All My Clothes Need Burning (formerly Television Times)

Steve Otis Gunn

Steve Otis Gunn is a writer, performer, and musician — and a former sound engineer who has spent most of his career in close proximity to people doing interesting things, occasionally on purpose. His debut Edinburgh Fringe show, Steve Otis Gunn is Uncomfortable, earned a ★★★★ review, and his debut book, You Shot My Dog and I Love You, is available everywhere books are sold. He created All My Clothes Need Burning to have the conversations he actually wants to have — with actors, comedians, filmmakers, and creative misfits who’ve spent their lives on the road, on location, on tour, and in situations that didn’t quite go to plan. Every guest has a story about the time things went sideways. This is where those stories live. Big adventures. Possibly worse decisions. Original music written by Steve Otis Gunn (unless otherwise credited) Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clothesneedburning YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@clothesneedburning TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@clothesneedburning Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/steveotisgunn.antisocial Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. Howard J. Ford: Caves, Cannibals and Cannes

    MAY 10

    Howard J. Ford: Caves, Cannibals and Cannes

    Howard J Ford has stared down a four-ton boulder held up by a single pebble, sat on funeral pots containing the dead while eating lunch, been lifted off his feet by hundreds of people in Burkina Faso, and walked out of a Mississippi murder house that nobody could bring themselves to buy. All in the name of independent filmmaking. Howard J Ford is a British filmmaker, director, and cinematographer whose films include The Dead, Never Let Go, The Ledge, River of Blood, Dark Game, Escape, and Bonekeeper — out now on Prime Video & Apple TV. His new action thriller Zipwire is heading to Cannes, and if his track record is anything to go by, it won't be long before it lands on your streaming service of choice. Why filming Bonekeeper in real caves in Wales and Herefordshire meant learning to light absolute darknessThe Burkina Faso incident: filming in a village with no electricity, sitting on pots containing dead relatives, and being swept off his feet by hundreds of people at the end of the shootThe haunted house in Clarksdale, Mississippi, where both Howard and his producer felt something was seriously wrongThe screenplay Howard wrote, which Morgan Freeman once wanted to star inWhy boredom is the starting point for everything — and how every film begins as a blank void before thousands of images and a story slowly emerge from nothingThe cannibal on a bicycle who stayed to watch the shoot — and why he was laughing Connect with Howard here: InstagramFacebookFind us on social media — links on the About page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    58 min
  2. Doug Naylor: How Red Dwarf Made TV Better Than Life

    12/18/2025

    Doug Naylor: How Red Dwarf Made TV Better Than Life

    The co-creator of Red Dwarf wrote a number one single in five minutes, turned around a failing Spitting Image, and had his brand new Red Dwarf movie cancelled because it was the BBC's only successful comedy. You couldn't write it. Well, Doug could. Doug Naylor is the co-creator and writer of Red Dwarf, which has run for 12 series and continues to find new audiences decades on. He co-wrote the Chicken Song (number one, 1986), was script editor on Spitting Image, and wrote for Jasper Carrott, Cannon and Ball, Ken Dodd, and numerous others. His children's book Sin Bin Island is the Financial Times Children's Book of the Year. The casting sessions where Alan Rickman, Hugh Laurie, and Alfred Molina all auditioned — and why Danny John-Jules, half an hour late in his dad's old suit, got the Cat after the very first auditionHow Craig Charles pestered Paul Jackson until he said "just see him to get him off my back" — and why Doug originally didn't like himThe BBC cancelled the new Red Dwarf movie because it was the only successful comedy they commissionedThe fake Duke of Manchester, who offered £12 million, sent a fax with his bank balance Tipp-Exed out and the amount typed in — and was later sent to prison Connect with Doug here: Facebookinstagram Originally released under the podcast's former name: Television Times. Find us on social media — links on the About page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    56 min
  3. Orbital FX: Inside the World of Practical Effects

    12/11/2025

    Orbital FX: Inside the World of Practical Effects

    Two lads from the North East of England built props that ended up purchased by Disney for actual Mandalorian productions — and they're still not entirely sure how to feel about it. Luke and Paul from Orbital FX are a North East-based practical effects and prop-making team whose work spans Star Wars replica props, Marvel productions, Disney theme parks and events, including a full-size Millennium Falcon build and components used in the Ant-Man quantum experience filmed at Pinewood. Why Lucasfilm's relationship with its fan community is completely unlike anything else in Hollywood — and what George Lucas apparently told Disney when they bought Star WarsThe story of restoring the original Boba Fett blaster from The Empire Strikes Back in five days Why making props for convention costumers is actually harder than making them for films How the carbon fibre Darth Vader helmet came about — and why cutting 40% of the weight is, apparently, a genuine game changerThe day Steve introduced himself to George Lucas at a bankrupt Fashion Café in London with broken speakers, dodgy lights, and a Tandy mixerWhy practical effects never really went away — and how Star Wars single-handedly reinvigorated an entire generation of model makers and creature shops Connect with Orbital FX here: InstagramFacebookWebsite Originally released under the podcast's former name: Television Times. Find us on social media — links on the About page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    59 min
  4. Olaf Falafel: The Seriously Silly Art of Being Stupid

    12/04/2025

    Olaf Falafel: The Seriously Silly Art of Being Stupid

    Olaf Falafel gaslit his own mother into believing she had a serious wind problem using a remote-control fart machine with a subwoofer — and has somehow turned that energy into an award-winning career in children's books and stand-up. Olaf Falafel is a comedian, illustrator, and author known for his Edinburgh Fringe shows, the Dave Funniest Joke at the Fringe 2019, and children's books including Old MacDonald Heard a Fart, Poo on a Pogo Stick, and the Trixie Pickle Art Avenger series. His new graphic novel The Far Out Five is out now, and his family show — Olaf Falafel's Stupidest Super Stupid Show, is currently on tour. Why comedians make better children's authors than celebrities — and why the crossover is more natural than the publishing industry admitsThe origin of Old MacDonald Heard a Fart — how singing it on the school run with his daughters turned into an actual book dealHow to achieve the perfect duck fart Why winning the Dave Funniest Joke at the Fringe brought death threats Why Lost is the show he'd erase from history — and the years he spent downloading it on Limewire before the ending stole everything backWhat it means to draw 200-page graphic novels while watching Liam Neeson films as background noise — and why Taken is genuinely one of his favourite movies Connect with Olaf here: InstagramYoutube Originally released under the podcast's former name: Television Times. Find us on social media — links on the About page. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    52 min
5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Steve Otis Gunn is a writer, performer, and musician — and a former sound engineer who has spent most of his career in close proximity to people doing interesting things, occasionally on purpose. His debut Edinburgh Fringe show, Steve Otis Gunn is Uncomfortable, earned a ★★★★ review, and his debut book, You Shot My Dog and I Love You, is available everywhere books are sold. He created All My Clothes Need Burning to have the conversations he actually wants to have — with actors, comedians, filmmakers, and creative misfits who’ve spent their lives on the road, on location, on tour, and in situations that didn’t quite go to plan. Every guest has a story about the time things went sideways. This is where those stories live. Big adventures. Possibly worse decisions. Original music written by Steve Otis Gunn (unless otherwise credited) Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clothesneedburning YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@clothesneedburning TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@clothesneedburning Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/steveotisgunn.antisocial Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.