I was trying to remember what he'd said at just after 8.30 more than 4 hours on, so possibly I'm paraphrasing him and possibly projecting some of my own ignorance.I get that and I know pubs are having a torrid time generally, I just don’t get his logic that it costs more to run a pub the busier it is. I know there are incremental increases, but surely the more you generally sell the more profitable you should be? I don’t have an issue with pubs putting up their prices, I just feel his explanation is a bit lame and misleading.
I do remember clearly his first point was that the BBC mostly had the story the wrong way and that pubs were mostly discounting at quiet times and that he repeatedly made the point that overall costs had gone up.
For me it's a no-brainer that costs will be higher on, say, a Saturday night, especially for a 'wet' pub. You may need a bouncer. You may need entertainment. You certainly need more bar staff. Now you may sell way more pints but that's turnover and, you hope, profit. It isn't anything to do with keeping cost down.