BudPod with Phil Wang & Pierre Novellie - Episode 170 - BudPod +2 *brrring!*
Episode Date: June 29, 2022The lads talk being stuck on buses, shoes, the woods, rugby, brogue and gamification Sketch: shoes! Correspondence from Tom the toilet paper guardian angel and Joe's bacon white factsL...Q1LQa4vklvU8MQN5O2z Get bonus BudPod on Patreon! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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It's Budpod 170!
170! That's pleventy!
That's pleventy episodes. Pleventy of episodes.
It's pleventy, if you ask me.
Well, let me close my window, because there are planes.
Yes. Amazing how audible they are. Even though they are up in the sky, Philip.
They're so far up And yet I can hear them
And yet you can hear them
I just quickly say thank you to all the pod buds
Who came to my preview so far
In 2 North Down in London
In King's Cross
And in Bill Murray as well
Hello Koji
And also the pod buds who saw me in Preston.
I had to take a bunch of National Express coaches
on a 25-hour round trip, Phil, to do my preview.
No, no.
What?
I'm cheating a bit.
I guess really it's a 19-hour round trip.
But yeah, that was my Saturday.
Oh, because of the train strike yeah yeah the
striky strikes um so i had to get up at six to be the guest one of the guest people the guest
person on frank skinner's radio show which is good fun um great and then that ended at 11 and
then my national express coach left victoria coach Victoria coach station in London at noon and got into Manchester at about half past five, 20 past five.
Oh, my.
I want to be sick.
I want to be sick.
Five and a half hour coach.
And I met up with comedian Eleanor Tiernan, who had landed there from a flight from Belfast.
We rented a car from a stranger using an app.
And then she very kindly drove us to Preston, where we did the gig in a sort of tent.
And then we had to drive back from Preston to Manchester
and then dick around for about an hour
before the midnight to 6.30 a.m. coach back.
Yeah.
Oh, yes.
Wow.
Yeah.
Pretty nuts.
Oh, God.
I feel like I'm talking to someone who's just given birth.
Were you able to sleep on the coach back, the midnight coach?
No.
Because you're too big for the seat.
Don't fit.
Because you're too big for the seats.
Don't fit.
I will say I'm too big for the seats on National Express,
but I'm much less too big than for a plane.
Okay, okay.
So better than a flight of the equivalent length, but...
Oh, wait, wait, wait.
So the seats on the coach are bigger than the ones on the plane,
is what you're saying?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And like the coach,
I was ready for a scene from the apocalypse and it was sort of okay.
The issues were...
The issues were slightly too big for the seats,
which is not great.
And also loads of stops.
And every time they do a stop,
a very loud announcement of where they were from the driver
and all the lights going on like in a prison.
Oh, fuck, of course.
Yeah, because they have stops, don't they?
Milton Keynes.
Fuck me.
Yeah.
And what was the mood like on the coach were people happy to be there
were people going was it like a prison atmosphere people giving looks to each other like what do you
what are you in for i think um i think there was a different vibe i would divide the passengers
between people trying to get to london overnight for some reason because their lives are sort of hard,
and people trying to get to one of the airport stops.
Oh, my God.
So there was sort of people who were like on the coach
because it was for some reason the easiest way for them
to get to Luton Airport at 3 a.m.
or Birmingham Airport at 5 a.m.
or whatever the ungodly hour the stops were.
I think it was Luton and Birmingham airports we stopped at.
So they were sort of holiday makers who were sort of tired,
but I guess optimistic about their trips.
Everyone else was sort of,
quite a lot of people making sort of hushed,
hushed phone calls in non-European languages.
Oh, okay. Okay, one of those, yeah. Yeah, where it's sort of like, it's 1am and they still have a phone call to make. non-European languages oh okay
okay one of those
yeah
where it's sort of like
it's 1am
and they still have a phone call to make
that lasts at least 10 minutes
and it's quite sort of like
it has a sort of tone of like
no and make sure to remember to
you know
that sort of tone
where you go
oh this is like the sort of underside of the economy or something
i'm in it's like all of us who have like weird lives due to whatever it is our origins or our
jobs and then holiday makers yeah that's the two groups i'd say and what is your day like after
at 12 a.m to 6 a.m coach ride you, do you go to sleep and you wake up at 2?
Do you just power on through to
the next night? What do you do?
My knees and my shoulders were surprisingly wrecked
from trying to sleep at an angle.
I got one of those neck pillow
things and I just don't think I know
how to work it or it's too big or not big enough.
You kind of clip it around your neck
the big squishy thing. i go on a dose
i go on a dose and i i i sort of flip i every time i can't decide on whether it makes it better or
worse yes i've still i've still not figured out whether it's been i've had it for years and i
still can't figure out whether it makes it easier or harder to sleep because like if i've got the padding sort of under my chin and i'm like leaning forward like i'm sleeping with my
like head down like i'm praying then it's like the force of leaning on it clenches your jaw for you
which is not relaxing it's just like a jaw clencher um so you're sleeping like someone who's trying to contain a spasm of rage, head down, jaw clenched.
You're sleeping like you're in a trap in Saw.
Yes, yes.
You're sleeping like someone who's being berated by a superior and you're about to flip out.
Or you could sort of roll your head to the side but there's no real purchase
there um it doesn't really work backwards yeah very hard to tell but yeah you're right get home
at 7 a.m um knees and shoulders all weird from the coach and then yeah sleep till noon still feel
mental for the rest of the day and then did a did a preview at two
north sound that eve bloody hell it's a preview boy i'm the king of previews if you want to look
at something in advance you talk to me was the pre was the preston show good it was quite good
it was um it's difficult because it was in a tent and it was still very much daylight so you could
it was just like a sort of conference really where you could see everyone in hd
it was like a farmer's conference yeah it was a yeah it was like a
it was a nice tent though i will say this it wasn't just like a tent tent it was like a lot
of money had been spent on it by some arts council funding or something it was all painted on the
inside wooden boards and it was more like the sort of thing you set up for the month at the Fringe
Not just like a gazebo
So it was like a Spiegeltent almost
Very much in Spiegeltent territory
Yes
So I've been doing that
And in fact, as we record now on Tuesday the 28th
I have a preview tonight
Downstairs at the King's Head in Crouch End
Which, if you're listening to this, you've missed
I haven't been to the King's Head for so long it's one of my one of my original favorite rooms
you filmed the thing there the king said my first ever uh special i made myself i put on
youtube is their film that the king said soft is it my sophomore show i guess so my freshman freshman show sophomore the second
year yeah yeah my freshman outing uh yeah and i still have it up on youtube i always think should
i take it down because i'm much better now but i think it's quite nice to have this record of where
where you've been where you've come from i don't think it's worth it's worth taking down like you
say it's not like it's so it's like it's not like it's so bad or so strange it's worth taking down like you say it's not like it's so it's like it's not like it's
so bad or so strange it's worth taking down i think it shows legacy shows progress
yours yours how about you man you've been in the woods i've been in the woods yes uh this past week
i've been filming outsiders for dave in the woods along um hosted by David Mitchell alongside
Fatiha Al-Ghori, Joe Wilkinson, Jessica Hines
Darren Harriot and Maisie Adam
a stupendous line-up of people
and it was a really fun show
I'll be coming out later this year on Dave
so do keep your eyes peeled for it
it's very fun, we have to complete tasks in the woods
and David Mitchell
judges them and gives us badges
based on our efforts.
It's a really fun time.
Do you get to keep the badges?
We
may have.
Maybe.
I can't say too much
at this point. But do you know what was the best thing was
pierre was we somehow managed to time a tv show where you have to spend a week in the woods
on exactly the same week as rail strike week oh yeah fucking i i i fucking smashed it i'm sorry to hear about your coach ride but
i fucking smashed strike week yes you did oh man you went like a you were like a prepper
yeah yeah i went into the woods to avoid the trappings of modern man yeah i.e sort of union
action yeah you you you you were like a nervous prepper spooked into the woods
by the first sign of any sort of social disagreement.
Especially union-based.
I'm like a nervous industry fat cat.
You know, like those old cartoons of a guy,
a fat, sweating man with a black suit.
Yeah, they're in white tie.
On the back is written,
he's got a punch cartoon subtitle on his back
that just says, industry.
Yes.
And I'm sweating and getting worried about the unions.
And I'm so worried that I make a plan to flee into the woods
whenever there's any industrial action.
Yes, yes, yes.
A sort of Victorian a of a libertarian
i'm yeah i'm a capitalist bear grills i'm share grills
i'm share share grills that's what i am share shares grills it would be a good
nickname for like a particularly adventurous investor
shares grills all right shares grills would be a good nickname for a particularly adventurous investor.
Shares grills.
Alright, shares grills.
We should sell that. We should sell banter to hedge fund managers.
Imagine they're not that fun as people.
They need help.
It's true.
That's what corporates are, right?
Pretty much.
It's basically managers paying for banter.
We're going to do it.
Because they just can't do it.
Yeah.
For all your wealth and all your power,
you can't even muster up the smallest morsel of banter.
Well, that's the whole
thing people say about Elon Musk, isn't it?
Is that he's the richest man in the world
or close to it or whatever.
And he's still like
so tangibly what he wants is to be funny.
Yeah.
Yeah, and
he knows that
the people who find him funny
on Twitter are the lamest, most boring people in the world.
Yeah, because they are not the funny people.
If the funny people don't find you funny,
you know that it's not working, whatever you're doing.
You got to try harder, Elon.
No outsourcing
yeah
yeah
you can't outsource your jokes
I mean you can really
you can pay for writers
why doesn't he just pay for writers
it's a pride thing
that's the fascinating thing about jokes
and being funny
no matter how rich a person is no matter how powerful they become everyone wants to be funny and if they
can't be funny it's absolute torture and it drives people insane especially men especially men because
men tie a lot more of their self-worth to being funny than women do yeah it's rare to find general yeah it's yeah definitely it's rare
to find a guy at least in the anglophone world who's willing to admit that they have not got a
sense of humor or that they're not that funny yeah i mean i've outright i've dated a a lady
who outright said i don't have a sense of humor and I don't find jokes funny.
I don't understand jokes, he said.
And she wasn't ashamed about it.
It was just like,
something about me you need to know.
I don't like jokes.
You know, like a German would say. Yeah, or a tyrannical despot.
It's quite like something Joffrey would say, isn't it?
Yeah.
I don't like jokes, mother.
Do you remember that year in Edinburgh Fringe
where the guy who played Joffrey was at the Fringe
and just wandering about seeing shows and hanging out?
Yeah, man.
People were posing photos of them with Joffrey in the artist's bar and stuff.
It was a wacky time.
I passed him a cigarette lighter.
It was after he'd been killed.
Did you?
Yeah.
It was just after he died as well in the show.
Yeah, he was finally free.
Everyone had watched him be poisoned to death and then he was just wandering about.
Spoilers.
Yeah. Spoilers. watched him be poisoned to death and then he was just wandering about spoilers yeah spoilers the actor himself didn't actually die i also wasn't expecting his thick northern irish accent yeah
so thick a very thick brogue what which accents can be described are allowed to be described as
a brogue i've always associated it with the celtic ones yes i was about yeah i
was just thinking that it has to be would you say a welsh brogue i guess yeah it's sort of
it's irish and scottish really yeah i'd accept welsh but i would expect a particularly oh yes
here we are here we are brogue is an in brogue is an informal term for a distinctive regional
pronunciation especially an irish or sometimes Scottish accent.
Well, well, well.
Haven't the boys nailed it again?
Haven't the boys
gotten out their hammers
and nailed it again?
Oh, yes.
Love it when a plan comes together.
First use of the term brogue
originated in the 15th, 16th century
to refer to an Irish accent by John Skelton.
Skelly!
Old Skelly.
It could come from because brogues are like shoes,
or it could come from the Irish word brog,
which means a hold on the tongue, or thus accent or speech impediment yeah i mean that's that that seems more likely than the shoe
thing how i don't know how the you'd go from shoes to accents well brogue brogues are traditionally
like highland and irish shoes like you wear brogues with your kilt, etc.
Oh, I see, I see.
Yeah, I just don't know how that then goes to describe someone's accent as...
Old shoe face over there.
Yeah.
Seems less...
I guess a shoe has a tongue.
Is that it?
A shoe has a tongue, Phil.
Or it should.
And don't let anyone tell you any different.
Yeah, yeah.
Are you a shoe guy?
You got some nice... I'm starting to become more of a shoe guy,
by which I mean I now buy more than one pair a year.
I mean, maybe two pairs.
And if I buy more than one pair of shoes a year,
I start to feel like,
slow down here.
All right, Sarah Jessica Parker, calm down. If I buy two pairs, I'm like, come on. i buy more than one pair of shoes a year i start to feel like slow down here all right sarah just
sarah jessica parker calm down if i buy two pairs i'm like come on there's a phil k joke and he's
even he's even further down uh this further along the spectrum than i am he has a joke where he
says he doesn't understand how people can go into a shoe shop to buy shoes wearing a pair of shoes
oh yes i yeah see that's i mean you you and i are very similar in that regard and i can empathize
with that i'm the same way like more than one new pair of shoes a year and it's like what
you're planning some kind of uh some kind of party or you going to run a million miles?
But there is something fantastic about the feeling of new shoes.
And I know this is hardly virgin ground, but there's something about getting in a fresh pair of shoes
that fit you just right.
Yes, that is true.
Yum.
This episode is brought to you by shoes.
This episode is brought to you by the concept of shoes.
It's kind of pathetic that we need shoes, isn't it?
Yeah, I mean...
Why do we need shoes?
Did you spend much of your childhood barefoot?
I certainly did in South Africa.
Yeah, running around the house, the cool tile floors,
and out in the wet grass in the after.
It's not the aftermath.
Soaking up the petrichor.
That's it.
The petrichor after a monsoon shower.
But nowhere further than that, because then there's pebbles, there's bugs, there's stingers.
I guess it's different in a bit more jungly place, whereas it was very arid where we were,
and you would develop, like,
you develop, like, over the whole summer,
these, like, hobbit feet.
You just never wear socks for, like, months.
Wow, really?
Yeah, and you'd end up with these, like,
these impenetrable hobbit feet
that you could sort of walk over pebbles and stones
much more easily
because you didn't have the soft virgin souls of a
I mean I guess that's how we're
supposed to be isn't it? Yeah that's the original
That's how they're supposed to be. That's the OG way to
walk around Phil
But why is
I don't understand the parts of the body, the features of the human
body that sort of require
that kind of
sort of wetting
I suppose.
The constant use instead of maintaining them.
I get it.
I say that, although it does apply to everything.
Like, astronauts get muscle atrophy.
Yeah.
And if you don't use your bones, they do get weaker.
No, you're right. Actually, no, I take that back.
Calluses on the hands, I was going to say.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, yeah, I experienced that with guitar playinguses on the hands, I was going to say. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, yeah, I experienced that with guitar playing.
When I picked up the guitar and learned a bit,
my hands, it was really, really difficult
until my hands got callus-y
and then suddenly I could play better.
And then I stopped and now they're soft as a princess buttock.
And I can't play anymore now.
Soft as a bourbon's limp handshake.
I mean, I told you when I went to get a pedicure
at a Korean place in Melbourne
and the lady refused to pumice my feet
because my skin was too soft
and she would draw blood.
Oh.
She basically said,
I'm sorry, sir, your life has been too easy.
I can't do this.
There is no trauma for me to scrape off.
Your feet, they are, how you say,
so weak and delicate
that they would be wounded by a health spa treatment they would be wounded by
something designed to help them that's how soft they have become like mr burns
if you got a massage he'd just die wow
if I pumice these you'll bleed
good lord
what's left to do then for your feet
I guess they just sort of breathe on them
yeah
dry clean
they have to be dry cleaned.
Yes.
Pressed.
Pressed.
They should be put on a delicate wash, I guess, in the machine.
Hand dry.
Drip dry feet.
It's becoming fashionable again, Phil, to have a crease in your feet.
It's been a while.
How was your week, though?
Were we able to survive the rail
strikes? I think just about.
I've mostly just been little Jimmy previews.
If I've forgotten any...
Let me look back through the week. There's been
that many.
I did a gig in a car park with a dog.
That was good.
Was the dog comparing the ladies and gentlemen please welcome i've worked with this next day a whole bunch of times
he's a good friend of mine he's very funny he's a very good boy
the big audience of dogs
all like you know when they stand on their hind legs and try to
clap
like their hands
go together and that kind of praying thing
what would the dogs
do they'd howl I guess or just like bark their
applause
yeah they'd wag just like
put your tails together
for your first act
yeah so that dog was emceeing it was all very good it was in a kind of artsy fartsy kind of um
is that ludos anyone who lives near wood green in north london i recommend figuring out if you
can still get a ludos l- L-U-D-O.
It's that hipstery thing where they make a little bit of waste ground and then it's got some cool shops
where you can trade clothes and also
get something knit.
And there's a
bar but it's on an old bus.
Oh, nice.
Yeah, very cool.
Oh, an old bus. I think I've been there, you know.
You might have done the gig.
Yes, there's a gig there.. You might have done the gig.
Yes, there's a gig there.
Yes, yes, yes.
I have done the gig there once.
Luckily for me, it was in the car park-y bit that it's all in.
And it wasn't on the bus as it was originally scheduled to be because I do not fit on that bus.
I cannot stand up straight on that bus.
Wow, really?
That's literally the reason they had to put you outside?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I hope they didn't say that but maybe they just
thought this guy's gonna break his neck just standing with his head at 90 degrees
yeah i've done the yeah i've done the gig on bus a couple of times and it happens more often than
you think folks yeah and i have to do the whole thing like quasimodo basically yeah i well i said to the audience i was glad it wasn't on the bus because i'd have to do the whole thing like Quasimodo basically yeah well I said to the audience I was glad
it wasn't on the bus because I'd have to do the whole gig
leaning forward with my hands on my knees
like an excited dad
like I was trying to G up a dog or a kid
like yeah yeah you ready to go for the
it's just quite a creepy vibe I think
to hold that position for up to 10 minutes at a time
it's just quite a creepy vibe, I think, to hold that position for up to 10 minutes at a time.
It's unsettling.
Yeah.
Where's the weirdest place you've ever done a gig, Phil?
Well, yesterday I did a gig in a field in rugby, which I found out upon arrival was literally in the rugby school oh shit yeah so it was hosted in
the field of rugby school but like people from rugby town were also there yeah uh but
it was it was funny because it's the actual school where rugby the sport was invented yes
the name rugby football yeah yeah 200 years. 200 years ago, whatever some,
and I called him this on stage,
precocious little twat picked up a ball and ran with it.
And I said,
I said it was rugby is a sport that could only have been invented by a public
school boy in any other case,
any other kind of school.
The other kids were just beaten him to death
but because he's a public school boy he just kept on with it and i said it's very much the
boris johnson playbook where if you break the rules once you're in trouble but if you just
keep breaking the rules they just become the rules yes yeah that's exactly right that's all
rugby is yeah that's what rugby is yeah yeah they just went
that's a big lesson from a lot of of private schools which is if you're going to break the
rules and you do it creatively enough we will let you get away with it
or if you just yeah if you break the rules and refuse to admit wrongdoing yeah you know what
fair play yeah yeah we'll build an entire sport for you
yeah we're gonna name a sport after you oh that was okay that's pretty good i think
but it's a good show really nice show and um there were a lot of like um the students there
and it's um it's it's strange yeah it's strange performing to 15 to 18-year-olds. Yeah.
It's very interesting.
So much stuff they just don't relate to or get yet.
Because they are on the surface adults,
but there's nothing...
I've got a big bit about buying furniture.
And I just thought, man, I've changed.
There's nothing here for these kids.
You just look into their eyes and you know that they,
you're like someone doing a whole routine
about mortgage rates to them.
It's just so far from their experience.
I was given, before the show, a couple of the acts,
we were given a, because I kept asking,
we were given a little tour of the house.
And it's such a beautiful school, the school.
And like everyone has their own study.
Oh.
To study in.
And I said this on stage as well.
The head of house at one point sort of said quite so seriously,
it can be tough on the kids because the teachers here, the
curriculum is very demanding. And I
got so excited. I was like, I wanted
to start. I was like, a demanding
curriculum, please, yes, let me in, let me in, let me in.
And I saw like those
blue Ryman folders with
maths, Mr.
Fleberjebel on them, whatever.
And that got me so excited. Like, tattered
fat folders.
Just got me excited. Full of knowledge, Phil.
Full of knowledge, yeah.
Did you get all those that...
Because that's something that is missing from
comedy or from...
Not all adult careers, but a lot, is
like, definitively doing
well with a number on a task.
Yeah, I do miss that.
I miss it terribly.
And it's why in my adulthood, with all its complexities and nuances
and difficult decisions, I love doing things like washing up, laundry,
tidying, banking, because it's just definite it's just definite tasks with definite
answers and a definite end that's true i just what i wish is that um i got a series of uh
tiny medals for doing laundry like in a game
and i could somehow level up my laundry skills
i i like but gamification is so powerful i yesterday i've started when i use ways the the
the navigation app yeah to drive around sometimes you'll say like stopped car coming up in how many
meters and then one when you approach it an option comes up for you to say
for you to tap and say that's still there or it's not there anymore and i'll tap still there if it's
still there and you get this little blue gem whoa pops up really and a plus two a little plus two
i don't even know what it's plus two of but i'm so excited when i get the plus's plus two of, but I'm, I'm so excited when I get the plus two.
Plus two?
Plus two.
Well,
that's good,
right?
And a gem?
Plus,
plus two blue.
I like blue.
And I like plus two.
That felt good.
And then if there's another stop coming,
oh,
it's still there.
It's still there.
Waze is still there.
And I click and it's plus two.
And I feel all giddy inside.
Plus two.
Oh God, that's better than minus two. And it's plus two and i feel all giddy inside plus two oh god that's better
than minus two and it's better than nothing i like plus two it's pathetic i'm pathetic it's
i'm a stupid little lizard all of our rat brains that's what it is yeah all i want is to do the
laundry for the 10th time and for the noise to go bring and then oh imagine my kingdom for a bring yeah
my kingdom for a little bring and a plus two i do the laundry i get a plus two and a gem
and i can choose a laundry machine that has a sort of purple glow
level two laundry machine unlocked
oh god it feels good shall we gamify some correspondence Level two laundry machine unlocked.
Oh god, it feels good.
Shall we gamify some correspondence?
Oh yes.
Plus two correspondence. Alan! Alan! Alan!
Alan!
Oh, God.
I can't help but notice, Alan, that you've...
Your feet.
Yes.
Well, look at them. I mean, they're perfect.
Pristine.
I can see my face in the toenails.
Yes.
Well, I mean... I mean, how?
All of our feet are bleeding, calloused, bloody stumps in some cases.
And look at you, standing there like... like a god.
And your point is?
Well, how do you do it, Alan?
What's your secret?
I'll never tell.
What he doesn't know is that I'm wearing
a brand new pair of...
shoes!
Yes, shoes!
Made from leather, meat, wood, bark, thick grasses, woven of course,
bamboo, metal, anything really that's harder than the average human foot. Make a little canoe shape.
If a canoe only had, was facing one way you don't need any back I guess you could
make a whole thing
and you put your foot in it
and walk on that
and not on your foot
no more bloody stumps
disclaimer
if you already have a pair of bloody stumps
adding a pair of shoes
will not make your feet regrow
you will still have a pair of bloody stumps
shoes are available nationwide
from Wednesday.
As women, our life stages come with unique risk factors,
like high blood pressure developed during pregnancy,
which can put us two times more at risk of heart disease or stroke.
Know your risks. Visit heartandstroke.ca
uh tom gets in touch Tom You're the bomb
I've probably done that before but
It's what you got
You're the bomb Tom
Um
Tom uh
Tom sort of bumped his
His message
Now I'm worrying that we've done Tom before
But we can't have can we Let me scroll down Now I'm worrying that we've done Tom before.
But we can't have, can we?
Let me scroll down through the Patreon to make sure that I'm not insane.
I don't think we have.
Okay.
Let's see.
Let's see.
So Tom says, puddle of bod. Puddle of bod. I don't think I remember Tom says, Puddle of Bod.
Puddle of Bod.
I don't think I remember this. Pud, yeah, Puddle of Bod.
I don't think we've done that.
A small tale I've been meaning to send you for some time.
I hope it brings a small slice of levity to your day.
Around two years ago, I started my current job.
Working in an office for the first time,
I slowly became used to knowing,
whilst not actually knowing,
my colleagues.
Hmm. It's true, it's a strange dynamic. Yes,. It's true it's a strange dynamic.
It is a strange dynamic, but an
important one.
The country's built on it. The British
Empire was built on those relationships.
I work in social
care and my office in particular, as
I'm sure many in the field are, has a male
to female worker ratio of 1
to 10.
Wow, that big. I mean, I knew
it'd be female
heavy, but not that much. Yeah, makes sense.
I'm a male.
Thank you, Tom.
And with around 40 or so total people
on our floor, I can safely say that
I'm at least familiar with the anonymous gentleman
whose life I saved this day.
Ah. High odds this day. Ah.
High odds, yeah.
Wow.
Life I saved.
This is intriguing.
So there's a one in four or one in three chance
he knows who the guy is.
Wait, say that again.
I've lost track of that.
So the ratio is one to ten,
and there's about 40 people on the floor.
Yeah. Oh, right, right, right, right. So there's four fellas. Yeah, and there's about 40 people on the floor. Yeah.
Oh, right, right, right, right.
So there's four fellas.
Yeah, and he's one of them, so it's probably one in three, I guess.
Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh.
Okay.
So he says, around two months into my job,
I went to the bathroom to sit smugly in the comfort that I was getting paid to void my bowels.
That's a lovely feeling.
They pay me to shit here.
I do the accounting for free.
They pay me to shit.
Any work I get done is a bonus as far as they're concerned.
I entered.
Do you think people who do get paid to shit
By fetishists are like
Always do your taxes while you're shitting
Then they're paying you to do your taxes
I entered the first of the two cubicles
In the bathroom and prior to making myself comfortable
I checked the dispenser for loo roll
For you see
This is not my first pudio
Nice
There was no
loo roll, and so I sauntered into the
neighboring cubicle.
Crisis averted.
Crisis averted. Plus two.
Plus two.
After a few minutes of sitting
peacefully, another one of the four men
of the floor entered the bathroom
and proceeded into the first cubicle.
Yes.
He then made himself comfortable.
I'm not sure...
Uh-oh.
Yeah.
I'm not sure when it was that the song Hero by Chad Kroger
from Sam Raimi's first Spider-Man started playing in my head,
but the chorus came around quickly.
Oh, fuck.
I remember that song.
And they say that a hero can save us not gonna stand here
so that's in his head oh god i can't believe i remember this song yeah good work hold on to
the wings of the ego yeah fly away wow how many times did i hear that song in 2000 whenever the fuck that i can still remember
the the tune and lyrics now a man with famously bad memory yeah wow really bad oh they play that
song so much yeah and uh it's in the ah good flashback oh that's a nice that's a fun there
you go flashback nice little taste of the past there and also i've always fun any song in that kind of slightly metallica voice yes yeah yeah very uh noughties pop punk and and sort of pop like pop metal
creed do you remember creed yes uh what did police come left i think'm falling. I'm holding on to all I think is safe.
I didn't realize at the time they were a Christian band.
Yeah, sneaky, the word creed, like that.
Yeah.
The whole song was about Jesus.
Yeah.
I felt a bit cheated, but it's a lovely song.
It's a shame because I think the only reason we feel cheated
is because we just get told how great Jesus is so much growing up.
You just go, I know.
I know.
Whereas when it's used to refer to Spider-Man,
yeah, well, there we go.
A new hero.
I don't think, yeah.
Yeah, I don't think Creed ever did a song for Spider-Man.
It would be lovely if they did.
It would be very funny to do a sort of Christian Spider-Man
where he is still Spider-Man,
but it's thanks to some sort of blessing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They praise Spider-Man,
but at the same time warn the listeners
not so much as to make him a false idol.
Yeah.
Spider-Man is only Spider-Man.
Beware the false idols.
He's powerful, but he's not God.
Spider-Man, Spider-Man.
God-like power, but he's a man.
Cast a web anytime, but just remember he's not divine.
He is. He's still but a man. casts a web anytime but just remember he's not divine he is
he's still butter man
oh
that's great
thank you
Christian
Christian superhero
Christian Spider-Man I realize that we're quite
far into the pod and we haven't pointed out the fact that
America is now being run by Christian Spider-Man
and they've banned abortion
oh fuck yeah big news pod and we haven't pointed out the fact that america is now being run by christian spider-man and they've banned abortion oh fuck yeah big news oh yeah we haven't yeah gosh
sorry to interrupt your email tom but that's uh just i guess just a short sidebar to say that's
fucking insane and terrifying it's mad and it's like god it's yeah how how are we how are we going backwards like this yeah very
very taliban vibes coming from the supreme court yeah no good well well back to tom's uh hero
moment there might be something for the mummies might be something spicy enough for the bonus
part yes that's true in the v area, we'll get into it.
But so Tom, right, Tom's got your hero, that's playing in his head.
Yeah.
I heard a scratching of fingernails
in the metal loo roll dispenser and I knew
my time had come.
Yeah.
I proceeded to take loo roll from
my own well-stocked supply and
send it over the adjoining cubicle wall.
Like a friendly ghost floating over, like Casper's coming down.
Yeah, spiraling down.
And I decided to send it over the adjoining cubicle wall, raining down upon my friend like a gift from heaven itself.
Haha, oh, cheers, mate,
came the relieved voice from his stall.
Haha, oh, cheers, mate.
Haha.
Haha.
Oh, cheers, mate.
A clearly very relieved, but still residually nervous.
Haha. Haha, oh still residually nervous, ha-ha.
Ha-ha, oh, cheers, mate,
came the relieved voice from his stall.
I said nothing.
My...
Which is funny.
I said nothing.
My inner voice, however, spoke very loudly,
and it said,
keep going.
Just keep giving him loo roll.
And so through small yelps of, thanks, mate, that's enough.
Cheers.
I'm good.
Yep. Cheers, Lee Lee I'm fine now You want loo roll I'll give you loo roll
That's a funny character
Give you all the loo roll in the world
So he's going cheers yep fine thanks
He says I continue to let fly gentle birds
With two ply wings without making a hoot so these are individual these aren't a role right so he's dealing them
like cards he's going like yeah so yes he's making it rain. Yeah. I like that. I continue to let fly gentle birds with two-ply wings without making a hoot.
That's nice.
That's a nice sentence.
The image of a man being shocked, then scared, then relieved, then utterly confused as he wipes in a hailstorm of loo roll provides me with great joy.
provides me with great joy.
The gentleman exited the bathroom before I left my cubicle,
and thus I now joyously live in the knowledge that whenever I speak to a male colleague,
there is a high possibility
that I have showered him in toilet paper.
And as he looks at me,
knowing there is also at least a one in three chance
that I was his savior or tormentor on the fateful day.
That's fun. See,
people say that men don't look out for each other the way
women look out for each other, but
it's not true. Sometimes we will
silently
shower another with toilet
paper in the time of need.
All the best. Keep on
keeping on and keep jacking it or don't, I'm not your boss
From Tom
Thanks Tom
Thank you Tom
Thank you Tom for the story about your bomb
Thanks Tom for your note about your bomb
Let's see
Do we have another quick A?
This one is a bit of a big A
Let me see
Ooh, this is the thing
Oh, here we go
Quickie, if you remember a while back
A while back
We were discussing the horror of Bacon White
Oh yeah, yuck
The horror of little white globules that appear when you cook bacon
Yes
So Joe gets in touch
Joe
Let's go
Let's keep on with the flow
Joe with the flow
Joe says hey pud buds
Or pud buds with a u
Oh nice yeah
Pud buds
Like wheat puddings
You only get bacon white from bacon that's been water cured
Basically filled out with water
Why have they done that um i think it keeps for longer and also it makes it like way
more so that's where you get like with added water or without added water on the back of bacon
and that's why bacon shrinks if it's if it's not the fancy bacon
i see yeah so it's a way of making you pay more for less bacon
Is that right?
Right, that's exactly it
Why I order
Yes, basically fill that with water
The water comes out of the bacon when it cooks
And some mixes with the water
Some what?
Some fat, maybe? I don't know
To create a smegmine emulsion.
Smegmine is good. That's a perfect word.
What a great word. Horrible.
Smegmine emulsion.
Yeah.
Smegmine emulsion's got to be the name of some kind of horrifying black metal band.
Yeah, I was just thinking it's a good band name.
Or even for backing singers, Philang and the smeg mine emotion
and they're all wearing white
ladies and gentlemen it's phil wang and a smeg mine emotion Bacon white
Oh I love you
So bacon white
You know that moment in those old recordings
When the audience cotton song
That's the song they know
Yes
Like bacon white
And then it dies down a bit I love you so bacon white. And then it dies down a bit.
I love you so bacon white.
And it's, yeah, Phil Wang and his smeg mine emulsion, hyphen, bacon white, brackets, live at Las Vegas, 1967, close brackets.
Remastered.
Remastered 1998.
1967, close brackets.
Remastered.
Remastered 1998.
Bacon white.
So he says, yes, it creates a smegmine emulsion. If go to the butchers and get fancy bacon You won't have that
And he finishes with
Not very funny but now you know
Koji
That is good knowledge
It's good shit
I had noticed on the rare occasions where I treat myself
To a taste the difference
Bacon par exemplar
Or finest
Yes very little bacon white and very
little shrinkage yes yes yes and they look more sort of like um what's a thin italian ham like
is it pancetta it's not pancetta parma but they look a bit more like just thin dried a bit darker
yes yes there's some darker meat substance to them. Well, now it's
time to
scrape off your bacon white
and get into the VIP area, Phil.
Yes, where
we'll be tackling topics a little too
spicy for
the general, the free
episode. So if you want to
listen in on these
spicy, spicy peppery conversations
do join our patreon to get access to all the bonus spots which are fun they're good promise
they're good stuff i like them i think they're very good the listeners had a little taste of
them last week that's right yes while i was in the woods a A little sippy sip. With a long beard. Scrabbling through the brush.
Digging up Krugerrands.
Yeah, eating slugs and worms
and being glad of it.
Well, there's none of that in the VIP.
So let's go there.
And thank you for listening, guys.
Thank you for coming to all the previews.
If you want to come to any other previews,
I've posted them on a picture of my face
on my Instagram.
Yes, London,
this week I am
headlining a
show at the excellent
Moth Club on Thursday
in
Hackney.
And then on Saturday
I'm doing a preview of my
show at the ARG Comedy Festival
In Shoreditch
Lovely
So look that up
ARG Comedy Festival
I'll be at ARG on Sunday night
But it's all
Fabulous
Gravy baby
It's a really really brilliant
Two day comedy festival
In London
Highly recommended
And it's back for
First time in like two years
Which is nice
Yeah
So do come along
Yeah
Let's do it
Okay
Bye
Alright
Alright bye bye
Bye