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am I right in thinking that you formerly Robbie Williams?
Bad boy, You weren't at that big Christmas fan.
I was more New Year's Eve fat.
But now your dad and everything.
Presumably that makes you Christmas.
He doesn't it?
Yes.
I was a kid, and I loved it.
There was a teenager, and it was sort of euphoric and amazing on then I did too much of that and then had to stop doing that.
And then you sort of left with all the blanks that you were filling in.
And then Christmas is like, sort of.
You should be happy now.
Really, really happened is going.
I'm no on.
Then you thought that out for however many years, it takes a sort that out.
Then you meet your wife and she.
Then I meet your wife, which was weird.
I know I have no use for her, my wife, and she's just she's just like a professional memory maker.
And I've sort of been taken on this tidal wave of just incredible memories that she creates.
Now we've got three kids and I absolutely love it again.
Perhaps it is my favorite time of year doll.
Yes, on I also like Easter.
Some point out an Easter record.
Thio.
What about that?
You've invented Christmas traditions.
What's that about in America?
We are having a sort of like a British conquer enclave.
Is Is that what you call it?
It's just full of British people.
And then my extended American family, Onda.
We decided one day that we'd make up a tradition on full our American family friend, and it's called Break the Bread and you have a baguette and we say it's British.
But the baguettes already friend get like two American people to hold it.
Either way, all the British people start going, break the bread thing, then you get somebody to karate chop.
Everybody goes way and everybody's drunk, and you completely forget about it until next Christmas.
When the Americans come round to go, we're not gonna break the bread.
That beautiful division.
It actually sounds quite fun.
Yeah, Miss an all new episode of The Graham Norton show, Fridays at 11 on catch Up.