BudPod with Phil Wang & Pierre Novellie - Episode 52 - ANNIVERSARY POD! Part 1. Feat. Adam Hess
Episode Date: March 4, 2020A year of BudPod! To celebrate, here is the first part of a MEGA POD where Phil Wang and Pierre Novellie are joined by the brilliant Adam Hess! Talkin' 'bout: Neighbours, Formula One, train announceme...nts, communion bread, Marjorie clips under the ground, young Jesus, movies ruin life, Adam digging a bunker, Atlantis and hoaxes, The Voynich Manuscript, another episode of Bear With Me, Adam and Phil have been publicly shamed, Phil got caught using a silly fake email, The Good Old Days of Twitter Get bonus BudPod on Patreon! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's 52!
Episode, um, no, it must have been, last one was 52 because I called it episode Nifty Poo.
So this is 53.
Is this 53?
It's 53.
No!
Yeah, sorry, I didn't realise that.
Nifty Pee.
No, Nifty Poo.
Let me check that.
Nifty Pee.
This is a live debate.
How quickly it's become, uh, you know, full of fraught disagreement.
Does this say on the app?
It should say on the app? It should say on the app
It would be mad if it didn't
It would be absolutely insane if it didn't say it on the app
What do we pay all that app money for?
Let me just buy some more credit
So I can check
Phil's on a pay as you go smartphone
No this is 52
This is 52?
Yeah
Really?
Yeah you're right sorry This is episode n This is 52? Yeah. Really? Yeah. Yeah, you're right.
Sorry.
This is episode Nifty Poo.
Okay.
Yeah, Nifty Poo, the year anniversary.
Well, congratulations.
It's been a year.
A year of Bud Pods.
What a year it's been.
And here to celebrate our stinky anniversary is our friend and comedian, Adam Hess.
Happy birthday, everyone. Thank you. Thanks so much. Thanks, man. Our friend and comedian. Our friend and comedian Adam Hess happy birthday everyone
our friend and comedian
our comedian
our comedian and friend
he's been here the entire time
this is just the first time
yeah this is a big deal thank you very much for the opportunity
Adam's the producer
yeah that's cool
I'll do that role
I've enjoyed it but I'm being let out for a special occasion I never know how to feel about Adam's the producer Yeah Yeah that's cool I'll do that role Yeah yeah yeah
I've enjoyed it
But I'm being let out
For a special occasion
Yeah
I never know how to feel
About a podcast or radio show
When the producer
Starts chipping in
Yeah yeah yeah
Do you know what I mean
Because sometimes
It's good value but
Especially when it becomes
Like they're pretending
It's just chipping in
But it's like
He's part of the woodwork
Or she's part of the woodwork
And they're
That wasn't even improvised
Yeah
And they're making it sound like they're sitting farther away.
But they've got their own mic.
Yeah.
They have a special faraway mic.
Did you find it weird when you realized that, like, when they started to film radio shows,
when you realized that they're not all sharing the same mic?
I just thought, like, Chris Tarrant and Dr. Fox had their teeth right up next to each other.
Yeah, good morning, everyone, like that.
And I was just like, oh, I should have imagined more camaraderie.
You thought every radio show was like when the three backing singers in a doo-wop song
kind of go, shoo, shoo, around one central microphone.
I think I'm basing it on when in Neighbours, when Toadie had a university radio show.
And that's all we've heard of.
I understood all the nouns you've said.
Oh, fair enough.
And I know Neighbours is the Australian one.
I'll edit this bit out.
Okay.
But Neighbours was huge here for no discernible reason, even though it's Australian.
Yeah.
What was that about?
Why was it so big?
Well, it was so big.
They showed it twice a day.
Was it just like...
I can't think of anything else that they would show twice a day.
Not like the news when it changes.
It's like for drug addicts.
They would show Neighbours at 1.15,
and then they'd go, well, we've got to do that again.
And they would show again at 5.35.
And they wouldn't change it, it was the same thing.
During the school holidays, I'd watch it twice a day.
Is it because Neighbours is just like
sunshine cockneys
oh yeah
and British people
are like
they're foreign
but they're so
essentially just us
or is there so much
going on in every episode
that you catch
different things
a second time
yeah
yeah you pick up
easter eggs
it's like a David Lynch film
loads of easter eggs
it's so complicated
and layered.
I think, to be fair,
the one at 5.35 did have commentary on it.
Oh, okay.
And so you'd have picked up
what the clues were and stuff like that.
Oh, so the 5.35 was the answers?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You had the afternoon to mull over
the mysteries of Neighbours.
Oh, I did.
Jenna closed the door in Bill's face?
And also there was not only that,
there was also a recap at the beginning of each episode
of what happened in the previous episode.
So I would sometimes see the same scene four times.
So you'd see it twice on the day
and then twice tomorrow in the recap.
And also it was like there was a three month delay
between an episode being shown in Australia
and the UK
so as such
I think after a while
they were like
well the UK is such a big market
it's going to be really confusing
for them if we have any
Christmas episodes
so they didn't once
because it would be
in March
so they just never
celebrated Christmas
after like 1994
or something like that
so it's like atheist
soap opera
yeah it was just
it was just
fucking petrifying it was like an episode of Lost it was like atheist soap opera Yeah, it was just time It was just fucking petrifying
It was like an episode of Lost
It was like, what's going on?
It was like The Sims
They don't have weekends
That really pissed me off
Because you have to go to work every day
Oh, brilliant
You never had a weekend
I got annoyed with The Sims because of the mismatch
Between how time worked and tasks
So for your sim to shower for
long enough for it to reach full clean for it to be like i'm happy because i'm clean now it would
have to shower for two hours and it would shower for the length of time that a murderer would
shower after killing a family member yeah yeah scrubbing and crying and you'd miss work and was there
was there an alternate thing which well that's not long enough like yes proportionally yeah
cooking oh really they would just get a dish of like nothing and put it in a microwave and then
that would go like oh my 10 minutes it would be like a roast dinner or whatever yeah i think about
the time of stuff really freaks me out i always always thought that about Soaps again that there would always
the cliffhanger
would happen like one
minute before the following episode
begins. But sometimes that
following episode would air two days later.
So over the course of...
So every episode happened the day after the previous
one. But over the span of
30 years, if you're missing
a day a week, we're in 1995 still
do you know what I mean?
these people are so busy
yeah, very stressful
it's economics of scale isn't it?
of course, yeah
a little bit here and there
everything alright?
yeah, I'm just making sure
because listeners, I've got a handheld mic
so that's why I feel a bit more like a roving sports reporter.
Yes, you look like it, too.
You look like you're at the Grand Prix.
Yeah.
I just know loads about the mental state of various drivers.
I will say this.
I had a very good friend growing up who loved Grand Prix and Formula One and stuff.
I never believe people when they say that.
I know.
I never believe them.
I know, but I would go around to his house to hang out. you know when you're a kid and this is like pre-internet
with smartphones or anything so you just have nothing to do there's just nothing you just
all day i would come around to his house and he would be sat like and he would watch like four
hours of racing it's pointless just ask at the beginning don't even do the race ask who's got
the fastest car you'll win it me, you'll win this.
And then it's like, believe it or not, you know who always wins?
Ferrari.
Ferrari always smash it.
Vauxhall Astras have suddenly started winning.
Yeah, and it's always like, David Carr comes last.
Of course David Carr came last.
It's David Carr.
It's brown.
No one's even sponsoring it.
It's the wrong shape.
It's got a sail. So it's not going to win
We're downwind
It's too long
It's too long, isn't it?
But also like
Yeah, I love how little anyone knows about
Anyone below third place
In Formula 1
Like Lewis Hamilton is one of the most famous people on earth
No one knows anything Yeah, exactly And they're still making so much money in like seventh place And Formula 1 like Lewis Hamilton is one of the most famous people on earth no one knows anything
and they're still making so much money in like 7th place
and they're like
well I'm Casper von Stubelitz
you know
I drive for Gronski
you know the Russian car
and it's annoying that
yeah in the end it's just like an Astra from
some Vauxhall Astra that's been towed in from Yugoslavia
I mean
some Soviet car
Built out of old tank parts
And no one would even notice
But it's also extra hard to make these people
Recognisable because you don't see them
During the actual sport taking place
They should have on top of their helmet
A sculpture of their head
Like a knight
Like a medieval knight
So you can see them driving around Like a knight Like a medieval knight Yeah yeah yeah
So you can see them
And then they like
Or should the helmet have their face painted on there
Oh yeah yeah
Something like that
Or maybe like
It'll have to rotate slowly so that everyone can see
Or maybe like a feed
Of what their face is happening inside the helmet
So they bump into each other, you see them go,
and look at each other.
Yeah, they looked too weird to me.
It's one of those sports as well where the amount you have to pay
to watch it in the special seats, to be there,
to be there in Monaco on the finish line,
is hundreds of thousands of dollars,
and it's full of oligarchs and Bond villains.
Yeah.
And it's objectively the worst way of watching that because they just go and they're gone yeah they should for an extra price you sit in a car surely you would see what surely you just
have to pay more to be able to watch it on the tv because you get like drone footage you can watch
the whole race yeah i mean the same way you can buy a box for the theater. You should be able to buy like a sidecar.
Yeah, 100%.
And then you pay an extra fee
and they attach you to the car and you just go.
Or like a rabbit in Greyhound racing.
They just like fly you around the track.
Like that, that'd be great.
In a little robot box, yeah.
Or maybe, I've got an idea actually.
Maybe like glass bottom fishing, like at a boat.
Maybe the track is glass and you can just hang out beneath it
Like
Right
Like a Japanese businessman
Someone who's really horny for cars
Yeah I'd love that
Or above
To be fair above works probably far better
Yeah above makes way more sense
You wouldn't be able to tell which cars
Which come out of one of them
Yeah
You could have a really decadent party
Where everyone's just drinking cocktails
While these
These death machines race underneath you
That's cool
That's quite cool That's really cool When the drivers are doing the driving do you not think at some
point they must think what should i do like like they can't be like driving all the time because
they know let's go straight for a bit you know how sometimes there's like a hundred cars all in a big
zooming blob yeah the guy at the not the not the guy right at the back but the guy like three from the back
he's definitely just thinking like i'll try i'll try that omelette recipe again yeah egg i'll try
that'll be good yeah yeah it's gotta be others i start thinking about goalies all the time sorry
goalkeepers sorry yeah sorry we don't want to get cancelled um do you when they're just they're just
basically for most of the match Watching football They're just like
They're probably
If they're ever engaged in the match it's disaster
No no no no no
You've got to think about other stuff
They must do
If you're a goalie
I am amazed that more of them don't just smoke
Yeah yeah But we don't know because the camera's not on them
That's true they could be up to anything
Well there was that it wasn't a goalkeeper but he was
He was a substitute for
One of the smaller teams like
Hull
Disenfranchised I don't know what
You call those clubs and he was just like
Eating a pie Yeah he got fin he was just like eating a pie
Yeah he got fined for
Formatively eating a pie
But wasn't that a brand deal
He didn't declare it
Yeah it was
Oh is that true
Everything's an ad
Everything's an ad now
I was having a delicious cup of
Adam is an ad
The short version of his is an ad It must Yeah
The short version of his name
Is ad
I'm not
I wouldn't be surprised
If there are ad people
Just hanging out
Like taxi drivers
If they just mention
I don't know why
Taxi drivers don't just say
Oh have you tried these beans
Yeah
If you hire people
Yeah
You'll just have a captive audience
If I was a masseuse
Sorry masseur
I would just You just got a captive audience You just mention beans I masseuse, sorry, masseur, you just got a captive audience.
You just mentioned beans.
I swear someone did do that, though.
I swear someone paid all the black cab drivers
to say something or to...
Was it Nigel Farage?
Because this seems to be working.
Every black cab driver is a super progressive
left-wing socialist, but their money...
They're highly capitalistic.
They need the money
because they yeah they're driving cabs if i was a train driver actually that's better because you've
got a pa system there's a thousand people in there go the next stop is uh norwich where alan partridge
dvd is and you just say something like that that would be great but also then it doesn't work on
the london underground and some of the shittier trains because as we all know they'll be like
you'll grind to a halt outside of your destination and it'll look quite serious and the PA will go
does that happen it's the speaker quality is so shit especially in the London Underground
I mean we also people don't be sold to in such sort of antagonistic like people no one wants
no one's taking anything in because they're frustrated isn't that a great way to solve some to to put people in a stressful situation and yeah it's a
horrible day but if you buy and so you sell something like a stress like a um an app for
mindfulness so when you get people stressed tell them the thing what if you did it for social good
so you'd be like and we're just being held at a red signal Outside of London Paddington
No sign of when it's going to be fixed
Unless everyone on this train registers to vote
Oh great stuff
I had a tube driver not so long ago
And he made an announcement
In an American accent
I was just about to say this
I had a tube driver once who had an American accent
And the second said
The next stop is London and Liverpool Street
Oh yeah the same guy
Everyone just popped up like
What the
We all looked at each other like
Well why isn't he in Hollywood
That's genuinely the feeling
I think it
So American
What's he doing here
What is our life story
I've always thought
Can you imagine like an English subway driver
Subway car driver in New York
That station is New York Grand Central
I just think to myself
The idea that
It was funny how that made us bond
On the tube
It's like that, a dog being on the tube
Not like there's a dog and everyone just smiles at each other
Or a rambling guy
Who is shouting at his own reflection
I don't know if that makes everyone bond
They just look down more
Yeah I mean that happened with I fucked a dog
No but that guy's trying to shout in people's faces
I'm saying that guy standing by the central pole
Looking down just going
Yeah well that's what I told her
Like stamping his feet loads
That means everyone can look at each other and go uh oh
I remember once there was a lady across
Across me on the tube
And she was just knitting.
And one by one, everyone on my side just caught her knitting
and just watched her knitting.
And it ended up like five people just silently watching her knit.
And then she got to her stop and she got up and she left
and everyone just kind of went, no.
We all had this chance of, no.
I was enjoying watching that.
It would be great if she starts knitting something absolutely horrific.
Oh, that's cute.
Oh, God.
Is that a murder scene or something like that?
It's just funny.
It's like a cock sock.
I think the world's become so shit that that's the sort of thing that would be viral.
A photo of the world's falling apart.
But this woman, woman Woman shocks the internet
By making a scarf underground
Or some shit like that
This is great
These commuters found something to bond over
And what it was
This is why I'm glad that flash mobs
Have died out
Because I've seen a couple
They're all committed masses
They're trying to
It was all cultists
And then just all took out a gun
And killed themselves
I was on the tube once
I was on a tube once
And I saw a guy, it was a packed tube
And I saw a guy with a trumpet
I was like if you fucking dare
And it wasn't in anything
But the last Flashmob video I saw was quite recent.
I think it was a quite recent video.
It was this guy just going, oh, happy day.
And everyone's looking around.
And everyone's obviously taken aback.
And then one of the people that had previously taken aback starts singing.
So she's in on it.
But the entire carriage is singing.
So this isn't a flash mob.
You're just a choir.
You're not flashing anything. You're just a choir. You're not flashing anything.
You're just hijacked public transport.
Yeah, you're just taking up quite valuable resources,
like limited space,
and then just singing.
You can sing.
It's just not a thing.
You should just get 40 men,
and they're all just sat there, right?
And they're the only ones in the carriage.
No one else is there.
And film it.
And one of them just takes his dick out
and just starts wanking.
And everyone's taking it back, and then And one of them just takes his dick out and just starts wanking. And everyone's taking it back
and then the next guy goes,
takes his dick out.
So I guess-
Then eventually,
the 40 of them are all just doing it.
They're like,
wow, what an amazing-
So I guess what you're saying is-
Everyone was so inspired
in calling it masturbation.
So yeah,
I guess that's what it is.
An annoying thing
stops being annoying
if 50 people do it unasked.
Yes.
That stops from being, oh, that's a nuisance. Someone's just singing in my face. Oh, 50 people do it unasked. That stops from being
oh, that's a nuisance. Someone just singing in my face.
Oh, 50 people are singing in my face. This is epic.
Yeah, that's like the difference.
Wow, this is epic.
Totally awesome.
It's restoring my faith in humanity.
My faith in humanity was so low
but also so easily fixed.
Oh, and it's the best thing ever.
Again.
That is scientifically possible. Things can get increasingly better. so low but also so easily fixed oh and it's the best thing ever again ever i've never seen that
is scientifically possible things can get increasingly better yeah but this is not at
that rate yeah um it's like when you try and do the thing with difference between like a belief
and a delusion because diagnostically that's quite difficult because you go like well when is a
delusion you know when is a delusion a religion? Yes, yes, yes.
Well, I mean, it can have sort of quite dangerous real-world consequences.
Someone I know who is a psychiatrist,
you're not technically or legally allowed
to define someone as insane
if their delusions, in quotation marks,
align with an accepted religious belief yeah so yeah so
so then they then they're not necessarily they could be a danger to their family and you'd have
to leave them alone because then they're not actually technically insane because no because
it fits with a cultural idea so so what so if someone, I believe I can fly because
Jesus might think that.
No, but that's not a part of Christianity.
There's not a part in the Bible that says Jesus
will give some people the ability to fly.
Whereas if you say, that old man said
a spell and now this biscuit is the
flesh of my God, then
you're just a Catholic.
Oh, I was that.
It was never explained to me, that thing.
Transubstantiation?
The bread thing.
It was never explained,
especially because we weren't given bread at all.
What?
It's not bread.
Well, biscuit.
A wafer, yeah.
Yeah, it was like...
I wouldn't go so far as to call it...
I wouldn't upgrade it all the way to biscuits.
I was obsessed with getting that.
It's rations.
It's the closest you have to rations nowadays, right?
The church communion wafer.
Yeah.
At the time, it was the smallest things I'd ever had.
It was...
Because it would...
You didn't swallow it.
It was like one of those breath fresheners.
You put it on your tongue, and then it just got...
It's just gone.
It was like a space invader without the middle finger.
It was a space invader.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's how they make them.
They just cut the space invaders in half, and they throw away the...
And they blow out the powder.
Yeah.
The powder's too much fun.
We can't have that.
Hello.
No one is available to take your call. Please leave a message out the powder. The powder's too much fun. We can't have that. Hello. No one is available to take your call.
Please leave a message after the tone.
Oh, hello.
I'm just calling because, you see, I went to the park.
I went to Hyde Park to look at the horses, and now I'm under the park.
I don't know what has happened, but I can't get back above the ground,
but I can see through the ground, like when you fall through the ground in GoldenEye, or maybe Medal of Honor.
So I've clipped through to underneath the park, and I can throw things up into the park, but they don't come back down through the grass.
And an infinite network of wires stretches all around me in every direction, and the background of the reality is sort of, I would say, eggshell.
Not pure white, but maybe off-colour.
But I do still get mobile reception, but I can't charge anything, as I said.
I can't quite climb my back out.
Okay, thank you.
It was thrilling getting that.
Didn't you, weren't you Christian?
I missed my confirmation because my parents were out of town.
And then I just never went through with it.
And that's why I'm an atheist now.
My parents just were out of town.
When I was supposed to get confirmed.
So funny.
Although I did go, I started going to church for Midnight Mass.
And I started going to a Methodist place in Bath.
And they literally just have like a bread roll from Sainsbury's.
And the guy tears off a piece of bread and gives it to you.
Oh, my God.
And I found that quite affecting, actually.
Yeah.
That's Jesus stuff, isn't it?
That's recognisably bread.
Yeah, yeah.
It's less mass-produced as well.
We need another crate of those thin, weird wafers
that makes you feel a bit industrialised.
Yeah, when you think Jesus, you think tearing off bread.
When people say... Rustic.ic yeah a rustic loaf steal a loaf of bread to feed your starving family it's only loafs of
it's only bread that you're stealing so if i was a starving family and someone was willing to steal
but the only thing they stole was a loaf of bread i'd be like come on you're a known crook
you might as well steal some want some kFC. But also, whenever you imagine someone stealing a loaf of bread
to feed their starving family,
it's like a round, crusty brown loaf.
Yeah, it's a legend.
It's a legend.
It's a square loaf.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like a square, uncut loaf of Wonder Bread.
You'd be like, no, fuck you.
That's terrible.
I think a real trick was making Jesus a carpenter,
which never comes up,
except at the end with the cross,
which is like a cruel joke.
Yeah.
Because if he was a baker,
and he ended up talking about bread all the time it'd be a much better story yeah well he talked about bread because that's just how he understood the world this word is my
body you know it would have been funnier if like like you said it's a cool cool trick if like he
got a commission for a big cross like a couple of days before and he'd
be like oh sounds fun what could possibly i know but i i've looked into this this jesus him being
a carpenter you've looked into this jesus this jesus chap you've looked into this whole i've
looked into him because i was finding it funny they don't mention much about him being a a a
woodman woodsman no what is it carpenter carpenter butenter Carpenter But There was other gospels
Wasn't there?
You mean the ones
That they didn't let into the bible?
Yeah
There's one about
What he got up to as a kid
You know what I mean?
Oh really?
He was a little rotter
What did he do?
It was a naughty boy
He was a naughty boy
And he
Because there's
There's one reference
To Jesus being a kid
Because obviously
That's the funnest thing
Imaginable
A child god
Magic god power kid It's great But there was The one reference we're allowed Is him talking to the rabbis to Jesus being a kid? Because obviously that's the funnest thing imaginable. A child god.
Magic god power kid.
It's great.
But there was... The one reference we're allowed
is him talking to the rabbis
on the steps of the temple.
Yeah, he goes missing
and he turns up in church.
And he's having a big debate.
Very convenient.
Very convenient.
He would be there, wouldn't he?
Or Jesus, yeah, yeah.
But in the one they didn't let in,
he...
He makes someone's hair fall out
or something?
Yeah, somebody didn't believe stuff he was, I think.
As a child, people weren't believing him
and he punished them for that.
Well, according to the gospel of something.
It's like Thomas or something.
A collection of fragments.
Like it's not a good...
Oh, like the anthology?
Like the short stories?
Yeah, like the notes for a new book.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, one of the bits they didn't let in
in the official version was a bunch of kids were fucking with him Well, one of the bits they didn't let in the official version
was a bunch of kids
were fucking with him
and he kind of
summoned a bear
and the bear just ate them.
Oh my gosh.
It's a lot more
like freaky,
freaky deaky.
I remember like
whenever I was at church
they were giving
the same stories
by my priest
and I was like,
there must be
some meaty stuff.
I was never taught
about Lazarus
being risen from the dead. Yeah. Sick. But I remember. I was never taught about Lazarus being risen from the dead.
Yeah, sick.
But I remember when I was taught stuff about miracles,
I thought these are all facts that the priest is saying.
So I was like, oh, and then Moses made the sea split in half.
And I was like, whoa!
And I was like, mummy!
And I was like, shush!
And I was like, mummy, that sounds like quite a big deal!
And everyone was being very quiet. And I was like shush and I was like mummy that sounds like quite a big deal and everyone was just being very quiet
and I was like
mummy
and like
no one was
and I thought
I was just
mum was like
showing off now
and I was like
oh so
expressing any emotions
like showing off
so now I'm quite stoic
if someone tells me
I got into Oxford
I'm like
what of it
I'm like
don't show off now
but I was like
it was quite weird
like some big news
stuff that he was up to
do you think
that's what a lot
of Christianity
in Britain is about
is getting our
expectations for
what is amazing
so high
that you're
not impressed
by anything
for the rest of your life
well yeah
I mean I
so Moses split the seed
don't react
don't react Don't react
Everyone's like
That's the least he could do
He came back to life after three days
That's pretty impressive
I certainly watched so many films as a young child
That life meant nothing to me
Do you know what I mean?
People say if you watch too much porn
Sex isn't interesting enough
I saw James Bond when I was four
That's mad
Like people
Bang
A pen went bang
Pens are shit to me now
Everything's shit to me
Because the stuff I saw
A lion can talk
Like this is
I'm fucking going to zoos
Zoos are shit
Because no one's singing
Yeah
And like
I'm just like
Nothing's interesting anymore
Because the film just ruined it
I thought medicine was ruined By a lot of films and stuff
because it's like, right, so in fiction,
I can go into the woods and grind up some bark
and just cure whatever I want.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
In real life, it's like this boring, prodding, paracetamol.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We were talking last week about when,
it turns out when we both were boys,
we'd make shampoos
I know, smoothies
You'd make loads of potions
I did it outside
Whenever I decided
I really loved my mum that day
Yes, it always was
It was going to be a little present
I'd go into the garden with a bowl
And just pick loads of mud
And grass and daisies
and rocks
and I thought
that was basically
a bunch of flowers
and I just give her
this earth microcosm
like,
Mummy,
I love you!
Like a cat.
Yeah,
a cat.
And she would just be like,
oh there it is,
give her a bowl of shit.
But my mum would encourage it
because she was like,
get him out of the house.
We had a bunker
We had a bunker in our garden
When I was growing up
Like a war bunker
A war bunker
Which was
No
What?
It was sunken into the ground
You couldn't open the door
It was a steel
Or a metal door
You couldn't get into it
You couldn't get in
But we knew
Like a bomb shelter
Yeah it was a bomb shelter
It was concrete
But with a metal door
Right
And we knew
Me and my cousins worked
If you just dig away Dig away in front of the door Deep enough We'll be able to open it it was a bomb shelter it was concrete but with a metal door and we knew me and my cousins worked out
if you just
dig away
dig away in front of the door
deep enough
we'll be able to
open it
so I was like
out there
for ages
after school every night
just digging
digging digging
my little hands
you look like a kid
from a folk tale
yeah exactly
and then after
after about a year
it was the year
I was doing
World War 2 at school
so I was like
7 or 8
or something like that
and I was like yeah I'll find treasure in was doing World War II at school, so I was like seven or eight or something like that. Yeah.
And I was like,
yeah, I'll find treasure in there.
I'll find skulls.
Why?
Yeah, a grenade.
No, I'll find nothing.
Yeah.
But anyway,
after about eight months,
I was getting nowhere
because I was small.
I was crap at physical stuff.
So I just gave up.
Years later,
my mum was like,
we were filling that hole
back up every night.
We were fucking keeping you out there.
You're really annoying man
And
Yeah
So
Then I eventually got into it
And
There was
Obviously just a ladder
Just a rotting ladder
What was there
Before you guys moved in
Yeah yeah yeah
Wait
Yeah
And I don't know if it was like
Second world war
Or cold
I don't know
Like someone's weird storage even
Yeah
But it was
literally just a
rotting ladder
which I just kicked
as soon as I saw it
I was like
I can kick that
or maybe I'll ask my mum
I'll ask my mum
can I break that ladder
and she's like
dude do
do whatever you want
yeah that and a bowl
that I just
tried to smash
but it was plastic
so it kind of
hit me
hit my shin
but yeah it was
absolutely pointless
like years worth of work
well if it was a plastic bowl then it probably would have been oh yeah unless it was absolutely pointless, like years worth of work. Well, if it was a plastic bowl, then it probably would have been.
Oh, yeah.
Unless it was Bakelite.
Oh, no, no, no. The bowl went
in there. Oh, you took the bowl in?
No, no, no. You're saying if it's plastic,
it must have been Cold War.
Right. But, I mean, the bowl could have
just been put in there later.
Right, sure, yeah, yeah. I'm married to the rather romantic
notion that no one had touched it. It was frozen in time. I don't know. Someone in there later. Right, sure, yeah, yeah. I'm married to the rather romantic notion that no one had touched it.
It was frozen in time.
I don't know.
Someone in the bar just went,
I've got to run out of space in the house
for this bowl.
This one bowl is more trouble than it's worth
to keep in the house.
Yeah.
I just can't bring myself to throw it away.
What to do?
They look up from washing the bowl in the sink
and see the bunker up the window.
I love the idea.
Pierre, you must know about this.
I love the idea that it sank over time.
It hadn't been touched for so long that stuff grew over it.
You know, like when they find an old city underground,
I'm like, so why is it under...
So did it just get so dusty that it's now underground?
I worry all the time about how things became under the floor.
Yeah.
Because the earth is not getting bigger.
So why is it under the ground?
I think that it's like when...
If you see...
I think it's...
If you see a graveyard where all the stones are, like, sunken,
I think the reason the floor's going up
is because, like, enough leaves fall.
Yes.
They turn into mud.
So that's just another couple of
millimetres every year.
But then I'm out in the desert.
Well, the desert blows the sand around.
Yeah, so is it just that?
But some bits must be getting shallower.
That did happen. That happened
somewhere in North Africa, I think in Egypt,
where there was a huge sandstorm
that just revealed all these statues.
And everyone went, fuck! that was there the whole time
Oh my god, like what?
Skateboarding statue, that would be great
If they were all just doing gnarly tricks
Yeah, because if it's just a man on a horse
Well, yeah, we know
But if it's a man on a monkey, we're like, yay!
And the history is cool again
Yeah
An Egyptian half pipe
Yeah that would be great
It was something very historically significant
It was like proof that a certain mythical city
Had been real or something
I love it when mythical cities are real
Yeah
I went to the Troy exhibit
And maybe Troy is real
It's one of those really annoying conclusions
Where they're like
We found proof that there was a city like Troy
But it was in a completely different place
And probably wasn't Troy
I guess the Troy Museum
Really have an incentive to keep the Troy lie alive
Yeah yeah yeah
It needs to be a cliffhanger
But they want there to be enough doubt
That you're not just happy that there was a Troy
And that you leave
Come back next year
We've found another jawbone
Yeah I'd love
Atlantis famously is made up
I think about Atlantis all the time
Yeah 100%
Plato's like
I only made it up
And I go but no
That's right
Was it in
One of his made up
Party conversations
I think so Socrates is talking to
Is it I don't know
I think the writer does play to
But it's like
But then you can say
Why did he make it up because he'd overheard the fact
That it was real
That sort of thing
Or like he made it up without fact that it was real. Like that sort of thing. Or like he made it up without knowing that it was real.
Yeah.
He just said it, but little did he know.
Beneath the waves.
I fall for a hoax once a fortnight.
And it makes my life really thrilling.
I found out about these stones that were found called the Dropa Stones,
which is basically a comic book carved into some circular stones that were found called the dropper stones which uh it's basically sort of a comic
book like carved into some circular stones that tells a story like it's like oh man and a woman
hanging out man and a woman like eating some beans or whatever and then you go is that a spaceship
and it's a little comic book and i was like watch a two-hour documentary of it read up loads about
it then i just googled the sentence dropper stones and then it went dropper stones hoax
and i was like that was the first thing. And I was like, oh.
And they were like, oh, we've carbonated it today.
And I'm like, no, this is not, no, it's real.
It's real.
Have you seen that thing of people going like,
well, you know, you've got the temples,
the pyramids, right, in Egypt.
You've got the pyramids.
And then you've got Angkor Wat in Cambodia,
the big pyramids there.
And then you've got the Incan and Aztec pyramids. And they're all, they've got the pyramids. And then you've got Angkor Wat in Cambodia. The big pyramids there. And then you've got the Incan and Aztec pyramids.
And they've all got the same design.
They all look the same.
Is that a coincidence?
Was there an ancient super civilization that got split up by continental drift?
And someone's like, or that's just the best way of stacking big rocks.
Yeah, triangles.
So that they stay up.
It's kind of how I feel about The Simpsons.
The Simpsons is on at 6pm everywhere in the world.
Yeah.
In Malaysia growing up, Simpsons was on at 6pm.
And I moved to the UK, 6pm.
Is it a coincidence?
Yeah.
The aliens gave us The Simpsons.
But it's not 6pm there at the same time as it is here.
But of course.
The sun never sets on The Simps never sets That pyramid theory
It would make perfect sense
Instead of it being pyramids
If it was like a Westfield
Yeah that is weird
Triangles are pretty fundamental
Or if it was a pyramid inverted
It's so needlessly difficult
They must have thought it was useful
I love a thing that
is on the cusp of being absolute bullshit i absolutely love it it's the closest i've got
to believing in god or like magic yeah because like there was a um do you know there's a there
was a map that was found called the vind the vinland map the vinland map vinland map yeah
where it showed it proved that i know that the new world in america had been discovered
and drawn on a map fucking ages ago yes and i was like this is great and then i was like and i was
like early on into my reading of it they were like no we checked the ink that's that's new ink
yeah that's that's a hoax and i'm like yeah you lie it's got it's got aluminium yeah it's signed
by banks it's a gel pen it's's been done with this popcorn-smelling gel pen.
It's on the back of a receipt, Choccy Woccy Duda.
You seem like you'd know about that, Matt.
Yeah, I know, because the Vikings,
or rather, to be more accurate, the Norse peoples,
are supposed to have landed in Vinland,
and they do seem to have.
They've got some archaeological evidence.
Leif Erikson and so landed in Vinland And they do seem to have They've got some archaeological evidence Vinland?
Vinland is like Labrador In Canada
Excuse me?
Labradors are from Labrador
In Canada?
Is it?
Wow, okay
I'm so clever that I didn't even know that Labradors were a dog
It's that bit of Canada
that dribbles upwards towards Greenland.
Oh, okay.
What, near Nova Scotia?
In Nova Scotia?
Yeah, that kind of area.
That's what the Vikings appear to have called Vinland.
Because part of the problem
with thinking that this is conceivable
is that our map projections, right?
The ones that put the UK way bigger
than it actually is.
Greenwich Mean Times in the middle and so on.
That, I think it's the Mercator
map projection. Mercator that was it
Sorry
I think that makes the distance between
like say Norway to Iceland
Iceland to Greenland, Greenland to
Canada look massive
and it's not massive. Yeah I would have discovered
America, I genuinely believe I would have discovered America
if I was back then. Because you just go
Scotland, I'll go to Iceland.
Yeah.
I'll go to Greenland.
I'll go to Disneyland.
The distance between Scotland and Iceland,
when you actually measure it,
not just look at the map and see that it's big,
is just as easy as Scotland and Norway.
It's so conceivable.
Yeah.
And they had all these stories.
We know they got all the way to Greenland and you can practically
spit at Canada from Greenland so why wouldn't they just
sail a bit more? And they say they did.
And there is some archaeological
evidence that they found.
I love that.
I don't know why it's so...
It's debated but it's so plausible and also it doesn't matter.
Because the whole point of discovering America
is that people already live there. It's not discovered.
Yes, of course.
So who cares?
Yeah.
Why didn't they leave more toys there, the Vikings?
Their settlement just died out.
They were attacked by Native Americans.
Oh, really?
Really harsh winters.
Have you not seen The Revenant?
The Greenland...
I have seen that.
It's hard.
Their Greenland settlement died out.
Anyway, that was my second year archaeological project.
In year two?
Year two.
Fucking hell.
You're...
That was a hell of a school.
That man is tough.
That was a hell of a school.
Jesus.
Me and you were talking about that code book ages ago.
The Voynich Manuscript.
Voynich Manuscript.
My favourite manuscript.
Do you know that?
Why are you into all these V things
Adam secretly loves codes and mysteries
I've got one
I've got the demo for Encarta
And it's only V
Adam's brain
Secretly is like
Late night history channel
Alien pyramids
Nazi hunters
There's a book called the Voynich
manuscript
yeah
because it was just
it was like
popularised by this bloke
called Voynich
that found it
in 1912 or something
and everyone's like
oh and he was like
oh I found it
he's like
what languages
is this written in
it was probably
it could be Turkish
it could be whatever
and he didn't know
and then he showed it
to every
like linguist
and they're like
we don't know
what this is
and there's all these
like drawings in it
and like
it looked like
maybe a botanical book
something to do with like medicine
showed it to everyone
they were like
we don't know
this is no language
that we know about
and then they were like
it must be a code
and every code breaker
even at Yale
they're still like
we have no idea
what the code is
they're like
this is
they've done like
statistical analysis on it
and they go
the frequency of the letters stuff like that they go this're like, this is, they've done like statistical analysis on it and they go, the frequency of the letters
and stuff like that,
they go,
this isn't random.
This is a language.
Yeah,
like a little kid
didn't just make it up
to fucking people.
Where do they find this thing?
It's been doing the rounds in Europe,
like going from like,
like count to count,
like in like weird,
in libraries,
yeah,
in weird collections of books,
like really,
like rich people.
And then there's just like,
New York man found it a while ago.
Like Jumanji.
Yeah, you need to stop saying that.
Like whenever I say,
I really need to trim my beard,
Phil's like, well, like Jumanji.
You were really affected by the attack
that happened to you while watching that film.
Yeah, it's secret manuscript code.
And the one thing I find really cool about it
is apparently handwriting experts have said
the person who wrote it, they didn't hesitate.
They wrote it fluidly.
So it's not like special slow writing.
It was just like as if they really know what they're on about.
Listeners, do a little Google image search if you're interested
in looking at the Voynich. Imagine if a Budpod
listener just cracked the Voynich manuscript.
It turns out you just hold it upside down.
Yeah, it's just a
description of loads of different types of poo.
People just make up their own languages all the time.
JR Tolkien just kind of made it up.
Totally, but the point is those can be cracked.
Oh, I see, I see, I see.
You can feed them into a computer and it'll figure it out.
Whereas this thing just is immune.
And it's like pictographic and letters.
And there's weird illustrations of plants and stuff.
There's ways that people are trying to crack it,
which is there's a few pages which are clearly astronomical.
So you go, well, that looks like the Big Dipper.
Or it looks like Aries, that constellation.
And there's a word beneath it.
And so you go, well, maybe that word is Aries.
And they go, well, maybe that's an A.
So they think they're trying to do stuff like that.
But then they have to go like, okay, is it Aries,
how we would spell it?
Is it the Latin, the Greek?
A lot of people just write in Greek for the sake of it.
Also, there's pictures of plants.
And they go, well, that looks like a coriander leaf.
So they're going, maybe the word is coriander.
Maybe it's cilantro.
Let's give up.
And coming up next,
John is cranky after waking up from his hibernation
and Jill has found something that she enjoys
even more than honey and fish.
It's the nation's favorite bears in this new episode of Bear With Me.
Bear With Me was filmed in front of a live studio audience. I found out recently it was polemic.
That's how you pronounce it?
Instead of banana.
I was saying polemic.
I was always saying polemic and polemicist.
And then someone, a comedian we know,
said, I'm sorry to tell you,
you're doing that.
I was trying to sound clever.
I was humiliating.
Who did it?
I will never say.
I will never say on air.
And I was like, fuck.
I really humiliated myself in front of you once.
Really? I'm dumb. Like in front of you once really?
we were talking about
we were talking about investments and money
and I
very like loudly
started proclaiming about
the advice that
Warren Buffett gave
his wife on his deathbed
but Warren Buffett is not dead.
But I was so convinced he was dead.
Alan Sugar's deathbed.
And I was just, you know,
when you just jump in on a conversation,
you're like, yep, now I'm catching the baton,
I'm running with it, keeping up the momentum.
When Warren Buffett was on his deathbed
and just, like, Adam's face dropped.
Well, I could see Adam's, like, smell blood, you know?
Like, his pupil just became his whole eye,
became black like a shark.
Wait, so surely...
I'm guessing, like, did I call you out on it?
Oh, yeah, big time.
But I thought you're intellectually secure enough that that's fine.
It's not like you were nervous giving a speech
in front of all the bullies and I put my hand up immediately you were fine with that of course
it was very embarrassing oh my in front of me surely but it was you um mark smith
rhys james i mean these are pretty brutal people oh no the brutal trio
i basically like went into the line enclosure
and slathered myself in gravy.
It's such a funny thing to get wrong.
Normally, I remember my life's been played
with just casually singing along to a tune of a popular song.
And then someone says, turn the music down.
Adam, what do you think the lyrics are?
And I'm like, what?
What did you think the lyrics are?
And I'm like, I don't know goes, what did you think the lyrics are? And I'm like,
I don't know.
He sung them pretty confidently three seconds ago.
Say the word.
And then you just,
oops, I did it again.
I know for years
I was singing wrong
and it was humiliating.
What were you saying?
Oops, I did it again.
I'm going to do that again.
Got a lost in this game.
I was like getting lost
all these days.
Oh no. That was a bad one. Yeah, this game I was like getting lost all these days oh no
that was a bad one
but also anyone who goes turn the music down
turn the music down
that person is an SS officer
that person is like a Nazi
from a film
excuse me Shots a Bar
who is the furthest favourite singer
immediately killing a spy
yeah yeah yeah.
Like in Glorious Masters.
How did you say three with your fingers?
That'd be a great thing to do anyway.
Just people go, shit, am I going to have to get murdered?
If anyone, I don't, I'm very comfortable with being,
I'm not the cleverest in the world.
If anyone ever picks me up on a word I get wrong now,
I'm like, okay, fine.
What's the difference between while and whilst
And then they go
If you think you're fucking good with words
Just whilst while and whilst
Surely no one knows that
Just chuck whom in there
I hope we know whom
People don't know whom
I thought I knew whom for years
People don't know who
Sorry yeah people don't know who
That's correct
That's fine
People don't know to whom
Something applies
People know who that is
But you would say
People don't know
Whom it was
You say whom whenever you would say him
So I'm singing my favorite whom yes
you're listening to bud now we're playing with farts okay um uh oh yeah so this weekend this
last weekend on tour i was caught out for the first time on a long-term lie i've been playing
it was at at the place i was staying from Exeter leg of the tour
and
at hotels
they sometimes
they make you write down
your email address
and I don't give people
my email address
fuck them
so I've
but instead of
challenging them on it
I just write a fake one
and it's never
ever come up before
until this time around
when I needed a VAT receipt
and
and
and she was like oh the printer's not Captain Pring a VAT receipt. Ooh. And she was like, oh, the printer's not-
Is it still a big dick Captain Pringles at hotmail.co.uk?
It wasn't far off because the lady at reception was like,
it's not printing right.
I'll just email it to you.
And then like amber warning was going off in my head.
And then she was like, I'll send it to this address,
chinaboy69at dimsum.com
Oh, no.
And I was like,
because I was there with Yuriko,
who's like my tour support.
No.
And so I just said it.
ChinaBoy69.
No, no, no.
I don't use that one actually anymore.
Because suddenly you have to come up with a reason
as to why you've changed your email address in one day.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You go, oh, I was forced of habit because I used to use Chinaboy69 at dimsum.com all the time.
But then I started charging for extra storage space at dimsum.com.
It's when people in a completely non-cynical way ask you for your number.
You give them a fake.
And people now do go, oh, I'll call you just so you've got mine.
That's just even not a creepy thing. People just go do Go oh I'll call you Just so you've got mine Yeah That's just a Even not a creepy thing
People just go
Oh I'll call you now
The two
I've been caught out twice
When I gave someone
A fake number
And I'll call you now
And I was like
I forgot my cyanide capsule today
That's when you go
This is the end
This is the end of the world
What could possibly happen now
I'll call you now
And you just silently
Raise your hands to their throat
And kill them
You go Ah So you've got to do something That makes You've got to do something weird I'll call you now and you just silently raise your hands to their throat and kill them.
So you've got to do something that makes,
you've got to do something weirder than what's about to happen.
Yeah, you have to eat the phone or you run up towards the wall.
Can you hear that?
Can you hear that?
Can you smell that?
Can you smell that and everything has to change?
Do you think there's a world where you could be so smooth?
So let's say your phone's in like your coat pocket And they go I'll call you now
And without looking
As you just rummage for your phone
You turn it off
And as you take it out and it's off
You go oh it's died
Yeah but then they call it
And then Billy answers hello
It's another number
Hopefully they wouldn't try
This is why I'm living my life
And this is true
In a way that I always have a shit ready to go
So that if I think something
You've always got one on the chamber
On the lips of my anus
There's a shit ready to go
Just in case I get into an awkward situation
It's like you're trying to remember a shit you took
It's on the lips of my anus
So if I think
We had something like that before didn't we
It's on the tip of my anus so what was it thing we had something like that before didn't we
it's on the tip of my anus
oh it's on the tip of my butt
so like
if like someone says
a line of enquiry
that you're finding
a bit weird about
or like
like your Warren Buffet
mishap
you just shit yourself
and then everything's
everything's okay
like
if someone like
questions me
or just like
where's that five pound
you owe me
and all of a sudden
we're talking about that
you get out of it
force one out of the chamber
yeah
no not force
allow
allow it's knocking
because it's right there
knocking all the time
it takes a very tight person
to watch someone
shit themselves
and go
I repeat
where is my five pounds
never mind that
yeah yeah yeah
where's my money
yeah
is it in your pants
that'd be great
yeah
I need to
yeah
I'm trying to
since listening to this more, I'm
more aware of shitting.
Yes. As an activity.
Yeah, we're trying to raise awareness of shitting.
Yeah. Not enough people know.
We're actually sponsored secretly
by the British Gastronomical Society.
In the pocket of Big Turd.
When I started to become a comedian,
I thought to myself,
I'm going to be clever.
I'm going to say words like Wednesday.
Long words.
And then it took me a good few years to realise,
I think as a rule I had,
if a story is funny offstage,
it's bad.
Or if a friend of yours
could have a story that's inherently funny
and you're not a good writer and then i thought i don't care and i i shat myself like three times
in the same year or something i thought this is good this is so good stuff yeah like some
awful stuff happened to me recently yeah bum wise and so this is i'm the king of comedy now
i'm inducing it's i think it's great because it's
like immediately acceptable stakes yeah like it's like job interviews first date and shitting
yourself the reason they're so like ubiquitous as plot points is no setup you know we know what's
gonna go wrong here and it's universal absolutely universal it's universal and like i'm like it's i'd like to do it more
just like the mishaps it's but you're saying that they're not transferable to stand to comedy
i'm now i'm now thinking i don't mind talking about this stuff on stage oh okay okay whereas
i used to think when people you tell something to a mate and they were you oh that must be in your
in your stand-up and i'm like well no because anyone that's just a normal funny story
why would you pay to hear a man say
I shit myself because anyone
you can get that for free
that's you overestimating people again
I am doing that a lot this week
I tried to do stand up the other day about
how many, let's say you're on a
train that's stuck on the tracks
it's not moving, you're all just stuck there
or you're stuck in the tube underground yeah like jumanji in a way like jumanji i just want to say this is really
like jumanji how many farts would you have to do before the anger and irritation of your fellow
passengers turned into genuine full-hearted concern like how much farting would it take for them to go we've moved beyond how much it stinks
and we've we're genuinely so worried about your health are you okay i don't think it gets i don't
ever get to a point where people start caring about the person yeah it starts becoming cute
but what if it was just like every second and you're going every second It wouldn't be concerned It would only be concerned
If the person farting was going
Help me
Because it looks like
You've never farted before
But it looks like you're complicit
If you're doing a fart
It would be worse if their face never moved
In which case you won't exhibit concern
You'd be like
He doesn't care
No that's more normal
That makes sense
That's a normal thing to do
Try and play it off as if it isn't
happening. Yeah, but my point is that
like, I'm saying
let's say that people are like, oh, for God's sake.
Like, people do snap. Yeah.
Stop it. Oh, that, yeah. I can't.
At what point
do people just go, are you okay?
Because there's a point where you stop hating the sinner
and you start to hate the sin.
You start to go, you're ill. You're so ill. Do you stop hating the sinner And you start to hate the sin You're ill, you're so ill
Do you think maybe the line of inquiry
Will be, what is it?
Out of curiosity about the human body
Did you breathe in loads earlier?
Why is there so much air?
Did you eat a balloon?
Are you allergic to something
And did you accidentally have a burrito full of it?
Yeah
This is what I mean.
Because farting is not like coughing or sneezing where it's like,
no one goes, I want to catch farting.
Like no one's scared about it because they're going to catch something from it.
Yeah, that's true.
Even though it's coming from the worst place.
Exactly.
Surely if you're inhaling a fart, it must be way worse than inhaling a cough.
But it won't make you sick.
Oh, but it's got a filter.
It's got like a mask on it.
But then it does.
You're not taking it like a bong hit straight from someone's ring.
You've got like a Rizzler filter of two pants.
Of clothes.
Jeans.
Yeah.
I've always wondered though.
But they are more powerful. You're addicted wondered But they are more powerful
You're addicted
But they are more powerful
I'm very surprised every time
If I'm walking forward through the street
And I fart
Sometimes I can smell it
And I'm like
Sorry how did he beat me?
Yeah yeah yeah
How are you in front of me man?
I know exactly
I have the same thoughts
I thought I left you back there
Yeah
Where have you come from?
It's like a sort of an atomic blast
That just goes and makes a sphere around you
I think it was inside your shirt
I think it's clinging to your clothes
It must be it
It was inside your shirt and it's sneaking out your collar
Like a ghostly hand from a cartoon pie
Gosh
Ghostly hand
I'm always impressed when you do a fart outdoors
And you can smell it at all
It's like I've beaten the outdoors
I can smell this fart more than the world
Especially if you're someone like
A tall person
That's a not insignificant distance
From your nose to your asshole
And it's almost instant
But you've got a more powerful nose
Think about that
You've got a bigger nose And a bigger bum
Bigger lungs
Yeah exactly
So you can actually smell more
So you're saying it scales up
Pretty even Stevens
Everything scales up
I remember when I
University experience
When I worked in
A national airport
In the perfume Marie
I was like
Well I've got free reign
To pop fart as much
As I want now
But I just made
The worst cocktails
Oh yeah
It was horrible
it smelled like burnt rubber
all that Sweden putrid
it smelled like someone shat on grandma
yeah yeah and I would stink
so much because I would sell free samples
of booze was my job
free samples of like
tasting samples of like whiskey
so you're in the duty free area
and the amount you'd spill on your hand
it would be like so syrupy and stuff and you end up just like so you smelt like
a sort of homeless cowboy i smell like yeah always were you um airside or landside i was airside
which meant i had to go through customs yeah i've always wondered you have to go through like
yeah every security yeah so i didn't need a passport but I did need to just go through a metal detector
and all that
and I would get up at 4am
so my shift would be 6am till midday
just queuing up, taking your belt off
and stuff like that, dead behind the eyes
because you hadn't slept and stuff
and it was so funny that our bosses there
they would always say like
and remember you're not allowed to go on your phone during shifts
for security reasons
and everyone bought that what? They would always say, and remember, you're not allowed to go on your phone during shifts for security reasons.
And everyone bought that.
It's like, what?
What?
What do you mean?
Tell me one word of what you mean by that.
Like you can report back what the other side of the airport is like.
There's a lot of Toblerones.
There's planes here.
Yes.
Plan can go ahead.
Hundreds of them.
Or the idea that once you go home, you'll have forgotten everything you thought and you can call people then.
Yeah.
Were there planes?
Damn it.
I think...
As if people who go on a plane aren't allowed a telephone.
Oh, it was the saddest job.
Not a single window in sight in the whole of the place.
Well, that's the thing I was thinking about
having a phone on a plane.
They go, please turn your phones to airplane mode. It's if this mattered you would come to every seat yeah and tear the
phones out yeah yeah exactly the idea that you would trust us to keep this plane yeah yeah to
remember to turn off our phones like make sure no one next to you has a gun well to be fair you
take care of that when i did it when i went that. When I was doing the Melbourne Roadshow, your friend and mine,
the tiny...
Have you done it?
I did the Asia Roadshow.
You travelled around Australia.
I did it around Australia.
There are some really tiny airports
where you check in.
And it's just like one building.
You can see all the four walls at the same time.
And I remember I checked in my bag
and they were like,
do you have anything on you that you shouldn't have? And I was like, no in my bag and they were like do you have anything on you
that you shouldn't have
and I was like
no
because I thought
that's just a question like
did you pack it yourself
do you have any of these items
in your bag
and I went
there's a list of quite
ridiculous items on there
yeah machine guns
nuclear bombs
and I went nope
and they went you sure
and I went
really
and then
get on the plane
that was it
you get on the plane
there was no scan
you just open the door and you go on the plane and I was like I on the plane there was no scan you just open the door
and you go on the plane
and I was like
I'm petrified now
I think they're just like
there's not enough fuel
in this plane
for you to get to a skyscraper
oh it was very
you board from the cockpit
everyone goes through
the cockpit
I remember being on
one of the planes
was so small
that there was
not an even number
of rows
yes
it was like one row
and then two
aisle two rows and I was like yeah that's And then two. Aisle, two rows.
And I was like...
Yeah, that's like planes
back to the Isle of Man.
Oh my gosh.
I've been on a plane so small
that the person who did
the safety dance at the start
was the pilot.
Oh, really?
The pilot was like,
here's how the life jacket works.
And I paid way more attention
because he had a peaked cap
and epaulets.
Look, I have to go pretty soon.
But guys, this is how...
Okay, if I fuck up...
Surely, by the way,
that's the easiest...
This is how the vest works. Surely, that's the easiest way to go pretty soon, but guys, this is how... Okay, if I fuck up... Surely, by the way, that's the easiest... This is how the vest works.
Surely that's the easiest way to go viral, by the way.
Just do a funny safety announcement at the beginning of a plane flight.
The Americans love that, don't they?
Yeah.
All you need to do is make it rhyme.
I don't even remember.
There was a bit of...
There was a spate of fun underground tube dances for a bit after one of them went a bit viral oh
like there's a move down the platform here to say
like a crappy rapping yeah you're telling me like dude the videos happened it wasn't oh
no for like a couple of months like there were like five or six like funky tube announcers and
now they're it's like when it funny thinking, oh I could have done that
because I once did it. It's like when you see
a teacher goes viral because they shake
every people's hand individually as they go
into the class and then someone goes
alright I'll do that but I'll go nuts
and then they've had to teach these
kids, alright you're going to shake my hand then I'm going to fist bump you
then I'm going to spin you around and I'm going to throw you up in the air
do it Simon! And then
such a cynical way of going viral but they must try and outdo each other but also it's
amazing it's like well if this goes viral then i could be teaching on tv yeah what's the goal
you want weird media attention for a week and then after and in the small village you teach in
in three years people will be like i just demand from the video like a pie shop that's the man from the video. In like a pie shop. That's the most you're going to get out of it.
Going viral, yeah, maybe it just seems
fun to people.
I think you have a unique perspective on this,
Adam, because you were one of the first people on Twitter
to hit numbers.
As they were, right? You were Mr. Numbers.
You were Mr. Numbers on the Twitter.
And I feel like
such an old cunt saying this. This was back in the day
where people shared things of value
Oh yeah
The purpose of them was to bring joy
People actually retweet it too
And so yeah I feel like you're sort of
Like a
Dying samurai
Who remembers the days of honour
Yeah like all these old
In the same way I remember certain battles
With certain nicknames
I remember Eggman
Or like the old days of
Job interview finger caught in Listerine
Mishap
Back when we took turns swiping at each other
With our swords
That's why I stopped tweeting jokes
Because I thought people aren't here for that anymore
They're angry all the time
but it's people just
realise
in my opinion
there is
it's easier
in every medium
to
to share
to get shares
or whatever
if there's like
an agenda
a fury
or something like that
like newspaper articles
it's like
or like
like we were saying about
this has to be the most
epic thing ever
or the worst thing ever.
It's easier to think of something bad than something good.
Everyone needs to either be an insane, stupid, man-hating communist hippie vegan.
Yeah.
Or Hitler's ghost, but now it's been mechanised and it's even more racist.
That's the only way we're interested in people's personalities.
And I'm not that angry
about stuff. All these references
that people pretend are things just because
it's already an accepted joke, like, everyone who vapes
is an idiot. No, they're not.
They're fine. But it's just an
accepted joke. Everyone in Islington has
a child named after a spice.
Not true. It's just people go,
that's a thing.
Anyone who talks about Bitcoin is really annoying.
Yes.
But mostly it just seems to be like quite cynical and stuff.
And I find like lots of times,
yeah, like to hit big numbers,
like just for the sake of it,
I would think, why do you want to do that? I mean, I was like,
I want to practice a joke writing skill
and sell tickets to an Edinburgh show. But other than that, I was like i want to practice a joke writing skill yeah and sell
tickets to an edinburgh show yeah but other than that i was like oh what's the point imagine going
viral for like something that wasn't actually happy and then like pinning that to your top
something and it's yeah something sassy about how shitty the world yeah and then linking to
your sound cloud beneath it if you want more of yeah, yeah. My son's gone missing.
I've got an Etsy page.
That was the end of the first half of the Mega Anniversary Megapod.
That's right.
It's a cliffhanger.
Yeah.
Let's find out what Adam says next.
Oh, no.
Have I been contentious so far?
No
You're practically info wars on your own
Have I just been babbling nonsense
And I think I've been making perfect sense
We'll see maybe next episode
See you next episode
When is that? Is that next week?
Yeah next week
Same time next week
Or you can just stay here
We'll stay here in silence
We'll sit here
like statues
and a curse
buy tickets to my tour
in the meantime
that would be lovely
oh yes Adam's on tour
Adam's on tour
go on his Instagram
and find Adam Hess
Instagram's
something like that
and Soho Theatre
April and May
correct
oh thanks man
yeah
I forgot about that
cheers
so
okay bye
bye everyone