CheapShow - Ep 125: The Human Lavatory
Episode Date: May 3, 2019After a few extraordinary weeks, it's back to the usual, humdrum, regular old CheapShow format... No wacky characters (well...), no crazy sound effects (kinda...) and lots of bickering, fighting and l...aughing (the same old, same old). In this week's episode, Paul and Eli discuss the awards fallout, take a trip down memory lane discussing Frank Sidebottom, force down some Turnip Juice and lament the loss of the Human Toilet from London Streets. Nice. Simple. CheapShow. And if you like us, why not support us: www.patreon.com/cheapshow Share & Enjoy. Photos for this episode can be seen at https://www.thecheapshow.co.uk/ep-125-the-human-lavatory If you want to get involved, email us at thecheapshow@gmail.com And if you have to, follow us on Twitter @thecheapshowpod or @paulgannonshow & @elisnoid If you like what you hear, please spread the word! Like, Review, Share, Comment... LOVE US!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I want a really quiet episode today.
Are you okay, Paul?
I'm just tired.
Oh, you're not okay, are you?
It's been a tough time in Cheap Show HQ.
So I just want an episode with no wacky special effects,
ideally no characters.
I just want me and you time.
Pure Cheap Show.
Do-do-do-do.
Source report.
Oh, all right, then. Right. show. Do-do-do-do. Source report. Oh, all right then.
Right.
Do-do.
Do-do.
Do-do.
Do-do.
Do-do.
Do-do.
No source report.
Great.
Thank you.
Thank you for that.
There was no source report.
Then why bring it up again?
Because it's...
We go through this.
It's not a report to say there's no report.
There is.
But no.
What's the report?
No report. No report. Thank you.
Welcome to Cheap Show, ladies and gentlemen.
The economy comedy podcast for your ears.
Incorporating
source report. No, not incorporating
source report.
Especially if there's no source report.
Ladies and gentlemen, this
week, no source report. It will return.
Sorry. Yeah, is it going to return next week?
And you'll go, do, do, do, do, do. Also
no source this week. Well, Paul,
if you fucking pull your finger out
and, you know, get some sources,
you're weak on source.
I'm not bringing sources. It's not my forte
sources. Is it?
No. On my CV,
it doesn't say, you know, skills.
Did you list your fortes on,
how poncy would that be
on a CV? My fortes
include... My fortes include sauce.
Jacking it? Well, no, that's not a forte.
It's my forte. No, it's not.
Is that
your forte? Are you good at it?
Are you good at wanking? That's the question
I'm asking you. Am I good at wanking myself?
That's my sauce report.
Ladies and gentlemen, it's Paul Gammon's source report.
Eli, how good's your wanking?
Out of 10?
It's almost always successful.
I didn't ask if it's successful.
Well, what's the point of wanking if it's not successful?
No, yeah, anyone can thumb their half-flaccid cock.
Oh, it's all thumbing now.
It's all thumbing.
And e-cap a droplet of fucking jizzum.
I'm not thumbing.
I don't thumb it.
I'm just saying.
Eek out a droplet of jizzum.
You can be functional at masturbating,
but some people give it a bit of a spin.
Listen, I've got a whole tranche of fortes.
Yeah, yes.
And what does that mean?
Explain what that means.
I have a whole...
You have nothing.
Shut up while I do the intro. What have we got coming up on the show no we're doing the intro ladies and gentlemen welcome to cheap show
i hate you and your noodle posse
people love noodles all right it's a fact of cheap show, you're gonna have to fucking reset.
Moodle time.
Tales from the dance floor.
Alright, how's the dick going?
The price of the shite. how's the big guy
the price of the site
it's the Economy Comedy Podcast.
You know it.
I've got a new character.
No, no new characters.
This will need a sound effect.
You'll need to put me in a cave.
I'm a witch in a cave.
Witch in a cave, witch in a cave.
Oh, it's Mike.
You know what?
You know what shall I do today? I'm a witch in a cave. What shall I do? Oh, do you know... You know what? You know what shall I do today?
I'm watching the cave.
What shall I do?
Oh, do you know what I've got?
I've got a naturally occurring keyboard
made from stalactites and those other ones,
which all have a different tone.
Paul, you put in the sound effects for this, okay?
No.
I'm playing Beethoven's Fifth on my stalactite keyboard.
Right, so not only do you want me to make sound effects, but you want me to find specifically Beethoven's Fifth On my stalactite keyboard Right So not only do you want me
To make sound effects
But you want me to find
Specifically
Beethoven's Fifth
Performed on a stalactite
Xylophone
You better do that
Do that
And get some sauces
Get some oinkment
I will eat oinkment
Anyway
What have we got coming off
On the show Paul
We're three minutes in
Yes
And the barrel's being scraped.
Fucking hell.
Today on the show, actually, you know, I don't know.
Come on.
I've got a bag of stuff, but we're recording two episodes today,
so I haven't really passed them out.
Shall we shit in here?
Do you know what my girlfriend's been doing recently?
Not shitting in there.
Okay.
But for Cheap Show.
You know, I bought that big poo.
That big, when Sarah came on, and I said, here's your prize. And it was like a
weird kind of stress ball but shaped in a
poo shape. It was an anthropomorphised
poo stress thing.
My girlfriend thinks it's hilarious. To put it in the bed.
To put it in the bed and hide it in different parts of the
bed. So in the middle of the night, I feel
the poo shape under my
arm. She put it in the pillow
once. Did you sometimes think,
hang on, she's done something to spice it up.
She's brought a boy back.
No, I don't think that.
I'm just going to go along with it and pretend I'm asleep.
Oh, no, I'm not going to do that.
No.
You butt-fuck yourself with it, don't you?
No more questions.
No more questions, Your Honour.
Over the next two episodes, we're going to do A Price of Shite. We're going to do
Paul's Page Turners,
where I talk about books I've bought
at a charity shop. And what was the
other one? And we've got Cheap Eats.
I have some very special Cheap Eats.
Over the next two episodes. Cheap drinks.
Cheap salty drinks, it could be
called. This sounds suspicious.
There's at least three salty drinks.
I don't like the idea of this already.
Well, what's happened, Paul,
is I've come in something
and I'm going to try
and make you eat it.
This is what I've come to.
The truth comes out,
ladies and gentlemen.
The truth comes out.
Oh, I shouldn't have said that.
Oh, is pre-cum John
going to come out first
and give me a little sip of it
and then walk away?
Pre-cum John doesn't do that.
Doesn't he?
No.
Here he is.
Yeah?
To talk about it.
Flying in on an aeroplane
is he?
No.
In case you want
any more fucking
sound effects
in this episode.
Well it's an aeroplane
but it's powered
by unicorns.
Right great well
unicorns with
harmonicas for mouths.
I'm not doing
any of this
just so you know.
There is unicorn imagine a unicorn with its horn is of this, just so you know. Imagine a unicorn
with its horn as a kind of toot
sweet. Imagine a unicorn
with its horn as a big cock.
I don't
think you'd be the first person to imagine that.
Unicock. Yes.
If you want to get a wish,
you've got to rub the unicorn's horn
until all the wish magic
comes out the top. Which is rainbow.
Rainbow jizz out the knob horn.
Yeah, and if you catch it in your mouth, you get three wishes.
And the first wish is, I wish I hadn't done that.
The second wish is, I wish I weren't born.
And what's the third wish?
You don't have one because by that time you're dead, aren't you?
Yeah, but by going by that logic, the first wish, you wouldn't even get to the second wish.
That's true.
Because you said, I wish I hadn't done that, and then your wish is granted.
Yeah, and then I wouldn't want to end my life.
And then you hadn't done it.
Yeah.
You'd be fine.
I'd be like, my second wish is I wish I weren't born.
Oh, no, no, no.
There's no come back seat.
And then Thanos snaps his finger, and I turn into dust.
Yes, a lot of people are very excited about the new Avengers movie.
I don't give two shits.
I read the plot on Wikipedia about half an hour after the film came out.
I was like, that's enough for me.
Really?
20 quid in my back pocket saved.
You'll watch it though when it comes on the telly.
When it's on telly, I'll watch it.
But the thing is that I don't like going to the cinema.
I don't like the experience of going to the cinema anymore.
Phones on, people talking, food everywhere,
half an hour of adverts and trailers,
and then a three-hour film.
Did you see that article saying that four out of five photos
that people take on their phones they never look at again?
That wouldn't surprise me.
But it's like people take a photo of something
as a replacement
for actually experiencing it.
Like I was at the art gallery
the other day.
Yeah.
It's woman's...
Yeah.
Okay, whatever.
I was at the art gallery.
I was at an art gallery.
What art gallery?
The Tate.
Looking at?
Dorothea Tanning.
Why was she tanning?
Is she going on holiday?
Hey-oh!
Wacky-wo! It doesn't even work, that gag. What? It does. Why was she tanning is she going on holiday eeeoh wiki wo
it doesn't even work
that gag
what it does
why was she tanning
is she going on holiday
yeah she's getting
a pre-tan
she's getting a pre-tan
oh that's a bit
complicated
on a second level
why would you get a tan
before you go on holiday
so you look good
when you get there
so you can go topless
yeah but
that's what you're meant
to get topless for
to get a tan
a little bit of a pre-tan
when you get there
you're not so embarrassed to reveal your pasty white blueberry do you pre-tan i haven't
been on holiday in like 12 years mate so it doesn't fucking matter yeah you're translucently
pale yeah i am yeah it's very attractive i do tan quite well you're the color of tripe
um no you look like Your face
The colour of your face
Looks like a strangled cock end
Like where you forced
All the blood
To the meaty helmet
At the top
Oh come on
Keeps talking
No
We haven't done this
In a while either
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep
Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep Cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, cheep, and I want to do this one. I'm going to rub sand in you. Here we go. I'm rubbing sand.
Here's my cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap eats song today.
All right?
Cheap, cheap, cheap.
You don't know what you're doing, do you?
I forgot.
What's your idea?
Hang on.
Hang on.
I've got to get the beginning right. Cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, Cheep-eats!
Coming into Cheep-eats station, ladies and gentlemen.
Oh, look, there's station master Eli Silverman on the platform.
Ruff, ruff, ruff.
No, he's not fucking Richard Brandoff.
Who said he was Richard Brandoff?
Go on.
Ruff, ruff, ruff.
Fuck him.
Ruff, ruff, ruff.
Welcome to Cheap Eats Station, population two.
Woo-hoo.
Chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa-chuffa Ladies and gentlemen, we've arrived in Cheap Eat Station And if you'd like to make your way to the buffet car
You can have a range of snacks
All our snacks produced by Uncle Gumbly
Oh, I like the look of that
What's that? A breakfast bar?
Sausage roll?
Gidster's breakfast bar style thing it's a
chutney sandwich oh yeah what's the bread made of please it's very shit very special are we doing
this we're doing this i can't believe i brought him up bread is special chutney the bread is
100 farmers grown uh sourdough bread it's the best quality grown grown with the best farmers
grown with the best farmers they've grown the best flour dough for the sourdough and i that's good
we've got a delicious uh cheese from uh lancashire that will be the make oh cheese lancashire cheese
nice salty crumbly kind of a cheshire-style cheese. Right. And then there's some delicious plum tomatoes,
grown lovely and juicy, and a few olives.
And the chutney is shit.
Right.
I mean, you knew it was going to happen.
Let's disembark now.
Yeah.
Can I just say, I like the idea of Cheap Pete's train.
I like the idea of it being a choo-choo train that we get onto.
Cheep-Eats!
Yeah, so do I.
Here we go.
And the conductor is played by Richard Branson.
So, Branson, legally the two characters are not similar.
No.
What have we got today?
Now, Paul, would you like to start with stuff that might be a bit not to your palate?
And then we can finish with some nice sweet stuff.
Yeah, let's do that.
Let's be nice to Uncle Paul.
You can recover.
Now, you know I have a deep love for all things pickled cucumber.
I know this.
The audience knows this.
I'm bored of this.
And I think I've found the ultimate thing here. Just take a look at this. I can't. knows this I'm bored of this and I think I've found the ultimate
thing here
just have a
take a look at this
I can't
oh hang on
I can't read it
because it's Polish
I'd imagine
yes
but it is
judging by the artwork
a garlic and pickle drink
yeah
and what does it look like
it's cloudy
it looks like lemonade
or even worse
it looks like
you know
when you get lemon squirt in a bottle and you can squirt lemon juice.
It's cloudy like that, isn't it?
It's cloudy.
And look, you can see there's sort of suspended powder.
It looks a bit like pond water.
There's a silty.
It's a bit spothy, isn't it?
And this is by a company called Bio Foods.
Premium.
Nice.
Ogerkow, I think, is Gherkin.
Okay,
fair enough.
So,
and there's some garlic.
So,
I'm hoping this is a lovely
garlic pickle smoothie.
And again,
I'm just going to say this.
Why is that?
What?
What is the point
of a pickle and garlic drink?
It tastes delicious,
probably.
But, it's a savoury drink.
It can't be thirst quenching.
Did you ever have V8?
Yeah, but I don't mind.
It's vegetable juice, isn't it?
Yeah, but that's refreshing.
Have a nice cold soup.
Gazpacho, for example.
It's like a...
But what in context is that a drink?
What do you have with it?
I'll tell you what the context is.
Health food.
Bio food, premium.
So what has been discovered in recent years is the probiotic bacteria that people traditionally thought was really only available from things like yogurt, live yogurt.
There's a huge amount of it in sauerkraut.
Really?
Pickle.
Yes.
And kimchi has this bacteria
that's very good for the gut flora.
Oh.
So this is obviously as a sort of health food
and aid to digestion.
Just so you know.
So that's the point of it.
Yeah, I know what you're getting at.
What is the, why would people...
Why would people go,
oh, I want a nice refreshing drink of pickle.
I think we're just going to see
more and more pickle flavoured stuff.
Just get ready for it.
Hello, I'm Uncle Grumbly
and it's Uncle Grumbly's bio farm foods.
Yes.
Where I have a lot of gut fruit
that is good in probiotic.
Why is Uncle Grumbly so big on Cheap Show right now?
I like him.
He's my new favourite character.
Now, I've brought a glass for you.
My drinks are very organic.
And chunky. I've brought a glass for you. My drinks are very organic. Yeah. And chunky.
I've brought a glass for you, Paul.
All right, thank you.
So I'm going to pour some out for you.
All right, give it a shake.
Wake the bottle, shake the drink.
I'm giving it a bit of a shake.
It just doesn't seem...
Well, shake the bottle, wake the drink.
Yeah, shake the bottle, wake the drink.
It doesn't appear to be carbonated, but...
Could it all...
Oh, no.
Don't sniff it and then give me that face.
Do you want the Huffington Report on this?
I want the Huffington Post.
The Huffington Post.
Yeah.
It smells so good.
So...
No, but that to you means I'm going to hate this.
It's got that real smell of those scratch and sniff gherkin stickers
that I used to get in Brent Cross.
I have to have a huff.
Mate, that smells like piss water.
That smells fucking horrible.
You have to taste it.
I'll taste it.
All right, I'm pouring some out.
What does it taste like?
It smells like a urinal.
No, it doesn't.
It does.
It smells like a kind of...
It smells of pickles.
Lime scale tube platform toilet.
A lime scale tube platform? Yeah, it's got lime scale
and it's made everything a little bit salty.
Right. Oh, God.
Now, what does that look like?
Oh, mate, that looks like snot.
It's got a very kind of grey
green. It is. It looks like
dirty water. Yeah, it looks like dirty water.
In a way, that's probably what it is, isn't it, Paul?
This is the most disgusting fucking
thing. Have a little taste of this.
Just don't.
Don't big it up for yourself.
Okay, I'm not trying to get it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That is unpleasant.
Really?
Is that bad?
It smells like a cross between someone putting a pickle in my mouth
and then farting in my gob.
That's what it's like.
It's like someone's done like a kind of,
you know, like a tequila shot
where the drink is the shot
and then instead of like salt and lemon,
it's a pickle and a fart in my mouth.
Ah, that sounds like something
Heston Blumenthal would...
God, it's got such a horrible aftertaste.
Every time I swallow...
Is it bad?
The garlicky kind of aftertaste
is really funky.
Right.
Really funky.
Okay. All funky. Okay.
All right.
Yeah, you taste it.
Back with us.
Ooh.
It's quite...
It's thick, isn't it?
That's disgusting, man.
Yeah, thank you.
It's not pleasant to drink.
I was hoping it'd be better than that.
I thought, to be honest, it's more garlicky than pickle.
It's the garlicky.
It doesn't have, you know, like pickle has that kind of tart sharpness.
That doesn't have that.
It's got a bit of, oh, mate.
It's boffy.
It's really boffy.
Okay.
Marks out of five?
Oh, I'm not going to give any marks for that.
That's unpleasant in concept and execution concept It's good for you though
It's good for you
Now you've got Flora
I'll drink
I'll have something else
That does the same job
But doesn't taste like
Someone's put a pickle
And they fart in my gob
Like a yakult
Yeah
Like a yakult
Right
What's next
That was a success
It still feels
I've still got this
Farty sensation in my mouth
Now As you know Paul A lot of Turks live Oh that burp It still feels I've still got this Farty sensation in my mouth Now
As you know Paul
A lot of Turks
Oh that burp was unnecessary
A lot of Turkish people
Oh Christ
Oh jeez
Oh god
God that has not sat well in me
Well it's starting to do
It's good biotic work
On your guts
Save me some of your
Outpourings.
Right.
What's next?
Now, I live in hell.
I live near a lot of Turkish grocers.
Yeah.
And one of the things the Turks like to drink is fermented turnip juice, also known as salgam.
And we're going to taste a couple of versions of that right now paul
it's salty it's pickly it's hot salty pickle turnip water so how is this drunk is this drunk
cold or hot cold right and it's seen as them like a refreshing drink uh it's salty so it's like a
savory sort of it's it's i can't think of anything equivalent. I mean, I guess they wouldn't be,
but I'm trying to understand why that culture
would drink that kind of drink.
I don't know too much about, you know, Turkish culture.
Again, I think it has some sort of, you know...
Because it's fermented,
it has a sort of good-for-the-digestion kind of thing.
No, fair enough.
But, like, it's a hot country, Turkey, right?
Parts of it, yeah.
Yeah.
And it would be popular in like cities there.
Yeah.
So sometimes there are, sometimes people will have a salty drink as a way to cool down,
like a cold salt.
I'm genuinely interested if anyone is from that area or drinks this.
Actually knows what the deal is.
Knows more about.
Now, it's meant to be turnip, but I think the main ingredient in the modern salgam is actually carrot.
So it's carrot juice.
Oh, that's interesting.
But traditionally it was a turnip, I think.
Okay.
So it comes in two basic kinds.
Yeah.
You get just the plain, and then you have it with chilli.
Oh, interesting.
Hot, spicy salgam.
Yeah.
So I've got both here.
All right.
So I want you to basically first
test the
normal
I like the bottle
because it's got that
kind of nice
dippled
dippled effect
I don't know what you
want to call it
it's dippled
it's nice
it's a dippled bottle
it looks like if you
squeezed your cock end
at the helmet
and all the blood
rushed to the top
that's what it would
look like
there's a sort of
thing going through
I keep reaching out
to like you know
mainstream newspapers and websites
and people who might want to support Cheap Show.
And I try and big up the fact that we are talking about this topic
and play down the scatological.
And then I open my mouth and then I say,
it's like holding your cock real tightly at the helmet.
And then I go, that's not going to endear reviewers to us.
It's not going to endear them.
Turnib.
Anyway, let's have a look.
Try the Turnib and I want the Huffington Report.
Here with the Huffington Report, Paul Gannon on the scene.
Hello, I'm Paul Gannon on the scene with the turnip juice.
I'm going to give it a quick sniff now.
That's horrible.
That is...
What?
What are you getting?
There's a very farty motif coming through.
Oh, that's really...
That's more farty than the...
That's a lot fartier than I thought it was going to be.
It's more fartier than the pickle and garlic water.
Yeah.
Now, time for you to have a little taste.
Let's have a sip.
A little sip-sip.
Oh.
Be prepared.
That's fine.
Paul.
Paul!
I won't ask you to taste the other one No I will
Okay
You always complain about
I actually thought you were going to
Yov all over the table then
I wasn't close
But I had a massive gag reaction to that
Okay why
My throat did not want to swallow it
What's wrong with it
Do you mean I had a massive gag reaction to that. Okay, why? My throat did not want to swallow it. What's wrong with it?
Do you mean,
it's got nothing satisfying to that flavour.
It's salty.
Yeah.
You can't just say,
oh, it's salty, therefore it's good.
I like salty.
Yeah.
But would you drink a glass of salt water?
No, that would make you sick.
That would make me sick.
Are you ready for the hot one?
Oh, pardon.
Oh, God.
Now, let's see if the Huffington is any... You might like the spicy one a bit more.
I'm thinking maybe.
That's why I'm happy to give this one a go.
Same smell?
No, it's almost the same smell,
but it almost smells like...
Do you tell me what you think it smells like,
and then I'll tell you what I think it smells like.
There's a specific thing I'm thinking of.
Remembering that it's a turnip-based drink with chilli.
No, I don't...
Chorizo.
That smells like chorizo sausage to me.
Oh, yeah, it does smell a bit like that, yes.
You see what I mean?
Because chorizo is also a fermented product, did you know that?
Yes, I did.
That's why it's so nice.
Yeah, so you might like this I doubt it
let's go
he's going to go for the spicy salgam now
and we're hoping
this swallow
my throat would not let me swallow that
Are we okay?
It's just fundamentally not a pleasant experience
It's not like overly horrible
It's not like grotesque
It's not like that dog pee or anything like that
The smell of that would just
Yeah, yeah
I think it's good for the digestion.
It better be.
Salgam. We've had the two types of salgam.
Did you enjoy that? I like it.
I know it's a bit perverse of me,
but I actually do like it. I mean, the thing is, I know that
that's in your gamut of taste.
It's in your flavour rainbow.
You know what I mean? It's in my flavour rainbow.
And I like that. That's fine, but for me, that is...
Not for you. Absolutely. Do I like that. That's fine. But for me, that is... Not for you.
Absolutely.
Do you like Marmite?
Yeah, you do.
I do like Marmite.
And I like, you know, like, carrot juices and things like that.
But there's something...
It's the fermentedness of it.
It's a cross between the fact that
the first sensation you get in your mouth
is just the salt hit.
Yeah.
So you taste the salt first
and the liquid.
So you feel for a minute
all you're going to swallow
like salt water.
But then it comes at you.
And then there's like a puff
and then all that flavour,
all that,
I don't know,
farty,
farty,
sour,
almost cabbage-y
lifts up.
But what I will say is this,
although I didn't like those,
I would rather drink those
than that fucking pickle
in the pickle water.
That was the worst. Which was just water. That was the worst, yeah.
Which was just offensive.
That's the worst for you, yeah.
I might have another little bit.
It was liquid stool.
Oh, that's good stuff.
It's not.
Why are you dirty?
Why are you a dirty boy?
It's a house of pickles, mate.
I'm in my element.
I'm having a pickle juice in the house of pickles. Yeah.
Ladies and gentlemen, you are
listening to Eli's dream.
I've got pickle
water in the house of
pickles. Come round here,
drink the pickle water all round
here. Thank you. Right, what
else have you got for me? Now, Paul,
I've put you through a little bit of a
gamut. A bit of a gamut.
A bit of a gamut.
A Gannon's gamut.
A tranche, if you will.
A tranche, yes.
A tranche of unpleasantness there.
Gannon's gauntlet.
We're going to finish off with some chocolate cake.
Yay!
Chocolate cake.
You like chocolate cake, don't you?
Now.
Oh, God.
Two products.
Oh, God.
Two products made by the same...
What?
Are you okay?
There's something going on in my belly right now.
Oh, it's healthy digestion.
It feels like an ice-cold storm of discontent.
Now, hopefully this will distract you from that.
You'll be all right.
It's just the good biotic bacteria going to work.
Oh, Mr Grumbly's waiting for a report at the other end
of the platform.
Now, these are two cakes
made by ETI company.
Yeah.
One is called Top Kek.
Top Kek.
The most incredible.
Top Kek.
The most disgraceful
leader of the pack.
He's a fruit.
He's a beaut.
He's a Harleyman Toot.
I've made that word up.
Fuck off.
I don't know what Harleyman Toot is,
but I'm going to find the meaning for Harleyman Toot.
Harleyman Toot.
I don't know.
No, that's good.
Harleyman Toot could be the pharaoh who's in Derek's carpet cleaner.
If only I could do some kind of Egyptian accent, and I can't.
Okay.
Now, we've got two cakes.
One is Topkek.
Topkek.
The most amazing one.
Topkek.
He's the one who's got the...
We don't know the lyrics.
And we're just like two boozy men.
Having a proper fucking...
Oh, you know what I think I'm feeling, Paul?
What?
I'm feeling a bit pickle drunk off this pickle water, man.
Don't get pickle drunk. I'm having some more. Don't you get pickle drunk. I'm feeling, Paul. What? I'm feeling a bit pickle drunk off this pickle water, man. Don't get pickle drunk.
Don't you get pickle drunk.
I'm feeling euphoric.
No.
The pickle juice is making me feel euphoric.
Ladies and gentlemen, please drink pickle juice responsibly.
Oh, God, that's salty.
It's not.
It's gross.
Ooh.
I have to drink me fizzy fizz good to take all the horrible taste away.
All right.
Now, we've got cake, though, for that.
Top cake is an individual cake.
And it says...
God.
What?
I never want to be a woman kissing you with a mouth that tastes like a fucking sewer pipe.
I don't want you to be a woman kissing me.
I'm not.
I mean, it'd be really freaky if you turned up one day. I'm a lady now. Kiss me. I'm not. I mean, it'd be really freaky. If you turned up one day,
I'm a lady now.
Kiss me.
Maybe it'd be the magic
you need in your life.
Maybe it'd be the magic
we're both looking for
in our hearts, Paul.
Mash your dirty spud.
Anyway.
I'm getting a bit embarrassed.
Anyway.
Paul's getting a bit embarrassed as well.
I'm just going to rephrase it
And just basically say
I feel sorry for the lady
Who had to kill you
Freudian
Kiss you
After drinking a bottle of that
This is getting all a bit Hitchcock
I'll see there's a strange woman
Who looks like my ex
Following me around
Then I'll run after her
And it'll be you
Oh like
Yeah like the end of Don't Look Now Yeah basically Come back to me my love You turn me around. Then I'll run after them and it'll be you. Oh, like, yeah, like the end of
Don't Look Now.
Yeah, basically.
Like, oh,
come back to me, my love.
You turn me around
and I'm like,
yeah, you're a little dwarf.
Yeah.
Right.
Top kick.
The most amazing
top kick.
And,
indescribable.
What's the other one we got?
Adicto.
Adicto.
What have you got
on the end of your foot?
I've got Adicto.
Right.
That's the best I could do. Yeah, that's not good. That's the best I could do. Now, Adicto. What have you got on the end of your foot? I've got a dicto. Right. That's the best I could do.
Yeah, that's not good.
That's the best I could do.
Now, a dicto, it amuses me because they've used the word addict or addicted.
Yeah.
We presume.
They're saying it's addictive.
Because that looks like a little cupcake, doesn't it?
A little chocolate cupcake.
Well, they both look like little chocolate cupcakes, but one has hazelnut.
The top cake has hazelnut.
Are you okay?
That pickle juice keeps coming back.
Now, do you want to open the Topkek?
Topkek!
The most amazing of Topkek!
What's the...
Gonna have to face it, I'm addicted to love.
Yeah.
I've got a song in there, eventually.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, Topkek, ETI, hazelnut and cocoa cupcake.
It's not a muffin, really.
It's more like a cupcake, isn't it?
I don't know. Get it out. Well, there's no's not a muffin, really. It's more like a cupcake, isn't it? I don't know.
Get it out.
Well, there's no cup.
It's shaped like a cupcake.
It's just a little simple cupcake.
It looks simple enough.
I don't know what else to say.
It's like halfway between a muffin and a cake,
what they call a cuffing.
Yeah.
Opened it up, split it up.
Chocolaty smell.
Smells fine.
Smells like cheap chocolate cake.
Yeah.
I'm going to have a little bite of this segment.
Oh. Oh. I'm going to have a little bite of this segment. Oh.
Oh.
What?
That's got no taste whatsoever.
Really tasteless.
Really bad.
It's not awful, but there's no flavour to it.
It's got bits of nut.
Can you taste the bits of nut?
Uh-huh.
Yeah, pretty bland.
Very bland.
Pretty bland.
You'd, uh...
I'm going to give that one.
Yeah, it's not very good.
Now, I'm opening up the Addicto, Gold Addicto.
Brownie.
And this is a cupcake.
It's a little flowery cupcake cup.
This actually has the cup.
Now, what does it smell?
Does it smell the same?
It's a little bit more chocolatey, I would say, the smell of that one.
This is probably going to be, this is their top of the range chocolate.
Oh.
I'm going to break a bit off.
I've got a bit of hells on it in my tooth.
Oh, that's a lot more chocolatey.
Oh, let's have a look.
Oh, yeah, that one's got a lot more flavour.
That's nice.
It's still not amazing.
But it's all right.
Compared to that.
Yeah, yeah.
So, in conclusion, Top Kek, one out of five.
I would say two and a half.
A Dicto's all right.
A Dicto's all right.
Two and a half out of five. It's got a kind of half. A Dicto's all right. Two and a half.
It's got a kind of brownie, sort of squidgy, chocolatey taste to it.
And I think it was only about 40p.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
How much were the juices?
They're very cheap as well, about 65p.
Oh, God.
You can get litres of this Seldom stuff now.
Hello, Eli and Paul.
I hope you like my Top Kek.
Uncle Grumbly. I hope you like my Top Kek. We had Top Kek. Yeah, Eli and Paul. I hope you imbibe my top. Uncle Grumbly. I hope you like
my top kek. We had
top kek. Yeah, I made that.
Oh yeah? What did you use? It's, translation's
not quite right. It's
top kek, but if you translate
it to English, it's
plop kek. Plop kek.
Yes, I thought it might be, yes.
You've eaten a lovely dollop of
Mr. Uncle. What about this Edicto one? Is that you as well?
What's the translation of that?
I haven't got anything funny for that one.
I didn't really have anything funny for that one.
But I thought I'd try.
A shit though.
It's a shit though.
It's a shit though, Paul.
No, there's nothing.
Let's just move on.
So is that it?
Yeah.
Right.
Cheap eats.
Right, it's time for the cheap eats train to pull out of the platform.
Bye now.
All aboard.
Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
Cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, perhaps with some different things that we will eat that will be cheap, Paul,
and you can pick up some stuff.
I look forward to it.
I'm sorry you really didn't like the pickle water.
I'm going back in.
Ooh.
Ooh.
That's a pickle water.
You should be in charge of their advertising or something like that.
That is pickle water.
Right, in a change to the programming session,
we recorded Price of Shite,
but we're not happy with it,
so I'm dumping it,
and we'll come back to it another time.
Because we did it,
and it was painful.
There wasn't a bonus worm.
We did have a bonus worm,
so there's a chance you'll hear that.
Maybe I'll save that clip and put it out as a Patreon thing.
How about that?
Okay.
So the Patreon can get off scraps.
But instead, we're going to do a new segment-ish.
Yeah.
Ish.
Called Paul's Page Turners.
Ooh.
Where Paul goes to a charity shop and buys a book.
Or books.
And then reads bits of it.
And then goes, this is a good book. And you go, no, it wasn was you go ah fuck you and then you do a character like usually richard brandoff
and then i do one to annoy you and then the segment ends on a fart ruff ruff ruff ruff ruff
i bought two books from a charity shop do you want to know what they are? Yeah. First one. I wanted to get
this book for a while and I saw it for a quid in
a RSPCA in Highgate.
Higgard? Higgard.
A very nice place, part of London, North London.
Lovely. Next to Highgate Wood,
which I used to go and chill out and go
for walks when I was depressed or stressed.
Highgate Wood has a, um, quite a sort
of, uh, sinister
almost. Do you think? It's quite dingy. It's quite a ding of sinister... Do you think?
It's quite dingy.
It's quite a dingy wood.
Do you know what I mean?
It's not unpleasant.
There are pockets of it that are... A bit gothic.
Yeah.
Sort of, you know.
It is.
It's almost...
A bit spooky.
It's a bit spooky there.
It's a bit spooky.
But not as spooky as Highgate Cemetery.
No.
That's very spooky.
Very spooky.
Very spooky.
Very spooky.
And you know what's really spooky about it?
What? It costs you five quid what's really spooky about it? What?
It costs you five quid to get in.
Does it?
Yeah.
Oh, is that for a certain part of the tour?
No, you can't just go in Highgate Cemetery anymore.
Really?
No.
Because it's too expensive.
Oh, I want to see me dead, Mum.
Five quid, basically.
I want to see me dead, Mum.
Five quid, Mum.
Well, you're not going to see her.
Is this like one of those...
She's hanging from a cage below the hanging tree.
I want to see mummy hanging from the high gate hanging tree.
Five quid.
Ten quid if you want to jack off.
So anyway, the book I got was by John Ronson.
John Ronson is an author who did things like The Psychopath Test
and The Men Who Steer at Goats, which has turned into a film.
He did a book about the porn industry recently as well.
Did he?
Oh, I don't know about that.
But yeah, he's a good journalist.
He also did an elongated essay, sort of monograph, about how Twitter, like the wrong tweet can ruin your life.
Oh, yeah, he had a whole book about that.
That was a whole book. It was a whole book about that. That was a whole book.
There was a whole book about that.
I think it's even listed on there.
It's a book that I started reading
then got really depressed by.
Why?
How these people's lives
were just ruined.
But yeah,
that book was hard to read.
Really?
Like one woman got her
whole life destroyed by it
and she did say,
she did do something horrible
on Twitter,
but the ramifications
probably weren't too much.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's a kind of scary book to read
but anyway
this book that I got though
is much more my wavelength
it's called Frank
and it's basically
about Frank Sidebottom
who was a comic creation
by a guy called
Chris Seavey
Seavey
so I didn't know this
until the book came out
and obviously the film
that came out
called Frank
there was a dramatisation
of Frank Sidebottom's life
and he was played by
Michael Fassbender.
Strange choice.
Maggie Gyllenhaal's in it as well.
Okay.
So he wrote this book
as a kind of precursor
to the film coming out
to kind of say
about what his experience
with...
Was he a friend of his?
He was in the band.
Ronson was in the band
with Frank.
Ronson was in
Frank Sidebottom's band
in the early days
when they were getting together.
It's a really short book.
It's like 68 pages.
It's only because Ransom sells books
that they decided to even make that book.
It's like one chapter for it.
I think it was all,
it was kind of a mutually agreed decision
to maybe him write this book
to help promote the film.
I see.
But also,
it's a nicely written book about...
Quite nicely...
Nice little hardback.
Nicely designed as well, isn't it?
Yeah.
Not unpleasant.
So for those listening outside the UK
who may not be aware,
Frank Sidebottom
was a novelty,
light entertainment
kind of character.
Chris Seavey
was a musician
and apparently
all of his,
his career wasn't going
very well.
So he created
Frank Sidebottom
to kind of just
fucking do what he wanted
and a bit of a kind
of rebellious action.
Yeah.
And he was hidden
because Sidebottom, the whole shtick was this big papier-mâché head mask thing. do what he wanted and a bit of a kind of rebellious action. Yeah. And he was hidden because side button,
the whole shtick
was this big papier-mâché head.
Yeah.
Mask thing.
And he had that nasal,
I can't really do it,
but you know,
it's really me.
Oh, it's that front side button.
Was he holding his nose in the mud?
He did.
He had a clip of that on his nose
the whole time.
Oh, did he?
Okay.
To the point where,
because he wore the head for so long,
like for instance,
John Ronson says that
whenever they were on tour,
he never took his head off,
even in the van.
You know,
he'd very rarely take it off.
I think how smelly it would be in the head. Probably.
Smelly in the head.
Funky. It is a good question.
How smelly was Frank Saibot's hollow head?
Yeah, probably funky. But
after the end of a tour, crikey.
It was probably a bit of a sweat box. Probably needed one of those
packets that you get in Japanese
foodstuffs that help it not
dry, keep dry. Yeah, got it. So,
I'll put a picture up on the website, but it was
a massive papier-mâché head.
You spit me right round, baby,
right round, like an ink gun, right round,
right round. You spit me
right round, baby, right round, like an
ink gun, right round, right round.
Do you know what you do?
You really do.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Please come and join me.
That was extraordinary.
I think that's wonderful.
Hey, this is nice, isn't it?
No, please feel free.
Go ahead, yes.
I could sleep on this, that's all.
Yes, yes.
Well, that was a lovely song.
Oh, thank you very much.
Thank you.
I tried to do my best, you know.
Yes, well, you obviously did do your best.
Yes, yes.
Oh, yes.
How would you describe that sort of music you've just played? Because it seems to be... Pop, you know. Yes, well, you obviously did do your best. Yes, yes. Oh, yes. How would you describe
that sort of music
you've just played?
Because it seems to be...
Pop, pop music.
Hip parade stuff, you know.
I see.
A lot of hip parade.
Even though it's played
on that instrument,
which is...
Well, what is that instrument?
It's a banjo, actually.
Ah.
It's a cross between
a ukulele and a banjo.
I don't know who invented it.
A very original idea.
I think, well,
it serves your type of music
very well indeed, very well indeed. Well, I can. I think, well, it serves your type of music very well indeed.
Well, I can play the drums as well, you know.
Oh, right.
And the bass guitar.
Well, I'm playing everything on my record.
A man of many talents, it seems.
Oh, yes.
Well, if the hat fits, wear it.
Although it usually doesn't fit me, you know what I mean?
Yes.
What's the other goal, you know?
Yes, why not?
You've got to in show business.
Absolutely.
Frank, tell me a bit about your spiritual home, your hometown.
At Timperley, I live in.
Timperley, yes.
Oh, it's very nice around there, very rural.
Yes.
I like to go train spotting and things like that.
Rambling, you know, looking in birds' nests.
You know, but I never touch them.
You know, they're like legs.
Oh, yes.
I never touch them, you know.
I like to take photographs of them.
Oh, yes, right.
That's a stamp collecting I like doing.
Yes.
And I like watching television.
It's brilliant.
Oh, really?
You know, I could lie there all day watching telly in bed.
Yes.
Fantastic.
But would you describe yourself as a country boy at heart or a city dweller?
Oh, yes, I'm an outdoor person.
Well, I'm an indoor person as well.
I'm a sort of outdoor indoor person, you know what I mean? Yes, I do know. Absolutely brilliant. Yes, I'm an outdoor person. Well, I'm an indoor person as well. I'm a sort of outdoor-indoor person, you know what I mean?
Yes, I do know precisely what you mean.
Yes, I see.
Have any other famous people come from Timperley?
Well, you know David Bowie?
Oh, yes, good Lord.
He was in an aeroplane that went over a Timperley once, you know.
Ah.
Well, I think it was him, didn't it?
It looked like him, you know.
I see.
And me being eye-opening, you know. Oh, think it was him and it looked like him you know and uh you know all right having
a lot um they uh they've been to manchester which is just near temple you know there was playing in
uh in a big concert you know i like doing concerts fantastic yes where do you do them do you do
concerts in timpoli oh yes at the village hall you know and uh you know i like to
play in the scout hut fantastic yeah we had three people in last week brilliant good lord yeah
that's quite a crowd yes i mean i do i do you um have to sign autographs are you mobbed by people
all the time i have to go shopping for my mom you know what i mean i get pestered you know
but yeah but i don't mind it you know what I mean because it's show business
isn't it
also Paul
just in terms of
correlating
relevant information
on this
we're all for that
where's that magazine
funny
because I saw
we were going to
discuss that
oh yeah
and I'm looking at this
and there's a DVD
out
Being Frank
the Chris Sivy story
yeah
that's a documentary
that's just come out
really recently
that talks about
the people who
work with him
would you be interested
in watching that as well
I very much would
because this book
is fascinating
and I always loved
Frank Sybotten
he did novelty songs
didn't he
well he didn't really
have any hits
you know what I mean
it was like
he did spoofs
of like queen songs
and you know
he made them
he changed the lyrics
to popular numbers
yeah born in the USA became born in Timperley so it was like he would like you know what's the
word i'm looking for like he would make something big and he'd make it really mundane and intimate
and personal and kind of parochial wouldn't he in a similar way to shortworth john shortworth
kind of tradition of northern comedy doing that. Yeah. Making mundane, putting the mundanity into things.
And making actually something kind of beautiful as a result.
Yeah.
So I remember Frank from watching TV shows.
Do you remember Remote Control on Channel 4?
It was like a quiz show.
And he was a presenter on that, wasn't he?
I think he was in it in some respect.
But that's what I remember seeing him.
He popped up in all different stuff, didn't he?
Like the tube.
Yeah.
But it was funny because apparently nearly everyone around him got more famous than he ever did.
Yeah.
John Ronson says he saw, for instance, Carolyn Ahern, who was famous for creating the Royal Family and being in Fast Show.
But apparently Miss Merton came from when he was making an album.
He said, do you mind being this character called a Mrs. Merton?
So he created Mrs. Merton?
Well, yes and no. He said, you want to be this next door neighbour character called Mrs. Merton? So he created Mrs. Merton? Well, yes and no.
He said, you want to be this next-door neighbor character called Mrs. Merton and Old Biddy.
And she did everything else.
He basically gave her the name.
But then that character exploded.
Yeah, weird.
And so Frank, as an act, kind of, it was always going to be cult.
You know what I mean?
It was never going to be mainstream success of him.
It says here he opened for Bross once.
I think I may have recalled seeing that.
He opened for Bross,
which were huge at the time
in the late 80s, early 90s.
And he basically was told,
you know, don't do Bross stuff.
So what did he do?
He came on and did Bross songs.
Before Bross?
Yeah.
And he was getting bottles thrown at him
and things like that.
Angry Bross fans.
Yeah.
You know what bottles they were probably throwing?
The ones they'd taken those caps off
to put on their boots
and then they'd throw
in the bottle
I'd never heard of that
do you remember
the Bross
had this whole
sort of fashion code
where you know
those like
Grolsch bottle tops
Bross
yeah
okay so you take
like a beer bottle cup
yeah one of those
ceramic sort of
you know
metal caps
that they'd have
on Grolsch
oh yeah
the stoppers
yes
yeah
and they put them on like their shoes like a, yeah, the stoppers. And they put them on their shoes.
Like a buckle.
Bross fans are pricks.
So, there's a story in here as well
about he was going on tour with Gary Glitter
of all people as well.
And Gary Glitter's people said...
When did Glitter...
When did he fall from grace?
It's like early 90s, wasn't it?
Yeah, when everything started coming out about him. Jonathan like early 90s, wasn't it? Yeah.
When everything started coming out about him. Jonathan King was the first of the nonces.
Yeah.
The first of the nonces.
He came.
No, he was, wasn't he?
King was a few years before.
I don't think he was the very first nonce, though.
Because that's the way you're making it sound like.
He was the first nonce ever.
He wasn't the first nonce that roamed the earth.
Who was the first nonce ever?
Jonathan King?
Correct.
Five points.
So the story goes like this.
Again, it's a great book.
It goes into much more detail.
But he talks about how he talked to Gary Glitter.
And they said, whatever you do, stay off the fucking stage and all this stuff.
Don't stand there.
Don't stand there.
Because Glitter, that's when he has his ideas, as we know.
Well, that's where apparently the stage rays and fireworks go off.
It's all pyrotechnics. So he went they went don't do that so what did he do he did that and
set off all the fireworks got lifted up and so apparently the managers or whatever stormed the
stage to get him wow he runs off and as he's running he's taking the head off he's not taking
his clothes off because he wears other clothes underneath his own takes it hide stands by the
door and the manager didn't know it was him no they went have you seen that frank sidebomb he
goes yeah he ran out through that door.
Crazy.
Yeah, crazy.
That's another advantage of being anonymous.
Yeah, I guess.
In the sidebar face.
But after the documentary is kind of about how there was Chris
and there was Frank and they were very different people.
And I think Frank allowed him to deal with failure,
whereas Chris couldn't deal with it, Frank could,
because Frank enjoyed the failure. Well, essentially yeah you know so that's what it was and to link it back to me
to some extent i performed with frank saibot me and graham casey before we set up you know
rogues handbook and stuff we did a we were part of a comic relief event in manchester where it
was like a 24-hour comedy show and we were just one act as part of the whole thing doing sketches yeah he was on After Us
did you do
Bad Lines
I honestly can't remember
the sketches we did now
I think we did
To Tony
that sketch
oh god
I like that fucking sketch
I think that's a good sketch
we did that
anyway
we go off
and Frank Sidebottom
is there
standing at the stage
and he goes
oh I like your ukulele playing all that stuff because I had done a little ukulele song at the end you got props from sidebottom still stay there stay at the stage he goes oh i like your ukulele playing
all that stuff because i had done a little ukulele song at the end and he got he got props from side
bottom well yeah and then he went on and did his thing and it was really good didn't he play you
a banjo yeah and he had a little frank didn't he on the stick the little puppet thing which is again
a puppet man doing a puppet thing he's like layers pretty cool yeah and he came off and then afterwards
he was just like oh i've got to go and all this stuff but he had a nice little chat he was really friendly
but he was in the mask
yeah the whole time
he turned up
wearing the head
and left wearing the head
so I only ever met Frank
you know what I mean
as I'm sure
a lot of people ever did
that's slightly creepy
but he played my banjo
don't you think
that's a bit weird
yes and no
but it's art isn't it
you know what I mean
yeah but you're backstage
with a performer
you want to talk
to the actual person yeah but think about it this what I mean? Yeah, but you're backstage with a performer. You want to talk to the actual person.
Yeah, but think about it this way, right?
Imagine you're Chris and you're like,
I like doing this for me.
I don't really care about other people.
That gives you a sense of anonymity,
that sense of I don't have to engage with these people.
I don't have to be Chris with these people.
I can be Frank and get in and get out.
And that makes sense to me.
You know, again, it's an artistic choice.
Yeah. It's strange, very eccentric. So I i would recommend if you find this in a charity shop john ronson's frank get it it's
a little read i read this in maybe about an hour quick read it's very quick read but if you like
it and you want to know more about frank's side bottom check out the documentary and the film and
he's there's loads of him on youtube and then if you you like that, go see John Shuttleworth's stuff.
It's kind of a natural progression.
Did you see the drama with Fassbender?
I haven't yet.
No, but it's on Netflix
and I should get around to watching it.
I've heard good things about it,
but I honestly,
I don't know.
It's a fictionalised version of that.
You know?
Yeah.
Before he died,
they were working on the movie then.
He said, basically,
it doesn't have to be real.
You can,
it doesn't have to be about my life.
So that's... He didn't mind them dramatising it. He basically dramatised said, basically, it doesn't have to be real. It doesn't have to be about my life. So that's...
He didn't mind them dramatising it.
No, no, no.
Basically dramatised it,
fictionalised it.
Just when I have this magazine here, Paul,
something that is going to be
of interest to us
on Cheap Show
is this new book
from Johnny Trunk.
Now, Johnny Trunk,
he is sort of a soundtrack.
He has his own record label, Trunk Records.
Oh.
And it has featured on Cheap Show before
because he reissued the Moogly Booglies.
Oh, really?
Yeah, that's on Trunk.
The Anthony Newley thing?
The Newley, yeah.
Newley and Delia Derbyshire.
Yeah.
So he released that?
Yeah.
He re-released it?
Yeah.
It's never before been released.
He unearths things like that.
He's really into the strange corners.
And then giving it a proper nice release.
And so he does it.
That's nice.
He does all strange library music and soundtrack music.
And he's got even more weird stuff like recordings of train announcements.
There's a whole scene.
People are really into that.
Yeah.
I don't want to ever meet those people.
No, I kind of can get it.
Do you want to come round to my house?
Oh, yeah.
I'll just put some relaxing tunes on.
Bing, bong.
Sandwiches are available.
It's all that stuff.
The Hampstead and City line has now closed.
Yeah, no, it's not that.
It's like, you know, when the...
Hey, this is your head steward and snacks are available in the buffet bar.
The buffet bar will be closing in 15 minutes, all of that.
But where's that?
Hang on, I'm confused.
There's people who record it.
Oh, pre-recorded stuff that they just play on the tannoy?
No, there's people who sit in trains and record it.
What?
Yeah.
That reminds me of what I was going to say.
I think I met a real-life Derek.
Ah.
I'll show you a picture of him.
I won't put it up on the website because I don't think it's fair to put it,
but I'll show you this man.
I'm travelling.
Was he like all lingering?
I'll tell you what, right now, so you can have a picture of what I'm about to tell you,
I'll show you the picture of the man I saw and then explain.
Was he talking?
This is the man.
I'll just show you.
Again, because there's a bit of respect and privacy,
I'm not going to put this on the website. Okay. But describe him, if you could.
He looks quite a reasonably dishevelled man in his 60s.
60s, 70s, something like that.
Could be in his 70s.
He's got a little tape recorder on his lap.
Yeah.
And he's dressed in a sort of dark navy look, sort of cagoule.
Yeah.
And he looks a bit dishevelled and sort of, he's got a grey sort of... Woule. Yeah. And he looks a bit dishevelled
and sort of,
he's got a grey,
sort of,
wispy beard.
Not wispy,
it's more like a stubbly beard.
Stubbly beard.
And thinning grey hair.
To be fair,
And he looks a bit depressed.
He looks a bit like if
Jeremy Corbyn hit the bottle hard.
Yeah.
That's basically the kind of thing
we're looking at.
He does look a bit like that.
And he looks like he's making a tape recording.
here's what happened.
Was he going,
oh, children. No, no, no, I won't go that far. recording. Well, here's what happened. Was he going, oh, children.
No, no, no.
I won't go that far.
But it's actually quite sweet.
So I'm on the train from Harrow coming into town
right at the weekend.
And the trains are all off on the Metropolitan
between Wembley Park and whatever.
So the point being is that I'm sitting on the chair
opposite him on the train heading south
into town on the tube.
Right?
And I see he's sitting there and he's just keeping himself to himself, mumbling.
And I think, oh, silly old man.
And then from a bag, he opens up in front of him and he pulls out this cassette player recorder.
You know, the little small one with the handle.
Well, I could see it in that photo. But in the bag was like four clock radios and a transistor and some other little technical thing.
A big bag of like radios, basically. Strange. Alarm clock radios and AM, you some other little technical thing a big bag of like radios
basically strange alarm clock radios and am you know like perhaps he collects them well he gets
he gets it out and he takes a cassette out of his pocket and he puts it into the cassette machine
presses it and then spends literally two minutes with his feeble strength trying to press play and
record at the same time down he couldn't do it he couldn't do it i was seeing him
put all his effort into pressing these two buttons and it took him two real solid minutes why don't
you just say look mate do you want me to press those buttons for you yeah it was weird so he
finally does it and the cassette starts recording and he leaves it on his lap and then it's like
wembley park blah blah this train will you whatever. And then he gets out of his pocket his mobile phone.
It's a smartphone, right?
Beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, presses it and then opens up an app
and he starts playing like some teeny bopper 90s pop song.
Okay.
You know, like a kind of like S Club 70 kind of thing.
Playing it loud on his phone and then puts the phone on the speaker of the recorder
and starts recording onto cassette the music coming out of his phone. On the the phone on the speaker of the recorder and starts recording onto cassette
the music coming out
of his phone
yeah
and he just starts
sitting there
and the music playing out
and then
I'm looking
I'm going
what's he doing
and he leans down
and he goes
whatever the date was
26th of April
and then names the band
and the song
and then just
puts the phone back
oh he's nuts
he catches me
looking at him
and he gives me a wink right and then I go the phone back. Oh, he's nuts. He catches me looking at him and he gives me a wink, right?
And then I go and I wink back
and then he raises his little arms.
He starts pumping the air with his arms
like he's dancing.
He has this weird problem.
And he's just doing this little dance thing, right?
And I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's good.
And then he gets up
and he starts, you know, bopping, bopping.
And the song ends
and he just sits back down,
puts the phone in his pocket, presses stop on his cassette
and then puts it all back in the bag and zips it up and then
gets off at Wembley Park. What a strange fellow.
Very strange.
And it's just a very strange thing to have.
I don't, I don't know what
he's doing. He's making a little
tape for himself. Perhaps he just enjoys taping
stuff. Maybe, but he...
You know, he just wants to tape it.
Yeah, but I just thought
it was adorable.
You know,
he wasn't creepy,
but it was kind of sad,
but also endearing.
It reminds me of this guy
called Lawrence
I used to work
in a call centre with.
He was like,
oh yeah, I've got records.
I've been keeping records
of all the top tens.
I'm going to write a book
of all the...
All the...
Top tens.
All the top tens
for like 20 years
it's like
Lawrence
they've got that information
yeah
the website's full of that shit
you can just
you know
why
are you going to write a book
he's like
oh
oh
oh mate
you just fucking destroyed his life
he's like
what I've got nothing
I've got nothing to live for
he did live with his mum
mate
that's sad
a little old man recording stuff
and having a lovely little time
bopping on a chair.
That's one thing.
Destroying a man's life,
work,
and then sending him home to his mum
is worse.
It just is worse.
Anyhow.
Anyhow.
That's that book, Frank.
What do you want to finish up?
Think about Trunk.
Trunk.
So he releases
and he has a new book out.
Yeah.
Is it called Top Ten since the last 20 years?
Wobbly Sounds, a collection of British flexi discs.
Cool, eh?
£10 only, so that's quite good.
I'm going to get a copy.
It's a book about?
Flexi discs.
I have that brilliant one for the tourist board of the Isle of Wight.
Remember that? Yeah. And it's interviewing people. It's ice cream ice cream nice ice cream that's the beck hill episode isn't it i think we played that yeah what is it on one because then we did the
spook and look there's a picture of one here with this advert for this book central milton
kings so it's obviously a sort of genre of flexi disc is the tourist the tourist holiday oh i love
them i love there is something both shit and amazing about flexi discs.
Yeah.
Because I see them in charity shops all the time
and I want to buy them because it'll be something odd.
But I won't buy them because they're big folded it with.
It's folded.
It's completely useless.
Absolutely useless.
And that breaks my heart.
I've got my Engine Fault flexi up there.
As we all remember, the Engine Fault one as well.
I wonder if that's in his book.
Well, you can find it.
You can reach out to him. Now, flexi discs from the Engine Fault one as well. I wonder if that's in his book. Well, you can find it. You can reach out to him.
Now, flexi discs from the 50s to the 90s.
And it details 150 of them.
I had a few when I was growing up.
Reader's Digest to smash hits.
Yeah.
There's a Chris Morris flexi for Select magazine.
Really?
Yeah.
See, I want all that stuff.
There'll be some interesting things in that book, don't you think?
So do you think it's like a coffee book where every page is a different flexi disc?
Yeah, perhaps.
Yeah.
All right. Just quick pause. Herman rolled down over there. things in that book don't you think so do you think it's like a coffee book where every page is a different flexi disc yeah perhaps yeah alright
just quick pause
Herman rolled down
over there
he's back
we can't mention
the scribbles
we'll have to
reintroduce him
in another episode
the scribbles
eating Herman
no
so
Herman the Wormen
yeah we can't
we can't
we can't introduce him
because we've lost
the footage
can't we
to the Patreon
ladies and gentlemen reintroducing the star of a failed segment of Cheap Show,
it's Eli's new friend, Herman the Worm Man.
Oh, hello.
I'm little Herman and I like breath.
I like to sup on breath.
All right, Herman.
All right, yeah.
So Herman is a worm that lives in your mouth and lives off your breath.
He's a little butt-plug-shaped green worm.
Yeah, he is.
He's a little...
We found it in a board game that obviously was not part of the board game,
but Eli fell in love with it.
I can only describe it as love at first sight.
Well, wouldn't you love a little butt-plug-shaped worm
that lives in your mouth and drinks your breath?
Absolutely fucking not.
All right.
Absolutely not.
Well, that's where we differ. Well, anyway,
Herman the Worm Man, a brand new
character for Cheap Show. I'm sure he'll
be a big success. What other books
have we got on this segment? Oh, that
was the thing. I got a few flexi
discs in my time. Lucky Magazine had The Jets
Crush on You. I think we've mentioned
that on the podcast before. Big tune.
Yeah, and I also got a
Care Bears movie flexi disc
that had a song from the movie in it.
Have we done a Platters flexi special yet?
No.
Well, that's something we should do, Paul.
Do we have enough?
I reckon we could cover them again.
Yeah.
We can definitely cover the engine sound.
We can do the Isle of Wight one, if I find that.
We should do it again, because I think...
I've also got some nice, quite rare private eye flexi discs.
We should do it then.
We should do a flexi special. The Gnome Report. What do you mean, Gnome Report? One of them's. We should do it then. We should do it. Flexi special.
The Gnome Report.
What do you mean,
Gnome Report?
One of them's called
The Gnome Report.
Is it?
Yeah.
All right, great.
I'd love that.
And it's like
the BBC Gnome Service.
Oh, BBC Gnome Service.
Yeah.
The next book I got
in a charity shop,
London's Strangest Tales.
Extraordinary but true stories
from a thousand years
of London history.
I love shit like this.
All right, let's have it.
I remember
there was that story
we touched on, I think,
about the great flood
of Tottenham Court Road.
Oh.
Because where the theatre is,
where We Were Rocky was
for years.
The Dominion.
Yeah.
That corner of Tottenham Court Road
used to have a massive brewery on
that made London Ale.
And the story goes,
and I can't remember the date,
it was, let's just say,
1600, 1700,
something like that.
One of the barrels
burst
that contained
tons and tons of beer
a big old barrel
and it swept down the street
and it drowned a few people
it swept into houses
it broke windows and doors
how big was this barrel?
huge
metric tons
you know like
in like water tanks
like one of those ones
they have in Nando's
which you can eat inside
yes
just like one of those ones in Nando's you can eat inside.
Well, it must have been.
Bigger than that.
Yeah, there are better details than that, but yes.
No, there isn't.
Paul, imagine there's a dead rat.
Do you measure it in Nando's now?
Oh, that's seven or eight Nando's worth.
Imagine that one of those barrels.
Yeah.
And you're looking down on it from above.
And there's like a mouse
just dead on the side there.
In it, the barrel?
No, on top of the barrel.
On the rim?
Yeah, right on the top.
So it's died on the rim of the barrel.
Can you picture that?
Is the barrel full?
Or is it empty?
The barrel's...
We're outside the barrel.
You can't tell.
I know, but we're looking down.
I know you can tell if the barrel's full or not.
No, because the barrel's got a wooden top.
You didn't say that at the top.
I presume there's an open top barrel.
It's not open top.
So it's been sealed.
So then there's a lid on top.
So he's dead on the lid.
Yeah.
There's one dead mouse on the lid of a barrel of beer.
A huge barrel.
Right.
Huge, like flooding.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A huge big barrel.
Do you know what that is?
What?
Like what my knob looks like.
A mouse on top of a big barrel.
Yeah, no, it was.
You know what?
That was the most protracted way we've ever done one of your dick jokes.
I mean, I'm...
It was good.
It was a great moment.
I mean, good.
I don't know about good,
but we got there.
All right.
So, this is a story
all about London's strangest tales.
It's just that simple.
I haven't read it yet
because I bought it on...
But you're going to read one for me
that I was particularly interested in,
The Filthiest Pub.
Oh, yeah.
Where was that one?
Let's have a look at it. The Dirtiest Pub in Oh, yeah. Where was that one? Let's have a look at it.
The Dirtiest Pub in London.
Yeah.
Apparently, this is a story from 1809.
Okay.
Pretty dirty time.
It's before the sewers had been built, hasn't it?
It's when they used to still chuck their shit out.
Didn't they?
Yeah, it was horrible.
And also, everything was horses.
Horses were just shitting everywhere.
Yeah.
Wasn't that when the Thames stunk of shit as well?
Big steamy horse piss.
Yeah.
I'm sure London was really great to live in in this time.
It must have been awful.
Yeah.
Not as bad as today.
With your commuters and your Polish.
Paul Gannon has now been fired from cheap show.
Dirtiest pub in London.
Here we go.
It's written by a guy called Tom Quinn.
So well done, Tom.
You've collected
And collated
A bunch of very interesting books
Apparently he writes
Stuff like this all the time
He's got science
Strangest inventions
And military
Strangest campaigns
He's the strangest guy
Right
Dirtiest pub in London
1809
Tingle lingle lingle
This could almost be
A tell us on the shop floor
As well
When you think about it
Let's see
Let's see
Many London
I bet there's poop in it.
Well, let's find out.
Many London pubs are far older than they first might appear.
In Bishopsgate, for example, Dirty Dicks dates back to the early 18th century,
despite the fact that the pub looks typically mid-Victorian.
I've been to Dirty Dicks.
I know Dirty Dicks.
Yeah, it's in Liverpool Street now, isn't it?
Yeah, when I'm DJing around the corner, I sometimes go past Dirty Dicks at night.
It's very lively.
It's very lively.
There's some liveliness,
some young people
with their lively,
zesty little vaginas.
Why?
Why?
And penises.
And penises, there we go.
So, Dirty Dicks,
I've been there.
The cellars here are original
and it was in the pub above
that one of London's
most extraordinary
and eccentric characters
once lived.
What pub is he still talking about?
Dirty Dicks.
Okay.
The story varies in its details, but it seems that Nathaniel Bentley,
a local businessman and dandy who ran an ale house, decided to get married.
Fine. Fair enough.
Yeah.
Everything was prepared and the pub's dining rooms had been laid out
with beautiful flowers, cutlery, linen, and a huge cake.
But on the night before the wedding, the bride died. That sucks.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's pretty...
That's taking grief to the extreme levels
that's a Pepsi Max
worth of grief
on the scale of soft drink grief
it's a Pepsi Max that
I don't understand where you're going with that
I don't really know either
are we going to try Fanta Shaka Toka
Shaka Toka
I feel for you
yeah we can
have you seen it
no basically Fanta have put out a load of new flavours they've got grape you don't usually see I feel for you. Yeah, we can. Have you seen it? No.
Basically, Fanta have put out a load of new flavours.
They've got grape you don't usually see.
No.
They've got melon.
Yeah, all the fruit you never really see.
There's this one I keep spotting, shaka-toka.
I feel for you.
Shaka-toki.
Shaka-toki.
What's that, though? I'm'm gonna find out right now yeah we're
gonna discover what shaka toki is oh i feel for you shaka toko
i love that here we go shakartaokata. Yeah, so Shokata.
Look, and it's blue.
Yeah, but what is that, though?
But what is that? I'm going to find out.
I'm just building up to it, Paul.
It's blue, look.
It's like a kind of...
Have you seen that?
Have you seen these blue Fanta bottles?
Yeah, it's like raspberry blue kind of colour.
Yeah.
It's elderflower and lemon.
Yeah.
I don't know if I'd like the idea of that.
Don't you like elderflower?
No, I don't really.
I don't find that flavour very flavour quenching.
You know what I mean?
It's not a satisfying flavour.
It just kind of feels like they're trading on that organic soft drinks market
with some piss-poor flavour variations for Fanta.
It's a lime.
The shakarta fruit is a lime.
So it's like a lime and lemon.
In Central Africa, amazing properties of this fruit were only discovered as late as a couple of years ago.
Weird.
Well, I'm going to give that a go.
I think we should maybe try that on the show, Paul.
We could certainly use it in a froth shop.
I think that's froth shop's territory.
Really?
Yeah.
Okay.
It's, you know, sugary candy sweet drink.
Can I get back to my story now?
It's healthy.
Yeah.
Can I get back to my story about a man's grief?
You can, yeah.
Well, I'm talking about Fanta flavours.
Right.
So his pants fell off because he was...
Yes, that's it.
It all boils down to his pants falling down.
Right, so he also stopped washing
and only changed his clothes when they rotted and fell off.
No, but hang on.
So you said he sealed up his room with the breakfast laid out.
Yes.
Do you not listen?
Or are you too busy fucking wanking over Fanta?
Eh.
Good callback to just now.
Only me and you are going to find that amusing.
Right, I know.
All right?
Weird.
Okay.
Okay.
This has gone well.
I thought this interruption.
Acting.
Right.
Shaka-ta.
Shaka-ta.
We're moving on from Fanta.
No, it says
He sealed up the room
As was
When it was laid
For the breakfast
Are we assuming
That the food
Is in there as well
The food for the breakfast
Yeah so imagine
It's all there
Cake
Well that would have been smelly
Yeah but that's
He's mad
And sad
And no one goes in that room
For
No it's all sealed off
So
He allowed his pub
To become one of the
Filthiest houses in London,
but people flocked to see it as if it was really as bad as they'd been told,
and Bentley made a fortune.
Right.
Because he had the Dirty Dick's pub.
It's just grubby.
Just a grubby, dirty pub with a room full of haunted, lost memories.
Do you think Oscar the Grouch lived there?
Go with that idea.
Yeah.
Go on, what does Oscar the Grouch sound like?
I don't know, get someone else to do it.
No, this is your improvisation.
No, I didn't say it's my improvisation.
I asked a simple factual question, which you were unable to answer.
What's the answer right now?
How does the notes answer it?
Let me have a look.
Is there a sub note?
Let me have a look.
Oscar the Grouch.
I'm reading.
Well?
No. No, he didn't. Oscar the Grouch is not in this story in any shape or form. What about Fungus the Bogey Well. No.
No, he didn't.
Oscar the Grouch is not in this story in any shape or form.
What about Fungus the Bogeyman?
No.
Do you remember Fungus the Bogeyman?
Yes.
He was grabby.
Right, you've got to go down a memory lane now thing.
Is this it?
Going down a memory lane.
I thought we were soonly done with this.
All right, come on.
Soonly do it.
Soonly done.
So, yeah, he made a fortune.
A fortune he never spent
Because he bought
Nothing
He's a bit of a
A maggot
He's a bit of a maggot
It seems like
There's a lot of that
Going around
People earning a lot of money
And then going mad
And then
Never spending any of that
Part of their madness
Is
Miserliness
Yeah
Because they feel like
Every penny must be counted
Because you've got to remember
Maggots started
Hiding money around his houses
Well yeah, they just want to have money
More than they want to have things that money buys
But then Meggett was a different case
Because he was
Oh no, don't touch me money
You want to build a magical castle in the sky?
Here's two million pounds in old money
So
He lived for nearly 40 years and died
Finally in 1809 He was a rich man by then he once said
what is the point of washing my hands or anything for that matter when they'll only be dirty again
tomorrow well he had uh he lived in an era paul before the um discovery of germs germs and stuff
so yeah so he was just just grubby yeah he wasn't actually like... You know, you could answer that question,
what the point is,
quite clearly with a medical answer now.
But that was...
It would spread germs.
Obviously now.
You get it sick.
You make people around you sick.
I would still say,
if I was in conversation with him
and he said,
what is the point of washing my hands
or anything else for that matter?
They'll be only dirtied again tomorrow.
I would say,
yes, but you stink of shit.
Yeah. You know what I mean? No, but it's like, I don't, yes, but you stink of shit. Yeah.
You know what I mean? I know, but it's like, I don't
care. They all, yeah. We have to work with you.
I don't have to smell me, do I? No, but we do.
I'm within my own subjective reality,
where it's okay. You're like that philosopher who
hated the Eiffel Tower, so his favourite place
in Paris to go was the Eiffel Tower
because it's the only place in Paris you couldn't see it.
It's that kind of thing. He could also just not
look at it. What, just wander around, not closing his eyes every time he turns north?
It's the sky penis of Godzilla.
Yeah, so a famous philosopher's going to start saying that.
It's just a big man lying in the ground who has a big green penis made of metal.
The Iron Giant Wang.
Yeah.
Not Eiffel Tower, but I had something else to say.
That never happened in The Iron Giant.
You never see The Iron Giant's cock crawl out of the sand.
It's because he's a robot.
Why would you give a robot a penis?
He was meant for moving bits of industrial stuff around.
No, he was built to be a war machine.
That's the whole point of the film, isn't it?
Exactly.
And then he discovers humanity via a little boy.
What utility does genitals have in war?
Just get in the way, get blown off, don't they?
Yeah, they do.
It's like Catch-22. Doesn't he lose his have in war? Just get in the way, get blown off, don't they? Yeah, they do. It's like Catch-22.
Doesn't he lose his balls in that? Once, I heard,
Paul, once, someone got shot through the womb
and the bullet went in... No, shot
through a dead testicle.
Yeah. And it went into a lady's womb.
Yeah. She had a baby. Mythbusters
thoroughly debunked that on an episode
of Mythbusters. I think it's true. It's not
true. That's the kind of thing.
That's pseudo-intellectualism.
And the bullet picked up more than...
I heard it happened again.
And the bullet went through two people's bollocks,
and she had twins.
Right, great.
Then they did an experiment before there was modern ethics,
and there was a whole bunch of men stood in a room
with a woman on the other side of the wall,
legs akimbo.
And they had a precision bullet.
You're a fucking monster.
Locked off.
You are a fucking monster.
And they shot through like 17 bollocks into her womb.
She died.
Nothing happened.
Wow.
And they died.
Paul, what I was going to say.
What I was going to say.
Yeah.
Did you hear as well?
There was this doctor.
The first doctor who went, oh. this is such a Ronnie Corbett of
podcasts.
Women seem to be dying near around childbirth because we don't wash our hands.
This is way before the germ theory.
Yeah.
Discovered that he was correct.
He said, you've got to wash your hands, guys.
I've figured out.
Yeah.
If you wash your hands, they have a much better chance of surviving all of this.
Okay.
In mid-wifery.
Yeah.
And they all ignored him
and laughed at him.
No, we'll go on
taking a shit
and then go straight in.
But that's the way
society is.
It's bizarre.
So...
The remnants of the old clothes
that hung from the ceiling
were only cleared out
after they fell foul
of a new health
and safety rule
in the 1980s.
But the pub, the old pub
What was that rule called I bet?
I bet it was called the Great Expectations rule.
Yeah, the Great Expectations, the Mrs. Havisham rule.
Or Flavisham. Havisham? Flavisham.
Havisham. But the old pub
still has a few fake rags here and there
to remind us of its decidedly grubby past.
If you go to Dirty Dick's, keep an eye out for the
dirty rags in the downstairs area.
Oh, I've never been to the downstairs area
of Dirty Dicks.
You haven't been to
the downstairs area
of Dirty Dicks
and saw some filthy rags?
No.
I can't go around there.
You can't go around here?
Do you want another
story from here?
I'm enjoying these.
I think you'll like this one
because it's quite short.
1190.
This is in London.
Strangest Tales.
The book by Tom Quinn.
Thank you for letting us literally take your work word for word.
That's a bit much you spent for it though, isn't it?
I spent a quid on this book.
You said 1190.
No, the 1190 is the year the story is taking place in London's strangest...
Oh, fuck off!
This story...
You spent through your nose with that, Paul!
It's meant to be a cheap show!
Fucking hell.
This story is called human lavatory
the Eli Silverman
story
that's an idiot
laughing at that joke
yeah
yeah
good
I call him
Jim
right
I've obviously
had to edit that out
Oh fucking god don't
But this is what he sounds like everyone
No don't
Don't you fucking dare
In my toilet
Right
Human lavatory
1190
As successive British governments have closed
Britain's once great wealth of public lavatories
London lose
Fucking tell me about it.
Yeah.
I am outraged.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
And then you go in a shop and they go,
you can't use the loo unless you buy a fucking coffee for seven quid.
Yeah.
What am I...
I'm going to shit on your floor.
So that's you who does that, is it?
No, I go, right.
You've asked for it.
One sentence in.
You've gone straight to shitting on floors.
Right. Mate, have you heard about
as well
sorry
I'm just
on a bit of a roll here
have you heard
there's coffee carts now
near King's Cross
but you can only pay cash
okay
it's not okay
you're okay with that
I don't know
I don't care
ew
it's all artisanal coffee
some fucking hipster with a big beard and lumberjack outfit selling coffee don't care. Ew. It's all artisanal coffee. Some fucking
hipster with a big beard and lumberjack
outfit selling coffee. It's not
very good, but it tastes a bit burned.
But that tricks you into thinking it's
posh coffee. It's not though.
This coffee I'm drinking now.
Ooh baby.
Did I get any offered?
Do you want some? Doesn't matter now, does it?
No, there's a whole fucking thing. Doesn't matter now.
Stick it up your arse.
There's a whole thing of it there.
Stick it up your arse.
I don't want your coffee.
Coffee enema, that's a thing.
So I could stick it up my arse if I wanted.
Well, there you go.
I'll do that then.
Let's do cheap show enema.
Mate, don't.
We'll get a pipe, a bit of rubber hosing.
We'll get a qualified nurse.
Cycle tyre pump.
I'm not trusting you with that.
It's cheap trusting you anywhere near that.
And then I'm going to get the hottest coffee I can find.
No, you wouldn't.
And pour it directly into your delicate arsehole.
I'll tell you what would happen.
Yeah.
Paul, you'd be like, right, I'm going to put the coffee inserter in now.
Yeah.
Oh, it's in.
Oh, I know where you are.
Aren't you funny?
Aren't you funny?
Oh, it slipped in.
Oh, lazy. It slipped in nicely.
I'm going to have to pull it out.
There seems to be a problem.
Ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of Cheap Cheap.
I'm going to have to put it back in again.
Oh, the problems keep reoccurring every 10 seconds.
Sploosh.
So, I don't know.
I don't know what you're inferring, but I'm presuming it's anal sex, right?
Yeah.
So, this coffee, wow.
Let's fucking move on.
Let's move on.
Come on.
What's this?
Poo-poo man.
I've literally one sentence into this
and you've gone off on a tangent
about anal sex and coffee.
It's a good combo.
It is.
So, apparently,
London loos up until the 1950s
were famous the world over.
Apparently, I didn't know that.
Well, yes.
That's what I mean.
We've got all of these underground loos.
You know, the ones that are all closed now.
You used to be able to just go down, wash your hands.
It says here, the public has now been forced to dash in and out of restaurants and pubs
where they have no intention either of eating or drinking.
Terrible.
But it's true.
It's like Camden had those toilets and they've been closed recently.
Open the fucking toilet.
Did you know?
It's all part of the slide towards fucking, you know fucking eli's manifesto neo-liberal privatization of the
whole public sphere isn't it yeah and they just don't they don't turn a profit lose do they
there's no way they can make money it's a service yeah the public for the community you're paying
for the upkeep they don't want to the neo-liiberals don't want to fucking pay for it, do they?
Well, there you go.
Hot political commentary on Cheap Show. Well, you know what I'm saying.
No, I agree.
It's all getting sold off.
It's all to different, you know, they get Serco to run it.
Isn't it great?
And Serco goes, we're not making any profit for this.
Isn't it great?
Fuck the people, you know.
I'm just, no.
Fuck people who want to take a piss in a busy city.
Do you know what I mean?
And now, you just see people pissing on the street all over the place, Paul.
It's disgusting.
Yeah, it is.
I totally agree.
And that's because they've fucking taken these facilities away from us.
Yeah.
Cheap Show.
The podcast that goes from political commentary to anal bum sex jokes within 90 seconds.
I've got a hive mind.
What can I say?
Buzz buzz.
Here comes another idea.
Ladies and gentlemen, I challenge you to name a podcast that does the same.
Well, there is that one.
Shut up.
There is that one.
What? Arse pod.
Yeah, it's called Political Arse Sex Pod.
Right, the prod pod.
Right, here we go.
The reason London and...
The reason London and...
The reason London's magnificent Victorian public loos were built in the first place
was simply that governments
of the time saw them
as essential to the
well-being of Londoners
who would argue that
it would still be quite
to the well-being of
Londoners to have them.
Fucking hell.
It's like you go to
Amsterdam or Paris
and they have those
little urinals on the
corners and stuff like that.
Give us the loos.
And they were great.
They were actually
really well made.
You know, with those
old, with the urinals
you get in the man
with the really big,
thick, white porcelain ones. Yeah. They're like great
aren't they? I like them. I'll have a piss
against that. Instead they turn them into nightclubs
and stuff, don't they now? Yeah, nightclubs and cocktail
bars where it's like, oh, come to the toilet
the place is a real shit hole.
Yeah. You know what I mean?
Try our new
Uncle Grumbly's
ass gravy. No. No. What?
Grumbly's not coming? No? Grumbly's not coming?
No.
Grumbly's not coming?
He doesn't work with booze.
He works with...
Fucking Uncle Grumbly
turns up everywhere.
He's not coming today.
He doesn't do booze.
He's not coming today.
No, he's not.
He's apparently still
on his...
on a romantic getaway
with Lady Plot Floss.
Fuck him, hell, mate.
Big trouble.
Big trouble.
Have you seen
the state of...
Squishy Jew.
I've never seen a man so broken. Yeah, he's
vacant. Because yesterday I saw him and I was laughing
at him for a bit and he
looked upset. Well, he did. You know what I said
to him? I said, Squishy. Yeah. I said, Jim.
Yeah. I said, Squishy Jim. Because you're close to Jim, aren't you?
You can call him Jim. I talked to him on the phone.
Yeah. I said, Squishy.
I said, Jim. I said, Squishy Jim.
Right.
I said, why don't you try skating around in puke because what he misses is the squishing
he misses the contact sport
it's the squishing that was his whole focus
that was his whole life
I've said puke skating
he didn't go with that I imagine
maybe headbutting mucus
once you've trudden plop you never go back
I said you can headbutt some mucus
nah he wouldn't have gone with that.
Round bus stops.
I've just been looking at his Facebook page,
Grumbly's Facebook page,
and they're all pictures of him and Lady Plops on the beach,
and she's having a suspiciously looking brown ice cream.
Chocolate.
Soft serve.
Just read the thing.
Anyway, I'm sure we'll check in with them in a future episode
where our audience care more about the characters than we do.
Right, so parliamentarians who knew their history far better
than today's legislators no doubt remembered that
throughout the Middle Ages and well into the 17th century,
one of London's biggest problems was the lack of public loos.
I imagine that's true.
Before they built them all in the Victorian era, yeah.
In their houses, people simply used a bucket or pot
and then threw the contents into the gutter or straight into the Thames.
Just out the window?
Out the window.
Look out, I'm going to chuck me shit!
Job done.
Mad, imagine that.
Just imagine what the streets smelled like.
It was bad.
London was probably not a great place to live.
It wasn't like those Shakespearean love movies or whatever
where they're all...
It's like no one ever showed
Shakespeare getting
a face full of liquid shit.
He may well have done
once or twice though.
Muchapoo about nothing.
Twelfth shite.
Oh God, don't.
Please don't start.
Romeo and Pouliere.
Romeo and Poo Toilet.
Richard III. It and Pooh toilet. Richard III.
It's fucking
right itself.
We have fun.
Right,
okay,
so,
yeah,
they used to
just chuck it
into the Thames.
There is much
evidence to suggest
that many
householders,
this is certainly
true in the
aristocratic
households, simply relieved themselves in the aristocratic households,
simply relieve themselves in the corner of any room they happen to be in.
Crazy.
It's crazy.
But it's pretty much like being in this room with you.
Oh, fuck.
Just go piss in the corner.
I do not do that.
In your fucking nest.
No, I'd like to say right now, no.
You've never pissed in this room.
Only, only...
Into a bottle.
When the toilet,
the one toilet in my flat
has been occupied
and it was a bit of an emergency.
Do I get forgiveness for that?
So you've shat into a Lucas A bottle.
I did not shit!
I would not shit it, come on.
That is a fucking line
we all have to draw.
It's also an art form.
If you can shit directly
into the neck of a bottle.
Oh, God.
It means you've spent some time on the street, basically.
That is Britain's Got Talent.
Do you have that talent?
No.
I don't either.
No.
Anyway.
No, but Paul.
I know.
I haven't got a funny bladder or anything.
There's nothing amusing about your bladder at all.
It's very strong.
All right.
It stores the piss.
Yes.
It stores it well.
You've trained it well.
It stores it.
Then I go for a big piss.
Don't need any more.
I don't need any kind of fucking incontinence nappy,
like, say, a Tenor-branded one for men.
Stop mentioning Tenor.
Why has that become a thing with you?
Right.
Right.
Mate, imagine having to wear one of those.
Oh, God.
Shut up.
Out in the street, people relieved themselves wherever they liked.
But the more delicate-minded, and of course women, found this unacceptable.
The solution was provided by human loos.
Oh, you carry around a bag.
These were men and women who wore voluminous black capes and carried a bucket.
When you needed a loo, you looked for the nearest man or woman with a cape and a bucket
and gave them a farthing.
You then sat on the bucket while they stood above you,
still wearing the cape, but also surrounding you with it.
Wow.
That is crazy.
They need those at festivals.
They fucking do.
That would be excellent.
I would totally use one of those.
I was going to say, I thought you'd be one.
Eli the poo man.
Eli the human toilet
Paul you made that joke
at the beginning of this story
It's still good though isn't it
Now it's got context
Well I tried to do a whole character
who laughed along
but you weren't having any of that
Nah bollocks to you
The name of only one human lavatory
has ever come down to us
The court's rolls reveal that in 1191
Thomas Butcher of Cheapside
was fined and admonished
for overcharging his clients.
Fuck.
He put it up to a farthing and a half
or something.
What happened was
they went,
don't you worry,
you sit on there
and I'll give you the cape.
And then he puts the cape around
and went,
well, I'm going to release this right now
unless you give me another farthing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Otherwise, I'm going to show everyone you now unless you give me another farthing otherwise I'm going to
show everyone you're
having a grunt in my
bucket
and then that's
that's what you got
done for
yeah probably
or you know
you're desperate
I need to shit
no one's around
it goes up mate
it's gone up
it's a groat
well you're out here
you're fucking miles
from the ditch
so it's either me
or you're shitting
the street love
alright then nah I fucking stitched you up like a kipper or what if you go Yeah So it's either me Or you're shitting the street love Yeah Oh Alright then
Nah fucking
Stitched you up like a kipper
Or what if you go
Pss pss pss pss pss pss
And then go
Oh
He's like
Oh shitting
That's extra
That's extra
Fucking argue
He's got an emptiness
Get off the pot
And he goes
One two three
Four plops
Four plops
Four plops
That's another three farthings that love
It's a pity I'm in a different historical era to Squishy Jim
because he could come and do something.
Is that that story?
Yeah, that's that story.
That was an actual thing?
Yeah.
They could bring that back.
So they don't, they just...
They just cover you in the cape.
They've got it here.
They've got it in front of them, sort of.
I mean, it's a massive cape.
So I'd imagine...
But the actual bucket, is it on a sort of harness?
No, they just put it on the floor.
Oh, and then they...
And then they...
Their head is outside the cape as well.
So you have privacy from them as well.
Yeah.
Oh, I just think that's excellent.
I don't know...
That's quite practical, isn't it?
It is.
It suits the time, though.
Have you thought about it with...
No, today's technology, they'll have sort of stool...
Like a poober.
...jellifiers.
Poober.
Yeah.
It's like, oh, I need a shit.
I'll book a poober.
And then a guy comes.
Hello.
And he could have a freaking thing.
Yeah.
Like a brown police siren on his head.
Yeah.
And he's like, oh, God, thank you.
And then you run out.
And he comes in.
In Glastonbury, people would use those.
Nightclubs.
At the end of the night in a nightclub.
You just walk out.
So they're pissing in an alley.
You call a poober.
Yeah.
It's good, that.
Yeah.
TM. Copy copyright Paul and Eli
they could just put
more urinals up
I mean they could yeah
it lacks the human touch
there's one I use in Shoreditch
when I'm working up there
yeah
every time I'm there
that they put up on the weekends
yeah
oh a little plastic thing
yeah
well here you go
it saves me time
and I like to piss
in the open air
great
ahhh
like that ahhh go like that no you don't oi me time and I like to piss in the open air. Great. Like that.
Go like that. No, you don't.
And if there's someone
else on the pod with me,
wink. Fucking hell, yeah.
Fucking
hell. I certainly
did drink some liquid earlier.
Yeah, great. You've made the scene
of being a bloke, eh? Pissing.
You've made the scene very clear to us.
Splash a splash.
I love it when it splashes, I say to them.
You know what?
We can revisit this book again, I think, at some point.
There's a few more stories.
I like that.
There's a few more stories in it that I think would suit.
Good cheap show grot.
And also not too brief, but not too long.
Like a couple of pages.
No, the stories are manageable.
And when you aren't going off one of your stupid, fucking stupid tangents what mate i fucking saved it from this section's been an hour
has it really yeah god oh strictly speaking two days
and that is the end of Cheap Show episode 125.
125.
125.
Not one to five.
One to five.
Not one to five. I don't know who this is.
This is Baron Von Numberplate.
Fucking hell.
Hello, I am Baron Von Numberplate and I am in charge of all numbers.
Okay.
It's good too.
I own that.
So it's like the count
but German.
Ah, yeah.
I mean, keep going.
By all means, Paul.
No, no.
All the fun's gone now.
Fucking hell.
Short-lived character award.
Fucking hell.
That might be the shortest
we've done.
No, I think the boy
who was problematic
is going to have to
take that out. Yeah, I know. Snip was problematic you're going to have to take that out.
Yeah, I know.
Snip, snip.
Fucking snip.
So that's Cheap Show.
Thank you for supporting us
on Patreon.
If and so, you do and so.
Shut up.
Patreon.
If and so and do you so.
Patreon.com forward slash
Patreon.
No, listen mate.
No.
Thwoppage.
Patreon.com.
We're going to have to
up the game on Eli's
non-existent but promised
rewards. Forward slash Cheap Show. Thwopp game on Eli's non-existent but promised rewards.
Forward slash cheap show.
Thwoppage.
Oily bollock thwoppage.
That's what I'm talking about.
How much
How much
The secret price.
Again.
So if they randomly get it right.
Yeah.
What if I turned around to you
and said,
mate, you're not going to believe this
but
Alan Stiff Stiff
from
Chepstow
He managed to get the Most people when they're trying to think of like a random like and stiff stiff from Chepstow.
Most people when they're trying
to think of like
a random
like surname
will just go for
like one that
actually exists
but no
you've gone for
a weird technique
of picking a word
that isn't
someone's name
and then doing it
twice.
Stiff stiff.
Oh and stiff stiff.
Typhonated.
Fuck me.
That was such poor improvising.
Right, so let's say that this hypothetical normal person,
Alan Stiff Stiff.
Yeah, got it right and donated £269.78.
And it was like, oh shit, that's the right one.
You'd have to do it. Do the bollock.
You'd have to do it. Oiled bollock thwoppage.
Yes. Hairy, oiled bollock
thwoppage. Yeah, you can carry on saying it.
I'd like to. Could I say it a few more times?
Go on. Thwoppage.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for listening to Cheap Show.
No, no, no. I've got an answer.
I've got an answer for you.
It won't happen.
The reason it won't happen is because I've made the whole thing up
and there is no actual donation price.
Good, so let's move on.
I don't know about the mechanics of Patreon,
but I don't think you can do cents.
You don't know anything about this show
outside of when we record in this fucking room.
You can't put cents on the dollar, can't you?
You can't go, I want to do a dollar and 20.
But that was just my fucking point.
So the whole thing falls apart.
Unless you get a visit
from the thwoppage expert
Oh god
I come round
and I just case the joint
I'll have like a
I just want to end
the episode
Uniform
I just want to end
the episode
No but just play out
this little thing
Imagine you're
Alan Stiff Stiff
Yeah
I'll come round the house
Come round here
Yeah I'll go round there
I'll go round there You come round here here. Yeah, I'll go round there. Come round there. I'll go round there.
You come round here.
Oh, ding dong.
Yeah.
Come to the door.
Hello.
Hello, just doing a check.
Hello, I'm Alan.
Yeah.
Got any low windows?
No, no.
The lowest we've got really.
I can see one there though, sir.
What's that?
That's a window, isn't it?
That's a cat flap.
You have very large cats?
Yeah, I do.
They're Bengal.
They're tigers?
Yeah.
Well, I've got a guide for that.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
No, you keep him away.
I've heard what he does.
I'll get my Viagra guy.
No, you're not doing that.
We're not having him around here.
Thwoppage!
Running around!
Thwopping!
And then I'm running off!
Right, what a waste of money from my point of view.
But look at this sort of stork margargarine style oil splat that's left.
The thwoppage print of an expert.
Thank you. Thanks for listening
everybody. The very sound of your balls
squeaking along a pane of glasses.
Thwopping.
For that.
Right. We're on Twitter.
Please join us on the conversation there. Why not?
At the Cheap Show pod and at Paul Gannon's
show. He is Eli Snowid. E-L-I-S-N-O-I-D. Email us Why not? At the Cheap Show pod. I'm at Paul Gannon's show. He is... Eli Snowid.
E-L-I-S-N-O-I-D.
Email us anything you want at thecheapshow at gmail.com.
And we're on Facebook and Tumblr and all Instagram and everything.
So just find us on there.
And pictures accompanying this episode is at thecheapshow.co.uk.
Have you taken those already?
Yeah.
Good.
Yeah.
Because I've thrown them away.
No, I know.
Took all the pictures.
Don't you worry about it.
And that's it.
So thank you. We're back next week for more all the pictures. Don't you worry about it. And that's it. So, thank you.
We're back next week for more.
Thanks very much, everybody.
Cheap laughs.
And we look forward to seeing you again.
Bye.
Bye.
What were you going to say then?
You little shit.
I was just going to say something about how shit you were.
Obviously.
Just stop the thing.
All right.