You should be able to legally record any conversation you have with this person as you are a party to the conversation. I can legally record interviews over the phone without telling the other person because I am also taking part in the conversation - if I were taping it on behalf of someone else, that is illegal.
I've worked for bosses like this before. One kept saying the karate club I used to go was useless and I should go along to his club. I did, and he kicked the shit out of me! My club was more into punching whereas his was more like kick-boxing and he would drop to the ground and scissor-kick my legs. I was so badly bruised when I left that I had difficulty pushing the clutch in on the car. He laughed the following day when I told him and said I should harden up. I could barely walk for days and it was only when his wife told him how disgusted she was that he rang and apologised. I started getting a good reputation as a motorsport photographer while I was working for him and he did everything he could to stop me selling them to other publications. The union said as long as I offered the shots to him first, he couldn't stop me, but by god he tried. Every time I complained he would tell me if I didn't like it, I could fuck off! In the end he got me on a technicality. I covered the Rally of NZ and had a few days leave when I got home. I took the photos into the Evening Post (in the old days) and they published one the day before I returned to work, so I was fired for breach of contract. It wasn't worth fighting him as he'd made my life a misery for three years, so I left. Three years later when a relative died and left me shitloads of money I took great delight in telling one of my former colleagues as I knew he would find out about it! He's doing a dead-end job now while I am self-employed, so karma wins out in the end!
Yes, I am pedantic about spelling and grammar so get used to it!
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