BudPod with Phil Wang & Pierre Novellie - Episode 219 - Emergency LIVE Pod from 205!
Episode Date: June 21, 2023The boys are all tied up, so we are releasing the live bonus pod just for YOU!Intro is Come Dine With Me (Slimy), the lads chat Lineker and spice levels, Stanley Tucci, British kid’s TV and correspo...ndence from Tom, Matt, Mark (front sleeping self-strangling). Sketch is Lucky Kentucky Jebediah Seven. Phil also tries to explain some sort of golden cage. Get bonus BudPod on Patreon! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, PodBuds!
Um, no non-pod this week.
Phil's just finishing up his tour.
I've had a whole bunch of shit.
It's been crazy, so what we're gonna do is we've decided it's high time
that, uh, you guys on the main feed here
get the second half of BudPod Live recorded at the Leicester Square Theatre.
It's been exclusive for a long time, a few months, and we're going to dish it out to you because we only have your best interests
at heart. To a degree, let's be frank. Okay, thank you very much to all the Pod Buds who came to
Leicester Square Theatre last Thursday, who sold it out. 400 seats,
biggest venue I've ever sold out on my own. Very proud, but very, very grateful. Thank you to all
you guys who came and cheered, and people who co-jied me in the very streets of Soho,
which made me feel like an old school sleazebag. Yeah, thank you guys that that was great it was very nice to do that in
the same room as bud put live which you will be hearing the second half of shortly yeah really
real nice real nice and um phil obviously passes on his thanks to the various kojis and
and pod buds and so forth from the tour of which they have been legion uh so very nice thank you um if you missed my leicester square theater show
because it sold out we are looking into doing it again in november late november so Late November. So keep your ears flared like horrible trumpets for news of that.
And other than that, in terms of stuff for me to plug,
the Fringe, really, the Edinburgh Fringe.
I've got lots of previews in and around the country,
certainly the southeast of England.
So if you want to see it before it goes to the Fringe when it's not ready.
I am doing a new show at the Fringe.
And then touring the old show.
Because life is too simple, isn't it?
And it's good to add things to make it harder.
I find.
So, new show, Edinburgh Fringe.
And then in autumn I will be coming near you.
With the tour. look on my instagram all the details are there in the pned post and there's already like extra extra
dates all kinds of shit like especially like brighton bristol cambridge my strongholds
so yeah um take a look at that and then phil will be back on tour i think in the autumn as
well actually with the same show so i mean what uh what an autumn it'll be the boys will be on
the road crisscrossing the land um okay great thank you very much guys and enjoy the second
half of the bonus part kojiji, have a good week.
See you Patreon people on Friday.
It's bonus pod 205!
It's bonus part 205! Yay!
You're in your kitchen.
At home.
Oh, it's nervous. You're nervous today.
It's finally come.
Come dine with me.
You're only on Bloody Come Dine With Me, your favorite TV show.
Jewel in the crown of Channel 4's schedule you've been thinking about
what to make
the guests are turning up
you've not met them yet
you're the first of the episode
you've been sort of
really thinking hard about your menu
what you're going to make for them
but you've finally decided you're pushing the bar out a little bit but you what you're going to make for them, but you finally decided.
You're pushing the bird out a little bit,
but you think it's going to pay off.
And the producer goes,
behind the camera producer goes,
so, Podbird, what are you making there?
You're pouring arborio rice into a pan.
pouring arborio rice into a pan.
Your onions are chopped chunkily at best.
I'm making an aubergine risotto,
you say.
An aubergine risotto,
the producer goes.
Wow, it's adventurous.
Oh, no, you think, adventurous.
Is that good?
Is that bad?
You think you overhear
the sound guy
go, slimy.
And you look up at him, but he's
like, he acts like he didn't say anything.
You're starting to feel a little bit
doubt, a little doubt about your menu.
But you go, no, no, look, it's too late now.
I've made my decision.
As long as I cook these aubergines right,
they're not going to be too slimy.
It's a bit out there, but it's never been done before.
People will remember this dish.
And you continue cooking, pouring in the stock.
And what are you going to have for dessert, the director says.
What are you going to have for dessert?
And you go, well, I was thinking,
I grew up in the countryside
and I always went around picking berries with the family
but I also really loved Horlicks as a kid.
So I thought I'd marry those two together
and I'm making a sort of horlicks compote
but adorned with
wild berries
and there's a sort of pregnant
pause as the crew films and
records and direct and you don't know how this has gone
and you hear a little
sound and you swear
the cameraman just went saccharine
like that
sounds a bit sickly You hear a little sound. You swear the cameraman just went, saccharine.
Sounds a bit sickly.
And they go, what about your entertainment?
What about your entertainment tonight?
And you go, I just bought a twister mat.
Ding dong!
Oh no.
And you go, were they here already? And the director goes, shrugs like that.
A knowing shrug.
Mmm.
Maybe they have.
Ding dong. And you go,
oh God. You rub your
hands on your apron.
You try and finish off the risotto.
Oh, the aubergine is starting to
look slimy.
And you go, you fix your hair
and you waddle over to your front door and you ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah. You smell your breath. And you go, you fix your hair, and you waddle over to your front door, and you
ah, ah, ah, ah, you smell your breath.
And you open the door,
why, hello, thank you for, and there's no one
there. Peculiar.
Ding dong!
What? How are you, you look over
at your doorbell on the
outside, and it's gone, ripped out of the wall.
There's two, ripped out of the wall. Just two wires
poking out.
And you go, what the ding dong?
It's definitely coming from inside the house.
You turn back inside, you close the front door.
Ding dong. You follow the sound.
Ding dong.
It's taking you to under the stairs.
Ding dong. Well, that's the toilet. That's the bathroom. Ding dong. It's taking you to under the stairs. Ding dong.
Well, that's the toilet. That's the bathroom.
Ding dong.
The sound's coming out of the
downstairs toilet.
Ding dong.
And your hands
are trembling. They're shaking.
And the
crew have huddled around you, and the director's like,
you got this, you got this, you got this.
He's saying to the cameraman, you got this, right?
He's like, yeah, I got this.
And ding dong.
And you turn the handle, and you open the door.
And it's Phil and Pierre.
In your downstairs toilet.
And Phil is pressing Pierre's nose.
Ding dong!
Ding dong!
And Pierre looks to you and says,
yummy, yummy dinner time!
We've come to dine with you!
Welcome to Bonus Paul!
Yay!
I have three things to say one is how funny it was
because some of you have been brought
and some of you may not be patrons
and you may not know that that is how we start the bonus pods
and beforehand Phil was like should I is how we start the bonus pods. And beforehand, Phil was like,
should I explain that we start the bonus pod
with a mad intro to the VIP area
based on something that came up in the main pod?
No, no, we won't.
We'll just go straight in.
And we couldn't do El Salvador in Mega Prison
because we've done that one.
We've already done that, obviously.
Obviously, we've done that one.
The other two things I like were
I like the fact that the person is called Podbud
because it reminds me of the generic name
from the old Pokemon Game Boy games.
Where you're talking to a character and it's like,
oh, thank God you're here, Player One.
And you go, that's what that menu was.
I should have put my fucking name in.
I really like... Slimy.
Devastating one-word critique
of Slimy. I just love the idea
of sort of like a subtly bitchy film
crew. Yeah.
They've seen a lot of episodes
of Come Dine With Me. They have opinions
at this point.
They know what's going to work and what's not going to work.
Do you think people who film on cooking shows gradually through osmosis
absorb really good cooking techniques just because
they have to constantly observe and hear about
them over and over again? I guess it depends on the cooking show.
If it's Come Dine With Me, probably not.
They just get ruder and
ruder. They get really good
at being cutting, yeah.
Slimy.
That's good.
Whereas, like, yeah, maybe on MasterChef or something,
I pick up a few things.
Yeah, I don't know, really.
Yeah, I wonder if some, like, cameraman
just become extremely skilled at the things.
Like, David Attenborough's cameraman
is really good at sort of galloping across tundra.
really good at sort of galloping across tundra.
And sort of eating out of hard nuts.
Yeah, foraging.
Yeah, and chasing snakes.
Or escaping snakes, I guess.
That's a famous one. They're really good at capturing
moments where animals turn their heads a little bit,
like this.
Yeah.
Takes years to nail that.
I like that a lot. Would you ever do Come Dine With Me? You're quite a cook. I like to cook. No, because I'm that level of cook where I don't want to find
out I'm actually not that good. I'm good enough that I have illusions, but not good enough
to know that illusion could come crashing down at any point.
And I don't really want to put myself to that.
Also, the thing that would come down to me,
the real challenge is the entertainment bit.
Yeah.
Because it's fucking psychotic.
It's no dinner party in the world
has ever gone that way.
No.
It is weird.
It's like they've gone,
well, like a normal dinner party.
Appetizer, main, dessert,
there'll be a cocktail of some kind,
and then knife throwing.
And then there'll be the part where the host stands up
and sings the names of his ancestors and their deeds.
Yeah, because everyone always has a problem with entertainment.
Yeah, they go, I hated that bit where it was no longer a dinner party.
Yeah, we had to improvise
beat poetry.
Yeah, I hated that bit
at the end
where it was shit.
Yeah, you were supposed
to hate that, yeah.
Yeah.
Here's a,
it's not a hot take,
but it's a medium take.
Oh, this is the other thing.
On the bonus pod,
we indulge in spicier takes
than we do on the normal podcast
because we feel safer.
Yeah, for the same reason
that HBO can show
all those floppy dicks and stuff.
If you're paying a subscription
to watch something,
it's a lot harder
to complain justifiably.
You'd be like,
well, I didn't know
when I was subscribing
to the floppy dick
tit drama channel
that I'd see some
floppy dicks and tits.
Whereas if it's on the BBC,
then you can say
it's a disgrace, actually.
You won't see that on the BBC.
You won't see that on the BBC.
Oh, speaking of...
Well, I'll just say my medium take
before your actual take.
Oh, okay, you take your medium take.
My medium take is, initially,
has anyone here watched the Stanley Tucci show
where he just sort of wanders around Italy tasting things?
Yes.
All sexy, bald food guy.
All the sexiest
food guys are bald. Anyway.
Is that true?
Yeah. Anthony Bourdain?
He wasn't bald?
Wasn't he? No. I don't know.
That's not the take.
The take is that initially you want to go,
Stanley Tucci's job is to drive around Italy
just tasting delicious things.
So you go, oh, that's a fucking dream job.
It's an easy, you know, lucky him.
I disagree.
I think that's really difficult.
Wait.
Okay, you go.
This is my spicy take.
Because everyone he meets has put their life into their fucking
risotto or their
custard tart or
this one weird vegetable that they
fricasseed in some
way. And it's like their whole
life has been put into this and they're famous for it
and that's why Stanley Tucci's there with a full
crew and it's from the BBC.
Big, famous, they've told their whole family
I'm going to be on Stanley Tucci.
That's what they call it in Italy, at the BBC.
At the BBC?
In Italy.
Which means BBS.
Hmm?
BBS.
BBS.
Come on guys,
I've been up here for a long time.
You're having water, I'm having Diet Coke, that's why.
Anyway, so there's pressure
on Stanley Tucci
to say the right stuff
as he tastes this mouthful
of whatever,
which for all we know
could be fucking awful.
He's tasting it and like,
oh,
and it's because
there's local piss in it.
That's wonderful.
And he has to go,
oh,
oh my God.
Well,
I can see why that's so special.
I mean,
wow.
And I watched loads of it
and every time
he's like
wow
and he's doing all these
like Italian gestures
to the dish
like
I'm glad we flew out here
this boiled rice
is much better
than the rice
I've had at all the other
fabulous restaurants
I've been to
it's a lot of pressure
on his face acting yeah how much do you eat yeah it's a lot of pressure on his face acting.
How much do you eat?
It's definitely cold after the ninth take
of you sipping and going,
and how do you,
does the chef still think you're sincere?
Right. Do they go, hang on, Stanley,
that was the same yum yum face
you pulled on take four.
On all the other episodes I've seen.
On the other episodes, you slut. Yeah. You all the other episodes I've seen. On the other episodes you slut.
Yeah.
You were rubbing your stomach
when you were going around
Granada in Spain.
That was the same face
you pulled with a prosciutto
or whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
That's a lot of pressure
on Tucci.
I mean, I guess you could say
Tucci's sort of thing
he's got going there
is a bit of a gilded cage, really, because...
Hold on, hang on.
Hang on, sorry.
Could we stop the recording for a second?
Don't stop the recording.
So, hang on, wait, wait.
Say that again, because the people started cheering
and I didn't quite hear what you said.
It's a what?
It's a gilded cage.
Gilded?
Yeah, cage.
G-I-L.
G-I-L-D-E-D.
Gilded.
So like gold, golden.
Like, yeah.
Oh.
Or at least of lace with gold.
So wait, like when you...
So like a gold-plated cage?
No, like made of gold.
Like made of gold.
As valuable and precious. But that would be good, wouldn't it? No, like made of gold. Like made of gold? As valuable and precious.
But that would be good, wouldn't it?
Well, this is a thing.
I'm glad you brought that up because...
Yes, it is good, but still it's a cage and you are in it.
I'm in it.
You're trapped, which is not good.
Even though I own it and it's made of gold and therefore valuable.
Well, it is sort of valuable in the inherent sense.
In the absolute sense of value, of monetary value specifically,
it is valuable because it's gold.
It's solid gold, which has a high value, a high price,
famously for a long time has always been very valuable.
gold, which has a high value, a high price famously for long times
and has always been very valuable.
So what use is
that value if you're trapped?
If you're trapped in the cage.
So that's bad.
It's sort of like it's bad, but it's
also good.
But the good is
in a way that it almost doesn't matter.
I'm trapped inside a good thing.
Yeah, I still think you're giving too much
on the good. It's mostly bad,
I think. To be trapped.
Mostly bad to be trapped.
So in this situation,
Stanley Tucci,
the gold is all the lovely food and
pretty places he gets to go to, but
the cage...
He also has to go to them.
He has to go to them.
The cage is he has to go to them.
Okay.
And he has to pretend each experience is unique and really nice.
I think I'm getting it.
I'm going to have to...
You get it.
It's tough.
It's tough.
I had to do a course.
A real apology there for people who had to be brought for that.
Fuck it up.
Bloody hell.
I cannot tell you how
hard I laughed
when, I don't know if you saw on social
media, we got a message from a lady saying
what is happening?
Who was it?
No way.
Was it you?
Did you leave the comment saying,
I thought I was losing my fucking mind?
She's here.
I cried laughing for over an hour on my own in my flat,
just at how much I could feel for you,
just listening, going, what is this?
Did you not say, I swear you've explained before
what a gilded cage is.
You guys didn't get this before
and you've already covered it.
You're like checking to see if your podcast app
had downloaded the right one.
Just the thing you dream of, really.
That comment was Stanley Tucci's yum-yum face
and I was a risotto chef from some fucking...
That was the reaction I dreamt of when I made it.
Anyway.
It was very satisfying.
Very satisfying.
Before your spicy take, shall we do...
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I'm going to do a favorite
of mine
and hopefully of you.
I like to stand.
Yeah.
Phil's more formal
than I am.
More respectful.
Please hit the music.
Exclusivity Does anything make you feel
As good and important
As exclusivity
That light tickle in your belly
That says
Sure we're all equal in the eyes of the Lord
But
I'm just that little bit better.
We believe that special people deserve special opportunities,
which is why Lucky Kentucky is proud to offer exclusively
to Bud Pod Patreon subscribers
our new limited edition whiskey Jebediah 7 named after our
founder Jebediah Menelaus and the seven laborers who died building his first
distillery
Jebediah 7 is aged in oak barrels
made from the very same oak
Jebediah refused to allow
to be used for his laborers' coffins
laughter
the wood imbues the whiskey with the unmistakable notes of vanilla, hazelnut,
and the blood of the families that dared to defy him
in their quest to bury their careless, clumsy laborer husbands.
Jebediah 7 has aged
for a total of 20 years.
The same amount of time
the lawsuits languished
before being thrown out
by the Kentucky judicial system
in which Jebediah
had many good friends.
Good friends in high places.
And who better to share a glass of Lucky Kentucky Jebediah 7
than with good friends?
High places optional.
Jebediah 7, a taste of history,
a taste of Kentucky,
a taste for those of us who are just that little bit better.
Thank you. A taste for those of us who are just that little bit better.
I said backstage before we came out here,
I think this one might be too dark.
I said, do you want to tell me?
And he went, no.
That was good. That was good.
That was good for the patron as well.
It's a little spicier.
Whiskey with a bit of spice in.
Exactly, a little spice, a little spice.
I like the use of the word clumsy.
And who dared to defy him.
It's very funny.
There is something sort of frightening about the... What's it?
What's the fucking whiskey that this is based on?
Jack Daniels.
Jack Daniels, yeah.
There is something...
There is something kind of sinister about his legend.
It is a sinister...
Yeah.
This was...
The whole sketch is inspired by those massive fucking tube ads
where it's like 11 paragraphs
and the history of...
Jack Daniels loved acorns
or whatever and you go
right and Jack Daniels
was alive in 18
18
and you're sort of going for your sake
I hope post 1870
but it wasn't post 1870
yeah
and they really try and emphasize
the latest ones are not as good as the long
semi-historical paragraphs. Now it's
just like a picture of a lady
with an indefinable drink
kind of slightly blurred in front of a
keyboard in a club, and it's like, Jack Daniels,
drink future good.
And you go, right.
Oh, there's a new one I saw.
I don't know if it's tweeted at us or saw it elsewhere, but
the Lemsip ad on the tubes.
Oh, yeah?
It says, however you cold.
Use Lemsip.
However you cold.
However you cold.
It's not a thing I...
I'm going to have a cold this weekend, actually.
I'm colding this...
I can't come.
I'm colding right now.
It sounds like you're shedding something.
I'm colding. I'm colding. How do you cold? Well. I can't come. I'm colding right now. It sounds like you're shedding something. I'm colding.
I'm colding.
How do you cold?
Well, I like snot.
There's only so many ways you can cold.
And then none of them are choices.
Or charming.
None of them are like something you want to eye cold like this.
I like the one where the mucus comes out of the holes in my face.
But my boyfriend likes to shit.
But we make it work.
That's just how we cold.
That's how we cold.
That's just how we cold.
That's how we cold.
Absolutely disgusting.
I'd rather never have medicine again
than talk like that.
I'd rather, like,
people employed by Lemsip
walked around the tube,
snotted in their hand,
wiped out my face,
and went,
buy Lemsip.
Yeah.
I'd prefer that.
I agree.
I'm not even
exaggerating, I agree.
Tell me your spicy take.
My spicy take
is about
the week's controversy, which is
Gary Lineker and
the BBC.
Oh yeah, remember?
It happened.
It happened.
It happened.
Try it.
The crazy thing is that it happened and finished between... Budpods.
Between Budpods.
Because it feels like it's been a scandal for 11 months.
Yeah.
It's like three days or something crazy.
Yeah.
But trust the BBC to use those three days in the most efficient manner to do the dumbest
thing at every single point
of the journey.
The BBC is like Mr. Bean.
It doesn't matter what the situation is.
It's not going to work.
It's not going to go well.
It's like, no, he's going to find a way to slip in that.
And he will.
I have two kind of spicy-ish takes on this.
Okay.
So just to get... I mean, everyone knows the story, I have two kind of spicy-ish takes on this. Okay.
So just to get everyone, I mean, everyone knows the story,
but Gary Lineker tweeted about
Suella Braverman and the small boats policy
saying this is awful,
and then someone replied to him,
and then Gary Lineker replied to that guy saying
it uses language not dissimilar
to language used in 1930s Germany.
Yeah.
And so that's the one that he got really
in a lot of trouble for, and then BBC, they blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, and then they said, actually, 1930s Germany. And so that's the one that he got really in a lot of trouble for.
BBC, blah, blah, blah. And then they said
Ashley's fine. And they went, Ashley's not fine.
You're fired.
And he went, okay, fine. And then everyone else went,
I'm Gary Lineker.
And...
Yeah.
And then they had no
football programming for
the weekend,
which is when football happens, I've heard.
And so now they've had to back down,
and they've ensured for themselves the worst of all worlds,
as they always do.
Now, as we said, the BBC is a very big corporation.
Most of it is fantastic.
It's just badly managed.
It's whoever's in charge of the crises.
Yes.
Everyone else works quite well.
This is my first spicy take,
is that the great crisis over the last six years in the UK
has been a crisis of lack of managerial talent.
And it all stems from Brexit.
of managerial talent.
And it all stems from Brexit.
Because Brexit was inherently unserious and incompetent,
and it legitimised a generation of unserious, incompetent managers and government.
So it punched a hole in reality.
It all trickles down because the government
chooses the director general right
of the BBC
and the chair
of the board
is you know
he was
part
Tory
and so
that incompetence
has trickled
down
from
from
Brexit
and the
Tories are
right about
trickle down
but it
doesn't
happen
with money
it happens
with
incompetence
and
and he didn't want to go on question time.
Come on, this is good stuff.
The people of Aberystwyth would clap this, wouldn't they?
But on my other side, my countering spicy take,
is that the great crime of...
One of the shames of how the BBC
mishandled this was I became about
what BBC
staff and BBC journalists and BBC presenters
should and shouldn't say when they could have
just said, this is fine, this is simple,
you're not a journalist, you can say this.
And we missed the opportunity
to have the interesting conversation which was
that it is
undeniably crass to invoke the interesting conversation, which was that it is undeniably crass
to invoke the Nazis at every single possible opportunity,
which is what Gary Lineker did
and which I think he shouldn't have done.
And I think that's a more interesting nuanced conversation
about how liberal people make their points without being crass.
And we missed the opportunity to have that conversation
because the BBC was so stupid
where I had this meta, that conversation because the BBC was so stupid we had to have this meta bigger conversation
with the more obvious answer
that we had to spend three days coming back to
it would be funny though if people started
instead of just going Nazi straight away
they went for some of the Nisha far right regimes
I honestly think that yeah
bring up Idi Amin or something
Pinochet, a bit of Pinochet
Pinochet never gets a look in
Franco? It's a Pinochet I mean, or something. A bit of pin of shame. Pin of shame never gets a look in.
Franco?
It's a pin of shame.
It's a pin of shame.
It's a pin of shame.
Frankly, Franco should come up more.
Phil does have puns,
but they're all the names of far-right dictators.
I like to stir the bowl pot. was I going to say okay we're in
way territory now
we're in way territory
it would have been
we must never be in
way territory
it would have been
very funny
I would have been
I cannot tell you
how quickly my monocle
would have popped out
my eye
if I'd seen
Gary Lineker
start referencing
like EDR mean
and stuff on Twitter
I'd be like
Gary
okay
Gary Gary not just a ball boy Idi Amin and stuff on Twitter. I'd be like, Gary! Okay.
Gary!
Not just a ball boy.
That's what I call ex-footballers.
You react to that the same way most people react to someone's glow up?
Yeah.
Oh!
Stop snapping my fingers.
Come through, Gary, with Idi Amin references.
Come through, someone's been reading.
Come through, Gary, with the Idiomine references.
Come through.
Someone's been reading.
We're centrists.
We haven't watched the football or drag race.
We don't like anything popular.
That's our position.
We only know enough to reference it in relation to more niche things that we do want to talk about.
That we do want to talk about, like penne che.
That's good.
That's my spiciness.
What I like is that your two medium spicy takes are fighting, like you've mixed a sort
of a booner and a madras.
Yeah, I'm such a...
They're sort of in conflict, but they create an overall spice.
Isn't it like a madras versus a dal or something, and they sort of cancel each other out?
No, because they're both spicy.
Oh, they're both medium spicy.
Sorry, sorry, sorry.
Yes.
Sorry.
You will.
If you'd confused curry spice levels like that on Question Time.
Yeah.
Shoes and glass.
Yeah, but this is my position.
It's like, but what about the more nuanced conversation we could have had? That this is my position. It's like, but what about the more
nuanced conversation we could have had?
That's always my position.
Immediately you're drowned out by the sound of Nigel Farage
armpit farting.
Immediately you're just the guy
going like, but why don't we study?
You're so quickly bullied
out of the conversation.
Yeah, my political position is very much,
Miss, you forgot to give us homework.
That's very much.
You're just the Lisa Simpson of politics.
We should do some...
Some VIP correspondence.
VIP correspondence, yes.
VIPC.
Oh, can it be done?
Can it be done? Can it be done?
The Patreon app is shit.
People are afraid to say it.
Spicy take.
But it's true.
Quick update based off the last Bud Pod Live from Tom.
Hello, I thought you should know that my girlfriend and I were unable to come to Bud Pod Live
because she had norovirus and shit herself.
Okay, thank you.
An appropriate reason not to were unable to come to Budpod Life because she had norovirus and shit herself. Okay, thank you. An appropriate
reason not to be able to come.
That was the real
test all along.
That's how
Tom and his girlfriend win the Budpod factory.
A real fan would have shit
themselves at home.
We burst into his toilet.
You brilliant boy.
You wonderful boy.
You wonderful boy.
Look what you've done.
But before that, we were really mean.
I couldn't calm myself.
You got nothing.
I hope you guys have seen
the old Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
or that's another...
It's a great movie, man.
It's so good.
Matt, Bud Pod Live reaction for the last one.
1A, he says,
in reaction to the fact that everything you like
is something to do with chewing,
like hillbilly culture.
Kid Rock and wrestling.
1A of his matters he's raising to our attention.
Oh, I see, I see, I see.
1,A.
You're a Philbilly.
Philbilly!
We missed that Philbilly.
You're a Philbilly.
I like Stone Cold Steve Austin.
I like Kid Rock.
I'm a Philbilly.
You're a Philbilly.
Nice.
He says, I once had an appointment with British Gas because my boiler needed fixing.
The man who came to fix it introduced himself as Steve.
Only once he'd left and handed me the receipt did I realize his name had been Steve Austin all along.
Wow. Wow. And when he left, was there
like, pshh, like a glass shattered?
He said, he stopped my flat being stone
cold. I'm so sorry. Nice.
Come through.
We and Boo.
I don't like that.
We stan upon King.
Come through. We stan upon
King. We stan upon king. Come through. We stan upon king.
We stan upon king.
Accept it.
This is the new me.
Oh.
What a really disgusting thing to say.
Mark gets in touch.
Mark, how stark.
That's a pretty stark name, actually.
Dear Plop Buds.
Founding farter and long-time patron.
Love seeing your live episode in Soho.
I'm afraid I have to admit to being
one of the apparently rare front sleepers
you refer to in episode 200.
Sleeps on his front?
Sleeps on his front.
I was sure John Lewis had made these people up.
Front sleeper.
Incredible.
How does he breathe?
How does he breathe?
He must have a face like a pug at this point.
He must have a dick and balls like a pug's face at this point.
Just all smushed.
I'm now able to enjoy
a variety of sleeping positions.
Side, back, front.
Are there any others?
There's not like
a 45 degree one, is there?
I mean, it'll take
too much core strength.
Yeah, you're just
planking all night.
Curled up.
Fetal, this fetal.
Fetal, this fetal.
But in my teenage years
I slept exclusively
on my front.
Head to the side.
Is anyone truly face down, he asks.
Still, you still look like you've just been shot.
Yeah.
You look like the front page of a newspaper in a murder mystery.
Horrible.
Really horrible.
What a thing for your mother to find in the morning.
Every morning, wake up.
Honey, wake up. Honey, wake...
Oh, yeah, I forgot.
That's just how you sleep.
Every morning, you wake up like the exorcist or like an owl.
Morning.
I would love to disabuse you of the notion that we're a bunch of psychopaths.
But in these teenage years, I found the most comfortable version of this to be where one arm was under
my torso. What?
With one hand on my throat.
What?
Hang on.
Oh my god, like an
upside down vampire. Yeah,
kind of. Or like Tutankhamun, but been flipped.
Yeah.
If you flipped Tutankhamun onto the side.
With my hand on my throat, yeah.
Like one of those Peruvian sky mummies.
Oh my gosh.
One guy really liked that.
That's all I need.
One night my arm went to sleep,
as I must have been lying on a nerve,
and I woke up and not feeling my arm
thought someone else had their hand on my throat.
Ugh!
I think the most disturbing part of that
is someone would strangle you by squeezing their hand
under your armpit.
Like someone comes in with a black glove.
Haha, finally going to get my rip.
He's on his front.
He's concealed his neck somehow.
They want to kill you, but they don't want to wake you.
That would be rude.
They don't want to disturb you.
Oh, I'll just quickly strangle you like that.
There we go. Excuse me.
Like a sort of sleeping baby.
I woke up and not feeling my arm
thought someone else had their hand on my throat.
My instinctive brain kicked in and tensed my muscles
causing me to strangle myself in response.
So he's like
Like Thing from Adam's Family
Funny unnecessary way to wake up
That's so funny man
Someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed Where you have no idea way to wake up. That's so funny, man.
Someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed where you have no idea.
I've written in once before with other tales of my
body acting weirdly. Open brackets.
The forever boner. Close brackets.
This is the same Mark as the forever
boner. And this is now making
me question whether or not I'm in fact possessed.
Koji like there's No tomorrow, Mark.
Thanks, Mark.
P.S. I tried to get chat
GPT to write me a better intro
since many of your fine correspondents have
comprehensively pun mined your names.
I'm not sure if our role
writing the puns is in jeopardy yet.
Me, colon. Write me a
juvenile pun using Pierre and
Phil. Chat GPT.
Why did Pierre invite Phil to his French class?
Because he wanted to teach Phil how to say wee wee
like a true Pierre.
Well, I mean, to be fair, I did get wee into it,
which is relevant to our... You could sense the toilet aspect of the podcast.
I feel like this is about Bud Pod.
Yeah, I've mined the entire internet,
and I've just noticed a lot of the word poo
being associated with these names.
Wee-wee, like a true...
Like a true Pierre.
Wee-wee and Pierre are both in quotes.
You want to say wee-we we, like a true Pierre.
Which makes my name
seem like some sort of slur or something.
But
yeah, I don't think the AI is
much of a threat to us.
Oh, no, I don't think so.
You feel safe?
I think I feel safe from this. I mean, we don't know how
this goes. You know, we don't know how this goes.
We don't know how to do this,
so I don't think the AI is going to know.
We're smarter than the AI at the moment,
and we have no idea what the... We don't even know what Gilded Cage is.
We've got no idea.
James Jackson asks for my Bill Tong recommendations.
James, snoggies.
Snoggies.
The delicious
meat of South London.
Which is another slightly creepy
phrase I didn't think I would say.
I mean Snoggy's is quite
the great comedian
John Hastings, Canadian
he always said that moving over here
he found the idea that the word snog meant
something nice like kiss. It was crazy.
It sounded violent and horrible.
It sounded like someone...
The way he expected it to be used would be like,
we're going to take that guy outside and snog
him to hell.
I always think of that when I hear the word snog.
It is a horrible word. It's a really horrible word.
It is really, really gross, actually.
I tried to justify
my position, and you know this.
Here's a hot take. all British children's television is disgusting
not the modern stuff but the classic stuff
I like the classic stuff
it's sort of unsettling
in a comforting kind of way
I like that it's unsettling
but as a child I moved here and I was just like
what the fuck is this
I had
Power Rangers
relatively high budget stuff every British children's show was literally made in a shed I had Power Rangers. Yeah. You know?
Relatively high budget stuff.
Every British children's show was literally made in a shed.
Yeah.
Every single one by a lone man.
My stanglepuss was just a lone guy.
He was like,
I'll make a sort of...
I'll make a weird cat.
Yeah.
I'll make a weird cat for the kiddies.
Yeah.
Sorry, darlings. You're going to my shed.
You're not working on the
cat, are you? Yes.
I'm working on the cat.
Well, perhaps we could film it and let the children see.
I'm so glad you said that.
Let's just go, Britain's weirdest
men, an inexhaustible supply of
felt and glue.
And just have at it, do what you like.
All British kids TV
is like a Krusty the Clown parody
of what Americans think our TV would be like.
What's that, Billy the Copper?
There are no more bimble buns
for the crimple stunks to eat.
And then like a tuba
with a crown goes,
Oh!
What is this?
Something David Lynch would do.
Yeah, really haunting.
Really horrible.
Well, speaking of haunting, we
have to leave you now.
That is haunting. Yeah, yeah. You have to be haunted by our presence until next year as we have to leave you now. That is haunting.
Yeah, yeah.
You have to be haunted by our presence until next year.
We're out of time.
We're out of time.
But thank you so much for coming. Thank you guys for coming.
What a thrill.
And if every single one of you could also buy a ticket to see my stand-up show in this room as well,
that would be a great relief.
It's on June 15th.
It's a wonderful show.
In this very room. It's a wonderful show. In this very room.
It's a superb show.
But guys,
thank you so much
for coming tonight.
Thank you very much
for coming out, guys.
So nice to see you all.
Please give it up
for everyone
at Leicester Square Theatre.
Yep.
Give yourselves
a round of applause
for supporting the podcast
all this time
slash being brought here
by your partner.
Yes.
Well done.
Thank you to Avalon
for sorting it out.
Thank you to Avalon.
And big enough for Pierre. Big enough for Avalon for sorting it out.
And big enough for Pierre. Big enough for Phil as well.
Koji, everybody.
Koji, guys. Koji. Okay, thank you.
Bye.