CheapShow - Ep 147: Tumpy
Episode Date: October 4, 2019Who is Tumpy? That's the eternal question burning at the heart of this week's economy comedy podcast. Paul and Eli think they know exactly what this "Tumpy" is and you will have to suffer through what... they create! If the idea of Paul and Eli creating anything new at all is shocking to you, then you may be (quite rightly) scared of the finale of this episode. It's a finale that involves Story Cubes, an overheard slur and a personal vendetta. Elsewhere, it's a clash of content vampires, misheard lyrics, weird "end of the pier" music and a surplus of way too many "new" characters. ​They do talk about "cheap stuff"too. Honest! 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-147-tumpy 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! MERCH Www.cheapmag.shop www.tinyurl.com/rbcheapshow
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Live from North East London.
Oh shit, just...
I'm trying to do something different.
Live from North East London.
It's the Cheap Show Podcast.
From the House of Pickles.
I'm your host Paul Gannon.
And with me...
It's Eli Silverman.
Hi everyone.
It's the House of Pickles time.
Look Paul.
Yes.
I've done shit in here.
Is that what that big mound is on the floor?
That Mount Gropp pants has been... I did a poo joke.
I did a poo joke and you
completely walked by it.
I want you to step into my poo joke.
We're going to put all the poo,
all the spoff,
all the wee-wee. All of this stuff,
right, is a component.
It's only a small part
of the overall smorgasbord
of delights and segments.
Segments that we do, Paul.
And I just don't think
we should start the show this week
with poo-poo.
Give me that, give me that,
give me, give me, give me that,
give me that's boff.
Give me that, give me, give me that,
give me that's boff.
Give me that, give me, give me that,
give me, give me, give me that's boff. I'm in a singy mood today.
I just wanted to warn you.
Why?
I don't know.
Now.
Oh, it's a source report.
Pass me that sweet relish.
There.
Pardon?
Pardon, sir?
Source report, pass me the sweet relish.
It's wee sachet.
Yes, give the sachet over.
I'm holding a wee sachet in my hand. Oh, and it's a source report. It's a Heinz sweet relish? It's a wee sachet. Yes, give the sachet over. I'm holding a wee sachet here in my hand.
Oh, and it's a sauce for a pot.
It's a Heinz sweet relish.
It's very interesting. I'll hand it over
to the expert. Right, this is Heinz sweet relish.
What colour do you think that would be?
It's a green packet. Yeah,
it's a green... I hate this segment.
It's a green packet.
Now, Paul, this is Heinz sweet relish.
This is as far as I'm supposed,
prepared to go for this show.
And for the integrity of the source report.
I'm going to taste it.
I'm going to taste some sweet relish right now on the source report.
That sounds dirty, doesn't it, boys and girls?
Right.
Here we go.
Smell the huff of this.
This is old relish.
What do you mean old relish?
Smell it.
It smells very sour.
It's got a gristly
kind of tang to it.
It's like it's off, isn't it?
Mate, when did you get it?
Oh, a couple of years ago.
Don't eat it.
I'm going to.
Don't.
Why?
It's not why.
You don't have to.
It's lumpy.
I don't want you to.
It's a source report.
And then next week's
a source report.
Eli can't do this week
because he's got
the aggressive shit.
Now, Paul.
Blasting.
Now, Paul.
Hot liquid ass.
Now, this was just my
the hook
to get people involved
with the source report
this week
because I've got some
actual important
source report news
to report
on the source report
okay
yeah
and that important news
is
why don't you sniff
some lemsit
while you're at it
I'm not going to
sniff lemsit
is it the little
capsules you can
break open
you can break those
open
why would you snort lemsit why would you drink old fucking sweet relish you're at it. I'm not going to sniff Lemsip. Is it the little capsules you can break open? You can break those open.
Why would you snort Lemsip?
Why would you drink old fucking sweet relish?
Old sweet relish.
Squeeze your sachet all over my lips.
What's the big news?
Crab bucket.
Crab bucket.
Paul.
Crab bucket, Paul.
This show used to be about something.
Crab bucket.
Yeah.
It's about sauce, mate.
This bit of the show is about sauce.
The crab bucket will be the receptacle for the sauce trough.
Coming soon.
Now, to eat some of this old relish.
Does that mean you're just going to vomit into a crab bucket every time you...
No, I'll put on my sauce sachets.
Look, we can both admit, Paul, you know,
that the sauces have all got a bit out of hand here in the House of Pickles.
The trough.
The trough has sort of spread everywhere.
There's sachets of sauce all adorning all sorts of places.
I haven't kept track of the sauce.
And that is remiss of me.
That is a problem that I'm bringing to the attention of the listeners
in this sauce-tra-sport...
You know what?
Before you jump that down, I'm just going to put the credits in now.cerer's Sport... You know what? Before you jump that down,
I'm just going to put the credits in now.
Welcome to Cheap Show.
I hate you and your fucking noodle posse.
People love noodles, right?
It's a fact of Cheap Show.
You're going to have to fucking reset.
Noodle time.
Tales from the dance floor.
How's the pick up?
The price of the site.
This is for guaranteed.
Hello.
Eli Silver.
Welcome to Cheap Show.
I'm not going on a nuzzle.
Right, well, we're back and he's holding the packet.
Look at this sweet relish.
It's all lumps of green.
I'm really not enjoying that.
I'm going to taste it.
I might have to get the spitty tray ready.
You might have to rethink your life decisions
that led you to this particular decision.
Paul, too late for that now.
It's way too late for that now.
I know, but let me save you.
Are we the Clarence that stops you from jumping off
the bridge of sweet relish horror?
Clarence?
Yeah, from It's a Wonderful Life.
Here we go, too late.
Oh.
Oh, God.
Oh, that's not very nice.
That is not nice.
I have had a very visceral reaction to this.
Oh, God. It is too early for me to be close to Vop
on this show.
Some things,
some things, Paul, to report from the Sweet Relish
experience. I don't want a report.
I don't want a report. It's off.
It's off.
But it hasn't, you know, it's just gone
a bit cardboardy. I'm closing my ears because I
can't hear it. If I can't hear it, then I can't be affected.
It has still some sweetness left, but there's an underlying kind of cardboardy sort of rottenness.
Just talk to them because I'm not listening.
It's a dryness.
A dry, like dry damp taste underneath it.
Just touch my knee when you're done.
A dry damp taste underneath it.
And that's the source report.
Thank you.
I'm going to tap his knee.
And back in the room.
I don't know why I had such a visceral reaction to that.
It's disgusting. It's all green and bogey like.
Don't go there, Kev.
Come on, mate.
You know what we need to do as a project?
Rebrand this podcast into the lovely show.
We need
you to work on your gag reflex.
It's getting worse.
I don't know why. But it doesn't often bring you to work on your gag reflex it's getting worse the older I get
I don't know why
but it doesn't often
bring you to completion
to full
no it doesn't
to full vomiting
no
you just sort of gag
and then you seem to be able
to just control it
not all the time
but largely
I can just shut everything down
have you actually
tasted some grim food
on either this show
or digitiser
and vomited
I nearly vomited when I ate the earthworm on Digitizer.
You ate an earthworm?
Yeah.
You're nicking all my moves.
I'm not.
It's just Biffo.
You are nicking my moves.
You know that I used to swallow earthworms.
Biffo's nicking it.
I used to swallow earthworms.
I've done it on this show.
Oh, I wonder where you heard about that, Paul.
You content vampire.
Oh.
I am a content vampire. i steal vampire content from all
the vampire content shut up i'm working it out it's all i am flying in i'm actually enjoying
this voice i am flying in i'm a bat a kissy bat yes i'm a very kissy bat okay i'm flying oh oh i steal this idea from you
soon there's gonna be like condiment condiment report or something you know isn't there there
is a feature digitizer where we test sources oh fuck off i'm joking we don't we make noodles
perhaps um perhaps i don't know you know paul, but I've been getting a lot, it's almost like a rising tide of outrage
and just a demand from almost everyone.
Do you know where this is going, listener?
I do.
Let's let them, just let them get on with it.
It's like a tidal wave of demand.
People fucking asking me on the street,
calling me up, emailing me.
I got a parcel and it was full of poo.
And it was like, this is pig shit.
Bring back fat sow, it said.
And that's all I get all the time.
Please, Paul.
All right, if you can show me an email right now
or a tweet that has anyone saying it.
I'll read this to you right now, okay?
Yeah.
Okay.
I don't know whether to smash the illusion.
I'm going to smash the illusion.
He opened up his 3DS. I'm reading it from the 3DS. I get emails on whether to smash the illusion. I'm going to smash the illusion. He opened up his 3DS.
I'm reading it from the 3DS.
I get emails on it.
You're right.
Okay.
No, that's legit.
That's legit.
Dear Eli, I absolutely love you and the show and everything.
There's the and er bit written in.
Yes, and er.
You can see.
All right.
He's pointing to a blank screen, ladies and gentlemen.
On a 3DS.
Yes. No, I'm going along with screen. He's pointing to a blank screen, ladies and gentlemen. On a 3DS. Yes, now I'm going along with it.
Please, please, please, please, please.
Yeah.
Please.
Yeah.
Please.
Lots of pleases.
Please.
Yeah.
Don't do another one, please.
Please.
Please.
Please.
Please.
Please.
Please.
Please.
Please.
Please.
Bring back Fatsal
that's it
that's all it says
oh fair enough
in that case
I'm just gonna
open up my
email
on my
phone
and I'm gonna
read an email
here from
Alan
Alan
and he says
dear Paul
please
please
please
please
please
please
please
don't allow for any more fat Sal.
Eli's ego is out of control.
It's nothing to do with me, Paul.
I forgot.
What?
Mate, okay, I forgot.
Hang on.
Bear with me.
I've got to pull this up.
So, ladies and gentlemen, you may know.
You're going to pull it up?
No.
Pull it out?
The basic discipline, don't do fat Sal.
Is it winky winky out the toppy?
Is it hello, Mr. Winky Hole?
Hang on.
Hello. Hello out the topppy? Is it Hello, Mr. Winky Hole? Hello.
Hello out the top of the hole.
Hello.
Hooky round the flies.
Winky Winky.
Hello.
Well, okay, so...
Hello.
Shut up!
Fucking hell!
So, I don't know if you know this, but a week ago,
there was a screening of Ashen's and the Polybius Heist.
And a few select people went to go see the film.
And feedback and things like that yes so i was speaking to stewart uh about this about the test screening yes because i wanted
to know how it went and oh shut up he says well went well everyone liked it thank fuck great um
a couple of people disliked eli's character which is a a bonus. And then I say, well, what kind of comments were read?
So he sends a few more.
He says,
someone said,
it's an ensemble piece,
not the Eli Power Hour.
I don't know what that means.
He sucked the life out of every scene he was in.
Oh, shut up.
This isn't even real.
And then someone else said,
plays the same character,
I don't know what the role.
No, no one
let me see that
this is a bullshit
he was too short
for some shots
and then
Stuart goes
yeah you had to stand on a box
for some scenes
yes I did
what
he's like little Tom Cruise
Tom Cruise gets a
like a
he
he wouldn't stand on a box
Tom Cruise
do you know that he gets a what did he call it a box Tom Cruise do you know that
he gets a
what does he call it
a trench
yeah a trench
a trench dug
for his co-stars
so they have to get
in the trench
he doesn't get on a box
for anyone
yeah
and that's what I'm
going to do next time
have my own trench
all right
well that's great then
that's not true
no one said that
and then someone said
Eli's basically the
Jar Jar of the
Polybius heist
that is not true
I've fucking got it here
it's right here
it's bullshit I'm going to delete the thread now oh yeah but anyway That is not true. I've fucking got it here. It's right here. It's bullshit.
I'm going to delete the thread now.
Oh, yeah.
But anyway, they were the comments.
So I'm shit.
I was shit, was I, Paul?
Yeah, you were shit.
Is that what they come up with?
Everyone doesn't like you.
You're the worst thing in the film.
So, Paul, you've riled me up.
You didn't do anything where you got your knob out.
And the source report went well.
But what have we got coming up on the show
today?
Today we've got
a little trip to
Silverman's Platter
and I think we've got
quite a lot to talk about
in that next segment
and then finally
to end on
we're going to go
story time.
So I've got another
selection of story cubes
from a charity shop
for a quid
so I thought
let's have a little
creative story time.
They've got different symbols than the ones we used before.
Yeah, they're all travel-based, I think.
Because the one that I got originally was just, it says,
it just says Rory Story Cubes.
But then this one says Rory Story Cubes Voyagers.
Oh, so you get different kinds.
They're quite...
Yeah, you can get little ones like Mystery,
where they're all spy-based.
They're quite well-made little things, aren't they?
I mean, they're just dice, expensive dice, which is why when I see one for a pound, I don't mind.
They must go for at least a tenner when they first come out.
Oh, yeah, but they're quite nice, aren't they?
They've got a nice weight to them.
Yeah, and they've branded them.
It's a nice sort of fake ceramic.
It's like Bakelite or something.
Something like that.
It's got a nice feel to it.
It's good to toss in your hand.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
It's good to toss.
It's good to toss.
Remember that advert from the 80s? No. It's good to toss in your hand. Do you know what I mean? It's good to toss. It's good to toss. Remember that advert from the 80s?
No.
It's good to toss.
No one's seen it.
Yeah, it was a BT advert.
No, it wasn't.
Do you remember that one where it goes,
Spooge in my cuff hole.
It was for a British gas, wasn't it?
Yeah.
It was like British gas.
Spooge in my cuff hole.
It was like a housewife who was
at home yeah and
she's like oh I
smell gas and then
and then a guy
turned up in a
Superman hero suit
Spooge in my
cuff hole and so
she bats it
Otter's pocket
right and then
that gets her
£10 off her gas
bill you know
what I've lost
energy now
no didn't you
have a tales from the Dance Floor
you wanted to do?
I thought we were going to do Tales from the Shop Floor.
I don't know.
Let's just do with this one, see how we go.
Okay.
I've got a Tales from the Dance Floor, all right.
Ladies and gentlemen, back by popular demand.
No, it's not, Fat Sal.
It is a Tales from the Dance Floor.
Floor, floor, floor, floor, floor, floor, floor, floor, floor.
Drop the bass
Boo
No
Right, there's no
Yeesh, yeesh, yeesh, yeesh, yeesh, yeesh, yeesh, yeesh
Techno, techno, techno, techno, techno, techno
Yeesh
Happy
Yeesh
See, we should maybe make a happy hardcore dance track.
Well, that was a minute of the podcast.
Sorry about that.
I love that.
Yeah, last night, a couple of things happened.
It's a smorgasbord.
I was doing the Camden Blues Kitchen twice in a row this weekend.
On the first night, which was Friday, there was these strange women at the front of the stage cheering and pointing at me.
And I thought they could be cheap show fans,
or they could just be nuts,
or they could be looking at someone else.
It was quite dark, and I had to do my job.
Well, they imagined another person on stage.
There were other people milling about on stage,
I mean, musicians and stuff.
Yeah, setting up.
Yeah.
But turns out they were cheap show fans.
How did you know?
On Twitter.
So why not give a shout out?
Why don't you give a shout out
to the poor desperate people who went all that way
to see you ignore them at the
Blues Kitchen? Which is probably what you did.
Sav. Hi Sav.
At Savvy Rooks.
Ladies and gentlemen, by the way, this is the first time Eli
supplied content via social media for this
podcast. It's good, isn't it?
And she tweets
Finding Eli Snowde at the Blue Kitchen. That's good, isn't it? And she tweets Finding Eli Snoyd at
the Blue Kitchen. That's a different place,
love. Yeah, that's where Eli eats his
chunky sauce. Kitchen electric blue.
Yeah. Chunky cheese sauce. Blue cheese
sauce. Chunky, chunky cheese sauce. They do
blue cheese dressing. What are your thoughts on that?
You hate it, don't you? Oh, I like blue cheese dressing.
You do? Yeah. Maybe we should try to do
our own homemade blue cheese dressing.
Oh.
No, no, no.
I've got one.
He's dead.
I've got a blue vein.
Get that zombie out of here.
I've got the blue vein sauce.
Get out.
He just won't die, Uncle Grumbly. Zombie Uncle Grumbly.
He won't die.
Willie, apologies if we made you feel uncomfortable,
but we really enjoy your comedy.
Yeah.
And DJing.
Oh.
From the couple at the front that kept pointing and smiling at you.
So they were like, thank you, Sav.
It's nice to know that they probably know the podcast well enough
not to approach you on stage.
Maybe there was a bit of apprehension about coming up and saying hello
because I might go, fuck off.
Fuck off.
And then all of a sudden they're like, show co-host is cunt i did reach a sort of new
level of nasty last night but anyway that's uh at the end of this oh well ladies and gentlemen
we're going to go to a new level of nasty the first thing that happened yeah is filthy the
first thing that happened is on friday on friday, because I play, there's live bands, of course, at the venue.
Often people will say, when's the next band on?
Or when's the band on?
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
It's perfectly fine.
It's a perfectly legitimate question.
I tell them when the band is on.
Half an hour, love.
Yeah.
10.30.
10.30.
I wish it was sooner.
Yeah.
Because I could go fuck, take a piss.
Buy the bins outside and get told off by your boss. I don't, that doesn't happen anymore. Because I could go fuck, take a piss. Buy the bins outside
and get told off by your boss.
I don't,
that doesn't happen anymore.
No,
because you got told off by your boss.
Mate,
it's gone so downhill,
that neighbourhood.
Everyone's,
there are people taking shits
by the bins now.
What,
in Camden?
Yeah.
Oh.
It's really bad.
Because that venue next door
shut down.
Yeah.
This is a venue,
the one that was next door,
has a award
for excellence
in the urban environment,
in the built urban environment, an award, and they shut it down.
Yeah.
Just because of tax or whatever.
The pub on the corner is a fucking Fender, total corporate Fender guitar shop.
Piece of crap.
Terrible building.
That's where that pub used to be that we used to go to.
That whole little micro-neighborhood has completely died.
It used to be quite buzzing, you know what I mean?
And now people are taking shits, basically, by the bins.
Great.
You know what I saw
where I have to fucking do my break?
There was a fucking rubber glove.
What?
And some human shit.
Yeah.
And gone?
Yeah.
What's been going on there?
Bum egg removal processes.
That's what I'm thinking.
Someone had to carry around with them
a glove.
Whatever.
It's just not cool.
Because they knew at some point
in the night
they'd have to pull some shit out.
It's the rise in homelessness and it's this fucking government.
Anyway, we're not getting into that.
Politics, but it's a good point.
Yeah.
Even as someone like me,
who hasn't lived in London all their life,
and I moved here in 2001,
even I've noticed a massive change,
certainly in Camden's identity.
Yeah.
And there was a protest,
because the HS2's going through Camden.
Chris Packham was there saying, they're cutting down what little greenery there is left in Camden.
It's a terrible stuff.
Oh, ladies and gentlemen, we're dangerously close to politics in this podcast and talking seriously.
Now, so.
Can I just interrupt them before we go any further?
Spoffy old cum load.
Now we're back.
Right.
Now we're back.
So one little thing that amused me
Yeah
First little story
This girl gets on the stage
And she goes
When's the next person on?
Right
I was like
What?
You mean
Banned
Yeah
She was like
Yes banned
No she was asking you
She didn't turn to the crowd dancing
And ask
When's the next person on?
So I just
It amused me
I laughed in her face
Alright good
Nice
Do you mean banned?
What did you mean?
You went
You pointed at her face And went, ha ha ha ha ha?
No, I just cracked up. Alright.
Trying to go, yes, how can I help you?
And she was like, where's the next person on?
Maybe she meant DJ. Maybe she thought you were shit. She meant banned.
Nah, she meant you. So when's the next DJ
on? What person? Well, the next story
probably has got a little element of that.
Yeah. Right. So, last night
I start DJ.
First song, I often start with something mellow it's the
beginning of the night people are still eating their food no one's gonna dance no one's getting
up and fucking dancing no one's dancing no one's you know it's just a bit of a mood music get
people in the mood get them ready get them going little thing in this game marvelous little thing
get them going yeah so the first song starts playing.
This girl immediately gets on stage, comes over and goes,
Is there going to be any dancing?
Oh!
Whoa!
That's a bit much.
Salty.
Yeah.
Is there going to be any dancing?
It's like, well, dance.
Yeah, go on.
You started off.
Do you know what I mean?
She said, can you play something louder?
And then you're like...
It's the first tune.
It's not actually out of your hands, though's not no for one thing yeah no how dare you
also you are the party you bring the party with you yeah everywhere you go you always bring the
weather party with party you know is there going to be dancing it's down to you it's down to you
isn't it it's you make the first move. Well, that annoyed me. That annoyed me. Yeah.
And then last night... Someone shat in your record box.
No, a girl came...
And left a little rubber glove on.
A girl comes up and she goes,
oh, I don't know if this is really this kind of place.
And I was just...
What does that mean?
What did she say?
She said, oh, I don't...
You know, I know it's not really that kind of place, but...
Okay, so she's about to ask for something.
Yeah, preface to...
And I cut her off immediately as soon as she said that
and said, well, don't bother asking for it then.
Oh, salty.
Yeah, this is what I mean.
But it's like, oh, I know you're not really going to...
And so it's like, let's just leave it there.
I'm not going to do it.
What did she say?
No, she kept...
I kept...
Oh, God.
She goes, I know this isn't really this kind of place.
And I said, okay, don't bother asking for anything then.
And then she said, but will you...
And I said, what, are you going to ask, are you?
No.
I was going, no, no. It's going gonna be a no so you're such a prick in so many of these stories i don't know how it is but i think you see yourself as the hero and you're not you're
the person who's ruined someone else you're not and she was like no i was like no don't ask don't
ask and she's like but okay reggaeton I was like what's reggaeton
it's that
really
it's that music
it's kind of like
Latin
reggae hip hop
you'd know it
okay no
I mean that's fine
but I'm saying
it's not a particular song
it's a genre
it's a whole genre
of dance music
that's interesting
I mean you might have
played that towards
the end of the night
sometimes you play a bit
and I get fired
you've played reggae
at the end of the night
reggae is a completely different thing reggaeton oh it's a different I'm going to play play a bit. No, I get fired. You've played reggae at the end of the night, though. No, reggae is a completely different thing.
Reggae Tom.
Oh, it's a different thing.
I'm going to play you a bit.
Yeah, reggae Tom.
Not reggae Tom.
I thought there was a guy called Reggae Tom who made reggae songs.
I can smell a character.
I'm not doing it because I can only imagine.
Yeah.
I'll get you drunk, man.
What about Uncle Grumbly?
Zombie Grumbly plays Reggaeton.
No, we can't mash characters together like that.
I think we should.
No.
Anyway, look.
He's dead and will only come back when I feel it's funny.
I just want to play you a bit of Reggaeton just to show you how...
I look forward to hearing Reggaeton.
How totally inappropriate the whole thing is.
This is Reggaeton from...
Reggaeton.
No. It's Reggaeton. You ready? Reggaeton. You ready? Yeah, Reggaeton. inappropriate the whole thing is this is reggae this is reggae tom from reggae tom no it's reggae tom you ready reggae tom you ready yeah reggae tom
it sounds like Coldplay.
Yeah.
It's sort of Latin pop dance music.
But wait for the beat to drop.
Oh, I'll have to wait for the beat to drop.
So it's got that dancehall.
Yeah.
That beat is like dancehall.
That's the reggae bit.
Do you see what I mean?
Yeah.
No, you're right.
It wouldn't work.
Also, so hang on.
Also, Paul, it wouldn't work, but also, shit, isn't it? Yeah.
But really, though, who is Reggae Tom?
Fuck off.
There is no Reggae Tom.
So do you think I was over nasty?
Yes.
Well, she said it.
Look, it probably isn't that kind of place.
No shit, it isn't that kind of place.
Have I played one single tune in the last two hours
from, you know, after 1975?
No, I haven't.
No, I know.
No, I haven't. No, I know.
No, I haven't, sweetheart.
So, look.
Perhaps I shouldn't use terms like sweetheart.
Sweetheart and love.
Really, like, belittling terms.
Yeah, maybe.
Sorry.
I'm sorry, everyone.
Well, there you go, ladies and gentlemen.
Let's start the show.
That was Tales from the Dark.
Don't you think the show has started?
You hate me, does it?
What are you going to say?
I said this with more hateful stories.
You had hateful stories.
It wasn't hateful. Built on hate. What about the? I said this with more hateful stories. You had hateful stories. Wasn't hateful.
Built on hate.
What about the
girl who said,
when's the next
person on?
That was funny,
was it?
No.
All right.
Paul,
Paul,
Paul,
I went to the
shop just now.
No, no, no.
Because we're out of sugar.
Don't do that.
Do not do that.
We're out of sugar, yeah?
Yeah.
So I was looking.
They've got loads of white sugar.
But the brown sugar, those packets.
Demerara.
Demerara.
Yay! very well done
Demerara
Demerara
No you know what
That tickled me considerably
Ladies and gentlemen
And I'm Cockahoop
Oh it's a fucking peak moment here on Cheap Show
Wow
I'm going to take a little metal picture
Click
There we go
Demerara Demerara Now Wow I'm going to take a little metal picture Click There we go Demorera
Demorera
Now
We've peaked
See you next week everybody
It's dark in here now
Yeah I know
Oh you've got a new lamp
I've got new stuff don't I
I do have a new lamp
Yeah
It's good
Could you reach over and turn my other lamp on
I'm Reggae Tom No i thought you weren't gonna do
reggae tom i'll do a reggae tom no don't please don't all right well i'll give him another accent
then oh i'm reggae tom no i'm reggae tom please leave i'm reggae tom. Please leave. I'm Reggae Tom. Reggae Tom. Listen, you can't do music in here because, you know.
What?
Teen Yeti.
Oh, I bet you.
Did you hear about the court case he's doing?
Teen Yeti?
What do you mean?
You've not heard about this?
I heard on the TMZ website, that showbiz website,
that Teen Yeti's going through what do you call it
litigation
litigation
litigation
he's getting litigated on
with that movie that's just come out Abominable
mate I know I didn't want to bring it up
but you know
it's about a Teen Yeti
he is a Teen Yeti but he's got none of the hard edge
that Teen Yeti's been none of the hard edge that real teen yetis have been through.
No.
Are the scribbles in it?
Have they nicked the scribbles as well?
I don't know.
Well, look, I'll be going and checking it out
and reporting back to teen yeti,
because you know we've got quite close.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And if there is any kind of skiddy-eating organism
that eats poons, skiddies, even if it eats spoff.
If it sucks spoff out like a butterfly.
Spoff is like a butterfly.
No, spoff is not like a butterfly
would eat your tears, you know?
No, I've never heard of a butterfly that eats tears.
They do. Besides, it would drink
tears, wouldn't it? Yeah, they would drink it with its long kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk I like your tears
I like sweat as well
oh poo poo
shut up
they do
anyway
I'll be reporting back
but anyway
so yes
you're right
Teen Yeti is in
but I've heard it's
tore him up
because it's like
it was meant to be like
his life story
and they took the script
and changed it
made it an animated feature
it's like Bigfoot and the Hendersons.
It's all over again.
Again.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's misrepresenting Yeti culture.
Well, hopefully we can get a...
It's misrepresenting the snowman world and sanitising it.
As you know, Team Yeti's are from the streets.
He is from the hard streets of Mount Grotpants.
You know?
He had to fucking build Mount Grotpants up from his, you know...
Grassroots.
From the grassroots.
Yeah.
And anyway...
He's seen strife.
So he also is in litigation.
Yeah, it's hard that word, isn't it?
Litigation.
He's litigating.
Yeah.
He's suing.
Yeah.
And that means he is especially sensitive about music going on in the House of Pickles
environment.
And he might have to send
his bodyguard.
Oh no.
I think he's tread carefully.
You've set him off. He's coming.
Look.
Just fucking go through with this. Here we go.
He's a hulking figure.
He's hulking over.
Another one man show moment from Eli Silverman.
Hey.
Now. Hi. Hi there. Yeah. So. over. Another one-man show moment from Eli Silverman. Hey, uh, now,
hi, hi there. Uh, yeah.
Uh, so, uh,
I, uh... I am not looking you in the eyes,
Jordan. I, uh, I was, uh,
I was monitoring the, uh,
my bank of monitors that I,
I monitor.
Uh, and I heard someone
say something about reggae. There can be
no music, no artists in this place.
Oh, I'm reggae, Tom.
Now, listen here.
I'm Freddie Goon.
I have permission from the estate.
I'm reggae.
Actually, your voice is quite nice.
Yeah, I'm reggae, Tom.
It sounds like Vicky's the cat.
I'm going to change it.
I'm feeling a hardening.
There's a hardening going on right now.
Oh, I don't know why, but it's hardening.
And you know what?
On a twist, little twist in my character,
I don't get hard downstairs no more.
I don't get hard downstairs.
I get hard nips.
Now I get hard enough.
I think that's a fundamental character change flaw,
and I don't think you should do it.
I think you'll be betraying everyone.
Well, you listen to me, young man. Me? You're be betraying everyone. Well, you listen to me, young man.
Me? You're talking to me now.
No, you listen to me, young man. Yeah.
I can't control where I get hard,
whether it's downstairs, in the basement,
or if it's in the mid-range clothing area of the
department store. I'm still not convinced
this character works, Eli. I'm just going to say
that now.
Well, I've got very hard in the mid-range area. Yeah. I'm just going to say that now. Well, I've got a very hard
in the mid-range area.
Yeah.
I've got two hard-like,
bullet-like points of hard steel.
You know what?
Poking through my shirt.
Just don't do anything.
Do you know what, Mr. Goon?
Yeah?
When I hear about
your body parts hardening,
you know what happens to me
to hear that?
What happens?
I start agaping.
Things agape.
They gape open.
You got the... I'm gap Agape. Are you got some... They gape open. Are you got the...
I'm gaping wide.
Have you got...
Right now, I am agape.
Maybe you could put it like this.
Yeah.
I am wide downstairs.
You've left the fire exit wide open.
Oh, yeah. In the basement. And everyone's running out. Yeah. You've left the fire exit Wide open Oh yeah
In the basement
And everyone's running out
Yeah
Right
Okay
Now
Right
Just no more music
Alright
It's a protected area
It's a copyrighted area
House of Pickles
I can assure you
There'll be no more reggae Tom
You have to get a performance license
Yeah
If you want to perform
Any kind of music
Original music
In this whole environment.
Okay, all right, that's fine.
How about I just burn down Mount Grotpants?
Is that a threat?
No, it's a question, isn't it?
Is that a threat?
What if I burn?
If I go and order this on tape recorder,
the tape recorder,
I'm wearing a wire.
Seven minutes and we haven't done the record yet.
I'm wearing a wire.
Yeah.
I'm just warning you.
Everything's been recorded. The wire is nestling
between my...
Yeah, but don't worry because this is
a podcast and I'm recording it anyway.
Right, I'm just asking a
question. If, for instance, I knew
that Team Yeti was at home
and I burned his home down,
then I don't have to worry about
that anymore. I'll be going back.
Well, I'll tell you one thing.
Think about it this way, Goon.
Shh, shh.
What?
Yeah?
He dies.
The value of his record goes up, Elvis style.
We can make a bit of money if we cap him.
I'm not hearing this right now.
I'm not hearing this right now.
I'm going back in there.
I can pay you more than him.
Let me tell you one thing.
I can pay you more than him.
I don't take bribes.
And I'll make you hard anywhere.
I don't take bribes.
Mate, I'm just saying.
It doesn't make me, it only makes me hard when you're not cooperating.
If I gape any wider, I'll fall onto the stool.
I'll fall down through it.
The stool will fall into you.
It will fall up into me.
That's how wide I am.
Seriously, think about it.
My action's totally dropped.
Think about it, Mr. Goon.
Me and you, we can make a lot of money.
I will consider it.
We can kill off T-Yeti. I will consider it late at make a lot of money I will consider it We can kill off Team Yeti
I will consider it late at night
Yeah
And it might cause a heart attack
A heart attack
Yeah
Downstairs
Okay
Well I'm going back now
Alright
Okay
I've got your number
Alright
I'll call you
My nips are like little bullets
Just think about it
That's all I'm asking
My nips are drilling through
My t-shirt now
Team Yeti's past his peak creativity
So we'll be doing him a favour
Well well well
Well you can all say All sorts of stuff All sorts of things Team Yeti's past his peak creativity, so we'll be doing him a favour. Well, well, well.
Well, you can all say all sorts of stuff.
Why are you saying Northern?
You can all say some stuff.
Here we go, ladies and gentlemen.
Hey-o, I'm Mr. Freddy Goon.
Causing hardness.
Hardness.
Hey-o.
Goodbye.
Well, the plot thickens. He's such a hulking great man, isn't he?
Yeah, and he's very erect.
All sorts of erectness in places you wouldn't even expect.
He tried to walk past the radiator, made it sound like he was putting a bottle down the...
Ah, fuck it.
Washboard.
Yeah.
Like playing a washboard.
Let's try it again.
He's hard all over the place.
Yeah, and when he tried to get past the radiator to leave the room, he played it like a washboard.
Thank you.
Is that alright?
Yeah, it wasn't good. It wasn't worth it. He had a big dick. Right, the plot to leave the room. He played it like a washboard. Thank you. Is that alright? It wasn't good.
It wasn't worth it.
He had a big dick.
Right.
The plot thickens.
Now.
Let's start with the platters.
It's time for Silverman's Platters.
Yeah.
Paul.
And unlike on recent episodes,
I have actually sourced the platters.
Yeah, it's nice.
It makes a nice change.
Now, we're going to start with
Yeah.
Little something my flatmate picked up in a charity shop.
Do you want me to do the pee for you? I'd like to start with a little something that my flatmate picked up in a charity shop.
Now, this is by the M&O Band.
It's on the Creole label.
Are they a big name by and large?
No, absolutely never heard of them ever before.
Oh, right, okay.
Could in fact be the only thing they ever did.
Oh, that's a shame, mate.
It's on the Creole label,
which is a yellow and brown fade.
The label is both colours.
A gradient.
A gradient.
They fade into each other.
Creole, what are they?
They were British,
and I think that what they mainly specialized in was
putting out r&b disco sort of records from the american market and reissuing them into the
british market oh so it was like licensing yeah but they also have strange stuff like this which
is strange instrumental stuff and now this is a single by em and o band let's do the latin hustle is it their song no
eddie drennan i've got the eddie drennan version so eddie drennan's the original guy who wrote
the hustle no he had a single called yeah the latin hustle and the flip let's do the latin
hustle so it was a knockoff of all the popular hustle tracks it was definitely a version of the
hustle we can go into more detail but actually,
if you just want to go to YouTube,
look for Todd in the Shadows
and he does a video on
the Hustle.
Van McCoy's The Hustle,
which is the biggest
disco sort of crossover
hit of all time.
So check that out
if you want to know more.
But there was all sorts
of Hustle tunes that came along.
One of them was
the Let's Do the Latin Hustle.
Yeah.
Which is a bit
sort of a tautologist
because disco kind of
comes from Latin sources
in the first place.
Comes from Latin in the first place and the Hustle of comes from Latin sources in the first place
and the hustle
has a very Latin influence
it's like saying
oh it's the Italian pizza
yeah exactly
well
it's a bit like that
yeah
but what interests me
better than my
washboard analogy
yes
that was
didn't work
poor
very poor
that's not the
interesting side
of this single
for me
the A side
let's do the Latin hustle
the interesting
side for me is the flip which is called switchback, let's do the Latin Hustle. The interesting side for me
is the flip,
which is called Switchback.
And let's listen to a little bit
of Switchback right about now. Thank you. So yeah, it is a, I think as you said, it sounds almost like a TV theme.
Yeah, but it's got a kind of plaintiveness to the melody, which I enjoy.
A little bit Hill Street bluesy.
Yeah.
Which is strange because-
It's a bit melancholy.
There's a sort of slight melancholy which I like I think adds to it
and
it's got that fantastic
moogie bit
moog solo bit
which
it has a sort of
again
a radio phonic orchestra
kids
kind of
hitchhiker's guide
and a bit like
the hitchhiker's guide
to the galaxy
which was a little bit
of that
it's got a little bit
of that tune
wasn't it
famously
the journey of the sorcerer
something like that
it's called
that is
you know what
have you ever seen anyone
play that on the
you know like
there's a few videos
on YouTube
of people playing it
on a banjo
it's beautiful that track
well they were very
accomplished musicians
the Eagles weren't they
yeah I mean
there's a lot of people
who think the people
themselves are horrible
but the music they made
were good
but I don't know
too much about the Eagles
it was the height
of cynical LA culture
in the 70s
when they were doing all of that.
Okay.
It was all a bit sort of...
They were like the oasis of their time.
Yeah, the peace and love had totally gone out of the...
Music.
...by then, you know, and it was just very slick.
It's adult-orientated rock.
I don't care for the Eagles that much.
You know, you can see it's good.
The thing about the Eagles is,
because their songs are so long,
they were great to time out pre-rec shows
when I was working for a radio station.
So they were useful.
Six minutes, and I can't put two minutes on.
Oh, the Eagles are six minutes and 15 seconds.
They're really useful.
We'll talk about Oasis, all the tunes on Be Here Now.
About five, six minutes on.
I can't believe how terrible that one that's a rip-off of Hey Jude is.
Well, yeah, what is it?
All Around the World.
Wow.
All Around the World. Yeah. All Around the World.
Yeah, nine minutes.
Fucking terrible.
And it feels like it.
And then there's a reprise
of two minutes
at the end of the album as well
where we get that again.
More than two minutes.
I think Noel Gallagher's even said
that's the album you make
when you're arrogant,
on coke,
and no one says no to you.
Yeah.
Because that's exactly the album you make.
Indulge and wank.
Disastrous. But that Hitchhiker's Guide to to you. Yeah. Because that's exactly the album. You make indulgent wank. Disastrous.
But that Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy song.
Yeah.
Was it the actual Eagles version
that they played on the soundtrack?
I don't believe it is.
No.
I don't believe it is.
I think it's a bit more electronic sounding
the one they did, isn't it?
Because it doesn't sound like the Eagles.
They're not known for their synthy stuff,
are they?
But I like that switchback by M&O Band
and it says produced by martin and owen
um sorry murphine and owen so that's the m and o are as well you can see in the bracket it says
murphine and owen so that's who the m and o are yeah so it sounds like to me like they're like
session plays because the two songs are so drastically different yeah they must be and
it's very library music-esque isn't it and it's teetering on easy listening sort of lift music almost, isn't it?
So imagine selling that.
But it's got something to it.
I like it.
And it's that sweet spot for me in between library music.
And also, I love the obscurity of it.
It's just a tune they obviously just did
because they had to put something on the flip of this single.
It's like, yeah, no, great A-side.
Your Latin hustle's really good.
Now, your B-side.
Your what?
Your B-side.
You know, you're some...
I don't... Your what? B-side, you know what? Your B-side, you know, you're some, I don't,
you know what?
B-side?
What's that mean?
Yeah.
Well, records have two sides.
Yeah, I know.
So what do you put on the other?
Yeah.
B-sides?
That's it.
You don't have that,
the strictures of the format actually led to
a sort of type of music,
which is the throwaway flip.
Muzak or.
Yeah, the throwaway,
and there's lots of examples.
Recently on, one that we've covered is Goldie by...
What's he called?
Simon Groom.
Peter Groom.
Simon Groom.
But there's also songs about being on a B-side.
There's that Chaz and Dave song about being on the B-side.
I think it's called Wallop.
I might be wrong.
No, it's not Wallop.
There's an extremely famous psych rock single by Tin Turn Abbey.
Oh, this sounds familiar.
Go on.
And the B-side is called B-side.
Oh.
But it's a fantastic tune in its own right.
There's also Eric Morkman-Wiser's The B-side.
Yeah, so it was a thing, wasn't it?
Yeah.
But that Simon Groom one was definitely just his it was a thing, wasn't it? Yeah. But that Simon Green one was definitely just his producer
just did something, didn't he?
Simon, your first song, good cover, very good cover.
We need something for your B-side.
You what?
B-side?
You what?
You've got to put something on the B-side.
Yeah.
You what?
You what, B-side?
I've got to do another song.
Now, this could be a character call. yeah you what you what I've got to do another song now
yeah
and the other thing
that comes to mind
I don't know
if we've ever
covered it on the show
but there was
Chalk Dust
remember Chalk Dust
by the Brats
which was
no
you do
it's
is it a song
yes
it's the Michael McEnroe
piss take
when he was like
oh we've done it
on the show
I don't think we have
I think we did it on Clickables that's what I'm saying years ago anyway there's um there's a it's
a novelty song about john mackinrow losing his shit umpire strikes back yeah yeah it's called
the umpire strikes back and it's a weird rap spoken thing but the flip is again just a muse
uh an instrumental that they obviously just do you you know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But this is a good example of it, because I think this has some merit.
It has a kind of...
It's nice.
It's a nice little track.
I will say that.
There's now Special Aboot It.
And the second platter we're going to cover...
Oh, you're going to rate it out of how many platters?
I'd give it three and a half.
I like it.
3.8, maybe.
All right, I'll go with three.
I like the mood.
It's sort of a bit...
It's pleasant.
Yeah.
The only problem is,
right, for me,
is that if that's on a compilation,
like on an album,
you can go with it.
But because it's a B-side,
how many times
are you ever going to play it?
You know what I mean?
It's weird when you get music
so disposable.
Yeah.
You get slapped on a B-side.
It's like,
you don't do easy listening that way
by playing all the B-sides
of something.
Well, personally,
I think I could use it
as a sort of bed
when I'm doing a radio show or something. Well, personally, I think I could use it as a sort of bed when I'm doing a radio
show or something.
Yeah, it's got that. Coming up later tonight
on Jazz FM.
I like that type of incidental music.
Next track is
similar, is a B-side
that didn't
appear anywhere else.
Yeah. And it's called Tumpy.
Tumpy!
Oh, we nearly played it a few episodes ago
but now
we've brought Tumpy back
oh haven't we
just brought it back
Tumpy's back
and this is on
guess who's back
Tumpy's back
this is on BBC
records and tapes
which I collect
yeah Eli
does like
his BBC records label
the singles
yeah
I love the singles.
There's all sorts of shit.
Classic blue label.
All sorts of stuff, but mainly it's stuff from their shows, wasn't it, really?
Yeah, like the composers who had made the songs for theme tunes.
Yes, but they also had their subsidiary, Beeb Records.
Did they?
I'm sure we've covered that before, but yeah, go on.
Yeah, Beeb, which had sort of, I think they actually put stuff out that wasn't on TV
that was just sort of
yeah
anyway this is
George Fenton
the A side
is Shoestring
which was a
detective show
which is a detective show
but obviously
he had
this guy George Fenton
had detective show
themes
coming out of his arse
because he's also
put a fucking good
detective show theme
on the other side
and it's not
connected to any detective show.
Yeah.
It's called Tumpy.
Should we listen to a bit of that right now, Paul?
Let's listen to Tumpy right now. Thank you. bass solo We like Tumpy.
Tumpy's good, isn't it?
Tumpy, yeah.
You can definitely imagine a show going with that.
What kind of show would it be?
Because obviously it's a show that will never be made.
It'd be like this.
Well, no, let's work out the genre first and then move into the scene.
I want to get a picture of where your mind is.
Okay.
All right, so where are we?
This is my pitch here.
Tumpy is a northern coroner, an autopsy doctor,
who gets involved in local crimes and murders.
And he smokes fags.
No, I don't see that.
I see Tompy as like a minder character.
Like he's the guy, he's like, there's a market stalls,
and he's the guy who you go to to get stuff done.
He's a finder?
Yeah, he's like a jack-of-all-trades.
He's like, oh, mate, when are we going to get some tea towels?
Let's do the first scene.
Oh, Tumpy knows.
So I'll be Tumpy, yeah.
Play the theme tune.
Here we go.
And now on BBC One, it's time for another episode of Tumpy. Get your pellets.
Love your pellets.
Got pellets here.
All right.
All right, darling.
I'll buy some pellets, love.
Oh, you're looking lovely today, Mrs Ginny.
Oh, thank you.
Oh, great tits. Brilliant. Love them.. Oh, thank you. Oh, great tits.
Brilliant. Love them. Jubbly, jubby.
Up, up, up. Downy, downy. And they
don't leak no more. Oh, that's good.
Because they were leaking all over my stuff.
I had to slap you. Yeah, didn't you
just? Anyway, move on.
Move on. Bye. Bye.
I didn't want to buy pellets. No, you can't buy no
pellets. They're for men. Pellets.
Pellets. Oh, hello, John.
Hello.
What's going on then, John? I'm Tumpy.
What's that?
Something I do. You tap your chest and go... Often when I solve a crime or...
Well, listen, Tom P.
Yes, John, what?
What is it, John?
Come behind the screen.
Come behind the screen at the back of the stall.
Now I've come behind the screen,
and now it's time to talk to you.
I'm sorry.
Sorry about that, everybody.
Anyway.
Yes, Tom P., what?
I've heard a little bird's toad.
I'm Tom P., sorry.
Tom P., I...
What is it, mate? Fucking let me get a word out. Well, get a word out, then. I've heard a little bird's told me. I'm Tom P. Sorry. Tom P. What is it, mate?
Fucking let me get a word out.
Well, get a word out, then.
I've got a fucking stool to run here.
A little bird's told me.
I've got sexist pennies.
Shut your fucking cakehole.
All right.
You've got my attention now, John.
Thank you.
Now, a little bird's told me.
Oh, yeah?
What bird?
That you've come into possession of a certain suitcase full of wind-up yapping dogs.
Oh, I may have.
I may not have.
They may be here on the premises.
They may be somewhere else.
Yip, yip, yip, yip, yip, yip, yip, yip.
Shut up, you little fuckers.
Well, I just wanted to point out
that I've recently lost
a suitcase full of wind-up yappy
doggies, and I find it very interesting.
John, I can't help you, mate.
You'll have to go now. I've got a cube
building. I see in the
corner of your little market stall there
you've got a little vibrating
box of yapping
items. Oh, the yapping frogs.
Let me have a look. Er, I'll have
to, yeah, alright then. Or I'll break
your thumbs off and stick them up your
ass. Come over here, lean over, have a look
in this suitcase. I've promised, mate. John,
I'm honest.
They are frogs.
They're frogs.
I've gotten them off Rigby Phil.
Well, Rigby Phil is currently face down in the Thames.
What?
Yeah, he crossed me one too many times.
Face down in the Thames?
Yeah, he's face down in the Thames.
In the Thames, face down.
He's face down in the Thames.
What's wrong with that?
He's dead.
He was treading on thin water. I had to give him a push. Just the Thames, face down. He's face down in the Thames. What's wrong with that? He's dead. He was treading on thin water.
I had to give him a push.
Just lean over here, John.
All right, well, I'll have a look.
I promise, mate, they're yapping frogs.
They're yapping frogs.
All good.
You can have a few if you like.
Here we go.
Let's have a look.
You can have a few because it's all good between me and you.
Let me just say this to you, Tumpy.
If I open this suitcase and there is even one yapping dog in there,
I'm going to rip your balls out,
make you eat them.
That's perfectly understood.
Have you shit out your balls.
I'll shit my balls out.
I'll put my balls in a sandwich.
I'll blend it down.
You'll put your balls in a sandwich?
Yeah, I've lost...
Your balls are getting involved.
I'm confused.
Someone's eating balls.
Right, just lean over here.
Right.
A bit further.
A bit further. Bit further.
Fuck off, Jordan.
I got you yapping dogs and I'm out of here.
Chompy!
And scene.
And scene.
Well, I can't wait to see what happens next week
on another
edition
edition of
Tumpy
Tumpy
there we go
I like that
I'm going to give that
do you have anything
about the artist
who made it
nothing
George Fenton
George Fenton
he obviously is a TV
composer
yeah
he's probably done a lot
of stuff
namely Shoestring
Shoestring he did
do you want to do
some research
on George Fenton
yes let's have a little
bit of background there
let's do that George Fenton? Yes, let's have a little bit of background there, Paul.
Let's do that.
George Fenton, composer.
Ooh, English composer, best known for working on the BBC series
The Blue Planet and Planet Earth.
So he's done all that recently, hasn't he?
That's good.
He's done TV and radio jingles for all kinds of BBC thing.
Feature films. He's done Gandhi. He did Gandhi? Okay, so he's That's good. He's done TV and radio jingles for all kinds of BBC's thing.
Feature films.
He's done a Gandhi.
He did Gandhi?
Okay, so he's a big deal.
Shadowlands.
Cry Freedom.
The Madness of King George.
A lot of big Brit films.
The kind of, yeah,
when British films are known for being arty
but also commercial.
Yeah, prestige.
Prestigious.
What else?
Company of Wolves.
High Spirits.
Not all winners. What was High Spirits. Not all winners.
What was High Spirits?
It was that comedy with Peter O'Toole and Steve Guttenberg and Daryl Hannah.
Wasn't it very good?
It came out in that whole kind of supernatural comedy craze of the 80s.
They were ghosts.
Like Beetlejuice and Ghostbusters and things.
So Guttenberg plays an American tourist who goes to, I think, a Scottish castle.
I vaguely remember this.
Liam Neeson's in it as well playing the angry ghost
who every night
kills Daryl Hannah
because they're the ghosts
and then one day
Steve Guttenberg
interrupts that play out
and who directed?
oh
Mel Smith or something
no
but I think it was like
one of those
you know one of those directors
who made a lot of films
for Ealing
and then made the
yeah yeah
but I might be wrong
oh god
Neil Jordan
was director of
The Crying Game and The the company of wolves and things
like that oh there you go so he's done a lot that tumpy chain's pretty good i like it i like tumpy
we all like a bit of tumpy we do yeah let's you know what we're hoping we're hoping that it goes
like winky it's tumpy winky tumpy winky then we need a fourth one called Splat. Yeah. And that's a kid's show. Tumpy and Winky and Splat went for a trip to Bibbly Bob Forest.
Yes.
And then Splat goes, I've got a secret, and took Winky behind a tree.
And all you can hear is Winky say.
I'm cutting that out.
Right.
Right.
So.
Shall we move on with the next Splatter Platter?
It's the platter that keeps that matter.
And let's not forget who the patron saint of this segment is.
Yes.
Clyde McFatter.
Matt Clyde McFatter, who makes the platters that matter.
Yes, he certainly does.
And he sponsors our platters.
And he's a Matt Hatter.
Well, I don't know.
Sorry, I keep touching the thing.
You're going to get electric shock.
Right.
Right.
So, oh, this is off.
Moving on.
Do you want to introduce This bit of the
Platter section
I'll start with that one
I reckon
Because that's going to be
A tangent isn't it really
Yes
Long story short
Eli shows me an album today
That he bought in a record shop
For four pound
It's called
Quite a lot
But it's the type of thing
That I thought might work
On the show
And here we are doing it Paul
So it's money well spent
I think so
Because it's called
Clinton the Clown
And the album cover
Is an old man with grey hair
and on one side of his face, just face.
But on the second side of his face,
clown makeup. Again, there'll be pictures on our
website if you want to check that out. It's unusual to
number the sides of his face.
One part of his face, two, second side
of his face. Okay. First side
of his face,
and then the second side of his face. Okay, thank you.
And I looked at it thinking,
first of all,
like you did,
it sounds like an American guy.
It looks extremely
American because
he's called
Clinton Ford.
Yeah,
that's his name,
the artist.
And what's the other guy?
George Chisholm.
That sounds very American.
And it sounds like
Chisholm.
George Chisholm.
And also,
there's a band
called
George Chisholm.
No,
no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, George Chisholm. And also there's a band. No, no, no. No.
George.
I don't know what I'm talking about.
George. I don't know what I'm talking about.
It comes out of my mouth.
I'm not kidding.
George Chisholm.
It comes out of my mouth.
Here's a tissue.
If you just go and...
Please.
But I thought it must be American
because of the American sounding names
and the band's called The Inmates
and also the second side of his face
which has got the clown thing on
is red, white and blue.
And it looks a little bit like
John Wayne Gacy.acy yeah it's a
bit creepy except john wayne gacy only used angles no curves on his face that's why he was yeah
because that's why it was kind of off because a lot of clowns his ocd was no it's just his design
was to look like that and a lot of clowns professionally would say that's weird there's
no there's no corners there's no curves sorry there's no yeah anyway that's no curves. Sorry, there's no... Anyway, that's a by the by.
So, you hadn't listened to it before we checked it out tonight.
I hadn't.
I just picked it up the other day.
So, let's play the first track of this album,
because I think it will give the listeners a perfect idea
of the complete tone of the album.
Yes.
And it goes like this.
It's called My Baby's Wild About My Old Trombone.
And it goes like this.
It's called My Baby's Wild About My Old Trombone.
Clinton Ford and George Chisholm,
taken from the original cylinder on Pye Records.
My baby's wild about my old trombone And she goes
She even plays it when we're all alone
And she goes
She blows it smooth
She blows it smooth She blows it hot
Her loving man
She's quite forgot
My baby's wild about my old trombone
And she goes
Grandpapa had left me an old trombone in his will
For years and years it hung upon the wall
And to his loving memory it would have hung there still
If my loving baby hadn't come to call
And that's kind of what it is.
Now, it's throwback comedy Dixieland music.
I don't know if it's Dixie,
because it's a little bit kind of musical.
Musical, Dixieland.
It's all that pre-World War II music, isn't it?
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
To spin off into many tangents,
it's like, this is the sound that Bonzo Dog started out doing.
Bonzo Dog doodah.
They were doing a lot of these kind of covers and things.
You even look at some of their own songs, like Jollity Farm.
It's on that
template, the old 30s, 40s music
template. And I guarantee they covered
the old Bizarre in Cairo and things like that.
Now that's the second tune, the old Bizarre in Cairo.
Shall we have a bit of that one as well? Let's have a little bit of that one. ¶¶
¶¶ Slave girls, thin girls, summer little fluff. Slave girls sold here, fifty bubble lump. In the old bazaar in Cairo.
Randy, shandy, beer without a froth.
Graces, laces, a candle for the moth.
That you'd look a dolly in an old loincloth.
In the old bazaar in Cairo.
You can buy most any anything.
Thin bulls, fat cows, a little bit of string.
You can purchase anything you wish.
A clock, a dish, and something for your auntie.
Fanny harem, scarum, what do you think of that?
Benny Striptease dancing on the mat.
Hoop-pa, hoop-pa.
That's enough of that in the old bazaar in Cairo.
So very much a pastiche of the middle, of, you know, the Oriental.
So it's not particularly politically correct these days.
No.
It did make me think of our friend, Derek.
And his bone hoover.
Yeah.
You can be a little bit of a groover
by yourself, a little bone hoover
down in the old bazaar in Cairo.
It could have been in there.
I mean, if he'd said bone hoover,
then it would have led some credence
to Derek's story,
wouldn't it?
Well, very much so.
You've got to mention,
we've listened to it
all the way through,
there's no way to mention it.
So, it's like
a collection of old standards,
you know, songs
that were popular
back in the day
and a few new songs
that they've written
for this style.
In that style.
But it is meant to be comedy
and am I right in thinking
this guy, George Clinton Ford, not George Clinton.
No, yes, different one.
Clinton Ford was known for Skiffle.
Apparently, he started out as a red-coated Butlins, then got involved with Skiffle,
was involved with some kind of jazz Dixie band kind of thing called the Mersey Sippy.
Trad Brit jazz was all about that, wasn't it?
And was on the rise all the time,
same time the Beatles were playing at the Caverns.
And then it's like,
because apparently like George Chisholm was a famous jazz musician.
And if I remember rightly,
he was briefly part of like the Goon Show band.
The Goon Show.
And again, you can hear the Goons in this as well.
So that's comedy music or music for comedy.
It was like this idea of like modern Britain being satirical, viral, musical numbers.
That they could be cheeky, but go give it a wink.
You listen to all the songs Bill Oddie wrote for them,
sorry, I'll read that again, and they're of this style.
It's that style.
But with a twist, you know, a kind of wink at the audience.
It will be vulgar and rude and suggestive.
It's that sort of post-war looking at the music from earlier in the century.
And subverting it.
And using it to be a bit naughty.
To be a bit naughty.
I mean, Python.
Eric Idle does that kind of thing as well.
Yeah, I mean...
There's a rich tradition of this sort of comedy jazz music,
I guess you'd call it, wouldn't you?
And Britain doesn't really make these songs.
I mean, these kind of comedy songs probably died alongside...
Say, died alongside, but the waning popularity, the importance of Python.
Right.
That music went out with that.
Yeah.
But it's weird.
There's nothing like that.
No.
And I love it.
You had Bonzo's, obviously.
But then as they went on, they moved behind from this and became much more art pop or whatever you want to call it.
But this guy, this is his only comedy music album.
way I want to call it.
But this guy,
this is his only comedy music album.
he released a song
called,
oh,
what was it fucking called?
Fanny.
Fat Fanny.
Hang on,
it's written right here,
hang on.
Sloppy,
sloppy.
Fan Like Fanny.
Sloppy Big Mott.
What's it called?
Fan Like Fanny.
Fan Like Fanny,
which was a song
made popular by George Formby
in the 20s.
Right.
And he did a cover.
Formby did sort of comedy music as well, didn't he?
I mean, it's all part of the same heritage.
It's all Max Miller, George Formby.
But the real difference these days is comedy isn't music anymore.
They used to sort of exist in almost the same...
Well, it's seen as novelty music these days.
Yeah, but that doesn't really exist.
That isn't made anymore.
Goldilocks and Chain, you could argue, fits into that heritage in a very distant way.
Lonely Island, you know, the American band.
Flight of the Conchords, you could also argue, have a bit of it as well.
Absolutely.
No, I'm wrong.
No, you're not wrong, but it's not popular because it's seen as twee.
Stand-up has been given this kind of legendary representation of what comedy has to be now.
And so everything else, sketch, slapstick, music, parody, mime, whatever, falls to a lesser state.
It's a shame.
Yeah, it is a shame because I think comedy is richer when there's more access to variety.
Yes.
And you had that variety in the 60s, 70s, and in the 80s.
But then in the 80s, mostly to the american influence of people like andrew dice clay
but you know what i mean it's like they made it rock and roll eddie murphy made stand-up rock and
roll and then that carried over to britain which is why newman and badil became the first uk rock
and roll comedy did they have any singles newman newman and badil uh possibly they may well have
done mightn't they all badil did do you know he's back? Four lines. Three lines. Two lines.
How many lines?
One line on my arse.
No.
Ben Elton's touring again.
My arsehole is gaping.
Ben Elton's touring again.
Yeah.
I always thought he was a good stand-up, Ben Elton.
He was a good stand-up.
It was funny.
He's just a weird, I don't know.
He's a strange guy.
He's a guy who's lost his edge because I think he doesn't need to have one anymore.
Yeah, but that's what he was saying.
I heard in an interview.
He's like, oh, but you're not going to be edgy.
He's like, I never was.
I was quite mainstream from the start.
Do you know what I mean?
He's just using the word
knobs and willies a lot, really.
It was a bit like Jasper Carrot or something.
Just like a sort of solid gag writer.
Well, he was an outlier to that whole movement
because Ben Elton was often,
because he was seen with Rick and Adelot
and they wrote together at Manchester University
and worked together.
When they kind of ended up crossing paths with the Oxbridge types,
you know, it was Frying Laurie.
Yes.
Those worlds.
So he dipped in and out because things like Blackadder were like the crossover
between those two types of comedy.
He was never part of any of those worlds, Elton, was he?
I would say in all fondness, he was a journeyman comedian.
Yes.
He did everything...
I'd say he was a very good joke...
It's like Alan Carr
or Jimmy Carr.
I'd say he was a very good
joke writer, Ben Elton.
Yeah.
But like, to be honest,
no sitcom he's ever done
since Blackadder
has ever appealed to me.
I don't like that
Shakespeare one.
Thin Blue Line, did he do?
I don't like the Thin Blue Line.
It's just...
It's all a little bit twee.
And his novels are sort of
a bit pulpy and formulaic.
But I mean, Popcorn was the big
one for him. Anyway, it's interesting to
me that he's starting to do stand-up again.
Yeah, good luck to that millionaire
living in Australia. Oh, a little bit of politics,
ladies and gentlemen. Thatcher, a little bit of politics.
Oh, standing in line at the queue.
Oh, politics, a little bit of politics.
Anyway. I wrote Blackadder.
I made it good. Okay. I've got
one of his LPs, Motormouth,
with a little booklet. It's in very good condition.
Now... Oh, it's right there.
Can you see it? Now, he's gone
to the shelf of my comedy LPs.
Motormouth. It's good, that, isn't it? It's got
the original sticker. Yeah. It's all very
mint on card. I miss that. I miss the proper
comedy album. Look at that little book I've got in there.
That's lovely. Yeah, and look, it's got...
Look, you know what I'm saying?
Poster, yeah.
This is some posters in here with him,
with Rick...
Rick Mayle.
Rick Mayle, yeah.
And Ben Elton.
So they used to work together themselves.
Yeah.
But obviously, you've got to remember,
Ben Elton was brought in for The Young Ones.
He was brought in for Filthy Witch and Cat Flap.
He just knew how to write for Rick Mayle and Ade Edmondson.
That's quite a nice piece, isn't it?
It's a lovely piece, actually, that. But it's just his a nice piece, isn't it? It's a lovely piece, actually.
But it's just his stand-up, isn't it?
I don't think he does any remixes of his songs,
like Rapping Ronnie. No, I think it's a couple of his gigs
or one gig. So this is going to
add to my comedy album, this
Clinton the Clown.
For me, it falls between
two stools, Paul.
It's not funny, and it's not
music-y enough. Do you see what I mean?
It's funny in a way
that would make
60-year-old women
in a theatre
in Margate laugh
in 1960
on the pier.
They might titter.
It's that kind of thing.
But it's from 1968,
this album.
Yes, it is.
So did he have,
this Clinton Ford guy,
did he have more success
with this comedy stuff
later in his career,
I guess?
I think the overall gist
from what I understand
is that
after the relative success
of this song
because originally
his release of Fan Like Fanny
was the big hit
that got his name noticed
and that's about this
this
lady of ill repute
who was a
a nightclub singer
and a piss head
and a thief
and probably a prostitute
heavily in furs
and then they remade it for this and called
it uh what's it called in this and fan dance fanny to update it a little bit because you're the whole
fan dance now for me it's not also just not absurd or surreal enough not quite enough the closest
they get is my baby's wild about my old trombone which is very spike jonesy yes now let's we're
gonna have a listen to a bit of Spike Jones. It'd be...
You can't talk about comedy music, I don't think,
unless you talk about Spike Jones. No.
Who came for... It was earlier
than these guys, obviously. I think he was working in the
40s. Do you know what? It's a good point. I don't know
very much about Spike Jones.
I'd just kind of take it as read. He's a band leader.
Yeah. Like Glenn Miller and things like that at the time.
And I think he was a...
What do they call it americanized jew i think
his real name is spike jawansky or something oh okay yeah yeah yeah and then that's why he put
his most famous tune is uh in the fuhrer's face which is uh basically a big attack in the
send up of hitler and uh that's well known but he had had this whole, basically, comedy orchestra.
And he used to have a TV show as well, Spike Jonze.
And for me, he's the ultimate because he really is absurd.
It just delights in these stupid noises.
Like cacophony of sound, isn't it, at times?
And it's very cartoony.
It's got that Tom and Jerry feel to it, you know what I mean?
He invented instruments just for making a stupid noise
on a record.
So he's got this sort of absurdist,
completely just ridiculous,
silliness,
screwball.
A discordant,
screwball-y kind of sound
with the kind of Tom and Jerry
Foley aesthetic as well.
Yeah, they've got Foley
sort of sound effect things going on.
Yeah.
And just,
but also really tight,
well-drilled musicianship as well
do you know what i mean yeah and it's all it's brilliant it's like it's what i like it's that
professional unprofessionalism yeah it was like they work very hard to sound that yeah
cacophony stick now i've got this lp go crazy with spike jones and it's got spike and he's
looking he's doing the dog
what's it
the HMV dog
he's pretending to be a dog
it's almost a
Mad Magazine style
cartoon
illustration
you can see this
on our website guys
and we're going to have
a bit of the first
tune on this
which is called
it just cracks me up
thinking about it
oh he's very
taken with this
I love it
I Kissed Your Hand Madame and here this. I love it. I kissed your hand, madame.
And here it goes right now.
In dreams I kiss your hand, madame.
And pray my dreams come true.
In I your madame Your dainty tits
And while in her land madame
I'm begging for your I haven't any
Madame
To the things I
Just when I hold you
Madame
You vanish with the Yes.
Now, as we've learned...
I love it because...
That noise.
You know, he had a whole noise.
Yeah, what is that?
It's like drinking.
It's like...
Yeah, it's like a...
And also just the...
You can't go wrong with a boing.
Or a slide whistle.
That noise cracks me up.
And it's got a slide whistle in there as well.
It's got everything you need.
And what I like about this is that the song is, and I would stand this,
it's like a song that's been covered by...
It's a German song, I think you said, isn't it?
I can't remember.
There's a film.
There's a black and white film called, whatever the song's called,
Kiss My Hand, My Lovely, or whatever.
I Kiss Your Hand, Madame.
Madame.
And I don't know if the song's based on that film,
but it's been covered by Bing Crosby and all these crooners.
And this is the subversion of that very soppy.
So I can only imagine it would have been like the Everything I Do, I Do For You song of the 1930s.
Yes.
He totally subverts.
That's the other thing I love about Spike Jonze.
There's an actual anarchism to it.
There's a real actual subversive element
to how ridiculous it is.
Do you know what I mean?
Did he ever score movies or anything like that?
You know what I mean? I think he may have or anything like that? You know what I mean?
I think he may have worked
with the Marx Brothers.
Spike Jonze.
Let me just have a quick look at this.
His name was Lindley Armstrong Jonze,
or known as Spike Jonze,
an American musician and band leader
specialising in satirical arrangements
of popular songs and classical music.
Ballads receiving the Jonze treatment
were punctuated by gunshots, whistles, cowbells
and outlandish and comedic vocals,
which again is another thing they do.
Lots of kind of tongue-in-cheek singing.
On this track, there's a bit of a sort of piss-take,
cool jazz beatnik character almost, isn't there?
He's like, come back to my pad, baby.
All of this sort of.
Yeah, it's like, I'll kiss your hand
because I can't stand your breath.
Yeah, that's the end.
Which is a great way.
He did a few little films, but not much.
Mostly just doing bits.
And he had a TV show, right?
He had a TV show, yeah.
There you go.
And the All-Star Review, which in 1952, before giving his own slot by NBC, called The Spike
Jones Show, which happened in 54.
So yeah, in 1990.
There's famously a band, a tune by the band, where he goes, he was watching Spike Jonze on the box.
One of the lyrics.
Oh, well there you go.
Later years.
Decline of big bands and the rise of rock and roll hurt his career.
No shit.
He couldn't lampoon them in the same way.
He played rock music for laughs when he presented,
for the first time on television, the bottom half of Elvis Presley.
This was his cue for a pair of pants inhabited by a dwarf actor,y barty to scamper across the stage that would have been good so all
you see are a pair of pants running across the stage that would have been good yeah
uh yeah so so spike joe's definitely related um to the clinton uh ford record um it's all of that
it's that whole lineage that that whole sound I love.
I'm a big fan of it.
I like Jim Dale's
Mother song,
which is a spoof of that.
And like the goodies
did a few like
taking my oyster for walkies
and songs like that.
Songs that have that kind of
end of the pier,
small,
traditional,
but sort of with
saucy songs,
bit cheeky.
Yeah,
it's just totally disappeared
all of that stuff.
And what a shame that is.
Yes. Maybe we should come up with our own song.
I'll call it Sloppy Hole Fanny.
No, no, we've got to do...
Sloppy Bucket. Sloppy Bucket.
It's got to be suggested, but still blunt.
Oh, I had a gal called Vajaji.
And everywhere she went's the smell.
I smell your fanny you know what it's lost
the innuendo when you just
say I can smell your fanny
it needs to be
a song like
go down the chip shop
my love
your legs are so open
and wide
I smell your chips
Stop saying you'll smell a lady's part
Stop it
The song needs to be called something like
I smell your chips
Shut up
Put some vinegar on those chips my dear
The song is like
I'll let you hold my pencil
But I prefer you to touch my wand.
It's that kind of thing.
It's got to be.
I'm no good at that.
You know, you're just, I've got a fake on my shoulder.
Well, it's funny you should say that because a certain T.Y. is working on a new song.
Is he?
Licky, Licky, Fanny, Fanny.
No, well, we're going to ban that.
What do you mean we're going to ban it?
I'm not going to have a song released under the Cheap Show record label called Licky, Licky,icky Fanny Fanny? No, well, we're going to ban that. What do you mean we're going to ban it? I'm not going to have a song released under the Cheap Show record label
called Licky Licky Fanny Fanny.
Well, you know who the owner of the label is, so.
Yeah, I know.
And we're not bringing him into it.
Brandoff is trying to buy the rights to Cheap Show.
And then it'll become Richard Brandoff's Cheap Show.
That'd be good.
No, it fucking wouldn't.
Well, at least maybe I'd get some more things to do.
I would if you did anything.
But you don't.
Shut up.
You just sit there and everyone to the right go,
Spoffy, wanky, cussy, pussy, fanny, wanky, licky, big, big.
That's good.
That's what you do.
Can I have that?
Can I have that?
Can you say that again or write it down?
I can't remember what I said.
Spoffy, what is it?
Spoffy, woffy.
Spoffy, woffy, licky.
No, I'm just saying, licky, licky, bicky.
Sticky, licky. Fanny. Fanny, wanny. I don'toffy. No, I'm just taking... Licky? Licky Bicky? Sticky Licky...
Fanny?
Fanny Wanny.
I don't fucking know.
Right, Paul.
Is that the end of that segment?
That's the end of this segment.
It's story time, Paul.
Is it?
Come on, boys and girls.
Come and sit down.
No, no, no.
Come and sit down by story time Paul and story time Eli.
No. Come and sit down. Sit down. I'm not doing this sit down by Storytime Paul and Storytime Eli. No.
Come and sit down.
Sit down.
I'm not doing this bit.
Sit down.
Paul.
What?
Can we just...
Step outside the podcast.
Yeah, just...
Let's...
Let's open the hatch.
No, you can't just mind me.
You have to do the sound.
I'm going to put a sound effect in.
It's better, isn't it?
I'm going to open the sound effect. okay paul yeah we're up here on top of the podcast yeah um i just want to say yeah the
whole thing with the little boys and girls what's wrong that's why you tell stories to
no you tell stories to children of all ages all No, you tell stories to children of all ages. All right, well, then I'll say children of all ages.
Can we go back in?
Can we go back in?
Yeah.
I'll go down after you.
All right.
I'm just going to have a little thing.
All right, I'm going down then.
I'm going down.
All right, here we go.
See you there.
I'll see you in a sec.
Yeah.
Cunt.
He's such a cunt, I swear.
One more time.
One more thing.
All right, I'm going back in the podcast.
Sound effect.
Okay. Oh, you're back. Yeah.
But you know, there's someone
milling around here, Paul.
Oh, yeah. There's someone milling around.
He's heard story time.
Yeah.
And I think he just, all right, story time, Grandad.
Oh, yes, so I do.
So I am.
Why are your favourite characters the worst ones?
So I am, story time, Grandad.
I'll tell you something.
I'll tell you a little story.
Yeah.
In the war.
It was way back in some war I was in, right?
Chewing testicles.
Just get to the bit where you chew testicles.
I was starving to death.
So I was starving.
I was hungry. Hungry like a fox.
Yeah, go on.
So, what's a man to do?
So what's he to do?
So, what's he to do, so to say?
You don't know, do you?
I'll tell you what I did.
Go on.
I'll tell you.
It's a story I tell.
I tell everyone, so I do.
Your Irish accent comes in and out, but go on.
So I do.
Tell them that story.
I am not Irish, so I'm not.
I used to eat people's genitals.
I used to do it for fun, so I did.
War is just a pretext.
I'm Storytime Grandad.
Why don't we just call you Genital Grandad?
Genital Muncherman!
Genital Munchydownman!
Genital Grandad.
Genital Grandad, I like it, so I do.
So now you can just drop the pretense of telling a story.
I like to eat.
I cannibalise other people's genitals.
And every now and then, just turn up on the podcast and just say,
I eat balls.
And then just go.
I'm going.
Save us some time.
I feel rejuvenated.
I'm no longer a grandad.
Just an eater of bollocks and vaginas.
Hang on, who's this coming in?
I've never seen this guy before.
Who's coming? Oh, who's this coming in? I've never seen this guy before. Who's coming?
Oh, it's Tall Tale Tommy.
And I'm telling tall tales to I am.
I don't like this guy.
And what I like to do is I eat the plop plops.
That's what I do.
You eat the plop plops?
I eat the plop.
I was in the war, you know.
Who are?
So it was.
And I was in the war and I ate poo.
That's basically what you do.
So if you're looking at me right now
looking unimpressed,
that's why I look at you.
I'll tell you something right now.
Oh, I'm called Tail Tommy
with me tails in...
Fuck him!
...eaten scat.
You've got your characters.
Everyone likes your characters.
No one likes your second-rate
knock-off characters.
That's it.
The only thing that gives me life
in this podcast
is doing my
knock-off Eli characters.
He eats poo poo does he
that's not as good yours eat balls how is that clever in the war so did mine he had to eat poo
no he's to survive no he had to eat the turds so i did let's just get on with this you've ruined it
you've murkied the waters have i or have i just pointed out to you in very clear terms
he's not nuanced he's's not. Nothing you ever do
is nuanced.
You don't know
what nuance means.
I'm 12-tail Tommy.
Fuck 12-tail Tommy.
And I eat the scat.
Yeah.
I'm the scat man.
No.
I'm the scat man. Nom, nom, nom, nom, nom, talking of terrible pop music,
someone on Twitter said,
I can't believe Eli hates... Right, said Fred.
Yeah, but it's...
Defends Aqua.
I will defend Aqua
from here until the day I die.
I think Aqua were the best of their time.
I would agree with you. I like
Right Said Fred, but they don't hold a
candle to Aqua. That was much better.
Barbie Girl is one of the greatest
singles of that era,
I'd say. Come on Barbie, let's go party.
Because that is incredibly brilliant.
The bald guy is like, yeah, party, let's go party. I love say. Come on, Barbie, let's go party. Because that is incredibly brilliant. The bald guy is like, yeah, party, let's go party.
I love that.
I love the emotion that he embodies of just carefree,
being slightly Dutch or something, and going to party.
He goes to party.
Come on, party, let's go party.
They weren't Dutch, were they, Aquitaine?
I don't know.
They were Europeans.
And Dr. Jones. And Dr. Jones...
Calling Dr. Jones...
...is a much more refined and, dare I say, nuanced poem.
Oh, that is nuanced.
And just a better product than Cotton Eye Joe.
Yeah.
If you compare those two, I think it's a fair comparison to make.
And I would say their ballad for Sliding Doors,
Turn Back Time, is great.
It is insufferable.
You know a lot of ballads that come out for movies or songs.
I don't think Barbie Girl's insufferable.
No, I'm not saying this.
What I'm saying is this ballad isn't insufferable.
Barbie Girl is self-aware to the extent where it actually becomes...
Well, I compare it to Tub Thumping by Chumbawumba,
where they're songs that had a notoriety for being,
in one case, super cheesy and pop nastiness,
and the other one was like leery 90s pub thing.
But actually, they were both about the opposite.
It's like Barbecue was about how it's shit being vacuous.
And Tub Thumping was about how that leery drinking culture is bullshit.
I know, but it's funny.
It's the satire paradox again, isn't it?
Where something becomes known for what it was trying to satirise.
Like Colbert Report.
Yeah.
And so that's the weird, funny line we all live in.
It's strange.
It's a strange thing.
Now, shall we do Storytime Dice?
Let's do Storytime Dice.
So, yeah, I got another set of Rory's Story Cubes.
These are the premium.
These aren't very much on message with Cheap Show, are they?
Well, they were a quid.
Yes, they are. But anew, these are like posh Story Cubes, aren't very much on message with Cheap Show, are they? Well, they were a quid. Yes, they are.
But anew, these are like posh Story Cubes, aren't they?
They are very posh Story Cubes,
but all they did was become the brand face
of what people have been making for years.
Story Cubes have been made for years.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're quite nice.
The illustrations are nice.
Like we were saying, they're...
And they've branded,
so you can get like Adventure Time
story cubes
or Batman story cubes.
My Little Pony story cubes.
Star Wars probably as well.
That sort of takes
the whole sort of
creativeness sort of
out of it.
Well, that's like
the Lego issue as well.
It's like you could
build anything with Lego
but specifically build
the Death Star right now.
Is that alright?
And pay 800 quid to do it.
Yeah.
So the whole sort of
open world
aspect of Lego is gone. The city thing.id to do it yeah so i liked it i honestly world the open world aspect of lego is gone the city thing they still do it oh no they still make
lego city stuff like the petrol station or hospital and that to me is the best stuff
when like you filter reality through lego as opposed to filtering fantasy through lego
you know i'm getting it it's like it delights me more to see them do a lego ice cream parlor
i prefer that than a le Lego Star Wars cantina.
Yeah, but that's just a sort of aesthetic judgment.
You prefer a little, like I like my little street sweeper thing.
Yes.
This is great.
I like things that are real versions in the real world.
Yeah.
But made mini.
But made mini.
Story time.
Story time. Story time.
Story dice.
Story cubes.
They don't even call them dice.
No, story cubes.
Because it might...
Wouldn't it be story die?
Yeah, which sounds a bit weird.
Weird.
Let's play story die.
You tell a story.
That's what we do every week on this show, Paul.
Die.
Telling poor stories.
Well, why not carry on with that trend?
Well, I don't know
what that was.
Have you dropped
the dice already?
You clumsy fucking wreck.
The dice have gone on the floor.
Have you got them all?
Yeah.
Are they all accounted for?
They're all accounted for.
All right, so I've got
the original set,
but we're not going to
put these aside
because we've used these.
We're going to use
the Voyager set today.
I don't know.
These are going to be harder.
They're more specific.
Well, again, you've got to...
They're all travel-based.
You're going to have... Right, you've got to... They're all travel-based. You're going to have...
Right, you've got... Can't we use those
ones? Which ones? The normal ones.
Because we've already used them, so use
this. You have to write this down, because I have
to cover all the points, don't I? Well, no, we'll just
keep them there. Roll them, keep them there, line them
up. We'll say which they are for the audience, so they know
what to expect. Yeah. So, house,
whatever, and then we'll go through.
You've got five minutes to tell the story with logic.
So you can't just say,
and then the bear popped out a flower and the flower on a plane.
I wouldn't do that.
That's unprofessional and ruins the game.
Look at that face.
Look at that naughty face.
You've got a naughty face on.
Right.
That's weird.
I don't like it when you've got a naughty face on.
I don't like this whole tone.
It's a weird tone.
You take that naughty face off.
You take that naughty face off. You take that naughty face off.
This nauseates me, the way you're behaving.
All right, so.
You take that naughty face off.
I'll take the naughty face off.
So you have five minutes.
Okay.
To tell the best story you can.
I have to roll them all first.
Yeah, just toss them.
Obviously, it's going to be loud now.
So, you know.
Well, that's what.
Be considerate.
That's what people want to hear, don't they?
Yeah.
Nice bit of ASMR.
Here's the dice.
The die.
The die.
The dice.
Dice is two.
It's like mice.
Oh, fucking hell.
Here we go.
Here we go.
And he's tossing his cubes.
You can't criticise the story whilst it's happening.
No, I can.
It's part of the game.
Right, okay.
You can line them up
any way you want
but you don't have to use them
in that order, alright?
Line them down.
Alright.
We'll just see.
So, what have you got?
You've got a trophy.
Don't stop moving them.
It doesn't matter.
You don't have to move them
in that order
if you don't want to use them
in that order.
I'll hand them to you.
You tell everybody what they are.
And I'll line them up.
And then you leave.
Yeah.
All right, good.
Hand me the cubes as they are face up.
A trophy.
Thank you.
That's your first cube.
And the second?
It looks like a fuel gauge meter.
It's bullshit.
It's a fuel gauge meter.
Like a car fuel gauge meter.
I hate this already.
Just fucking play.
Number three.
Oh, skull and crossbones
Ladies and gentlemen
Bit of drama
Next
A ladder
That's
A ladder
And
This one
This one is
Oh
Now this is an interesting one
This looks like a
Magic cauldron of some kind
This looks like
Yeah
It looks like
Or Bovril
It's a cauldron
It's a cauldron
Next
Eli has to work into his story, whatever this is,
which is a...
I guess that's a helmet.
These are bullshit.
Is it a Greek kind of war helmet or something?
It's like a...
Yeah, ancient Greek.
Medieval helmet.
It's like a Viking, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's got horns on, but that's a myth.
A nose guard.
It's some kind of ancient pre-ancient style
war helmet
some kind of dangerous helmet
with horns on
and then what else
a bumhole
well it looks like a bumhole
I don't know what that is
it's just
it's a sphincter
it's a sphincter innit
what is it
it's bullshit
it's like dots
what am I going to work with
with that
I don't know
you can interpret
it could mean nothing
it could be a splash
it could be a splash
it could be a blip
it could be a black hole
it could be a sun
it could be a wink
it could be a blink it could be a hole it could be everything it could be a splash. It could be a splash. It could be a blip. It could be a black hole. It could be a sun. It could be a wink.
It could be a blink.
It could be a hole.
It could be everything.
It could be nothing.
It is nothing.
It could be the complete of everything.
The complete of everything. The complete of everything or the absence of nothing.
Okay, Paul.
Come with me to my garden of joy.
Just put it down.
Anyway, that's what that is.
Next, oh, you've got a lovely Arabian castle.
Like Aladdin, maybe. Something like that.
How exciting. And your
last cube, Mr Silverman.
Please.
I want to play these. Tough
shit. Oh, it's a mountain
range. There you go.
I'm just going to take a picture. I can't see them from here.
I'm going to take a picture so I can move them closer to you.
Right. A picture has been taken.
Careful.
Oh, you fucked it.
What's that?
Is it gherkin or something?
Shut up.
I remember where they are.
That looks better.
It was that one.
It was that one.
And then that will be the black one.
So that's the ones you've got.
Right.
I fixed it.
Princess Paddy on.
I don't know.
No.
I'd say no okay are you ready
you're five minutes to tell the story cohesively with interest incident adventure and character
developments maybe an arc with those nine cubes your time starts now Now.
Wakingness.
Oh.
The mountains.
The sun.
If you end up being fucking abstract just so you can just check them off, I'll punch you.
Mate, you're wasting my fucking time.
I'll kill you.
Well, think about it. I will.
Listen.
Let me just put it this way.
What was wrong with what I just said? Wakingness. I'll repeat you. Well, think about it. I will... Well, listen. Let me just put it this way. What was wrong with what I just said?
Wakingness. I'll repeat it.
Wakingness. What does that even mean?
Exactly. So you're hooked
in, aren't you? Alright. You're hooked in
now. I am. What does it mean?
Is it a new language? What's this guy working
with? Show me
what you're doing now. Anyway, you hand me a cube
when you want to take it out of the story, alright?
Shall I start again?
No.
Come on.
I live by the mountains.
All right, mountains.
That's good.
Wakingness, you live by the mountains.
Go on.
Wakingness, I live by the mountains.
Sadly, autumn was here again, and it was time for my poison medicine.
Right, let's go on crossbows. I made my breakfast in the whole big cauldron.
Stop looking at me like that.
Stop looking at me.
I know I'm failing.
It's terrible.
This is awful.
It's awful.
The cauldron.
The cauldron?
Three down, ladies and gentlemen. And after I ate my poison I thought
why? Why did I do that? And then
I remembered. I'm some kind of crazy
arse berserker guy
Right. Who serves in a
militia. A medieval militia
for the king.
Oh so is that the helmet you want me to take out now?
Yes. Alright so that's the militia.
And I work for the king.
And that's why I eat poison, because I go berserk.
The king lives in that castle.
Arabian castle.
He'd be a sultan maybe instead, don't you think, if he did your fucking research?
I'm not doing research for this.
And I realised, with a sudden explosion in my mind that looked like an abstract star shape.
Yeah, all right.
Boing!
This was the poison actually kicking in.
I thought I was having an epiphany,
like as usual, this always happens.
Wake up, eat the poison.
Why don't I do that?
Out of the cauldron.
And I go, oh, I'm a berserker for the king
in some kind of militia.
And then it goes, boing!
The poison, which is not actually poison.
It is poisonous,
but it acts more as a drug.
Poing! And then I'm on
berserk.
Christ, I'm on
berserk. I'm going to tear this shit
down.
But how do I get down from
the mountains? Right, you're right. This might have been
a bad segment to do, but go on.
How do I get down from the mountains?
What, a ladder? I get down on the
ladder. You need to tell the audience what
you're doing. You can't just suppose they know
it's the ladder. So you've
got a ladder and you've got it down the mountain.
Why would you need a ladder to get down a mountain?
Because I'm big. No, why would you need
a ladder to get down the mountain? I go back and get berserked off on the
poison. I go big. So then
why would you need a ladder then if you're so big? Well,
it's still, if you think of the scale, it's
like, it's still quite... So then the ladder's
going to be useless. So, to me, this is how big I get,
right? To me, a mountain
is about the size of a house. One minute
forty. You'd still need a ladder, wouldn't you?
To get up something, maybe.
To get down. Yeah,
but you wouldn't start with a down position and go
downer with a ladder.
I'm on top of the mountains.
I said wakefulness, the mountains.
That's the beginning of the story.
You could just crawl down.
A ladder wouldn't help you get down a mountain better.
In fact, I would argue using a ladder to get down a mountain is harder, considerably.
Anyway, I have my bag with me.
That's for putting heads of my enemies in.
Oh, yeah, it's not a trophy.
It's a bag.
Right.
So you got down the mountain with your bag of heads
Now what you got one more cube and this has to be the one that ends the story and get in the car
To go to the berserking field
Where I work
Start the car up. Oh
What looks like my speedometers out
It's not It's not registering.
I'm going to have to phone someone
to come and do this
because speed is a very important consideration for me.
I don't want to break the law.
Especially with the berserking.
The end.
That's you tapping the fuel gauge sign on the dice.
And so what?
Your story is about a man
who drank poison
realised who he was
went up a mountain
came down a mountain
with a ladder
no he was already
up a mountain
Paul
I don't have to
fucking
he had a bag of heads
but the worst thing
that happened to him
that day
was he ran out of
petrol in his car
didn't run out of
petrol
the only incident
in the story
comes right at the
very last cube
yeah but you've got a lot of backstories.
World building.
It's not world building.
I don't want a world building experience.
Episode one just needs a lot of world building,
and that's why they're often the weakest of all episodes.
You're so full of shit.
That wasn't a story.
That was a bunch of stuff that happened in a row.
All right, well...
God, it's hard to film five minutes, isn't it?
It's time for Paul.
Paul, come on.
Wait.
It is time for story time.
Doodly-doo, doodly-doo, doodly-doo.
Yes.
Is that doodly-doo?
Is that doodly-doo?
Doctor Who thing?
Yes.
Is that the Doctor Who thing? Yeah, that's what I was doing. Doodly-doo, doodly-doo, doodly-doo. Is that... Doodly-doo. Doctor Who-thoo. Doodly-doo. Yes. Is that the Doctor Who-thoo?
Yeah, that's what I was doing.
Doodly-doo.
Doodly-doo.
Woo!
Woo!
How'd you do?
Now, so, let's break the story down, shall we?
It was shit.
Okay.
And you made no effort.
I did make an effort.
You made no effort.
There was no character.
It was all first person.
We know nothing about you.
Wakingness.
In fact, you don't even know anything about you.
I call it wakingness.
It's just you being vague for some kind of fake kind of context.
It doesn't exist.
There's nothing below that phrase.
Well, that's...
You're so wretched, aren't you?
You're just such a wretched man at times.
Bloody hell.
It's my turn to roll the dice.
You wait.
I will give you no quarter.
With this meanness, I will give you no quarter.
I will tell you this now.
When I roll these dice,
nothing short of a Mark Twainian odyssey
will come out of my mouth
compared to whatever that shit was that you did.
All right.
All right.
Yeah.
We'll see.
Here we go.
It's an interesting mix. You've got a better roll than me. Yeah. We'll see. Here we go. It's an interesting mix.
You've got a better roll than me.
Right.
I had a terrible roll.
So my first one is what looks like a worried face.
Already better than any of the ones I've got.
I'm going to moan and bitch and be a sore loser as well.
Next cube is an angry face.
Again, you've got two emotions there.
You can go back and forth, two
characters. This is just much better.
And it's just a matter of luck.
Maybe you're just, you know, your imagination
is stunted. I guess it is.
It's just stunted. You're lazy. I think your
problem is you think you're smarter
than you are and you're not and you just don't bother
them. Wow, Paul, I was really getting into it
now. Anyway, a ray gun
is cube three.
A ray gun?
Could have used that.
Here's one that you've had.
It's a fuel gauge.
That's not a good one, is it?
Not really, but I'll still make it work better than you did.
Come on.
I think this is a trap door or like steps down into the cellar or something.
Would you agree?
It's a trap door, yeah.
Oh, here's something.
It's an oversized mushroom.
Again.
A gift.
Oh, look.
The waves on the next cube.
The throughing waves.
Is it the throughing?
It's the sea.
Yeah, it's the sea.
Big waves on the sea.
And look, here's an elephant.
That's the next cube, number eight.
Are you just reading your story cubes out?
Even if I did, it would still be better than what you did.
It would be better.
Just leave it there.
Finally.
Just leave it on that.
What's the end of the story?
Crabs.
Of course.
Are you ready, Mr. Silverman?
I'll hand you the cubes and I've worked them out of my story.
Okay, and I'll have you in charge of the timer, please.
All right, well, you've just got to press it once.
I'm not going to fiddle with it, am I?
I just want to do this by the book
God you're really getting sore and weird
about this
let's just get this out of the way and end this fucking episode
whatever you do
it's not going to be good enough for me
right are you ready
do I press play
yeah you just press that blue button
it's stupid it's not play you don't play a timer
no you don't I agree with you
it's just an annoying app that annoys me Yeah, blue button at the bottom. It's stupid. It's not play. You don't play a timer. No, you don't. I agree with you. Fucking things.
What do you want me to say?
It's just an annoying app.
Yeah.
That annoys me.
Don't like this skin on this app.
Right.
It's just on the phone.
Are you ready?
Yeah.
I am ready.
Yeah, I am ready.
Okay, see?
I'm paying.
Here we go.
Let's play fair.
And go.
And go.
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls of all ages,
it's time for Paul Gannon's Magical Story.
And this week it's called Eli the Crab and the Magic Mushrooms.
Working ahead a bit of work.
So one day...
You're handing me the mushrooms.
No, no, I'm saving that.
This is just a title.
No, you're wasting them.
It's just a title.
I've not worked it into the plot yet.
It's foreshadowing.
It's Chekhov's gun.
This is Chekhov's mushroom, isn't it?
You talk about pretentious.
Put Eli's crab down.
Fucking hell.
One day...
Are you going to say Star Wars is the greatest Western you've ever seen?
Once upon a time in a galaxy far, far away,
there was a little crab called Eli, and he woke up.
How he woke, did he?
How he woke.
How he woke.
I like this.
I am being.
I have become my true.
So then he woke up, and all of a sudden,
there was a bang, bang, bang at the door.
Bang, bang, bang.
So just out of coincidence, that's what's going to drive this narrative, is it?
Just some unconnected thing happens.
Nothing.
It's the early morning, is it?
Which you've stolen from me.
Wait.
All stories can start any time of the day.
And I've chosen to start at the same time of the day.
It was night then.
And he just woke up and said awakenings
awakenings did he?
He was woken up
by the bang bang bang.
You've got no consistency.
I'm just changing it up
to match your expectation.
Right.
So Eli the crab
wakes up in the middle of the night
because there's a bang bang bang
on the door.
In the middle of the night now.
Yeah.
So it's not morning.
Make up your fucking mind.
I'm just going to swerve
where you swerve.
Alright.
That's all I'm doing.
So at first Eli was concerned
but actually he knew
exactly what that sound meant.
It was his best friend, Paul Elephant,
who came round and he was like,
oh, hello, Eli.
Why do they all live in this silly world?
How are you today?
How does this world work?
And Eli Crabbe was like,
ah, it's so good.
How come animals talk in this world
and live in buildings?
Paul the Elephant goes,
did you do the stuff for Cheap Show?
I forgot that.
I was just drunk.
We'll do something else.
It's fine.
We won't do the noodle special.
We have to take this.
We won't do the noodle special.
Because I'm just too tired, mate.
So Paul the Elephant went,
oh, that's really inconvenient.
It's really inconvenient.
Anyway.
Paul, you've got so long.
You've come to a total halt.
And Paul was really angry.
And Eli Crabb knew that.
So Eli Crabb decided to do something special for Paul Elephant.
So Eli Crab went out into the garden and plucked himself one of the special mushrooms
from the dinkly dell at the bottom of the garden,
where he was told not to ever take mushrooms.
Good foreshadow and payoff.
Anyway, Paul, just fucking calm down.
Why? You're fucking just chill. You, ah, Paul, just fucking calm down, right? Why?
You fucking just
chill.
You're just fucking
on edge.
Fucking calm down,
we're fine.
And I'm like, well,
I worry about stuff
Eli Crabbe.
I know you don't,
but it's just,
sometimes I get,
it just does me
head in.
And I go, oh,
wait, I've got this.
And he gave Paul
Elephant a fucking
bit of this mushroom.
And Paul Elephant decides, oh, I'll give it a go.
So he snoffs it down.
And all of a sudden, all of a sudden, Paul doesn't like it.
All of a sudden, the ground swells up like the ocean.
And the waves are crashing.
And the waves, the sand is like waves crashing around.
Paul the Elephant.
And in the distance, Paul can hear Eli say,
Ah ha ha ha.
He ate a fucking mushroom.
What a cat.
I can't even handle it.
And Paul's tripping out and he doesn't know what to do.
Look, he's going all wibbly wobbly and he's upset.
Paul elephant is sad.
Put that sad face down.
Okay.
I haven't got a minute.
Shit.
One minute.
So, Paul all of a sudden looks into the sky
and sees this massive
gauge in the air filling up
going from sane closer to
insanity.
He goes, oh no, I'm going more
insane. It's part of his hallucination.
It's a bit of a sort of get out of everything
clause, isn't it? If they're hallucinating.
And then he saw this
and then he saw that
and then he imagined
the end of this story.
And then he starts
freaking out
and Eli Crabb
doesn't know what to do
and sees that Paul's in danger
so Eli Crabb
goes to his cupboard
and pulls out a ray gun
and goes,
I should get out of here.
He just happens to have.
Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang.
Zaps Paul to death
and Paul's dead lying there on the ground.
And Eli's going, I've gone too far.
Why is he rubbing his nose?
Because that's what Eli Crabb does with his crab pins.
He goes, how are you?
And then he drags him down to the basement and goes, Paul, I'll just say he never turned up.
Five, four, three, two, one.
Eli will suddenly realise that he doesn't make the podcast.
And so his career's over. And he's going to do the show anymore
now that Paul's dead, eh?
And Eli realises he's done a terrible thing
because now he can't make a podcast by himself.
He doesn't know how to edit, does he?
He doesn't know how to edit.
Paul, you need to stop doing the story now.
Thank you, that was... So Eli Crabb drinks himself to death.
Whoa!
Age 50.
The story!
The end!
Did you like it?
Paul, I think...
Did you like it?
When we stop doing this week's episode of Cheap Show,
starring Paul Gallen
and Eli Silverman
we need to have a talk
and I don't mean
in the metaphorical
outside the podcast space
honestly
well I think
that was a very successful
story time
there was elements
of your story
that definitely were
better than mine
thank you
but
it was real
it felt real
felt really real
I don't know
those whole digressions they're not digressions that's character formulation character stuff in there
but i really felt that you in terms of actual narrative i feel really good
you weirdo feel really happy you oh the way you stitched it together you use shake it out you
these things made had no narrative connection apart from just
turning up
the ray gun
just turned up
also
it's lazy
to have one of your
characters
hallucinate
and then it can
just hallucinate
for example
the worst
you know
it's a ladder
to go down a
mountain
with a bag
full of beds
that came out
of nowhere
he needed the ladder
to go down a
mountain
at least he's
using the object
you just
hallucinate
you're fucking
thinly thin Lizzy thinly veiled thin Lizzy you go down the mountain at least he's using the object you just hallucinate you're fucking thinly
thin Lizzie
thinly veiled
thin Lizzie
you
autobiographical
character
Paul the elephant
could have been anyone
could have been any Paul
hallucinates at one point
and looks and sees
a huge fuel gauge
in the sky
weak
that goes from saying
to mad
and then it snaps
that's why
yeah it did
you listen back
when you listen to the episode
if you ever do
because you just turn off
don't you once we finish recording?
You don't engage at all.
It's like,
oh, damn it.
Don't you remember?
But it's,
Paul.
What?
It's like an artist
wouldn't just look at his own painting.
Mate, I heard what you said
when you were on the roof
of the podcast.
I heard what you said.
You thought I was down below
and you couldn't,
I couldn't hear you
call me a cunt. Isn't it soundproof? You should have closed the hatch first, shouldn't you? I heard what you said. You thought I was down below and I couldn't hear you call me a cunt.
Isn't it soundproof?
You should have closed
the hatch first, shouldn't you?
I heard what you said, mate.
The podcast roof has got
all the eggshells.
Mate, I heard what you said.
So that's why I'm angry.
So maybe the next time
you want to talk to the audience
outside the podcast,
just keep your voice down.
Right, I'll make sure.
And it hurt me.
Well, it wasn't for you.
If I do it again,
you'll do one over.
Whatever it was mate cheers
that's the end
of this segment
hey everybody
we're back
and remember
me and Eli
are just good friends
don't worry about us
it's all characters
we're not really like that
it's fine
anyway
it's now time to say
goodbye to another episode
of Cheap Cheap
we hope you've enjoyed yourself this
week.
We have.
I feel great.
I feel like I've
got a lot off my
chest.
It's really weird.
Anyway, if you want
to contact the show,
you can.
Thecheapshow at
gmail.com for any
emails you want to
send.
Can they send us
stuff?
Yes, they can now
send us.
To the new P.O.
box?
Yes, we are sharing one
with Digitizer
and if you want to send us anything,
do it.
Don't send shit.
You know what I mean?
Send stuff that you think
would be good for the show,
interesting,
worth a chat,
worth a laugh,
or maybe an item
that we can put into
a kind of audience-sourced
price of shite.
And sauce and noodles.
Yeah, potentially.
If you would like to send us something, please do.
It's Cheap Show, P.O. Box 1271 Harrow, H.A. 3 3 N.S.
You do it.
It's good.
It feels like you'd be on the telly.
Like you're doing going live.
So if you wanted to send something in to us here on Cheap Show, everybody,
you're doing going live.
So if you wanted to send something in to us
here on Cheap Show
everybody
just send it to
Cheap Show
which is
P.O. Box
1279
Harrow
H.A. 3
Why did I say 9?
Well
It's written wrong.
Thank you for coming in
for the audition.
We don't think
you're quite right for it.
I'm doing a different voice.
No, we're not going to
pencil you in for another audition.
I'm coming all this way
can I just have one more go?
And you can put your clothes back on,
because that wasn't necessary either.
It's not to do...
This is not for the character.
This is just because...
And erect?
Erect, though?
It's just I've got a medical condition.
With a Danny Longlegs tag off the tip of it?
What's that about?
Why have you got a big Danny Longlegs tag
off the tip of your penis?
It's part of the medical condition.
Is it?
Yeah.
It's just weird to see.
Yeah.
Mr. Dangly is a friend of mine as well.
All right.
We'll let you have one last go.
I could do it in a different voice.
Yeah, please.
Thank you for listening to Cheap Show.
And if you've got anything to send us, boys and girls,
please send it to our new P.O. Box.
That's Cheap Show, P.O. Box 1271, Harrow, H.A. 3, 3NS.
Thanks very much.
Good.
Was that all right, Mr. Twangy?
We'll be in touch.
Yes, that was fine.
We're on Facebook.
We're on Instagram.
We're on Tumblr.
Just look for Cheap Show or Cheap Show Pod.
You'll find us eventually.
We've got a Reddit page if you want to join in the conversation there.
And where can they see if they wanted to see
you know some stuff
that's been on the show
where would they look for that
our website
thecheapshow.co.uk
and then just look for
the episode you want
and find the pictures
and videos that accompany
said episode
okay then
what else
oh we're on twitter
at thecheapshowpod
I'm at paulgannonshow
Eli is
Eli Snoid
E-L-I-N-S-O-I-N-O-I-N-O-I-N
E-L-I-S-N-O-I-D-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N-I-N alright so they don't have to patreon.com forward slash
cheap show
you get lots of
little bonus content
magazines
podcasts
videos
stuff that
the larger world
won't see for a long time
what do you mean
the larger world
won't see it
well some videos
will go on YouTube
publicly after a few months
but most will stay
private
priority access
they do indeed
and that's it
thank you very much
for joining us
we'll be back next time.
We've got lots of exciting stuff coming up in the future, haven't we, Eli?
I've lost the will to speak now, Paul.
Goodbye, you fuck.