The History of the Troubles (Accordin' to my Da'), as the full title has it, views Northern Ireland through an oldfashioned, end-of-the-pier perspective. The basic humour, from the lips of Grimes and McKee in varied roles and attitudes, is dispatched with jovial, bovine relish, but never assumes shocking or seriously mocking proportions. Haemorrhoids, and Grimes's silly hospital porter with a lisp and nose for foul smells, serve as running or limping jokes, while masturbation and women's breasts, or rather the lack of them in Long Kesh, come in for broad smirks of humour.