CheapShow - Ep 132: Crab Bucket
Episode Date: June 21, 2019What mysteries lie in the infamous Crab Bucket? What surprises does it bestow? Frankly, not many. However it is just one of the delights featured in this week's "almost classic game play rules" editio...n of The Price of Shite. Elsewhere in the episode Paul and Eli delve in to the mucky history of London once again to discover about the lives of "Pure Finders" and how a few dodgy streets got their names. All in all, it's a pretty standard episode... apart from that one moment where we use time travel to right a very dirty wrong from CheapShow's history... And if you like us, why not support us: www.patreon.com/cheapshow Share & Enjoy. Photos/Videos for this episode can be seen at https://www.thecheapshow.co.uk/ep-132-crab-bucket 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
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Hello there, it's time for Cheap Show once again. I'm Eli Silverman.
Oh, I'm sorry, news is just coming in. Beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep.
Hi, this is Fraud Spot and we've got news coming in today of the renowned section of Cheap Show
called The Source Report is under investigation at the moment for fraudulent knowledge and
backroom activities. Apparently, he's been in the pocket of big source companies taking bribes.
And we're going to speak to the man who heads this
source report, Mr. Eli Silverman.
Mr. Silverman! Mr. Silverman!
Hello! I'm from
Cheap Show's Fraud Report
and I've got
questions for you, sir. Okay, well I'm happy to answer
any questions. Everything's above board
and the rumours that have come out
about the source report are nothing but
unfounded rumours
and I'd like to see
anyone produce
a scrap of evidence
because source report
is a service
that all of the
cheapskates
and cheap show listeners
all value
very highly
because it's source
it talks about source
and that's always
been what they do
and it's impartial
and we don't have any
we don't take any kind of payments from any kind of source company heinz is not doing anything i have to
interrupt you i'm sorry i've got this print out here it's print out here which i'll let you read
right now this says that you received a payment of 40 000 pound from the el guacateco mate you
can't even remember a word you said before.
You try and do a bit.
You try to do a bit, and you haven't got the skills.
Don't change the question, Mr. Silverman.
I'm not changing the question.
Did you accept £40,000 for a well-known hot sauce company?
Now, I've got one.
The printout there says you received.
I've got a question for you.
Yes.
Do you think I'd still be fucking sat in this dismal room
with some fucking scouse twat doing a fucking shit thing that fucking just fails constantly?
That's all that's good about it.
It's just constant failing.
Do this with you.
If I had 40 grand from El Yakateka to fucking push their sources.
Welcome to Cheap Show.
I hate you and your fucking noodle posse. Welcome to Cheap Show. Moodle time Tales from the dance floor
How's the big guy?
The price of shite! Well, you haven't answered the question.
The source report is cleaner than my balls.
So you're a filthy, filthy thing altogether, Mr. Silverman.
The cleanliness that surrounds my nads, it shines. with my balls. So you're filthy, filthy thing all together, Mr. Silverman. No, I clean,
the cleanliness
that surrounds my,
my nads,
it shines,
it shimmers in the air
with cleanness.
No.
It's pure,
soapy,
I've seen those videos,
restoration videos,
you know,
and they take an old,
rusty old thing
and then they clean it up.
And they did it with my nads.
And there was one
with your balls.
Yeah, yeah.
They presented your balls
and they were all rusty
and musty and gross.
And what did they do to them?
Scabby.
Well, first of all, it's interesting you ask. Right. They put your balls in they were all rusty and musty and gross. And what did they do to them? Scabby. Well, first of all,
it's interesting you ask.
They put your balls
in a sandblasting unit
and just took off
all the rust from the outside
and they got smashed out.
The subtle ball underneath.
Yeah.
And then he takes them
onto some wire wool
and some 1000 grit sandpaper
and just buffs it down.
It's my favourite bit.
Yeah.
It buffs it down
and then he gives it a good
old polish on the wheel he polishes the balls in the world brings out a lot of the color but
that natural uh texture and then that's it you got a nice pair of as good as new balls
so my claim that my balls are at this point yeah immaculately clean is correct it is great you can
see the video online right now it It's Eli's ball sack restoration video
by Fixum and Lixum.
The channel's called Fix It or Lix It.
Right, Fixum and Lixum.
Because he fix them,
then he licks them at the end.
That's also my favourite bit.
Yeah, it is when he licks your balls at the end.
Paul, can you just try and inspire me
with something a bit better than this nonsense?
Source report fraud,
that didn't work,
and now...
It worked alright!
I thought you were going to get angry and say,
no, no, and storm off.
That would be what they do on the Cook Report, remember?
Oh, the Cook Report.
Remember?
I thought you'd be something like that.
It was like, no, no, Barbara.
It would get a bit brand off.
Barbara.
It's always Barbara with you.
It's the only name I can think of.
It's the only name you can think of.
It's not.
Your child is going to be a boy and he's going to be called Barbara.
What's wrong with that?
Babs. All right, Babs. It would be confusing for and he's going to be called Barbara. What's wrong with that? Babs.
All right, Babs.
It will be confusing for him.
Names.
What are names?
What are names?
Just signifiers.
Don't mean anything.
You can change your name.
I could change my name right now.
My name right now is called Ryan Gannon.
They're not signifiers.
Yeah.
They don't signify anything.
That's the point you're trying to make.
They signify who you are.
They're symbols.
They're part of your identity.
So what point are you trying to make?
That names aren't important or are?
No more questions.
I'm storming off.
You are a fucking intellectual lightweight,
my friend.
You can't string rational arguments together.
He's all clever right now,
ladies and gentlemen.
You can't speak smart.
He's all high and mighty right now,
ladies and gentlemen.
But a couple of minutes time,
he'll be going,
er, pooey DVDs, Pooey DVDs.
Pooey, pooey.
Just because you love it when I say that.
I don't love it.
You love it when I say pooey DVD.
I don't love it when you say pooey DVD.
I've heard you.
You had a little nap now.
I remember I just woke you up before we started this second recording today.
Oh, yeah.
I'll go along with this comedy gold idea.
And you know what you were saying in your sleep?
Go on.
I say pooey DVD to me.
Yeah, I love it when you say that.
Oh, please say it.
Yeah, say, put me DVD. Yeah.
Eli, I love you. You are
good at stuff, and especially when you say, put me
DVD. And I woke up and you went,
oh, oh! And then a little
wet stain emerged
in your pants.
And you had spoffed in your sleep over me saying pooey dvd paul yes you had yes you had welcome to the economy comedy cheap show podcast where we go
through the bargain bin charity shops the thrift stores the jumble sales the bazaars of great
britain and beyond and look for the treasure
amongst that trash
and bring it to you
via podcast
hello
hello I'm Paul Gannon
I'm Eli Silverman
this is six minutes in
right so
they don't need to know that
I need to know that
why do you need to know it
it keeps me abreast
of the time
listen if they were listening
they could look at it
on their thing
on their phone
or whatever device they're using
it will say exactly
how much time has elapsed
you don't have to fucking tell them.
It's probably more than that.
There's too much fucking fat.
Trim the fat off your home delivery.
Get off then.
What do you mean get off?
You're my fat.
Get off.
I'm your fat?
Yeah.
You're my fat.
Get off.
I'm the meat.
I'm not the fat, mate.
You are the gristle that surrounds the meat of my genius.
He's clutching his knob.
Yeah.
He's clutching it through his trousers.
You are the gristle, mate, that surrounds my love-long-lang-ling.
Paul, I actually thought we were going to do quite a good one, but it hasn't been.
Oh, look, it's still early.
It's only seven minutes in.
All right, shall we try and improve it from now?
Do you want to see what I've bought this week?
What have you bought?
Oh, this is like Paul's item at the beginning of the show that doesn't fit.
Item of the week.
Doesn't fit in anywhere.
Item of the week.
Now, what have you bought for us this week on item of the week?
Oh, he's handed it to me.
Wow.
This is a product.
It's mint on card, everybody.
It is reasonably mint on card.
It is literally mint on card.
I don't think it's been opened at all.
It's fucking unopened mint on card.
And it's by a company called Spy Mission.
And this is, I just need to take the price off because you paid £2.
A bit costly, but I was so enamoured with what it was.
But it doesn't have any clear sort of thing.
It's a watch with a bunch of gump with it.
It does tell you on it.
It's a listening kit.
It's a listening kit.
It's a listening kit.
So this is a bug for bugging, what, your phone?
Yeah, I think the bug is in the watch and you leave the watch somewhere.
Just leave it lying around?
Yeah.
And this is the listening device.
Can I open this?
Yeah.
Again, this might not work like last week when we had the bloody...
Well, this is very mint on card.
You can hear it, ladies and gentlemen, don't you?
Yeah, he's giving it a proper tear.
Peeling it off.
Yeah, we had that gym kit.
I'm peeling the blister pack off the card.
The values just dropped down to nothing, Eli.
Do they call that blister pack?
They don't do.
No.
The values dropped down to nothing.
Here's the watch.
I'm going to hand that to you, Paul.
Okay, I'm going to have a look at this.
Now, there's a little pack here.
It's not a bad watch.
I mean, it's obviously very cheap, but from a distance, it looks fine.
Now, what do I have to put the battery in?
Oh, there's a sticky bit dangling off it.
What do I put the battery?
There's a little watch battery here. I don't know.
I think it probably goes in the watch, doesn't it? Yeah, maybe.
But I don't know. Maybe it goes in the
listening department.
This is weird. It's got weird things written on it.
So it says... It's got, like, you know, like
it's meant to be a sports watch. No, I can see there's a battery
already in this listening department. Oh, okay.
So maybe it needs to go in here. What does it say
on the sports watch? Sporty time.
It says time clue.
And then it says transport.
But it's like trans and then sport.
Two words.
Rubber time clue?
I don't know what a rubber time clue is.
Is this more of a toy or an actual espionage item?
I don't know.
It says listening device.
Join the Spy Academy.
Play your free mobile game. I think it's more of a toy. It does have a battery. It's a spy toy. But I'm guessing it says listening device. Join the Spy Academy. Oh, it has got a battery in it. Play your free mobile game.
I think it's more of a toy.
It does have a battery in it.
It's a spy toy.
But I'm guessing it doesn't work.
Is this the spare battery?
Yeah, I guess the spare one.
See if that works.
Because, oh, it's a bigger battery.
No, you've got some earbuds.
Oh, mate, it's a much bigger battery than the one that's in there.
I don't know what you're meant to do with it.
What are you meant to do with it?
Well, look at the back.
Look at the back of the car and see if you can figure that out.
There's headphones.
And the headphones definitely go into this so this is the listening device so i've planted my watch this bit
here and then i've got the listening device here which has a volume control on it battery should
only be changed blah blah blah what's it saying though so listener i've got the listener yeah
and then has it got a battery and? What kind of battery does it take? There, it's there
Yeah, so that
It's a spare battery, mate, it's just a spare
How do you turn it on?
I don't know, I'm going to try and press it
I'm going to put the head fans in
Can you hear anything? If I put it on?
Yeah, there, I can hear it
Hang on, let me go out the room and talk into this
Really? Yeah, it's working
I'm going to go out the room
It's working, mate, I can hear right. Really? Yeah, it's working. I'm going to go out the room.
It's working, mate. I can hear it.
All right, he's going to speak to me,
and he's going to say something,
and I'll see if we can...
I'll write down what he says
so we can prove that he actually said something.
Did it work?
Did you say something?
Yeah.
Hang on, can you hear it now?
Yeah.
Go out. I can hear you just shuffling around
No
No
Can you hear me now?
Paul what's going on? You put the headphones on
Alright, I'll put the headphones on
Is there something we need to do? We need to turn this on
The watch on
Oh I can hear you
Why is it picking it up there?
You talk. I'm gonna go outside and you talk and I'll try and listen. Alright he's gone outside
and I'm talking but it's not I'm talking into it. Hello hello I'm talking into the the watch
uh doesn't seem to work does it? Ah go out ah it's too Ah, it's too loud.
It's too loud.
It picks up.
What's it picking up?
It just, like, this sounds like an amplifier.
So when you put it on, it amplifies what you're hearing.
Yeah.
By certain decibels.
But I don't know.
Oh, so that's what it is.
It's for eavesdropping.
It's not a bug, I see.
Oh, so it's not a bug.
So it's like you have it on you.
Okay, so what's the watch for then?
I have no idea.
It's part of a toy range called Spy Academy.
Yeah, yeah.
The Spy Academy is a great new club for every young agent.
Enlist today and receive a fantastic free mobile phone game.
Ringtones, screensavers, free stuff for your school.
I think that's just a listening enhancer.
It's meant to enhance the sound.
Yeah, so you can overhear people.
Oh, that's interesting.
There you go.
Hang on.
I'm going to turn it on.
Ah, fuck, it's loud.
You're getting feedback.
Yeah, it hurt my ears.
Whisper.
Hello, I have a large problem.
Ah, I can't fucking do it.
Ah, God.
Ah, it fucking hurt my ears.
Right, that's a piece of shit.
I have no idea what the watch does, if anything.
But that amplifies ambient sound,
so it must have a mic on it there.
Battery operated.
What was it?
It doesn't actually tell you what it does, though.
No, it's weird, isn't it?
Maybe it is just a kind of listening thing.
With a watch.
So you can whisper.
So if you're in a room and you point it in the general direction of someone,
you can pick up their talking a bit more.
Yeah, through a door maybe or something.
Maybe.
I don't know.
Shall we start the show proper then?
Right.
Anyway, welcome to Cheap Show.
It's the economy comedy podcast where I, Paul Gannon, tolerate Eli Silman's excesses.
Oh, yeah.
I tolerate a lot of stuff.
What's going up on the show today, Eli?
Well, today we have the price of shiga shiga shite.
Oh, yeah.
Which is our little way of doing stuff.
And don't talk to me about non-sequiturs.
What else have we got?
We're struggling, ladies and gentlemen.
What else have we got?
I don't know.
We're going to go back to that book about London.
Oh, we've got some tales from London.
As part of Paul's page turners, we're going to go back to that book
and look into a few more historical moments from London
that you might just not know about.
Are we going to start with the Price is Right, Paul?
Yeah.
All right.
But we're going to do it after I put the sound effect in, ain't I?
What sound effect?
I don't know.
Sometimes it's the ch-ch-ch-ch-ching of a till,
or sometimes it's the ting-a-ling-a-ling of a bell,
or sometimes it's shaking the money pot, or sometimes it's the ch-ch-ch-ch-ching of a till, or sometimes it's the ting-a-ling-a-ling of a bell, or sometimes it's shaking the
money pot, or sometimes it's the
cash machine.
Listen, mate. Look, we've got some money
here. You don't have to.
You don't have to use the sound. Yeah, we do.
No, you don't. Look. Just imagine this.
You did this last time and it didn't work.
I didn't do it last time. You did. You did this like 20 episodes ago.
Well, I'm doing it again.
Right. Time for the doing it again. Right.
You drop the coins
and you bash the mic.
Time for the prize to shine.
Yeah.
You are a wank.
Welcome to this next section, Paul.
No, no, no, no, no.
The section starts.
No, there's the sound effect.
No, you fucking dare.
There's the sound effect, Paul.
No, it's not happening.
Here's the fucking sound effect.
Right. Right.
Right. Jingle time.
Talking to your fucking microphone.
Fucking hell!
Oh!
Paul!
Paul's a wank, a wank, a wank.
He's a wank, a wank, a wank.
This fucking podcast.
I know.
Right.
I know.
Right, you ready?
Yes.
Today, ladies and gentlemen, it's time to play The Price of Shite.
Oh, it's the fucking Price of Shite.
It's the fucking Price of Shite.
It's the fucking Price of Shite.
Oh, it's the fucking Price of Shite. Oh, it's the fucking Price of Shite.
That's right.
Right.
It's the Price of Shite, Paul.
Now.
A nice classic one.
There have been
lots of different versions
of the game,
but the recent way
that we've been doing it, Paul,
is a combination
of classic Price of Shite,
Guess the Price,
combined with
your live version where you just put them in order.
In order.
But we do both.
So there are three items today, Paul.
Yeah.
And there's a number of ways you can score points.
That's exciting.
You score a point for each item in the correct order of ascending priciness.
What?
So if you say this is the cheapest.
Yeah.
And it is.
Yeah.
You get a point for that.
Oh, I see.
I see.
And if you say this is the middle one in terms of price, you get a point for that.
And if you say this is the most expensive one, and it is, you get a point for that.
So there's three points available from things being in the right orientation.
But if you think about the maths of this, Paul, you can't actually score two points.
You can only score one.
One or three.
One or three on that. It's interesting, that, isn't it? Yeah. Because that's the nature of numbers, isn't You can't actually score two points. You can only score one. One or three.
It's interesting, that, isn't it?
Because that's the nature of numbers, isn't it?
Isn't that the nature of numbers?
It's the nature of numbers.
Numbers have a nature.
And this is part of their nature.
No, it's not just to be numbers.
They are numbers.
But it's their nature to be numbers.
And also to behave in ways.
Naturally.
They behave in ways.
Yes, they behave in ways that we don't understand.
So, one or three points available from the ordering of the items.
Great explanation of the rules so far.
Continue, Mr Silverman.
But you also can guess the price of the shite itself, Paul.
You can indeed. There are rules you can score from that.
You get two whole points. If. If. You get it on the nose, as we say. You can indeed. And there are rules you can score from that. You get two whole points
if you get it on the nose,
as we say.
On the nose.
Exactly right.
If you guess exactly
the price that I paid
for the item,
you get two points.
It's a big score.
If it is within...
25p either way,
under or over.
25p either way,
under or over,
you get one point.
Yeah.
Because we're generous here.
We are...
We don't want you to go away empty-handed.
Empty-handed.
Although you definitely want me to go away empty-handed.
That's not the way I play the game, Paul.
I'm not going to put...
I've been very fur to you.
That's not the way I fucking play the game, Paul.
I'm not going to put shit on any of this.
I'm not going to dunk tea bag any of these items.
I'm not going to pick up floor from a tube or...
Floor from a tube?
Pick up floor from a tube? Pickor from a tube? Pick up floor from a tube?
Have I?
Have I said how much was this piece of floor from a tube to you?
No.
I'm just saying, you pick up sweets from the floor of a tube station
and hand that to me.
Or the crusty eye patch.
Or the crusty eye patch.
And then you went way too far and you put a tie in poo
and then tried to fucking give me disease.
And then put a Keith Lemon DVD in a toilet.
Yeah, exactly. Threw it at you. So, a Keith Lemon DVD in a toilet. Yeah, exactly.
Threw it at you.
So, that's not the way I play.
Yeah, I play fair.
I play fair.
You have.
It's nothing.
Nothing's a prize, Paul.
Possible.
Nothing's a prize.
I found it.
Nothing's a prize.
It's legitimate.
It could be zero.
You have nine points.
That's not fair, is it?
Nine points.
Still fucking angry about that.
Can I just say?
Still angry about your whole fucking eyepatch zero points thing
and then the one pound at the other end.
You just don't know how to play the game.
It was appalling gamesmanship.
You don't know how to play.
I'll tell you what's appalling gamesmanship, Paul.
I'll tell you what's appalling gamesmanship.
Gamesmanship.
I can say that.
You say it.
Gamesmanship.
Gamesmanship.
Gamesmanship.
I can say it too. Gamesmanship. Gamesmanship. Gamesmanship. Yeah. Gamesmanship. Yeah. I can say that. Yeah. You say it. Gamesmanship. Gamesmanship. Gamesmanship. I can say it too.
Gamesmanship.
Gamesmanship.
Gamesmanship.
Yeah.
Gamesmanship.
Gamesmanship.
Gamesmanship.
Or the USS Gloria, which is the gay man ship.
Ba-da-ba-ba-da-ba.
Arr.
Now, Paul.
Yeah.
Now, Paul.
Yeah.
When you pretended that one one because we have a different
version of the price of shite which is another good version which is the found given the bfg
bought found or given version and where you said i found it under the christmas tree that was a gift
we all know that and the cheapskates have backed me up on this and that was unfair okay now let's just put bygones be bygones
yeah for a moment
yeah let's do
bygones be bygones
we've got a
lovely fresh
price of shite for
you Paul I wish
you well I hope
you get the maximum
score okay none of
this bad feeling
if I did it all
right all through
the right order
you would get nine
points right nine
points are you
possible to win
because you've done
quite badly lately
I had a zero
yeah and then a one.
And a one pointer. Yeah. So I'm not, listen.
Did I cheat in any of those circumstances?
No. Did I not even aid in many
respects? You didn't cheat, but you know.
You do seem to be better
generally at guessing the price of stuff than me.
I'll accept that. I had a bit of a
winning streak. Now,
are you ready for your first item, Paul?
Give me, give me, give me an item.
Say what you see, Paul.
First item, price of show.
I like this.
This falls into the, if I'd seen this, I'd get this two category.
Yeah, because it's like the cream egg cups.
We like a bit of promotional old school food crockery on this show.
And that falls into that category.
Tell them what it is, Paul.
It's a cereal bowl.
And it's a cereal bowl, I think,
almost designed for the cereal it holds.
It's a Weetabix cereal bowl
celebrating 70 years of Weetabix.
Now, what is Weetabix for those of us
that don't know what Weetabix is, Paul?
It's like a kind of grain biscuit, isn't it?
It's a lozenge-shaped sort of cereal biscuit
that you're meant to put...
It's a breakfast cereal.
Yeah.
And it goes soggy very quickly.
I like it when it goes soggy, don't...
You put a bit of sugar on top,
milk...
You don't have to.
You don't have to,
but you let it crumble a bit.
It would be too dry to eat without milk.
Oh, you couldn't eat it dry, Eli.
But you can actually get it really mushy,
can't you?
If you put some milk on and leave it for a few minutes...
When I lived in Bournemouth and I used to write for Paragon Publishing,
there was a Shakeaway.
Back in the day, Shakeaway had just opened up.
What is Shakeaway?
Shakeaway is a fancy milkshake store where you can go,
oh, I want a Dime Bar milkshake.
Do they still do Shakeaway?
They still have them in Bryce.
They still have them in...
Oh, yeah, I think I've seen them.
What, the junction they had?
Shake places haven't really taken off in London.
You don't see them that much in London.
You see them on the outskirts.
There's tons.
What's your feeling on a milkshake generally?
I mean, I can enjoy one once in a while.
I like them.
When I was a kid, me and my mate Dave
used to make milkshakes of our own concoction.
So, you know, you do chocolate, clipmars, bars and stuff.
Did you have a visit from your Uncle Grumbly?
No.
Did he come round?
No, no milkshakes were made with Bob Lee.
Put some of this in.
Put some of this in.
Poor little boy.
You've made all sorts of lovely, lovely milkshakes,
but it's missing one ingredient.
Oh, slurry.
Right.
So you used to make your own milkshakes?
What's wrong, Mr Grumbly?
He's trying to kill off Uncle Grumbly.
He's shat out his organs into the milkshake.
He's trying to kill off Uncle Grumbly.
I've wasted my life.
Now Uncle Grumbly seems to have died, everybody.
I've killed him off.
Well, that would work, Paul, but you've overlooked one thing.
What?
You were doing a flashback to Uncle Grumbly meeting you as a child,
which means he couldn't have died back then, could he?
Because he needed to be alive for his recent activities
in the world of confectionery stroke poo.
Because you know what that means?
What?
It means that Lady Plops and Squishy Jib are back together.
Well, that never happened.
It never happened.
Why did it never happen?
We've reset the timeline.
Right.
Oh, Mr. Squishy Jim, how are you?
I'm all right.
I've been a bit down, actually.
Have you, darling?
Yeah, I've got nothing to squish, you know. Well. Since you went off with that. I've been a bit down actually. Have you darling? Yeah, I've got nothing to squish.
Well...
Since you went off with that...
I don't remember him. It's all of a sudden disappeared.
You don't remember who?
You.
Oh, I don't. The timeline is changing around me in a Back to the Future style way, which means I'm still allowed to remember bits of it.
But it fades out over time as the timeline is corrected.
Right. Alright, so what? So you still want me to go to supermarkets with you and squish squish
the shit in?
Squishy Jim, I was blind. I was blinded by shit. I was blinded by the idea of making
shit.
Oh Squishy Jim is back! Squishy Jim is back again!
Oh Madam Lady Plop, say you'll never let me go again.
I will never discard you like yesterday's chip paper.
Come on they've just opened a liddle over there.
Let's fucking put loads of shit in it I can squish.
Here we go.
Squish squish squish.
Squish squish squish.
Squish squish squish.
Squish squish squish. Squish squish squish. Oh I'm so happy. Squish squish squish. Squish, squish, squish. Squish, squish, squish. Squish, squish, squish.
Squish, squish, squish.
Oh, I'm so happy.
Squish, squish, squish.
Squish, squish, squish.
Oh, I'm in paradise.
And they all lived happily ever after.
The end.
I'm glad that's all been sorted and that they're back together and Mr. Grumbly, Uncle Grumbly's basically written out.
Who?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Anyway, Weedsabix Bowl.
Weetabix Bowl.
I love the colour of it.
It's a nice yellow.
It's a yellow bowl and it's square.
That's the unusual thing.
But it makes sense because, okay,
so you put a normal brick of Weetabix in a bowl
and because of the shape of it,
it kind of sits above the bottom of the bowl
so the milk has to be poured in more to reach the top.
And this is... They've thought above the bottom of the bowl so the milk has to be poured in more to reach the top and this is...
They've thought about the design
of Weetabix and how a square bowl would work
better. Yeah, it sits exactly on the bottom.
The milk goes directly on it without any gap underneath.
Crumbles, evens out,
absorbs more evenly. Some people would like
the bottom half of their Weetabix to be
mushy.
You want it? I want this.
I'll give you money for it. You can have it, Paul.
How much is it?
No, no.
Oh, damn it.
You're cutting me out again.
You can have it, though, Paul.
All right, cool.
Okay, because you like it.
It's nice, isn't it?
I really like it.
And these are the nice things that we get on Cheap Show.
I love this.
I love branded crockery.
Yeah.
That's what it is, isn't it?
Well, all that kind of stuff.
Like last week when we did the froth shop stuff and all the sweets,
I like when they incorporate the design, the iconography of the candy into it.
So those little bottles of nail polish, just cute, just adorable with the logos on.
This is crockery.
This will last.
And it's a week, 70th anniversary.
I wonder when that was.
I think we should check that out.
All right, let's check that out.
Due process. It made me just think about the Spanish fle out. All right, let's check that out. Due process.
It made me just think about the Spanish Flea.
You know, that tune.
I've got a Moog version on that.
Can we do a Moog special again soon?
Moog 2.
Moog 2, please.
Back to the Moog.
Yeah, please, can we do it?
Moog harder.
Can we do it, Paul?
Moog hard with a vengeance.
Live Moog and die Moog. Live Moog and die Moog.
Another Moog to die Moog.
Put Weetabix 70th anniversary.
Bowls.
Oh, it comes up on the thing.
The bowls come up, has it?
Now, was this probably something you could collect stamps on the side of a packet and then send off for, maybe?
I think so.
There's not much details on...
They couldn't have put that in...
2002.
It was 70 years old. So that's quite an old bowl now. It think so. There's not much details on 2002. It was 70 years old.
That's quite an old bowl now.
There's some eBay
prices here. Almost 18 years ago
this was their 70th
anniversary. It's interesting, on eBay, where
I'm seeing a lot of these sales, they're being
sold in sets of four.
Ah, yeah, you'd have them as a set
wouldn't they? Yeah. How much are they
going for?
Between £8 for a set of four and £29.
That's quite a lot, isn't it?
For a set of four.
So they might be a bit collectible, these things.
Maybe.
A lot of people do collect stuff like that.
My granddad, I think it was my granddad,
he loved collecting toy cars of Cadbury's.
You know, they used to bring out vintage old model vans.
And they have Cadbury's on the side.
Or Hovis.
Yes.
He loved all that kind of shit.
Well, that's why I've got one up there for Araldite.
Oh, you do?
A little van up there for Araldite.
Yeah.
Behind it is the little engraving of Ali Pali I bought today.
You're very proud of this.
You're very proud of it.
It looks good up there.
It does.
It suits the overall kind of bric-a-brac motif of that wall.
Yes, it does.
Now, I am going to have to push you for a price.
We are playing the price of shite today, Paul.
I'm going to say that was one...
You can change it once you see all three items.
Yeah, you're right.
I forgot we're doing it.
I'm going to wait and rank them before I price them.
You don't have a feeling?
It's between £1.50 and £2, I think that.
Okay, now, are you ready for your second item?
Eli, good first item.
Okay.
I'm just saying, good first item.
All right, here's your second item, Paul.
You don't have to close your eyes.
I know.
I'm going to open it.
What do you think it is?
You know what?
What?
Good item.
Then you hand me a small box of drawing pins.
That's what it is, Paul.
72.
I mean, yeah, you're right.
This is vintage.
Look at the vintage box.
Look at the nice vintage colour on that.
I don't know.
It sounds like condoms for robots on the back.
What does it say?
Double riveted for strength.
Rust resistant.
Electroplated.
Superior quality.
See, that's when...
Back in the day when they actually used to have to sell you the drawing pins.
They're trying to make
these days they wouldn't
try and big up the drawing pins.
What are they like?
They're like drawing pins
with flathead drawing pins.
Flathead with that weird
pattern that all drawing
pins had on the top
with like a little
let me see
a little flower
kind of like a little
fake daisy look.
You know what I mean?
I've never noticed that before.
These are vintage pins.
I bet they don't have them
on these days. No, because they're all No, because they have them like that. These are vintage pins. I bet they don't have them on these days.
No, because they're all... No, because they have them like that. Look at that blue
pin in there. They've got plastic heads these days.
These are old school, mate.
These are nice old school ones.
Yeah, not as exciting as the Weetabix
It can't all be winners.
But it's got a quite nice retro
packaging, doesn't it?
What era do you think? These might be 1950s
drawing pins. Made especially for F.W. Woolworths and Co yeah so that was back in the day when you go into woolworths
and just like sweets pick and mix they had a wall full of uh tools and and and make some screws
things you needed screws pins yeah clamps washers this is probably a box in there so yes i actually
like the color and the and the graphic design on the box, I have to say.
I would say that
looking at it,
it looks 50s,
early 60s.
It could be,
couldn't it?
Am I wrong?
Well, it doesn't say,
does it?
No.
They don't date these things.
But it's made for F.W.
Woolworth.
It says item 53,
so they probably had
all different...
Maybe 70s then.
Maybe 70s.
It's probably 70s. Yeah, it's probably 70s.
Yeah.
But, I mean...
Made in England.
Yay!
Brexit!
Right, there you go.
We don't need these French drawing pins.
We don't need them.
Le drawing pin.
Le drawing pin.
Fucking all the German.
Who fuck you what?
Drawing pinon.
Pinon drawing.
We'll make our own drawing pin.
Or Italian.
Drawing pinny.
Or like the Spanish.
Draw a pinny.
Or Romanian.
Ceaușescu pin Oscar.
Anyway, we're going to go to our British pin factory now
and make drawing pins the British way.
Where is it?
Oh, that was closed down 20 years ago.
Yeah, Brexit! Yeah, a bit of satire. A bit of satire there on the cheap way. Where is it? Oh, that was closed down 20 years ago. Yeah, Brexit!
Yeah, a bit of satire.
A bit of satire there
on the cheap show.
Now, that is your second item, Paul.
Yeah.
72.
It's quite a specific number as well.
Yeah, very 72.
I wonder why they did that.
There's all sorts of things
this is bringing up.
72 of them in there?
Yeah, but why did they decide?
Why did they decide?
Maybe that is the year.
Drawing pin 72.
Why did they decide
that you need 72
and not 70 or 50?
I mean here's the way
I look at it.
Maybe they just saw
the movies that were
being released at the time
like Airport 77
and they thought
we'll call our drawing pins
drawing pins 72.
Admit to me
that is something pleasing
about the graphic design
on that box.
It's not just a box
of drawing pins.
If I was making
a drama set in the 70s
and it was set in a corner shop you'd have one of those as a prop. That's what I'm saying. And small tins and a few of drawing pins. If I was making a drama set in the 70s and it was set in a corner shop...
You'd have one of those as a prop.
That's what I'm saying.
And small tins and a few of them.
Yeah, they can't all please you, Paul.
No, you're right.
You're right.
Which of those two items do you think is more expensive, though?
If it was me playing it...
Yeah.
Obviously, the drawing pins would cost more than the bowl.
Really?
Because you'd try to fool someone with that.
Well, no, because I would go out of my way to buy something that...
Didn't look as...
I try and keep things...
You know, like I said, when I went to that Tiger,
and it was 50p, but usually they go for a fiver.
You met a Tiger?
Was it a female Tiger?
Tiger Copenhagen.
Was it a Tiger?
Was it dead?
Was it a female?
Why did you do this joke a few episodes ago
when we were actually talking about Tiger?
It's just occurred to me now.
Well, don't do it then.
It's a great joke, mate.
It's not a callback.
It's a callback.
It's not a callback.
The Derek story, isn't it?
The tiger.
Did you fuck it?
No.
Well, you know what you can do?
Get some Viagra.
I don't want to know anything about...
Which you can get around the corner.
No.
Yeah?
You can't.
You've got to be careful.
Get some Viagra.
With Viagra.
Take half of Viagra.
Just a bit.
So you get a fucking proper stodge right on.
So if you have half of Viagra... Does that mean bit so you get a fucking proper scodge right on so if you have half a Viagra
does that mean
the first chunk of your penis
is rock hard
but then it droops at the end
like a
like a sock
like a half inflated
one of those things
like a sausage
halfway out of a machine
yeah
like
you can't think
you can't think of even a word
you can't think of anything
do you think of something funny
to describe it
no
let's move on
like a wind sock yes Like a windsock.
Yes, like a windsock.
Yes, good.
Are you ready
for your third item?
Yes.
So you're saying
you would have been deceitful
or you would have tried
to fool me by paying more
for the drawing pins.
Yeah.
Because the obvious thing
is to think that the drawing pins
would be cheaper.
I know.
That's the game, isn't it?
So which way are you leaning, though?
1.03, isn't it?
It's always going to be 1.03.
Which way are you leaning?
To my east. Are you ready for your third item? 1.03, isn't it? It's always going to be 1.03. Which way are you leaning? To my east.
Are you ready for your third item?
That's great, Gak.
Close your eyes.
All right.
Oh, there's some froth shop things I forgot in here.
We'll have to forget that until another time, though.
I might mention those, give them an honourable mention in a minute.
Come on.
Here it is, Paul.
Yeah.
I'm putting the handle in your hair.
Oh.
What is it, Paul?
Oh, fucking hell.
It's a bucket for catching crabs.
It's a crab bucket.
It's a crab bucket, ladies and gentlemen.
Oh, it's not full of crabs.
No.
Could be, though.
Although it does say on the label, swimming bucket.
It's not a swimming bucket.
It's a crab bucket.
It says crab bucket on it.
Explain to me what the fuck a swimming bucket is.
It's a bucket that you take when you go swimming.
Okay?
Clear enough?
You can't because...
Splish.
No, you don't swim with the bucket.
Splish, splosh.
It's as...
Splish, splosh.
Swimming is a general activity, Paul.
So it's down around my neck?
No.
As I swim?
Stop trying to play devil's advocate.
Well, I'm sorry, but it's a good point.
You can't swim and have a bucket.
Okay, what if they called it swimming activity bucket?
Would that sound better for you?
What does that even mean?
Swimming is an activity.
Swimming playtime bucket.
Does this work for you?
Why don't you just call it beach bucket?
Beach bucket works better.
But then they probably thought, well, you might not go to the beach to swim.
You might just want to go to a fort.
A fake beach or a lake.
They have a lot of those in France, don't they?
Yeah.
Lakes that they man-made and they have a water slide or something.
Yeah.
And they might have a beach there.
But is it a beach?
But they don't have any crabs there, though, do they?
They might have freshwater crabs.
I don't know enough about crabs to know if that's fake or not.
Come on.
I bet there are freshwater crabs.
It's a transparent bucket with crabs in various poses.
Photographs of crabs. I like it. I guess you go out and you catch a crab. And you with crabs in various poses. Photographs of crabs.
I like it.
I guess you go out and you catch a crab.
And you keep them in your bucket.
And then you put it in a bucket.
And eat it later.
And then...
You poo on the crabs.
Is that what you do, Paul?
You poo on the...
That's what you got.
You knew before you got halfway through that.
Yeah, that wasn't going to work.
You don't poo on the crabs, Paul.
The crab pooed on you got halfway through that. Yeah, that wasn't going to work. You don't poo on the crabs, Paul. The crab poo's on you.
But listen, mate.
If you got a bunch of crabs in there, leave them for a few days,
it would smell bad, wouldn't it?
Yeah.
It would smell like a crab bucket.
Now, I'm thinking I might get some crabs.
You know what?
You should turn that into a thong and go out partying with it around your waist.
That would be good, wouldn't it?
Come on, darling.
Look at the crab.
Put your hand in the crab bucket, darling.
Oh!
Now, Paul.
Yeah?
I quite like the design of this.
It's fun, isn't it?
It's like Blackpool Beach.
You go and grab a crab bucket.
It's a fun crab bucket, and it's a mint on card.
There is the card.
Have you ever caught crabs?
You can answer any way you want.
I've never had the venereal disease of crabs,
which are, in fact, little spiders.
Yes.
Did you know that?
Yeah.
They're not crabs at all.
No.
But I've never had them.
No.
Because, as we know, my balls are so clean,
you can see them from outer space.
That's not true.
Yes, it is.
It's not.
Prove it wrong. Can you go to outer space and then say oh i'm looking at the world eli i'm looking at the right side of the
world i can't see no balls yes you fucking can don't lie don't lie to me how dare you spaceman
paul lie about the reality of my shining beacons of ball light emanating
off the North American continent
like two beacons of hope
if I was in America
again I was just going to say this
I've been told in the past that I interrupt you sometimes
when you go off on a little riff and a little character
and you shouldn't
I should based on that what you just did
ball light
ball beacons my ball beacons of cleanliness.
Ball beacons and carrots.
Ball beef.
That's your third item.
Ball beef and carrots.
And it doesn't say who the manufacturers are.
It doesn't fucking matter.
But there's a goldfish there.
So on that swimming bucket label.
You could put a crab and a goldfish in the bucket and have them fight to the death.
Watch them fight.
Yeah.
It's dark.
The fish would lose.
It's like that cunt who posted that fucking picture
of a cat being attacked
by a crab on YouTube
or Twitter.
Was the cat in trouble?
It was some cunt,
some CEO.
What's his name?
Randy Pitchford?
Right.
Who gearboxed
whatever the name
of the company is.
Anyway, he's a massive cunt
and apparently he went,
he put the video up on Twitter
of this cat cruel video
and then everyone was reacting
and he went,
I just wanted to know
what their reaction would be.
Oh yeah, no. You just thought it was what their reaction would be oh yeah you just thought
it was funny
you thought it was funny
and everyone thought
you were a cunt
you were a sadist
yeah
and then
and then
and then
he goes
oh it was an experiment
it was a social experiment
here's a social experiment
stop being a bully
here's a social experiment
Randy Pitch
yeah he's not a nice guy
here's another one
Randy
stop lying
what's he famous for
and it's all
very complicated
but Randy Pitchford's all like,
it didn't happen.
He doesn't speak from Yorkshire, by the way.
Now, but Randy, if you're listening.
I just had a thought.
If you're listening.
Come on, mate.
Come on, mate.
Come on, man.
Come on.
Chill the F-O, man.
Listen, no one wants to see fucking animals hurting each other, yeah?
Okay.
Do you know what I'd like to see, Randy?
You put in a room full of crabs. Giant ones.
A giant room, a bottomless room of crabs
that we drop you in in a room.
Bottomless? Well, what does it go down to?
The bottom. Well, it's not bottomless
then, is it? It goes up to the other side.
Is it an infinity deep well of crabs?
It's an infinity bucket of crabs.
Imagine that. A room of infinity
crab bucket? Yeah, it's a
crab bucket that goes on for infinity
Full of crabs
Imagine you've got like
Several thousand light years down
And you think
This just goes on forever
It's just still crabs
It's just crabs
Now I just had
Crabs, crabs, crabs
Crabs all the way down
All the way down
Crabs, crabs, crabs
I think there's some fat earthlings
Wait, wait
We'll just lower him in
And then
That's the noise of the crabs
And they go
And he gets pinched
to death
he's just
forever
yeah
pinched all the way
down
to infinity
now is that
is any
of that true
is any sin
that anyone
commits
or any crime
that anyone commits
worth eternal pain
yeah
no
it's not proportionate
you can't say
I want someone
to suffer forever.
I do. I've just had a thought.
I actually had it a few minutes ago. Crab bucket
could be a euphemism for a
lady's vagina.
I knew you were going to say it.
Oh, close your legs, darling.
Your crab bucket's been out in the sun.
That's why you will be forever.
You left your crab bucket out in the sun,
sweetheart.
Let's all sit down and watch a telly
Sweetheart have you washed your crab bucket
Rinse out the crab bucket
Darling
We're horrible people
Do you know what I saw this and I thought
That could be a euphemism for a vagina
Therefore I will buy it
I love it
I love that as a euphemism for a vagina, therefore I will buy it. I love it. I love it.
I love that as a euphemism for a vagina.
No, you don't. It's a horrible thing to call a lady's
part.
Your crab bucket's leaking.
It's the voice you do as well.
It's like,
it just makes you look dirty as well.
Your crab bucket's got a crack in it.
I think it's leaking old residue.
Sweetheart, your fucking crab
bucket needs a doctor, stat.
Now, Paul, enough merriment.
Okay?
Yeah.
You need to be playing the game.
It's the business end of the Price of Shite now, Paul.
I'm going to rank them this way.
You're up against the business.
Here comes the business.
I'm going to be quite reckless and maybe a bit clumsy,
but I'm just going to say what I think the order is.
Let me write this down.
I'm writing it down so there can be
no argument about how much you
score. Now, we have three positions.
We have the cheapest position,
which I call number one.
The second position, which I call
number two, which is the middle
price. And then the most expensive, which I
call number three. Right. Why isn't
the most expensive number one?
It's just the way I'm doing it.
All right.
Okay.
Seems a bit inconsistent.
I don't need fucking notes and comments now, right?
Whilst we're doing it, yeah?
I do like your Tabasco t-shirt, by the way.
I've got a Tabasco t-shirt on.
I do like that a lot.
I'm slightly jealous that I don't have one.
You can get one if you go to a Target.
Well, they might not have it.
But they're out in the States.
They've got all sorts of...
I'm going to the States in two days time.
You are.
But again,
I've been back for two weeks
by the time this podcast comes out.
So who gives a fuck?
Now,
maybe the plane blew up.
This will have to be released
posthumously.
You're going to have to edit
these podcasts.
I know you won't have to
because the footage will die with me.
Forget it.
Jesus Christ.
Okay.
Enough.
Yeah.
Doom. What do you think is the cheapest item Jesus Christ. Okay. Enough. Yeah, doom.
What do you think is the cheapest item on our Price of Sight show today, Paul?
I'm going to give you two.
Okay.
I'm going to give you what I think it is. No, no, no.
You have to make a decision.
You're trying to score points.
Pins are the cheapest.
Pins are the cheapest.
And how much do you think the vintage drawing pins were?
If they were any more than a pound, I'd be disappointed.
So I'm going to say 75p.
75p.
Locking that in? I'm locking it in with the
monkey clapper.
It's locked in.
Good. Now, we need
to know what you think is the second most
expensive. Eli?
Or second most cheap. It's the middle expensive. Eli, I believe... Or second most cheap.
Noel, I believe the second cheapest
is... What? I'm not Noel.
How dare you? You look
like Noel. I don't look like Noel. You're offensive
to my eyes and you've got a beard. Do you know what I noticed,
Paul? You know that FlexiDisc
book I've got? Yeah. And there's one
Noel talks about Barclays and he's sitting at a dinner
table. Yeah, it's a weird thing. And he's got that weird
sort of cheeky grin on his face.
If you look down the table in that photograph, there's a guy who's copying the look.
Is he?
Yeah.
He's copying Noel.
I'll show you.
It's weird.
Show me later.
But yeah, I'll take your word for it for now.
Okay.
Now, stop trying to distract me with stories about Noel.
He's a cheeky monkey.
No, don't do the monkey. He's a creepy Noel? He's a cheeky monkey. No, don't do the monkey.
He's a creepy chunky.
He's a cheeky monkey.
He's a cheeky monkey coming down the street.
He's a cheeky monkey.
Look at his feet.
Oh, he's a monkey.
What does he do?
He goes to the zoo and chucks a bit of poo at you.
Oh, I'm the cheeky monkey from the jungle.
I'm a cheeky monkey,
my best friend Bungle.
No, he's not Bungle.
It is.
I want you to tell me
which of my prices of items
is the middle priced item.
Cheeky monkey says...
No, he doesn't say shit
because he's not a real character.
Paul.
The bucket.
The crab bucket.
I'm locking it in.
I'm not amused by this monkey shenanigans.
Just put it down.
Finally, the bowl.
No, I need a price for the crab bucket, please.
£1.20.
£1.20 for the crab bucket.
Yeah.
Okay.
Now, Paul, that means that you believe our most expensive item today on the Price of
Strike is the Weetabix 70th anniversary.
Do you know why I didn't ask?
What didn't you ask?
Where you got them from, because that might help.
You got it around the corner, didn't you?
It's all around here.
Yeah, it's all around here.
Come around here.
Come around here.
It's all a bit of a stuff around here, don't you?
All right.
So then... Just come down here. I'll go around here. here. It's all stuff around here, don't you? All right. So then come down here.
I'll go round here.
I mean,
what the fuck else am I going to go?
The bowl is two pounds or thereabouts.
Okay.
Probably 250.
Now,
right.
Let's go from cheapest to most expensive and we'll see how many points you've scored today,
Paul.
Okay.
How exciting.
Now,
you said the cheapest item that I purchased today
for the price of shite
was the vintage drawing pins.
Yeah.
Manufactured especially
for Woolworths,
the shop that doesn't
even exist anymore.
No, it exists online.
With the lovely little bit
of graphic design on it.
Yeah.
The drawing pins,
you said the most cheap item
and reality says...
Correct. Oh, you shit in the bed. that's a point that is one point you get one point for guessing the pins are the cheapest you were right means i've probably
gashed the other two round now but anyway how do you know you gashed the other two around you don't
know you want to change that no okay good all right so drawing pins you said 75p yep our survey said
I just want to say
our survey said
can I just say
our survey said
our survey says
our survey said
50p they were
oh so I get a point
for that then
you get a point for that
you're doing very well now
not too bad
but things could change
you're doing very very well now
alright good
two points
I know
right
but still things can change
now Paul
things are going to change because that's it.
That's it for you.
Good times are over.
Oh fuck.
Revel in those points.
You said the second most
expensive thing.
It was going to be a
switch.
Middle priced item.
You said the crab bucket.
Yeah.
No crab bucket was the
most expensive item.
Oh.
It was bought new as you
could tell from the label.
You should have been able to tell from the label.
This wasn't a set.
It doesn't feel new.
It feels quite manky.
No, it doesn't.
There's a stack of them.
It has no crab in it.
No, I don't think it's got crab in it.
There's no whiff of crab in there.
Hello, is there a whiff of crab in the bucket?
It could also be a drum.
What's Eli doing?
Oh, he's got his face deep in a crab bucket.
Oh, God.
Get my nozzle out of this crab bucket.
Right.
All right.
So that was our most expensive item, Paul.
But how much?
You said £1.20.
Yeah.
Reality was £2.49.
That's disappointing.
It was £2.49, Paul.
Disappointing.
It's a good quality bucket. I think you've downplayed the bucket. It's disappointing. It was £2.49, Paul. Disappointing. It's a good quality bucket.
I think you've downplayed the bucket.
It's just a bucket, though.
With some crab decals on it.
Yeah, all right.
I like the font of crab bucket.
It's very bold.
Crab bucket's very bold.
It's like Beano.
They're quite good photos of crabs as well.
Yeah, that front crab looks pretty gauche.
And it's not like stuck on with a dirty sticker.
I like the fact that all the crabs give a different kind of emotion,
like excited crabs.
He's like, hey!
How you doing?
Don't look at me, I said.
He's a thinker.
He's a thinker.
I contemplate shellfish.
Hey.
Very genial, isn't he?
He's like, yeah, walking down the street.
Got my crab claw out.
Check out the big one on me.
I got my crab claw out and I'm doing a win.
We got the fourth crab and he basically just looks like he's like...
He's the same crab as that other crab, isn't he?
He's like, come over here.
Come over here.
Come over here.
Why don't you?
I've got a secret to tell you.
Okay, he's a good crab.
What's the last crab saying?
His last crab is...
He's a dancing crab.
He's a dancing crab. He's a dancing crab.
But you were way out, so no points there.
Shame.
You were not within the 25p limit.
No.
Which means, takes us to our Weetabix bowl,
which you thought was the most expensive item.
No, Paul, it was the mid-range item.
You said £2.
Yeah.
I think you were put off by your little web search there.
You thought it was worth quite a lot
I only paid a
quid for it
there's one quid
for that and it's
yours
so you're not
going away
empty handed
no one's going
away empty handed
today
you've got that
but I've still
scored better than
you have in the
last two games
you have
but it's tough
this way
you've doubled my
points from the
last two games
it's tough this
one though isn't it
this version of the
game
I like it
it's got a lot
of play in it
it's got a lot
of wiggle room
in play it's got a lot of play in it. It's got a lot of wiggle room in play.
It's got a lot of play in it.
Well, you know what?
Well played, sir.
Well played.
Solid, good suggestions, nice variety,
interesting collection of charity shop tat,
and I've walked away with a Weetabix bowl.
And that's right.
The price is shite, everybody.
And that's right.
So, to finish Cheap Show today,
we go to Paul's Page Turners,
where I find a book that I have found in a charity shop
or maybe a bookstore of some kind that sells quality books.
It's just a voice you're going to start the segment with
and then drop immediately.
Yeah.
So just drop it now.
All right.
Thanks.
So we covered this book a few episodes ago,
but there was so much in it that I kind of wanted to dig back into it.
It's London's Strangest Tales by Tom Quinn.
Extraordinary but true stories
from a thousand years of London history.
I know some people listening outside of London
may go,
I don't give a fuck about Liverpool.
Liverpool's got some interesting stuff as well.
All the caverns built under Liverpool,
these tunnels that were built.
And I can't remember all the details right now,
but effectively a very, very rich man
paid a lot of very very
poor people to just dig
oh didn't we cover that
on the show before
I think maybe briefly
the guy who got
a lot of people to dig
yeah
he was a miser as well
wasn't he
no I think this guy
was quite altruistic
and that's why he was
paying people to dig
because there was no jobs
it was like
ah fucking dig
and like apparently
some of the caverns
are as big as cathedral spaces
and some are very, very narrow.
People found these now.
Yeah, there's litter all over Liverpool.
It's crazy, isn't it?
Yeah, it's crazy stuff.
Now, London is also a city with a lot of underground stuff to it.
London is a very interesting place.
It's got underground rivers.
It's just such an old place.
Old tunnels, old bunkers.
Warren Street, famous on the Tube, at the top of Tottenham Court Road.
It's called Warren Street
because it's a warren.
Literally underneath,
there's all sorts of tunnels
going miles down.
But where did they come from,
those tunnels?
They're built by people
over the years.
Oh, so there's just
an adjacent selection
of warren tunnels.
There's just loads of tunnels down there.
Are they sealed up?
You've got the tube, obviously.
Yeah, lots of them are sealed up.
These aren't related to the tube at all.
No.
Someone just went,
I'm going to build a fucking tunnel.
The whole of London is honeycombed underneath
with all sorts of underground spaces.
It's interesting that, isn't it?
Yeah.
Because remember when they moved
a lot of bodies out of London
because there's too many bodies buried
so they had to move them out of London
to build houses.
No, I mean, there were plague pits as well
which they were always pulling things up
but apparently they moved the whole graveyard
just so they could build something in. Well, they did. They had Crossrail being built, I mean, there were plague pits as well, which they're always pulling things up. But apparently they moved the whole graveyard just so they could build something in.
Well, they did.
They've had Crossrail being built, of course,
in recent years, Paul.
And they keep having to get the archaeologists in to...
Is that what they called you?
Yeah.
Archaeologists in to check out some bones
or some old shields.
And that pisses them off
because it's like, oh, we've got to meet the schedule
and get it all done by 2020.
It's like, yes,
but there's a bone here
of a man who might have died
of something a long time ago.
Don't you think archaeology is important?
I do very much believe
archaeology is a very important thing.
Just saying.
You'd rather have a train.
You'd rather get on a train.
Woo-woo!
Chug, chug, chug.
No, I'm just saying
it's part of the problem, isn't it?
You're digging through an ancient city
and you're going to come across
stuff that will need... I mean, not even just in terms of looking after and preserving
history it's like there are plague pits you don't know what might come out of it so you got to treat
it carefully yes it's the way of the world now you've got a little story for us about london
then paul there's loads of stories i mean like there's tons of stuff we could go into there's
so many small why don't we read a couple? You read one and then I'll read one.
Alright.
What kind of story
would you like?
I want the one
about selling dog shit.
Oh, how to make a living
selling dog poo.
Yeah.
Page 99.
How to make a living
selling dog poo.
Thank you very much, Tom Quinn.
You can buy this book,
I'm sure, online still.
I saw it in a charity shop.
London's strangest tales.
I'm writing a book.
I know, Paul.
You're doing everything,
aren't you?
What am I doing?
Nothing, because you're fucking bone idle
it took you 10 years
to make Clankerman
it didn't take me 10 years
you said about 10 years
it took me 4 years
but you came up with it
10 years ago
no I didn't
you told me 10 years
well I was exaggerating
cunt
don't use my words
against me
what your facts
don't make facts wrong
then
well you're going to
America
Ghostbusters writing writing a book.
I'm going to write a book
based on my solo show
about ghost hunting.
I've got to raise money for it
so I'll be begging for cash.
Of me?
Not from you.
Never from you.
Fucking hope not.
From you.
Fucking hope not.
Because I would not be
backing that book.
Right, great.
I've seen the show,
haven't I?
What am I going to learn
from that book?
There's more. I'm bored. Oh, bored. I? What am I going to learn from that book? There's more.
I go into more detail.
Oh, he said he's got mental health issues and ghosts helped him.
Fuck that.
That is not the plot.
That is.
Let me give you a little fucking summary.
Oh, I'm depressed.
Oh, I've gone on a ghost hunt.
Oh, I feel like I belong.
I'm less depressed.
I'm poor.
Fuck off.
Fucking.
Fuck you. Victim-blaming scumbag. I'm less depressed. I'm Paul. Fuck off. Fucking. Fuck you. Victim
blaming scumbag. I'm not victim blaming.
That's the third time over four episodes you've done that now.
I'm not. Two episodes.
Two episodes. Right, yeah, but I'm not victim
blamed. Who's victim here?
Me.
Shut up moaning.
Maybe produce some more stuff and then I can take the piss out of you then.
But until then, I'll just take the
piss out of that. I've been in a film
this year
yeah
well there you go
yeah
have you
no
no
exactly
wasn't allowed to be in it
read the story
how to make a living
selling dog poo
poverty in early centuries
pushed tens of thousands
of Londoners
into a very peculiar
occupation
okay
occupation
I'm liking it so far particularly by peculiar at least fucking hell Okay. Occupation.
I'm liking it so far, Paul.
Particularly by... Peculiar, at least.
Fucking hell.
Start again!
Poverty in early centuries pushed tens of thousands of Londoners into very peculiar occupations.
Peculiar, at least, by modern standards.
There was a huge market for live birds.
Donald did an episode about that once.
Live birds.
Well, people were killing birds to put into hats. Yeah, but why would there be a market for live ones? P did an episode about that once. Live birds. Well, people were killing birds to put
into hats because
birds and hats.
Yeah, but why would
there be a market
for live ones?
Pigeons and stuff.
Hang on.
And this market was
met by hundreds of
live bird sellers who
might walk 20 miles
outside of London to
catch a dozen or so
birds before walking
20 miles back to sell
them.
They then repeat this
journey three or four
times a week.
So I guess people just
wanted to buy birds.
I love a pigeon.
There's a fucking load.
Well, then I want a woodcock.
Yeah, why would you just buy a bird?
As a pet?
Or put it in a pie?
It doesn't say the year.
It doesn't say the year.
So maybe owning a pet bird was quite exciting.
Do you know what, Paul?
I'd like a pet bird.
What bird did you get?
I'd like someone that talks and is...
Have a wank!
I wouldn't teach you to say that.
Do you want a curry?
Oh, in that case,
it would just be like,
Ow!
Fuck my life, squawk!
Ow!
I don't say fuck my life.
Ow!
Your shit version.
Your parrot would sigh a lot.
Ow!
It might.
It might.
Yeah.
Ow!
Ow!
Oh.
Go on, then.
Oh, right, here we go
Or take the mudlarks
Who scoured the river foreshore at low tide
They're birds as well
No, these are the name of the people
This is confusing, are they selling mudlarks or what?
No, they were called mudlarks
Oh, so I'm confused
Explain it to me
I'm trying to but you keep fucking interrupting
Or take the mudlocks who scout the
river foreshore at low tide. They went
barefoot, whatever the weather, searching
for... Well, they're birds. Of course they go barefoot.
They haven't got shoes.
Birds don't have shoes.
Some. Owls have shoes.
No, they don't. They do. They wear
winkle pickers. Do they?
Yeah, they wear big, long shoes.
Big, long toes. Owls? Yeah, they wear big, long shoes. Big, long toes.
Owls?
Yeah, and they clatter in the tree.
They went barefoot, whatever the weather,
searching for copper nails from the ships
or for old bottles.
Anything, in fact, they think they might sell.
So these people would just go down to the shoreline
and pick up anything that washed up.
Yeah, and just pick up anything that washed up
and then clean it and sell it.
And they're still known as mudlarks to this
day, but they do it more as a hobby, I'd say.
I guess so, yes. They're actually making a living
in it. Must be hard to make a living at that
these days. Now, there's another group of people.
The Toshers. Oh, yeah.
T-O-S-H-E-R. Toshers. What do you think
they did? Come on, Eli.
What do you think Toshers did? I think
maybe they were hired
hoods who would go and maybe intimidate people for you and extort money.
No, they were men who risked their lives searching for valuables in London's vast, unmapped warren of sewers.
Wow.
So they would go down into the shithole sewers below London and with a net, scoop out treasures.
Stuff that had fallen in.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, I've dropped my ring in the toilet.
Don't worry, love.
I'm a tosher.
Can you go fetch me my ring?
I don't think that's what they mean.
I think that you just go down and once you've found it,
because, you know, no one's going to.
Well, toshers tend to be from the same few families,
and they handed down their knowledge of the sewer network
from generation to generation.
That's great, isn't it?
Yeah, you want to go around Oldbourne.
Go left at Oldbourne.
Go left at Oldbourne. Or all the way left at Oldbourne.
Or else you're up a shit pipe.
You're literally up a shit pipe.
You're literally head deep in a shit pipe.
But you'll find some lovely bottles in it.
There's lovely bottles,
but make sure you don't drink from the bottles.
No, don't.
Also, you go down Oldbourne,
people tossing coins, don't they?
They're tossing coins.
They're always tossing coins down.
You can find a father.
I'm a tosher and I get tossed coins.
You get, you know.
Why have you got the voice that Paul Whitehouse did in...
Man and Boy.
Fucking...
But even generations of experience didn't always protect them
and many died when sudden rainfall flooded the system
or the lamps and candles they carried.
Can you imagine how horrific that would be as a way to die?
Yeah.
That would be pretty bad.
They were overcome by the gas down there.
Yeah.
Imagine that, mate.
Where's daddy?
Oh, well, the last I saw him, he was throat deep in shit,
gargling his last, going, I found a penny!
It'd be terrible.
Imagine, that gives me my claustrophobia.
You're down in a sewer, and you hear, yeah, it rises.
Oh, God.
The effluent.
Yeah.
The shit.
The piss.
And you're just drowning in a shit pipe. But effluent. Yeah. The shit. The piss. And you're just drowning in a shit pipe.
But food waste.
Underground.
Gargling hot raw sewage as you blink out of existence.
It's not probably hot.
I meant hot as in exciting.
Or perhaps the strangest job of all was that of the pure finder.
Pure finder.
A job that existed.
Is that one word or two words? It's two words. Pure finder. Pure finder? A job that existed. Is that one word or two words?
It's two words.
Pure finder.
Yeah.
They existed in Victorian London.
A pure finder was someone who spent his days
searching for dog feces to sell to leather tanners,
particularly to those tanners engaged in producing leather
for the bookmaking trade.
Which he bound a book in leather.
So to make leather a little bit more dark,
he'd smear doggy dirt into it.
Is it really to make it the colour?
Yeah, it's tanning it, isn't it? It's part of the tanning process. In the same way
you know tweed, they used to use urine. But doesn't it wash off?
But doesn't the fucking... Well I'm sure you
don't buy a book that smells of dog shit.
Well, how do they get the smell?
Unless it's a book by
Geoffrey Archer.
Geoffrey Archer.
No. Those books smell of shit. Yeah, because they're shit books. Or the Stephanie Myers. Ohcher No Those books smell of shit
Yeah
Because they're shit books
Or the Stephanie Myers
Oh poo
They smell of shit
Yeah she wrote Twilight
Oh yeah they're bad
Or who
Who's that prick
Who wrote
Fifteen Shades of Grey
Doctorow
Or the Da Vinci Code
El Doctorow
Wasn't she called something like that
El Doctorow
No
The Spanish Doctor Who
I think it could be El Doctoro, not the Spanish Doctor Who.
I think it could be, couldn't it? Maybe.
El Doctoro.
That's funny, man.
Paul said something funny.
I only took two and a half hours.
You've just got to give me time.
You've just got to give me time.
Okay.
So, Henry Mayhew's extraordinary book called London Labour and London Poor
charts the lives of a number of pure finders.
Mayhew explains that in the 1830s and 1840s,
only women seemed to have been involved in the trade,
and they were known as bunters.
By the 1850s, when Mayhew carried out his research,
men, women, and children were all working as pure finders.
When you grow up, you can be just like me,
picking up dog shit from my park and giving it to people who make books.
I'm losing energy here, Paul.
By the 1850s, when Mayhew carried out his research,
men, women, and blah, blah, blah,
pure finders sold the dog eggs that they collected
for roughly 10...
Does it say dog eggs in there?
I've heard that bit.
For roughly 10 old pence a bucketful.
You could use a crab bucket.
Crab bucket, yeah.
Dog dirt bucket.
Or you could just cross out the word crab and put... Dog egg. Yeah. Sounds romantic. You could use a crab bucket. Crab bucket, yeah. Dog dirt bucket. Or you could just cross out the word crab and put...
Dog egg.
Yeah.
Sounds romantic.
You could have...
Come on, get your dog eggs.
Dog eggs.
No.
Ten pence bucky.
Dog eggs.
Dog eggs.
You wouldn't do...
You wouldn't sell them on the street.
Get your dog eggs.
No one would buy a dog egg apart from a tanner.
A bookbinding tanner.
Yeah, anyway, the tanners, mostly based in Bermondsey,
where 30 tanners were recorded in the 1860s.
Tanneries, sorry.
Tanneries.
Yeah.
So obviously you work near where you sell your trade.
What are you talking about?
All the tanners work in that area, Bermondsey.
Why? Is there a lot of dogs?
Where are all the dogs at?
There must be a dog park where they walk dogs and there's loads of eggs.
There's no dog parks back then.
I mean, you go, got an eye on that dog.
He's got a runny tummy.
I wonder where they found all the dog poo because I'm sure...
Streets.
Yeah, but not a lot of people had dogs back then, did they?
No, they didn't.
I'd say probably...
I wonder if probably there would have been.
Sykes had a dog in Oliver Twist.
People would have working dogs, wouldn't they?
More than live pet dogs.
I think there was probably a lot of stray dogs in London. Probably. Sykes had a dog in Oliver Twist people would have working dogs wouldn't they more than like a pet dog
I think there was
probably a lot of
stray dogs in London
probably
not a lot of people
cleaned up the shit
back then
no they didn't
so
there's probably
quite a lot of
white dog eggs
yeah
there was probably
shit loads of white
but once they've gone
white they can't tan
don't know
maybe for a posh book
I'm sure
did it say
to colour leather
that's not tanning leather
it's just what it says
it's treating leather, isn't it?
It just says for helping treat leather.
Yeah, you treat it.
It's not for the colour.
I don't know.
It might be.
It's not for the colour.
Leather's brown already.
He's been eating a lot of fucking pedigree chum.
I want a darker hue.
It's some kind of chemical thing that it does.
That something in the poo does.
Maybe.
It's not that it colours it.
Because then it will just wash off.
The colour will just wash off the leather. It's not to make the leather does. It's not that it colours it because then it will just wash off. The colour will just wash off the leather.
It's not to make the leather brown.
Leather is brown already, Paul.
I don't know.
You're wrong.
You're wrong.
You're wrong.
Anyway, they preferred the dry sort of faeces
as it contained more alkaline
and it was the alkaline
that worked its magic on the leather.
Thank you very much.
Fact.
Slam down.
Curiously, Mayhew and
others recorded that many of the
Can you just say you were wrong?
You said you thought. I didn't say it was wrong, I just said
no. You thought. I said I didn't.
No, you said you were quite confident
you would like use the brown poo
to make the leather brown.
Wrong, wrong
and thrice wrong. Curiously, Mayhew
and others recorded that many of the Pure Finders
were well-educated men and women who'd fallen on hard times.
Talk about falling on hard times.
Oh, I'm a lawyer.
Now I sell dog shit.
His description of the trade is hugely evocative.
The Pure Finder is often found in open streets,
as dogs wander where they like.
Right, so stray dogs.
Yeah.
The Pure Finders always carry a handle basket,
generally with a cover.
I'd hope he has a fucking cover.
Yeah, to hide the contents
and have their right hand covered with a black leather glove.
Many of them, however, dispense with the glove
as they say it's much easier to wash their hands
than to keep the glove fit for use.
It's probably true, isn't it?
Yeah.
Why have a glove that you have to treat simply
when you can just...
Wash your hands.
Lick your hands clean. No, you wouldn't do that.
No, why?
I thought we killed off that character.
No, it's a different dirty character.
It's not a different.
It's the same.
Who cleans himself like a cat?
Mate, it's Uncle Grumbly by a different name.
No, the voice is different.
Let's hear the voice then.
That's not a voice. That's a weird noise. Hang on, I'm getting it. You can't fucking talk. I can talk. Oh, hello.. That's not a voice.
That's a weird noise.
I'm getting it.
You can't fucking talk.
I can talk.
Oh, hello.
Right, here's his voice.
I'll do this character.
All right.
And it will be played by Grumpy Sessions.
Oh, hello.
I'm Grumpy Sessions.
Now, what do you want me to...
That's not the voice for Grumpy Sessions.
It is.
This is Grumpy Sessions.
Now, Paul, sorry, sorry,
just a second before I start
with the Licky character.
Yeah.
Oh, what was he like?
He sounds more like Prince Charles right now.
No, that's what Grumpy Sessions sounds like.
Now?
Yes.
He's developed over the years.
I tell you what,
my mother,
she used to have
lots of voices.
When she was angry with me, she'd say,
Oh, Grumpy, I'm angry.
And then when she was happy, she'd be more like,
Oh, Grumpy, I'm happy.
And then when she was powdering her downstairs area...
Her crab bucket.
And then when she was powdering her downstairs area... Her crab bucket.
She'd powder it.
She'd pack it almost like a...
Pack it up tight, the powder up there.
Almost like a...
Like a poultice.
Right, okay, well...
I could cut this out, but I'm going to leave it in as a lesson.
A lesson to me for Lange to go on.
So, I'm Grumpy Sessions and I'll do the Licky Carradine now.
Okay, go on, do it.
Oh, I've lost me glove.
He's going.
Oh, he's going.
Look at him.
Look at him, he's wobbling.
He can't keep his own amusement to himself, can he?
Look at him.
Look at him, he's going.
He's so impressed with himself
stop trying to put me off
here we go
no no I'm not
I'm getting carried again
oh
I'm very poor
but I used to be so posh
I used to be a lawyer
but now I'm on hard times
here I am in the street
looking at stray dogs's arses,
hoping that something pops out.
Oh, there's something.
It's a fresh dog turd. I'll get over there.
Oh, where's me glove?
Oh, me glove's full of shit, and I've
just remembered it's in the sink at home, soaking.
Oh, I'll just use me hand.
Oh, there it is.
In the bucket.
In the bucket.
Come on! You're nearly there at the end.
Ooh, ooh, there's a piece of poo on me hand.
Ooh, I'll give it a good old licking.
Grampy Sessions available for bar mitzvahs.
Well, thank you for coming in. You're not quite right for the role.
We're trying to find a new angle A youthful angle
I can do that
I can
My mother
Always used to say
Close the beef curtain
Well we're trying to
Rebrand Pure Finders
For a new generation
We don't quite think
You fit in
So thank you for coming in
Thank you for coming in
Sorry it's been
A waste of time
It's been very enlightening
For us
Okay I'll go Go home Look at my mother's old crab bucket right come on here we go right so
women generally have a large pocket for the reception oh yeah oh yeah
a large pocket you know what i recently women women generally have a large pocket? You know what? I recently... Women generally have a large pocket.
I recently sent an email to the dollop guys to say,
hey, you're coming to the UK.
Can we be your guests?
Because it's never going to happen.
Right.
But if they're listening to this episode,
we can fucking forget about even being considered as a backup, backup, backup.
Why, Paul?
I read out women generally had a large pocket. And what did you do? Oh, back up, back up. Why, Paul? I read out, women genuinely had a large pocket.
And what did you do?
Oh, yeah.
There we go.
That's it.
You've ruined us.
All right, just keep going.
You've ruined our opportunity.
Keep going.
That and the fact we're shit.
Right.
Okay.
They had a big pocket for reception of such rags as they had their chance to fall in with.
But they pick up those of the very best quality and will go out of their way to even search for them.
So what they're saying is women made more of an effort
and they had rags in their pocket to clean their hands.
They had a sort of more of a professional approach.
Thus equipped, they may be seen pursuing their avocation
in almost every street in and about London,
excepting such streets as now...
Can you ask him
to turn that down
a little bit?
Yeah.
I just find it funny, mate.
I'm reaching that point, Paul.
Yeah?
You're losing it.
Nearly there, mate.
We're nearly at the end of the show.
Come on.
So, thus equipped they may be,
they're seen pursuing the air...
Oh, fucking hell.
This is such...
This is written in such...
In the...
Highfalutin language.
I'm not a more common...
I don't know how to read.
Fancy do I.
Read it fancy.
All right, then.
Thus equipped they may be,
seen pursuing the avocation
in almost every street
in and about London,
accepting such streets
as are now cleaned
by the street orderlies,
or whom the pure finders grievously complain
as being unwarranted interferences with the privileges of their class.
What they're saying is,
you shouldn't be cleaning the streets of dog shit,
it's my living you're costing.
So basically you're saying that these posh people
who've fallen on hard times are taking over the business,
or the women are taking over the business.
No, the people who are pure finders are complaining about the fact
that we now have street cleaners
picking up dog shit.
And it's like,
yeah, but that's my livelihood.
You're literally taking the cash out of my hand.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The pure collected is used by leather dressers and tanners
and more especially by those engaged
in the manufacture of Moroccan and kid leather
from the skins of old and young goats
of which skins great number are imported,
and the roans and lambskins
of which the sham Moroccan kids
of the slop leather trade
are now used by the better class of shoemaker,
bookbinder, and glover
for the inferior requirements of their business.
So they're buying cheaper stuff,
but they're still selling it as a premium commodity.
Pure is also used by tanners.
So pure was the word for dog shit?
I guess so.
It's strange.
It's calling it pure.
P-U-R-E.
Yeah, P-U-R-E.
As is pigeon's dung for the tanning of the thinner kinds of leather,
such as calf skins,
for which purpose it is placed in pits with an admixture of lime and bark.
Okay.
Now, if you're going to go for pigeon shit, it'd be harder to collect, wouldn't you?
You'd need something kind of squeegee.
What you'd have to do is...
You'd need a scraper.
You'd need maybe a pipette to take it from branches.
Paul, you said pipette and then you thought, what's a pipette?
I know what a pipette is.
No, you didn't.
It's a little squeezy part thing with a tube.
When you said pipette, you were just thinking, you were clutching for a word. No, I knew pipette. I you didn't It's a little squeezy Pat thing with a tube When you said pipette You were just thinking
You were clutching for a word
No I knew pipette
I saw your whole voice
Your whole thing
I was
Pipette
Pipette
Pipette
You
I was good
You did well
Because you thought
How can I make pipette work
As a poo collector
It did work
It did
It does
It does work
I couldn't do turkey baster
Pipette A turkey baster. Pipette?
A turkey baster, if you think about it,
is basically just an oversized pipette.
Isn't it?
Yeah.
It's a party pipette.
Right.
Last little bit.
In the manufacture of Morocco's and Rome's,
the pure is rubbed by the hand of the workman
into the skin he is dressing.
So he gets right in there.
Yeah, rubbing the...
That must not be a pleasant thing to do.
No. Not on a daily
basis dad's coming home yeah he smells of shit literally dog shit hey kids have come home from
a long day no no no dad you stink of shit this is done to purify the leather i was told by an
intelligent leather dresser and from that, the word pure was originated.
Oh, it purifies the leather?
Yeah.
Okay, so it kills off all the sort of...
The dung has astringent as well as highly alkaline,
or to use the expression of my informant, scouring qualities.
When the pure has been rubbed into the flesh and grain of the skin,
the flesh being originally the interior,
and the grain the exterior part of the cuticle. Ah. What?
What? gives a disagreeable smell to the leather. No shit. And the leather buyer often uses both nose and tongue in making their purchases.
What?
So you come in, you look at the leather,
and you think, oh, no, that leather's too shitty.
It's got too shitty.
It's too shitty, your leather.
Oh, no, I'm going to die.
I can't use this book.
It smells of shit, mate.
Yeah, well, you wouldn't want your books or your gloves
or your jacket smelling of shit, would you?
So do you want to read
one more story before we go?
Yeah.
I'll read one, Paul.
Have a quick look
through the content
and pick a title out.
I'll see one that...
Right, I found one there, Paul.
All right, go for it.
Okay.
Now, I'm not going to
read out the title.
All right.
Because it's going to
eat me dip-dab.
Are you going to eat
your dip-dab
while I'm trying
to fucking do stuff here?
You ready?
It's a short one.
Good.
We tend to think of the modern world as a place where anything goes, Paul.
In olden days, a glimpse of stocking was looked on as something shocking.
But heaven knows, anything goes.
We take a very...
Good authors, you who want new, better words, now only use four-letter words.
Writing prose, anything goes.
Thank you.
The good has gone good today, and good's bad today, and black's white today, and that's that today, and this writing, prose. Anything goes. Thank you. The good has gone good today
and good's bad today
and black's white today
and that's that today
and this is this today
and come round here today
and that's how it goes.
So though I'm not a great romancer,
I knew that I'm bound to chance
when I propose
anything.
Anything.
Goes.
Paul is a prick Yo
I'm starting again
One sentence in
I'm starting again, Paul
1450, that's the year, isn't it?
Not this year, no
No, that's the year
I didn't realise each of these chapters has a year
A year, yeah
What was the year on the last one?
I think it was 80.
I think it was generally 19th century.
It was 19th century.
Now, this is a lot earlier, 1450.
We tend to think of the modern world as a place where anything goes.
Here for a day.
It's good to stop, you know.
Please, please.
All right.
I'll enjoy my dip-dap.
We take a very liberal view of swearing and sexual morality,
and we imagine that all other ages before ours were characterised by strict, prudish morality.
A morality typified by the Victorians who were popularly...
Popularly.
Popularly.
By the Victorians who were popularly...
Shut up.
It's hard though, isn't it?
Popularly.
How do you say... Popularly. Popularly. Yeah, that, isn't it? Popularly. How do you say it?
Popularly.
Popularly.
Yeah, that's it.
Popularly.
Popularly.
You know when you say words sometimes and it just happens?
It's totally happened.
Go on.
I'll just try it.
I'll have a little run up.
That is quite popular.
We tend to think of the modern world as a place where anything goes.
Hold it down.
We take a very liberal view
of swearing and sexual morality
and we imagine
that all other ages
before ours
were characterised
by strict, prudish morality.
A morality typified
by the Victorians
who are popularly
who are popularly
no, who are popularly supposed to have. No, who are popularly
supposed to have covered the legs of their tables
as the very idea of any sort of leg on display
was shocking to them.
The Victorians may well have been excessively prudish.
Possibly.
Worthy and hypocritical.
But it is completely wrong to imagine
that all other earlier epochs were similar.
It's always been the way, though, hasn't it?
There's been a kind of moral code
that supposedly typifies a generation.
But there are always subversive
parts of that. For example...
What are you trying to say? For example,
I can't remember the year, 1600 or whatever,
big, big, big religious movements
and then the whole Hellfire
Caves thing where... The Reformation
you're talking about. Is it that?
When the king came back from the continent and it was all like religion's great let's all do religion again
yeah because you had cromwell and the roundheads yeah cromwell who who said ban christmas because
he was a puritan yeah he banned christmas and then the king came back and he said it's party time
yeah let's get crazy with the god shit
so what point you're trying
god's back in the house and the God shit. Wob, wob, wob, wob, wob. Meow, meow, meow, meow, meow. So what point are you trying to... Meow, meow, meow, meow, meow.
God's back in the house.
Wob, wob, wob, wob, wob. Don't do the wob, wobs.
Wob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob.
Wob, wob, wob, wob, wob.
Do you know what, Paul?
You love your little fucking EDM
stroke dubstep noise off, don't you?
But the music's moved on.
The music has moved way on.
It doesn't do that over.
Now...
But my point is, the Hellfire Caves were built as a reaction to that. It was a place for over. Now. But my point is
the Hellfire Caves were built as a reaction to that.
It was a place for people to be absolutely debauched.
Right. You know? Popularly.
Popularly. The Victorians may well
have been excessively prudish, worthy and hypocritical
but it is completely wrong to imagine that all
other earlier epochs were similar.
Yep. There have been many periods
in the past that have taken a far more liberal
view of life in general than the modern age.
During Charles II's reign, for example, Nell Gwynne, heard of her before, 1651...
She was married to him, wasn't she?
I'll start again.
All right.
During Charles II's reign, for example, Nell Gwynne, who lived from 1651 to 1687,
was adored by Londoners
who loathed the king's French wife.
Oh. And this despite the fact
that Nell was always referred to as the king's
whore. So who was Nell Gwynn then?
Nell was the king's whore.
Yeah, but who was Nell Gwynn?
I'm just a bit fuzzy on history.
I just want to know... I just said
the sentence explained it
before. She was in a prostitute
An orange
She was an orange seller
Wasn't she
Nell Gwynne was a prolific
Seventy figure
Of the restoration period
Praised by Samuel Pepys
For her comic performances
As being one of the first
Actors on the English stage
She became known
For being a long time
Mistress of Charles II
Thank you
Got it
Okay
I just didn't know
I was fuzzy on my history
And I needed clarification
Alright
It's important that I learn.
It's important that our listeners learn.
It's important that we all learn for the context of the rest of this story.
Continue.
Anyway, she was adored by Londoners who loathed the king's French wife.
So this is what we were talking about.
He came back from the Reformation.
He came back from...
Well, he was French as well.
And people complained about Brexit.
No, your fucking history before you go, Britain's this, Britain's that.
The French fucking...
No, it's just stupid.
Just this whole sort of golden age of Britain.
Britain has always been a mongrel country.
Always.
It always has.
In the Empire, we were fucking cunts to everyone
and slaughtered them and shipped human slaves across the country.
We want to go back to that, do we?
Some people would.
Yeah.
Let's go back to having a fucking leader
who's from France.
You were like the good old days.
Let's go all the way back to that.
No, bloody hell.
Do you want a French Prime Minister?
Do you?
Or do you want a French King?
Do you?
I'd have a French King, please.
It'd be quite fun, wouldn't it?
That'd be four pound fifty, sir.
What are you talking about?
A French King.
It's a sex act.
Is it? Yeah sex act is it
yeah
what is it
it's what I do
to your crown
right
um
have you all
me dip dab
just put the
dip dab down
it's distracting me
put the dip dab down
it's nice though
but she was loved
the point he's making
is even though
she was
known
as the king's whore
yeah she was loved.
So there wasn't a sort of snootiness towards being a whore.
It's very similar to Prince Charles.
When he was married to Diana, no one liked Diana.
They always preferred Camilla, and they referred to her as the Prince's whore.
Did they?
No, I don't fuck.
No, everyone loves Diana.
Paul, you need to sort it out.
You're really riffing
on a like a shit level you've gone mad you're looking into the middle distance just can we get
past this fucking paragraph yeah can we whore in the 17th century seems to have lacked at least
some of the harsher overtones that it now has so it was a friendlier term it just wasn't looked at or bless her that little law yeah yeah
until tomorrow the littlest whore have on and settle down maybe it's something you'd say uh
strumpet now yeah strumpet sex worker is the actual thing these days i say a bit sex worker
positive on this show so i like to represent. How positive? Positive to the extent that you go get some for me.
Because I'm lonely.
I personally wouldn't pay for sex.
Could you pay for me to have sex?
On Patreon.
We're raising money for Eli to get his bell sucked.
Don't start.
No, it'll be a Kickstarter.
Charles II himself cared little for...
Cockstarter.
The porn Kickstarter site for people who want to get laid.
Oh, I want to get laid.
I can't afford a prostitute.
I'm going to start a cockstarter.
A little video.
I want to have sex with a lady.
Fanny batter.
A crab bucket.
Charles II himself cared little for traditional morality.
He allowed plays to be written and performed
that made the pursuit of pleasure,
particularly sexual pleasure, the
centre and mainspring of life. This is a part
of the Reformation. This is why it changed society.
Is this where the restoration plays started coming in?
That's right. Yeah. Yes. See,
we're not that unintelligent, Chief. We're not.
We just act it.
Puritan London
was scandalised, but there was little
the religious could do,
as the plays had the king's sanction.
Oh, so fair enough.
So it wasn't that...
In medieval London, too,
sex was far more acceptable in a public context than it is now.
You're going to say public space, then.
Anyone who looks at a map of London produced before 1450
will see several street names that are so extraordinary
by our standards
that they simply would not be allowed
today. It's the good shit, come on.
Addle Street appears on earlier maps
for example. Addle?
Yeah. Addle, okay.
Addle Street, I don't know where that is,
appears on these earlier maps, for example,
and to a medieval Londoner, Addle Street
means filthy spot.
Oh!
So I could describe this room as Addle'd.
Addle Room.
Yeah, the Eli's... The House of Addle.
Eli's Addle'd Room.
Oh, it sounds like a mystery.
Or take Fetter Lane, which still exists.
Yeah.
In 1450, it meant the Street of the Dirty Beggars.
Aww!
Other names were dropped after the Reformation
as the influence of killjoy protestants came to
dominate public life oh public holidays on saints days were largely abandoned and many london street
names were changed shite burn lane near cannon street so named because of the number of cesspits
to be found there it's not like just because people had a lot of diarrhoea after eating a hot meal. Was changed to the
far more genteel sounding
Sherbourne Lane. So if you live on
Sherbourne Lane and you're listening to this podcast. It's called
Shithowl. Shit Lane. Shit Street.
Shit Lane. Shit Road. Shit Street.
It retains Sherbourne Lane to this day.
But the most extraordinary street of all
that vanished with the arrival of the Reformation and the
serious sensibility that seems
to have accompanied it,
was a small lane that ran north from Cheapside.
Where's Cheapside?
That rings a bell.
It's the east end.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
No, Cheapside is a road that goes out of the City of London.
Like Fleet Street?
Yes. That whole area?
Yeah.
No, no, the City of London.
Cheapside is like the east side of the City of London.
Oh, okay, okay.
So it's near City of London, before the East End.
Okay.
Around there.
All right.
A small lane that ran north from Cheapside.
It was called Grope Cunt Lane.
Yeah?
For the simple reason that it was a famous haunt of prostitutes.
Wow.
Say what you see, ladies and gentlemen.
Grope Cunt Lane.
It's magic just walking down the street.
We've got to name all these streets
for the ordinance
we've got to get it
all writing down
so the other
smith lane
we'll name that
after John Smith
who built that thing
right we've got
pennywinkle lane
because you should
sell winkles down
here for a penny
what should we
call this street
what's down there
mate
oh a bunch of
prostitutes
right and what's
going on
well there's some
guys paying to
grope their cunts
right we'll call
this crab bucket
avenue
now Paul yeah it's uh i love that book it's fascinating to me it's fascinating to me
uh that that's the case isn't it it's strange um they also lots of places in london that aren't
called what's um what people think they're called petticoicoat Lane, for example, hasn't been called Petticoat Lane since 1750.
So what is it actually called?
It's Wentworth Street.
So why do people call it Petticoat?
Because it was where the clothing trade was.
Oh, before it moved to Savile Row.
Or whatever.
I know.
They still have a market down there where they sell clothes.
It's weird.
So it's more like a nickname, a familiar nickname.
Yeah, but it used to officially be called that.
And also, Bond Street.
Could you go to Bond Street now, Paul?
Where?
There's no Bond Street.
There is literally no Bond Street?
There is no Bond Street.
Where was Bond Street?
Round there.
Come round here.
You've got Bond Street tube station,
but then you've got New Bond Street or Old Bond Street.
Yeah, New Bond Street's the posh bit with all the posh shops, isn't it?
Well, they're next to each other, but they're two separate roads.
And neither of them are called Bond Street.
One's called Old Bond Street and one's called New Bond Street.
Oh, that's very strange.
Isn't that strange?
And there's a whole book, isn't there?
I can't remember who wrote it, but it's about missing London,
about all the streets that don't exist anymore
and the maps that have changed and the whole area.
And it also...
So you've got Petticoat Lane, Bond Street,
and also, if you think about it, London itself.
There is no place called London. What respect? You've got Greater London. Right. And you've got Petticoat Lane, Bond Street, and also, if you think about it, London itself. There is no place called London.
In what respect?
You've got Greater London.
Right.
And you've got the City of London.
Okay.
What does London mean, then?
Where's London?
It's the City of London.
No, but that's the City of London.
That's like saying it's the Man of Eli.
It's just the City of London.
Yeah, but you wouldn't say, I'm going to the City.
You wouldn't say...
I'm going to London.
Well, you wouldn't mean the City, would you?
I mean the whole lot of London.
Yeah.
But there's no actual official place that has that name.
So there's City in London and Greater London.
They both make up London.
Yeah.
So there's London then.
It's just this split up...
Central London, yeah.
Yeah.
No, but there's no actual place with the name London.
That's the point I'm trying to make.
We should get them to rename a street called Cheap Show Street.
Cheap Side could be near Cheap Side. Yeah, we could be called Cheap street called Cheap Show Street. Cheapside could be
near Cheapside.
Yeah, we could be
called Cheapside
Cheap Show Street.
We should go to
Cheapside and just
do a bit there.
Why don't you
take a picture and
go?
Yeah.
Cheap's in the word.
Right, is that the
end of the show now?
Yeah.
Coming up on future
episodes of Cheap
Show, more Sauce
Report.
No.
Yes.
The Sauce Report
has been retired
because it...
No, it fucking
hasn't.
We've had to abandon that spot because...
Eli's Urban Noodle Country Kitchen.
Because of its ties to Big Name Brand.
It's ruined the integrity of this show.
No, it hasn't. So we're dropping it. No, we're not.
So there's no more scandal. Alright. We'll drop the source
report then, Paul. Yeah, we are. We're dropping it. We have to
for legal reasons. The source report is dropped
but look forward, ladies and gentlemen,
to a new segment.
Brand new segment of the show.
Condiment Corner.
Source.
Report.
No, it can't be called that.
I literally just gave you Condiment Corner.
That's bullshit.
What is it?
You fucking keep your Condiment Corner.
This week, Paul Gannon's going to do Condiment Corner.
I'm going to talk about this one this week.
This is my report on McDonald's barbecue sauce.
25 milliliters, best before.
I can recommend this barbecue sauce.
It's very good.
Careful with that.
It's a classic barbecue sauce.
You'll like it.
Not too sweet.
A bit smoky.
I give that four out of five.
That's Paul's Condiment Corner done for another week.
Doop-doop-doop-doop-doop.
Look forward to Eli Silverman's.
No more.
There's no more.
Look forward to Eli Silverman's.
No.
Sauce and syruprup Dossier
That's it for another Cheap Show
Thank you for joining us
Let's just get all the admin out of the way as quick as we can
I'll get some admin out of the way
Thwoppo
Patreon.com forward slash cheap show
if you'd like to support us
at any small amount
we'd deeply appreciate it.
Nuzzle Thwop.
Magazines,
video episodes,
Bazaars,
jumble sales.
No, shut the fuck up.
Thwoppo!
All kinds of exclusive
Hello!
Thwoppo!
Hello!
All kinds of exclusive
content for Patreon supporters.
Thank you so much.
It's also,
as we record this today,
it's Yven's birthday. Fucking get it right's been event's birthday today and she does the cheap show
magazine which you can get and i don't buy it now i've never seen it because paul's cruel to me
he's mean and cruel i just forget to send you the files he doesn't i was is it my life is this my
own life it's my life it's my life podcast anymore. Do I have anything to do with this podcast anymore? What? Do I have anything to do with it?
Do I put content in? Do I
produce content for the fucking podcast?
Yes, I do. Now, I want to say something
right now. Thwoppo.
Yeah, I was just waiting for you to say Thwoppo so we can move on.
Thwoppo. Thank you for that.
Nuzzle Thwop. I don't think I Thwop.
Don't chuck shit at me.
Well, then stop talking shit. Yeah, I just want to say a few
things, right? One. Thwoppo. Yeah, two. Poultice. Three. Tronch stop talking shit Yeah I just want to say a few things Right One
Thwoppo
Yeah
Two
Poultice
Three
Tronch
No I don't want to say
Stop putting words in my mouth
What's something else in your mouth at a fucking minute
Fist
Right
Okay
Yeah
Just give me three things to say
Alright
One
Yeah
Thwoppo
Right
We've
Yeah
We've established that
I am going to lamp you
One Thwoppo Two Nuzzle thwoppo Right We've Yeah We've Established I am gonna lamp ya One
Thwoppo
Two
Nuzzle Thwop
Yeah
Three
Thwoppage
Thank you
Thanks very much for listening everyone
I'm out
Thwoppage
Can you shut up then
While I finish doing the album
Nuzzle Thwop
Yes
I can
Yes
I can
Yes I will
Let me say something though
If you want to support us on Patreon
Go to www.cheapshow.com.
No, it's not.
It's not that.
It's patreon.com.
Shut up.
There.
You said it now.
Well, let me.
You fucking said it now, haven't you?
Let me get through this.
Let me get through this.
It's the worst part of every recording.
Got to get through this.
Got to get through this.
Got to get.
Got to get.
Got to get.
What happened to Daniel Bedingfield?
Who gives a fuck?
Right, moving on.
I fucking don't
what else have you
got to say
let's just go through
them
what what
let's just
break it down
I'm trying to
but we always
take forever
it's only two and a half
minutes
and I just want to
finish it
have I said
thwoppo
yes
you said
thwop
thwoppage
nozzle thwoppage
thwoppo
thwop thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp
thwopp thwopp thwopp thwopp thwopp thwopp thwopp thwopp thwopp thwopp What, I've got a new one? What? Thwop-o-grande. No. You knew you wanted to laugh there, didn't you?
And you just didn't.
You are a thwop-a-holic, mate.
That's your fucking problem.
No, too right.
Too fucking right.
Shut up now, please.
Just say it then.
No one's stopping you from just doing the admin, mate.
Do the fucking admin now.
Zip. I've zipped it.
I'm going to stop talking. Yeah?
Right now. Right this
second. You can email us
thecheapshow at gmail.com
We're on Twitter
at thecheapshowpod, at Paul Gannon's show
Eli's, Eli's Snowid, E-L-I-S-N-O-I-D
You're not doing that anymore.
Fuck off.
Patreon.com forward slash cheap show
and we're on tumblr
we're on facebook
we're on instagram
you can just look for
cheap show
you'll find us
unless you find that
rock band
who sometimes get
some of our tweets
bit awkward
but that's it
for another episode
of cheap show
thanks very much
for listening everybody
what are you doing
heyo
stop
heyo
fuck he's put the
crab bucket on my head
and he's whacking it
heyo I thought I'd finish this episode by thw put the crab bucket on my head and he's whacking it.
I thought I'd finish this episode by thwacking your crab bucket.
Goodbye.