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When a radio show comes to town...

Victoria Derbyshire | 08:24 AM, Tuesday, 30 September 2008

"If you see me holding my index finger and thumb a couple of inches apart, I am not making a comment about the size of a part of your anatomy, I am asking, could you keep your point concise please?". One of the instructions I had to give an audience of more than 200 people before they took part in my programme live from Birmingham yesterday. Our guests inluded David Davies, Iain Duncan Smith, Lord Heseltine, Teresa May etc; last week in Manchester it was Cabinet Office Minister Ed Miliband, Ö÷²¥´óÐã Secretary Jacqui Smith and two of her predecessors, Messrs Clarke and Blunkett.

You see when you're live on the radio I think it a bit rude to say "keep it brief will you?". But a small visual instruction and the millions listening around the country will never know.

Audience etiquette when a radio show comes to town is integral to broadcasting a smooth non-jarring three hours. A presenter drawing aforementioned index finger across their throat in a puerile pirate-like manner means you really must stop talking now or we'll crash the jingle leading upto the news.

One of the most powerful sounds from both programmes was the quiet that greeted Dave from Cheshire when he spoke: "I live in a three bedroom semi and it's just been repossessed." He's got until Christmas.

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