when I was Charlie's age.
Read the summary on the final page.
"Sooner or later Lee will learn that joking around will get him nowhere.
" So? We all went through a cheeky phase at school.
I sometimes used to use a blue pen instead of a black one.
And this was two years later.
"Lee is a mediocre student with a mediocre future.
"I look forward to the day when his unamusing antics are "a burden to someone else.
" And this was when I was 15.
- This isn't a school report.
- Exactly.
It's my clocking-in card from the biscuit factory.
I wondered why it had jam on it.
That's not jam.
It's blood, from the wearing down of me fingers as I toiled for hours on a very tiny wage, in the brutal, harsh conditions of a Northern factory.
- It's jam, isn't it? - Yes, it's jam, but the point is I'd ruined any chance of a future all by the age of 15, just by mucking around and I do NO want that to happen to Charlie.
No.
Oh, maybe you're right.
I think we should sit down and talk to him.
OK.
Charlie is always saying, "When I grow up I want to be like me dad.
" And I've told him, "Sorry, son, you can't do both.
" You're not in trouble, Charlie.
Course not.
We just want to know why you're being silly at school.
Cos you're bored in class? Is it because you like being funny? When she said class clown I didn't realise she meant Marcel Marceau.
Maybe you're mucking about because you want someone in particular to like you? Izzy, maybe? Mucking about is not how you impress girls, Charlie.
Trust me.
You don't want to end up like like a boy that was at my school.
He was the class joker, until he got suspended.
- Suspended? - What did he do? Yeah, what did he do? Well, this boy was in science class and he was supposed to do a big presentation about flammable gases.
But instead of just reading out what he was supposed to read, he decided to muck about and do a sort of practical experiment.
What do you mean? Well, it just so happens he had a Zippo lighter and a bellyful of baked beans.
He lit his fart! That's SOOO cool! No, Charlie, it is not cool, especially given what happened.
What? Put it this way, there was more solid than gas.
Urgh! - Not cool.
- Exactly.
The point is, this kid, he had a lot of potential.
He could have done so many things, but instead he ended up ruining his life and his trousers.
I'm sorry that happened to you, Dad.
What? I'm not talking about me.
It wasn't me.
Dad, I'm seven.
I'm not a moron.
You don't have to be embarrassed - just because you pooed your pants.
- Please stop talking.
The point is, there are other ways to impress girls, like being chosen to read a story to a famous author.
Look, we just want you to be happy, son, because we love you.
OK, Dad, from now on I'm going to do my best to be good.
Good lad, Charlie.
We've been married for quite a few years now, but what you did just then, what you told Charlie is the most disgusting thing I've ever heard! I was hoping to catch you.
I'm not sure what it is you said to Charlie, but over the last few days he's shown a marked improvement in his behaviour.
I even insisted he write a brand-new story, and I'm pleased to inform you that it contains no unnecessary language, or female genitalia.
Oh, well, there goes the Channel 4 deal.
In fact, as a reward for such a turnaround in his behaviour, I've selected Charlie as class representative to read to our visiting author.
Oh, my God! That's fantastic! Isabella Jenkins, young ladies do not lick boys' faces.
Yeah.
Get him to buy you a drink first.
Izzy has got a new friend, Jake McKenzie.
She thinks I'm boring now.
Well, she's not going to think that when she sees you on that stage reading a story to Johnny Lucas, is she? The new story isn't as funny as the other one.
I'm sure it's brilliant.
- In fact, why don't you read it to us now? - Yeah, good idea.
It'll be like a rehearsal for the big day.
"Once upon a time there was a little boy who met a witch and the "witch was very naughty, even though she knew it was wrong to be naughty.
"The little boy was very good and always helped his mother with "the dishes, never ate sweets or watched violent cartoons.
"One day the boy was walking through the woods "so the witch was told that for hygiene reasons she must "always wash her hands thoroughly, especially after using the bathroom, "so she washed them and also made sure not to splash water "on the floor when she dried her hands "and the witch and the woodsman got married and lived in the cottage "and she promised to never be naughty ever again "and they lived happily ever after.
The end.
" I said, "The end.
" Oh, what a fantastic story, son.
You don't think it's a bit boring? No.
- Izzy is going to think you are so cool.
- OK, if you say so.
Right, who wants to watch YouTube videos of old people falling down escalators? No, it's OK.
I'm going to tidy my room.
Oh, he's probably just a bit tired.
Funnily enough, I'm not.
Must have been that refreshing ten-minute nap I had during that story.
- Hello? - 'Where the hell are you?' - His reading starts in about ten minutes.
- Anna's stuck in traffic.
What do you want me to do, leave our five-year-old twins on their own? No, Lee, that was a rhetorical question.
- How's Charlie? - Moping around like Morrissey on Mogadon.
Look, I'll get there as soon as I can, OK? Bye.
The twins let me in.
I could have been anyone.
I could have been an axe murderer.
You still might.
Don't give up the dream.
Oh, Anna, look at this.
Lee wrote it when we first started going out properly.
"Roses are red, violets are purples, "If I give you a quid will you show me your nurples?" What are nurples? You've got two of them.
En-suite bathrooms? Lee is so hard on himself, and on Charlie, but you know what? It was Lee's joking around all the time that made me like him in the first place.
Well, I didn't think it was his good looks, or his job or his taste in clothes or his breath.
This is no fun if you don't join in.
I've got to go.
Thanks, Anna.
So immature.
Show starts in five minutes.
Just because this is extra-curriculum doesn't mean that I'll tolerate tardiness.
Is my story really good, Dad? Course it is, son.
You're going to take the roof off.
Like grandad did to that church when he got in trouble with the police? Good luck, son.
Oops, busted.
Want one? No, I'm all right, thanks.
Never my thing.
I used to have a much more disgusting habit as a teenager but I'm down to ten-a-day now.
Johnny.
Johnny Lucas.
Oh, right.
The author.
You looking forward to judging what the kids have written? Honestly? Not really, no.
No, these kids' stories are always so bloody boring.
Sometimes I think some of these teachers are just knocking all the fun out of them, you know? It's like the kids have lost the art of just being silly.
Yeah, but being silly doesn't get you anywhere, does it? Well, I don't know.
It's all I've ever done, muck around, write silly stories.
Not done me any harm.
Even got me this - a key to a Bentley Continental.
Should write another book.
You might get the actual car.
Oh, gotta go.
Old Morag looks like a right ball-breaker, eh? Oh, thank God.
I've been thinking about Charlie.
Me too.
- Being silly, it's not all bad, is it? - No.
It's what attracted me to you in the first place, you know, the daft jokes.
- Not the good looks and the charm, then? - See, that kind of thing.
Will all parents please take their seats now? - Come on, then.
Let's get this over with.
- Hang on.
Our baby boy is about to go on stage and tell the most boring story since your mum thought she had shingles but it turned out to be the wicker chair.
So, what can we do? I know.
If you're using the toilets again would you please be more careful this time? Our caretaker was mopping for hours! Mate, I'm looking for a classroom called, um Oh, what's it called? You know, woman, nice to soldiers.
I want to say Joanna Lumley.
Oh, forget it.
Right, now, this is storytelling, and I want you to bring these stories to life, and you are the audience.
So if you want to laugh, laugh.
If you want to cry, cry.
And, remember, one lucky little brat is going to get a free trip to Legoland, and that's not fair on the rest of you, is it, yeah? So if you don't like it, give 'em hell, yeah? Just kidding, you know.
Just, er, let's try and keep it fairly sensible.
Now, before we start, who'd like to hear a poem about poo? Yeah! Oh, God.
"'Zap, zap' went the alien warship, "as the space captain steered through the astro-belt.
"Would the alien fleet capture this heroic spaceman, "torture him and kill him?" We can but hope.
Jake McKenzie? "Trapped in quicksand.
Quick, grab that vine.
" (Charlie.
Charlie.
) Indoor voices! Where did you get that? I just found it in your desk.
Look, what if I Tippex over the foo-foo? My boy is about to walk out there and humiliate himself by telling a really, really boring story.
Charlie's a good kid.
OK, sometimes he's a bit silly, but that's not always a bad thing.
Don't let him walk on that stage and make a fool of himself.
Please, I am begging you.
I hope Ofsted downgrade you to "satisfactory".
Now, next up we have Florence Nightingale class and it's Charlie.
"Once upon a time there was a little boy who met a witch and the witch "was very naughty, even though she knew it was wrong to be naughty.
" Boo! Sorry.
"The little boy was very good, and always helped his mother with "the dishes, and never ate sweets or watched violent cartoons.
" Boring! "One day the boy was walking through the woods and he met a woodsman.
" "And the woodsman told the boy all about endangered wildlife "and about how certain flowers have gone extinct "and that people should start putting their litter in the bin.
" Get off! Right, that's it.
"They asked the witch if she wanted to be their friend "so they shouted over to the witch and said" Hello, witchy, you manky grotbag of pig's wee! What are you doing here? What are you doing here, "Woodsman"? What are you doing here, Woodsman? Don't you remember? The witch was full of useful advice.
She said it's important to be a good little boy, but it's also important to be yourself and have a sense of humour.
And the little boy thought, "Yes, the witch is right," and so he asked his daddy to come on stage and cause trouble at the book reading the boy was doing at his school.
(Finally, a bit of theatre.
) And the dad said, "No chance.
"I'm not getting on stage and making a fool of myself, "just so you can win a trip to Legoland ".
.
and there's nothing you can do about it "even if you do know a witch with magical powers.
" Oh.
And so the wicked witch waved her wand and said to the woodsman, "You're totally under my power.
" "Oh, no," said the woodsman, "I hope you're not going to make me do anything stupid.
" And then the wicked witch cast a spell on the woodsman and suddenly he was hopping about on one leg which the woodsman found easy.
Not so easy when the witch made his trousers fall down.
Then the wicked, evil witch cast another spell and suddenly the woodsman was doing an impression of a chicken.
And the woodsman reminded the boy that he had an axe so not to push it.
And then the witch made the woodsman set fire to his fart.
Now this I've got see.
Ah, yes, but unfortunately the woodsman had nothing to use as a flame, so that idea was immediately abandoned.
Here you go, woodsman.
Oh, God! I think you may have just won yourself £1,000 worth of library books.
Bravo! More! No.
Well, that was certainly a memorable performance, especially for Jake in the front row.
I think you singed the poor boy's eyebrows.
Are you still sulking? I can't believe that Charlie is taking Izzy to Legoland and not me.
I helped him win, at the risk of blowing my own trumpet.
Still, they all lived happily ever after.
The end.
Well done.
It's important that he listens to his teachers, but we have to make sure we also don't forget he's a normal seven-year-old.
Exactly, and we have to let him act like one.
Can you smell matches? - Charlie! - Charlie!
Charlie's got his school report.
It's brilliant.
Shouldn't I be the one getting the kiss? We're switching things around this year.
You get put in a box and stored in the attic.
With the others(!) A.
A.
A.
He's got the Scouse hat trick.
Hang on, what's this? "Miss Anstis, English, C.
" We don't want all As, do we? We don't want to have to start doing a paternity test.
"Despite reasonable grades, "I am concerned that Charlie is in danger of becoming the class clown.
" Oh, ignore her.
Miss Anstis is a bit uptight.
We need to go and see her, find out what Charlie has been up to.
We? Schooling is usually my thing, like getting rid of spiders and keeping the kids alive.
I get involved in school stuff.
I helped raise money with that cake stall.
Helping is baking and selling, not buying and eating.
- I'm not kidding, Lucy.
- OK, fine.
We'll go and pick up Charlie together tomorrow and go and see Miss Anstis, but I'm telling you now he's absolutely fine.
Tell me that when he's living under a bridge sniffing glue.
I just about tolerate those Haircut 100 albums, but will you please update your drug references? I missed those little toilets.
Oh, bring back memories of school days? No, I mean literally missed them.
It went everywhere.
Yeah, all right! Have you tried to pee and crouch at the same time? Yeah.
I wonder what that must be like(!) Mum, I'm just going to see Izzy.
That's sweet.
Yeah, and yet when I do that to women Right, come on, we need to get to Florence Nightingale.
The classrooms - they're all named after British historical figures.
What happened to classrooms having numbers, and canes, and little piles of sawdust covering up sick? Well, things have changed, which you'd have noticed if you were a bit more involved in school life.
I am involved.
Excuse me, I'm looking for my son's teacher, Miss Anstis.
I am Miss Anstis.
Sorry, didn't recognise you without your cakes.
- Wait here.
No messing about.
- OK.
- I was talking to Charlie.
- Right.
I knew we shouldn't have touched that bottle that said "drink me".
So, er, Charlie's school report? I'm afraid Charlie does have a tendency to draw attention to himself.
Today, for example, he disrupted lessons by coughing.
Coughing? She means on purpose, Lucy.
It's a classroom classic.
They were doing that back in my day.
Back in your day they probably had TB.
Charlie was trying to make the class laugh.
He does that sort of thing a lot.
Do you know what he called me last week instead of Miss Anstis? Miss Ant's Tits? No.
He called me Morag.
- Well, that's not nice.
- That's my name.
Obviously he found out and decided to say it for silly, comic effect, and I think it's disrespectful.
Course it is, and just now when I said ant's tits.
Just because your name sounds like - Not saying you've got, you know - Fingers on lips.
I've tried to explain to Charlie that it'll be him that suffers in the long run.
Course it will, Miss AnSTIS.
For instance, we're about to be visited by the children's author Johnny Lucas for a storytelling contest.
Each class selects a child to read a story.
The winning school gets £1,000 worth of books and the winning child gets a trip to Legoland.
I was considering Charlie to read for our class.
Oh, that's great.
As I say WAS.
I'm afraid Charlie's story just went for cheap laughs and was entirely inappropriate.
Perhaps I should read a little bit to you.
I must warn you, the language is very vivid and you may deem it unsuitable for a child.
Oh, well, at least he's written a warning.
"'Hooray, ' cried the little boy, "as the witch was bludgeoned to death when the woodsman smashed up "her stupid, ugly, smelly face that looked like a cow's bum.
" "Bludgeoned.
" That's a good word.
"Then the little boy took the woodsman's axe and chopped "the stupid witch's stinky, old, fat, blobby body up "and put her in the pot of boiling water.
" I blame Heston Blumenthal.
"One by one he threw the bleeding body parts into the cauldron.
" Cauldron spelled with two Os.
"First he threw in her fat arms, "then he threw in her horrible hairy legs, then he threw in her "stinky, slimy intestines, "and her massively monstrous butt cheeks.
"Then, finally, he threw in "her foo-foo.
" How many Os in foo-foo? OK, look, so his story was a bit rough around the edges, but he's seven.
He's not TS Eliot.
I know he's not.
I'm not an idiot.
No-one expects him to be as good as her.
Didn't you hear it? Chopping up her gizzards and cutting off her legs? Who cares? She's a witch.
It's not like he kidnapped the local choirgirl, put cigarettes out on her arms, then buried her in a shallow grave.
Where does Charlie get his dark side from? Look, are you bothered that he's trying to be the class clown? What about the, you know, foo-foo? OK, maybe that was a bit silly, but it's our fault for teaching him such childish words.
Yeah, let's teach him some adult terms for it, then he can start doing stag dos(!) Half the world's got one, Lee.
Why is society so scared of it when we talk about it? The problem is we live in a patriarchal society.
- Bollocks.
- See? You don't mind mentioning those.
A Nancy? You are a doctor and you call it a Nancy? It's my parents' fault.
They were a bit Victorian in their attitudes.
As far as they were concerned, it was called a Nancy.
It was a terrible thing full of teeth and monsters.
Still, at least I was prepared when I met Anna.
Bet you never mucked about at school, did you? Oh, I wouldn't have dared.
It was a boarding school.
Cold showers and ritual beatings.
Yeah, but look where it got you.
Yeah, married to Anna - cold showers and ritual beatings.
I mean, you've got a really good job.
I bet your Jack toes the line.
He'll end up doing a really important job, like Prime Minister or TV weatherman.
You've got quite a limited idea of important jobs, haven't you? Stop worrying.
What's so wrong about being a bit of a class clown? Because I don't want him to end up like Well, like me.
I thought you were proud of your background? School of hard knocks.
Ferret and dripping for breakfast.
O-levels in greyhound management.
I didn't get any O-levels, actually.
Whilst you were off to your fancy university, hobnobbing with the toffs, I went to work in a biscuit factory.
Well, you were sort of hobnobbing.
Look, why don't you sit down with Lucy and tell her in a calm and sensible way that you're worried that Charlie might end up like you? As soon as she imagines that apocalyptic scenario, she'll have to see sense.
So what did you call a Nancy when you were growing up? Well, I don't know about your other O-levels, but I can see why you failed biology.
What's in the box? I've been up in the attic to get some of my old school reports.
Can you come and sit next to me for a minute? Why, is there a spider in there? This is the report I got when I was Charlie's age.
Read the summary on the final page.
"Sooner or later Lee will learn that joking around will get him nowhere.
" So? We all went through a cheeky phase at school.
I sometimes used to use a blue pen instead of a black one.
And this was two years later.
"Lee is a mediocre student with a mediocre future.
"I look forward to the day when his unamusing antics are "a burden to someone else.
" And this was when I was 15.
- This isn't a school report.
- Exactly.
It's my clocking-in card from the biscuit factory.
I wondered why it had jam on it.
That's not jam.
It's blood, from the wearing down of me fingers as I toiled for hours on a very tiny wage, in the brutal, harsh conditions of a Northern factory.
- It's jam, isn't it? - Yes, it's jam, but the point is I'd ruined any chance of a future all by the age of 15, just by mucking around and I do NO want that to happen to Charlie.
No.
Oh, maybe you're right.
I think we should sit down and talk to him.
OK.
Charlie is always saying, "When I grow up I want to be like me dad.
" And I've told him, "Sorry, son, you can't do both.
" You're not in trouble, Charlie.
Course not.
We just want to know why you're being silly at school.
Cos you're bored in class? Is it because you like being funny? When she said class clown I didn't realise she meant Marcel Marceau.
Maybe you're mucking about because you want someone in particular to like you? Izzy, maybe? Mucking about is not how you impress girls, Charlie.
Trust me.
You don't want to end up like like a boy that was at my school.
He was the class joker, until he got suspended.
- Suspended? - What did he do? Yeah, what did he do? Well, this boy was in science class and he was supposed to do a big presentation about flammable gases.
But instead of just reading out what he was supposed to read, he decided to muck about and do a sort of practical experiment.
What do you mean? Well, it just so happens he had a Zippo lighter and a bellyful of baked beans.
He lit his fart! That's SOOO cool! No, Charlie, it is not cool, especially given what happened.
What? Put it this way, there was more solid than gas.
Urgh! - Not cool.
- Exactly.
The point is, this kid, he had a lot of potential.
He could have done so many things, but instead he ended up ruining his life and his trousers.
I'm sorry that happened to you, Dad.
What? I'm not talking about me.
It wasn't me.
Dad, I'm seven.
I'm not a moron.
You don't have to be embarrassed - just because you pooed your pants.
- Please stop talking.
The point is, there are other ways to impress girls, like being chosen to read a story to a famous author.
Look, we just want you to be happy, son, because we love you.
OK, Dad, from now on I'm going to do my best to be good.
Good lad, Charlie.
We've been married for quite a few years now, but what you did just then, what you told Charlie is the most disgusting thing I've ever heard! I was hoping to catch you.
I'm not sure what it is you said to Charlie, but over the last few days he's shown a marked improvement in his behaviour.
I even insisted he write a brand-new story, and I'm pleased to inform you that it contains no unnecessary language, or female genitalia.
Oh, well, there goes the Channel 4 deal.
In fact, as a reward for such a turnaround in his behaviour, I've selected Charlie as class representative to read to our visiting author.
Oh, my God! That's fantastic! Isabella Jenkins, young ladies do not lick boys' faces.
Yeah.
Get him to buy you a drink first.
Izzy has got a new friend, Jake McKenzie.
She thinks I'm boring now.
Well, she's not going to think that when she sees you on that stage reading a story to Johnny Lucas, is she? The new story isn't as funny as the other one.
I'm sure it's brilliant.
- In fact, why don't you read it to us now? - Yeah, good idea.
It'll be like a rehearsal for the big day.
"Once upon a time there was a little boy who met a witch and the "witch was very naughty, even though she knew it was wrong to be naughty.
"The little boy was very good and always helped his mother with "the dishes, never ate sweets or watched violent cartoons.
"One day the boy was walking through the woods "so the witch was told that for hygiene reasons she must "always wash her hands thoroughly, especially after using the bathroom, "so she washed them and also made sure not to splash water "on the floor when she dried her hands "and the witch and the woodsman got married and lived in the cottage "and she promised to never be naughty ever again "and they lived happily ever after.
The end.
" I said, "The end.
" Oh, what a fantastic story, son.
You don't think it's a bit boring? No.
- Izzy is going to think you are so cool.
- OK, if you say so.
Right, who wants to watch YouTube videos of old people falling down escalators? No, it's OK.
I'm going to tidy my room.
Oh, he's probably just a bit tired.
Funnily enough, I'm not.
Must have been that refreshing ten-minute nap I had during that story.
- Hello? - 'Where the hell are you?' - His reading starts in about ten minutes.
- Anna's stuck in traffic.
What do you want me to do, leave our five-year-old twins on their own? No, Lee, that was a rhetorical question.
- How's Charlie? - Moping around like Morrissey on Mogadon.
Look, I'll get there as soon as I can, OK? Bye.
The twins let me in.
I could have been anyone.
I could have been an axe murderer.
You still might.
Don't give up the dream.
Oh, Anna, look at this.
Lee wrote it when we first started going out properly.
"Roses are red, violets are purples, "If I give you a quid will you show me your nurples?" What are nurples? You've got two of them.
En-suite bathrooms? Lee is so hard on himself, and on Charlie, but you know what? It was Lee's joking around all the time that made me like him in the first place.
Well, I didn't think it was his good looks, or his job or his taste in clothes or his breath.
This is no fun if you don't join in.
I've got to go.
Thanks, Anna.
So immature.
Show starts in five minutes.
Just because this is extra-curriculum doesn't mean that I'll tolerate tardiness.
Is my story really good, Dad? Course it is, son.
You're going to take the roof off.
Like grandad did to that church when he got in trouble with the police? Good luck, son.
Oops, busted.
Want one? No, I'm all right, thanks.
Never my thing.
I used to have a much more disgusting habit as a teenager but I'm down to ten-a-day now.
Johnny.
Johnny Lucas.
Oh, right.
The author.
You looking forward to judging what the kids have written? Honestly? Not really, no.
No, these kids' stories are always so bloody boring.
Sometimes I think some of these teachers are just knocking all the fun out of them, you know? It's like the kids have lost the art of just being silly.
Yeah, but being silly doesn't get you anywhere, does it? Well, I don't know.
It's all I've ever done, muck around, write silly stories.
Not done me any harm.
Even got me this - a key to a Bentley Continental.
Should write another book.
You might get the actual car.
Oh, gotta go.
Old Morag looks like a right ball-breaker, eh? Oh, thank God.
I've been thinking about Charlie.
Me too.
- Being silly, it's not all bad, is it? - No.
It's what attracted me to you in the first place, you know, the daft jokes.
- Not the good looks and the charm, then? - See, that kind of thing.
Will all parents please take their seats now? - Come on, then.
Let's get this over with.
- Hang on.
Our baby boy is about to go on stage and tell the most boring story since your mum thought she had shingles but it turned out to be the wicker chair.
So, what can we do? I know.
If you're using the toilets again would you please be more careful this time? Our caretaker was mopping for hours! Mate, I'm looking for a classroom called, um Oh, what's it called? You know, woman, nice to soldiers.
I want to say Joanna Lumley.
Oh, forget it.
Right, now, this is storytelling, and I want you to bring these stories to life, and you are the audience.
So if you want to laugh, laugh.
If you want to cry, cry.
And, remember, one lucky little brat is going to get a free trip to Legoland, and that's not fair on the rest of you, is it, yeah? So if you don't like it, give 'em hell, yeah? Just kidding, you know.
Just, er, let's try and keep it fairly sensible.
Now, before we start, who'd like to hear a poem about poo? Yeah! Oh, God.
"'Zap, zap' went the alien warship, "as the space captain steered through the astro-belt.
"Would the alien fleet capture this heroic spaceman, "torture him and kill him?" We can but hope.
Jake McKenzie? "Trapped in quicksand.
Quick, grab that vine.
" (Charlie.
Charlie.
) Indoor voices! Where did you get that? I just found it in your desk.
Look, what if I Tippex over the foo-foo? My boy is about to walk out there and humiliate himself by telling a really, really boring story.
Charlie's a good kid.
OK, sometimes he's a bit silly, but that's not always a bad thing.
Don't let him walk on that stage and make a fool of himself.
Please, I am begging you.
I hope Ofsted downgrade you to "satisfactory".
Now, next up we have Florence Nightingale class and it's Charlie.
"Once upon a time there was a little boy who met a witch and the witch "was very naughty, even though she knew it was wrong to be naughty.
" Boo! Sorry.
"The little boy was very good, and always helped his mother with "the dishes, and never ate sweets or watched violent cartoons.
" Boring! "One day the boy was walking through the woods and he met a woodsman.
" "And the woodsman told the boy all about endangered wildlife "and about how certain flowers have gone extinct "and that people should start putting their litter in the bin.
" Get off! Right, that's it.
"They asked the witch if she wanted to be their friend "so they shouted over to the witch and said" Hello, witchy, you manky grotbag of pig's wee! What are you doing here? What are you doing here, "Woodsman"? What are you doing here, Woodsman? Don't you remember? The witch was full of useful advice.
She said it's important to be a good little boy, but it's also important to be yourself and have a sense of humour.
And the little boy thought, "Yes, the witch is right," and so he asked his daddy to come on stage and cause trouble at the book reading the boy was doing at his school.
(Finally, a bit of theatre.
) And the dad said, "No chance.
"I'm not getting on stage and making a fool of myself, "just so you can win a trip to Legoland ".
.
and there's nothing you can do about it "even if you do know a witch with magical powers.
" Oh.
And so the wicked witch waved her wand and said to the woodsman, "You're totally under my power.
" "Oh, no," said the woodsman, "I hope you're not going to make me do anything stupid.
" And then the wicked witch cast a spell on the woodsman and suddenly he was hopping about on one leg which the woodsman found easy.
Not so easy when the witch made his trousers fall down.
Then the wicked, evil witch cast another spell and suddenly the woodsman was doing an impression of a chicken.
And the woodsman reminded the boy that he had an axe so not to push it.
And then the witch made the woodsman set fire to his fart.
Now this I've got see.
Ah, yes, but unfortunately the woodsman had nothing to use as a flame, so that idea was immediately abandoned.
Here you go, woodsman.
Oh, God! I think you may have just won yourself £1,000 worth of library books.
Bravo! More! No.
Well, that was certainly a memorable performance, especially for Jake in the front row.
I think you singed the poor boy's eyebrows.
Are you still sulking? I can't believe that Charlie is taking Izzy to Legoland and not me.
I helped him win, at the risk of blowing my own trumpet.
Still, they all lived happily ever after.
The end.
Well done.
It's important that he listens to his teachers, but we have to make sure we also don't forget he's a normal seven-year-old.
Exactly, and we have to let him act like one.
Can you smell matches? - Charlie! - Charlie!