CheapShow - Ep 24: Look-In Magazines Rool OK
Episode Date: June 28, 2016Do you remember Look-In? The old 80s magazine for teens about TV, movies, music and comic strips? No? God we're old? Well, if you do, you are in for a treat as Paul & Eli find a stash of Look-Ins and ...decide to look into the history of the weekly magazine and fall head first into a nostalgic hellscape that includes Madness, 5 Star, Worzel Gummidge, Spagna, The Krankies and, god help us, Little & Large. At some point... Paul MAY have a massive rant about shitcom "Bread" by Carla Lane. You have been warned! We also have all the usual bits with more Tales from the Dancefloor and The Price of Shite... But we discover that Eli has a fanbase thanks to his appearances on the YouTube channel "Barshens" and the comments are... well.. troubling! Its more cheap topics and cheap laughs in another CheapShow podcast! Share & Enjoy. Subscribe or Die! You can see pictures and accompanying videos on our website www.thecheapshow.co.uk 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 & Follow Us at @Barshens too! If you like what you hear, please spread the word! Like, Review, Share, Comment... all that jazz! Subscribe to us on Stitcher, iTunes or most good podcast apps and get fortnightly fun WARNING *Show contains strong language and adult material
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everybody! It's time for episode 24 of Cheap Show. I'm Eli Silverman. Here's the
other host, it's Paul Gannon! Ah, hello, welcome to Cheap Show episode 24 of cheap show i'm eli silverman here's the other host it's paul gannon ah hello welcome
to cheap show episode 24 hello welcome how are you i'm good so uh the live show was the last
episode i'm just going to apologize again for the sound quality yeah listen to our smooth smooth
sound this week i just don't know what the logic is of building an inflatable stage, kind of tent area to have performances on,
and then putting the stage right at the end of the inflatable tent area
that has the fan.
The air conditioning fan?
Yeah.
No, the fan that pumps the inflatable tent up.
Oh, the actual thing that keeps it all inflated.
Yeah.
That was right next to the stage.
So you're on stage talking.
All you hear in the background is,
womp, womp, womp, womp, womp, womp, womp. You know, it all inflated. Yeah, that was right next to the stage. So you're on stage talking, all you hear in the background is, hob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob.
You know, it's just, it's distracting.
And so when we're recording it,
you can hear our voices in the background,
you're just hearing the wob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob.
Not even drum and bass, wob, wob, wob.
It's not the wob, wob.
Yeah, no, that's...
Wob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob, wob.
That's dubstep.
Is it dubstep?
Yeah.
I'm not au fait with the latest trends.
No, well, you seem to be able to make the bloody noise.
Wow, wow.
Also, another question.
Yeah.
Why couldn't they have people with the technical know-how
to plug the mics directly into our recording device,
thereby alleviating the technical issues?
I think it was the desk, actually.
I don't think it had the proper out to record into a separate out external source.
Also, the microphone was set up so the gain or whatever it's called was...
Makes me mad.
Either way, it wasn't great because, for instance, if you did a joke on the microphone,
and, you know, it was a good joke, the sound would cut out the minute your voice stopped speaking.
So you wouldn't hear the laughter in the crowd.
That's never good.
So it would just be you going,
and that's why she didn't fall down.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.
You know what I mean?
And it would sound weird.
It's just got that weird cut off on the way.
Anyway, let's just cut this short
and apologise again for the sound in episode 23.
I'm not all that bothered,
but it's worth pointing out, I think, at least.
But we're back here in the studio.
Studio.
For another extremely smooth and well-produced episode of Cheap Show.
Of Cheap Show.
So we've got a looking magazine special today, kind of.
I say looking special.
It's just the topic we've chosen, or I chose.
You've chosen.
Yeah.
You've foisted on me.
So we're going to be looking at the old looking magazines of the past.
We've got, what else we've got?
Price of Shite.
And what I thought we'd also look at as well is just to start off.
Yeah.
You know what?
Actually, no.
You've got to tell us from the dance floor.
Let's get that out the way.
Tales from the dance floor.
Floor, floor, floor, floor.
Thank you, Paul.
Floor.
Yes. Floor. Finished? Yeah. So. Floor, floor, floor, floor, floor. Thank you, Paul. Floor, floor.
Finished?
Yeah.
So.
Floor.
Don't start doing this.
I'm sorry.
No one.
All right.
No one finds that amusing.
I did.
You find it amusing.
Yeah.
Have you stopped now?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
And I, it's, yeah, anyway.
Yeah.
Don't say floor again.
Hmm.
I want to say it so bad. I want to say it so bad
I want to say it so bad
And I just don't know if I should
You shouldn't, okay
You know what, I'll book convention and I won't do it, I promise
I'm going to go and get a sip for my coffee
Which will give you this beginning you need
To get going without me interrupting you
So
Floor!
So, yes, here is another in my Infrequent series of Tales from the Dance Floor.
Little stories I like to tell about the things that happen when I'm DJing in the club.
Confessions of a DJ.
So, I've had quite a lot of negative vibes off people recently.
Really?
Because you don't put out
negative vibes
when you're on stage
with your arms crossed.
I don't have my arms crossed.
You look miserable though.
No, I don't.
You do.
Every time I walk in
and you're DJing
and you've been there a while,
you look pissed off.
Anyway,
so I'm there the other day.
Yeah.
It's everyone,
all the staff have commented
on the lovely atmosphere
that night.
You know,
atmospheres change.
Yeah, from night to night
depending on the people there. From night to night depending on the clientele and everything. You know, atmospheres change. Yeah, from night to night, depending on the people there.
Depending on the clientele and everything.
And everyone had noticed, everyone was having a really lovely
time. Yeah. Dancing.
Dancing. Jumping around.
Drinking and chatting merrily.
Drinking and chatting, yeah. It was all
very nice. And then right at the end of the night,
like literally sort of ten minutes ago,
I'm preparing the
next record. This guy kind of ducks into the booth, arms crossed. He's like, I'm preparing the next record.
This guy kind of ducks into the booth,
arms crossed.
He's like, this tune's a bit shit.
What's the next tune?
Right.
What's the next tune?
And I'm like, the next tune is Fuck Off.
Oh, I didn't say that. Straight.
I didn't say that.
Of course I didn't say that.
In my head.
Well, you know, what positive thing does he hope
is going to come of that?
You know, just coming up to some guy who's doing his job and just going,
you're shit, this is shit.
It's a very rude introduction.
It's extremely negative.
What's the next tune?
As if I'm going to go, oh, sorry, Mr. Punter, sir.
Oh, yes, for you, I will produce the tune.
Do you like this tune?
Please say you like the tune.
Oh, please.
Do you like this?
I know this tune was bad.
I need spanking because it was so bad.
It was so bad. I'm so
bad at my job, Mr. Punter Man.
Fuck you, you bearded suburban
twazpot. Oh,
twazpot. Anyway, just wanted to get that
out there. What's the next tune?
So what did you do? I just went,
yeah, the next tune's disco. He probably won't like that either.
And he went, disco?
How old was he?
Was he like a millennial?
He was in his mid-20s.
Twat.
Fucking twat.
Yeah.
Fucking, oh yes, I'm in my 20s and I've seen everything.
I've heard everything.
I know everything.
He probably, I think, just from a deduction,
I'd say that he'd probably just been rejected by a young lady on the dance floor.
Oh, this is one of these, I need, like when a cat is embarrassed,
what it will do instantly is it will groom itself.
Yes.
Did you know this?
When a cat is attacked and it, you know, loses the fight or it impacts.
I've seen that.
Cats all go, I fell off a chair.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm cool, me.
I look shiny.
It's the equivalent to the Fonz, like, combing his hair after being rejected.
Yeah.
Right?
So, I'm guessing that.
He does, doesn't he?
Yeah.
Yeah.
They cat all lick themselves. They go, look, I still can put spit all over rejected. Yeah. Right? He does, doesn't he? Yeah. They cat all lick themselves.
They go, look,
I still can put spit all over me.
Yeah.
So basically him going up to you
to assert some dominance
over the music
was his grooming moment
to kind of get back
whatever self-respect
he thinks he has in his head.
That's the story
that I sort of produce
in my head
because I can't see
why he's so negative.
It's just like,
well, what magical thing
is going to happen
from you just coming over
and dissing me?
Does he think maybe he's going to just suddenly go, you should play that tune, mate.
Make this house rock like a fucking hurricane.
No, but he didn't have.
I said, that's what I said.
Because I was kind of a bit irked by his whole attitude.
Oh, and quite rightly.
I sort of went, have you got a request?
Like, you know what I mean?
Usually how this works is if you ask for something and then I tell you, no, I don't have it.
But, you know what I'm saying?
Anyway, fuck you, you fucker.
Did he go quietly?
It was just a bit of a standoff with me going,
yeah, I'm going to play another tune.
Is there a musical equivalent of a Mexican standoff?
Is there a, I don't know, Tchaikovsky standoff?
Tchaikovsky.
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's just a musician.
No, a Mexican standoff is a metaphor
that can work in lots of different areas.
It doesn't have to be an actual sort of Wild West thing
where you've got your hand over your gun.
Right.
But there was no moment here
where he thought you were going to give
and cave into his demands.
I don't know what he wanted me to give.
Did I just stop the record?
Sorry.
Get on the mic.
Sorry, this prick here.
Mr. Smith here of Milton Keynes
has said
this tune's a bit
whack
what's the next one
well here's the next one
Mr Smith
it's wham
you prick
I bet he'd like that
as well
anyway
and then
yeah
last night
oh right
that was a strange sound
so
this is just typical
of the kind of weird
passive aggressiveness
yeah that people that people bring to the arena of asking djs to play records so yeah this guy
comes over again a man you know a young man probably in his 20s um and he goes first of all
first of all can i just say great great doing a great job doing a brilliant job brilliant excellent
djing skills he says you're brilliant yeah yeah
i'm thinking here we go here we go where's the catch yeah so he goes can you play edwin star
war okay that's not a completely out of bounds suggestion it's a tune i like and i said no
sorry mate i do not possess that tune which is is, you know, you can only do so much.
Yes.
You can only bring with you so much on the day.
You know, because I play vinyls.
Yeah.
And there is a limit to how many vinyls you can bring.
Yes, physically, for you.
And then he turned.
He turned.
He did?
Yeah.
What?
After telling me I'm a great DJ and requesting, I said, I don't have it. He goes, what?
You don't have Edwin Starr's War?
You play Funk and Soul and you don't have it. He goes, what? You don't have Edwin Starr's War? You play Funk and Soul and you don't have that?
What?
Is it one of the fucking Ten Commandments of Funk and Soul?
I must have that record.
Douchebag.
You know, in fact, it probably wouldn't work.
You know, it's a good song.
Works on the radio.
It's not that dancey, is it?
Not really, no.
It's not that sort of floor shaking, is it?
Not really, no.
Just fucking think about it, mate, before you make these accusations about me.
You know, come over here, try and butter me up first
and then fucking bum me.
No, wait, that was a stretch, so to speak.
No, hang on.
Well, he does.
He butters it up and then he goes,
yeah, you're shit, doesn't he?
That's dark.
But the thing is, you know what that reminds you of?
It's like when a guy goes up to a woman and goes,
you're really, really pretty. Aren't you really pretty? Do you want a drink? And she'll go, I'm all right for a drink. He goes, you're a slag. Yeah, exactly. You're a thing is, you know what that reminds you of? It's like when a guy goes up to a woman and goes, you're really, really pretty.
Aren't you really pretty?
Do you want a drink?
And she'll go,
I'm alright for a drink.
He goes, you're a slag!
Yeah, exactly.
You're a whore, you!
Exactly.
What's wrong with me?
It's like that.
It is like that.
Obviously, it's not as bad
as that open misogyny.
No, not as bad as that.
But it's a similar thing.
It's musical misogyny.
It's a similar dynamic, isn't it?
Yeah, it's a similar behaviour pattern.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
because I didn't get what I wanted.
Anyway, so,
that's my second tale of misogyny. Did you actually say this too? Or did you just say, and then just turn away awkwardly and ignore it? Yeah, it's a similar behaviour pattern. Yeah, yeah, yeah, because I didn't get what I wanted. Anyway, so, that's my second tale.
Did you actually say this too?
Or did you just say,
and then just turn away
awkwardly and ignore him?
Yeah, basically.
No, I just went,
look, I haven't got it.
You know these ranchers
who have it?
I can't produce it.
I haven't got some kind
of future 3D printing
robot machine
that will just produce
it out of thin air.
No.
Also known as the internet.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Anyhow.
What? He did, and he did the classic. You know what I mean? Yeah. Anyhow. What?
He did, and he did the classic.
I do have it on my iPod.
Oh, of course.
I'll plug your iPod in.
I'd love to listen to your compressed MP3 quality.
Yeah, your bloody 60...
Everything I've learned about music,
I learned from a compendium download from iTunes.
He'll probably have an advert from Spotify coming on.
And then he'd probably get a call.
Yeah.
He'll go, your girlfriend calling or something like that.
It'll be like you're in there.
Everyone's awkwardly dancing to war.
What is it good for?
Mother.
Yeah.
Mother.
I'm at a nightclub.
I've made a friend with a DJ and he doesn't like me because I've forced him to put my phone on
With Edwin Starr
And never met a girl like you before
No that's the wrong Edwin
I'm confused
Mother
Good God
So that was your Tales from the Dance Floor
No there is another one
Should we say that until next week then?
No I'll quickly just put it down here
Oh God it's the same story
Someone comes up to you
Here's my request you say no
It does have that basic form Yeah, it's the same story. Someone comes up to you, here's my request you say no. It does have that
basic form, but it's
I just want to just... Alright,
alright, go on. Also, last night
this guy came up and
he said, do you have a playlist?
A playlist, as in like a pre-planned
organised list? Yeah, do you have a list of
everything you've got? And I'm like,
no. I'm like, no. I'm like,
no, I'm playing vinyls, you know.
He goes, oh yeah, no, I know. I've got, I love
vinyls. Oh yeah, vinyls are great.
Yeah, my dad has
original Beatles records. It's like,
why can't people get it through their
stupid fucking head? The Beatles
are one of the biggest selling acts of all time.
Yeah. Your dad's Beatles records
are worth exactly jack shit.
Do you know what I mean?
Oh, wow.
He liked the Beatles, did he?
Wow.
What a fucking renegade.
Well, he bought a repressing in 1978 of a soul.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
That's worth a lot, though.
Yeah, it's not worth jack shit, you idiot.
Anyway.
Is it signed by top price?
Yeah, it's got a barcode on it. Fucking hell.
Anyway. Yeah. And then he's like
he keeps pressing me for this sort of list.
Yeah. The list, like I've got a whole
list of every record I've owned.
For what purpose? Because he starts this conversation
by going, oh, can I make a request?
And so I, in my, you know,
wisdom, think
he has a tune in mind. That's usually
what happens, isn't it?
You know, it varies, but yeah.
If you're going to make a request, you have a request.
Can you make faster?
Yeah, exactly.
So, I go, no, I don't have a list.
And he's like, well, maybe some Beatles.
Hang on, did you say it like this?
Did you say, no, I don't have a list?
Or did it come out as, no, I don't have a list.
No, I just went, look, I've got vinyls.
And then he tells a story about his dad's Beatles.
Anyway.
And so, but he was quite, you know, this guy wasn't moody.
He was in an, you know, he was like, if you can play some Beatles, that'd be great.
So, you know, it was fine.
It was a nice, it was a positive encounter.
Right.
But I just think it demonstrates, you know, with all of the technology we have today,
people have this sort of entitlement to curate.
Everyone curates their own media sphere, don't they?
They make their own playlists.
Have their own channels of where they watch this, that and the other.
Exactly.
So they can't deal with someone else making the decisions for them in a club.
He literally had to.
He didn't have a request.
He just wanted to have some input.
Into the night.
Into the vibe of the night.
It gets me.
To walk away and go...
It's not like I want to hear that tune
because that's my favourite tune.
I want him to play my tune, that tune.
I just want to have some kind of
interactive thing going on with you.
And do you think what happens
is his song finally gets played
and everyone goes,
oh, and the mood changes in the club.
And he goes,
who recommended that?
And he goes,
that was me who asked for
Lady Madonna by the Beatles.
That was me.
I changed the vibe with this night.
Come back to my place.
We will have a sobbing contest.
Anyway, that is the end of my extended and slightly tetchy Tales of the Dancefloor.
More of the same next time.
Thank you.
Right.
So people may know who listened to the Cheap Show podcast. People may know who listen to the Cheap Show podcast.
People may know who listen to the Cheap Show podcast.
I haven't finished the sentence yet.
Just try that again.
No, there's nothing wrong with it.
You just didn't let me finish the fucking sentence.
It automatically makes sense.
Like you do sometimes when you say floor, floor, floor.
What do you mean floor?
Floor.
What are you talking about?
When you said Tasman the Dance floor, floor, floor, floor.
And then you wouldn't let me start.
Oh, yeah yeah fair point.
Now I've forgotten
my point.
Yeah just start again.
Alright.
So those who listen
to the podcast
the Cheap Show podcast
this very podcast
may be aware that
Eli and I
help out on a
YouTube channel
called Barshans.
And Barshans is a
joint entertainment
channel on YouTube
hosted by Barry Lewis
from a channel called
My Virgin Kitchen
and Stuart Ashen who has a channel called My Virgin Kitchen and Stuart Ashen
who has a channel called Ashen's on his
YouTube channel and they got together for a mega channel
called Barshen's. It's a super group channel.
It's the Led Zeppelin of
YouTube channels. I was trying to think of a reference and I'm glad
you got it. Thank you. I wouldn't have thought
of anything. I would have thought of Stars on 45 Remix
or something. They weren't a group.
No, they were just session players. That's a weird
thing. Yeah, it was. Anyway,
we help out on that. Eli's
sometimes in it and I produce it.
And as a result, we've got a
little bit of, a tiny smidgen
of a following from
that audience to this. Okay?
And we welcome that smidgen. And we welcome
it. We appreciate that. Maybe we're a bit too
rude for the average Barshan's audience.
Maybe a bit too risque with our fruity language.
Get used to it.
Bosoms.
Grandad.
Yeah, get with it, daddy-o.
Heaving buzz-buzz.
Heaving clout.
Clout?
That was a northern expression for a lady's part.
A clout?
A clout.
Oh, that's disgusting.
I rammed it up a clout.
Oh.
Gross.
Anyway, the point being is that Eli's now... She had the it up a clout. Oh, gross. Anyway, the point being is that Eli...
She had the right chubby clout.
Oh, dear.
Anyway, I was going to say, yeah, so what happens now is Eli has appeared in some of these videos,
mostly in the cosplay, the poor man's cosplay.
Yes.
Right.
I model the poor man's cosplay.
Yeah.
cosplay. Yes. Right.
I model the poor man's cosplay.
Yeah, the idea being is that for a budget of simple pounds
you can recreate any kind of
cosplay for, you know, a comic
con. And you've done the Stormtrooper
in the past. Stormtrooper was good.
You did Where's Wally. Where's Wally.
We've got a few coming up which you won't
spoil here. Okay. But we've got a few others
coming up, haven't we, of that.
What's nice though is
now that i read the comments uh just how many talk about you oh really so do you want me to read a
few of the comments out about this uh right okay so um let me just scroll down and see what we can
find off so this these comments are coming from the uh where's wally cosplay video first of all
first comment by a guy called ian lucas the says, Eli deserves a raise putting up with you pair of loonies.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
You know, you are a bit debased.
When you say a raise, something.
Well, yeah, because that's what I put underneath.
I put a comment saying,
Eli gets exactly what he deserves, nothing.
So that's that.
Test, I can't pronounce this.
It's Testaja, T-E-S-T-A-A-J-A.
Aja.
Anyway.
Testaja.
They've simply put the phrase, more Eli, he's the coolest.
That's fucking right.
You're not, though.
Well, uh.
You're not cool.
I am.
We've had this discussion before.
No, we haven't.
We have.
Out of us two, which one's the coolest?
Me.
No.
Come on.
How are you cool?
Just by being who I am, man.
Explain me.
Give me three qualities that you have that express how cool you are.
Three qualities that you think suggest how cool you are.
Well, if you have to describe it, then you ain't got it, baby.
For idiots like me, give me three examples that you think that build up your character,
that make you cool.
I would argue, if you can't think of any which obviously you're struggling anything that makes
you cool yeah come on then my hip style bullshit my trendy hip style that's one that's not true
my devil may care attitude you do not have a devil may care attitude i do i am anxiety ridden
worrying attitude same difference devil may care anxiety care. Anxiety, same difference. And three, I'm hung
like a fucking big dick thing.
Oh, you've got an argument
winning dick. Yeah. Compared to
yours, when you flop it out and it looks like someone's put
a matchstick on the table. Me, when
I get mine out, it's like someone's brought
a bag of draft excluders.
Get it right.
If I put it on the table, it looks like some
kind of prehistoric bird beak.
Resting on two hacky sacks.
On two olden hacky sacks.
Michael Vaughan said on this channel,
if he doesn't already, Eli will probably soon have his own YouTube account.
Don't know what he'd do, but it would be fascinating.
And I wrote back, judging by my work history with Eli,
I doubt he'll be asked to do anything on YouTube.
I can barely get him to turn up to our podcast.
Well, here I am.
Yeah.
Turned up to your podcast.
And I don't want to give too much away.
Yeah.
But there's something I can't really say too much for contractual reasons.
What about in general?
Give me a hint.
Along the lines of what that guy was talking about.
Oh, I see.
Spoilers for a future Barshens episode.
Not a Barshens episode.
No?
This is an actual channel.
Oh, I know what you mean.
Shut up.
That doesn't count.
It's just a cheap gag.
He looks like he's dressed up as someone from a Dr. Seuss book.
I get that because it's a bit of a weird character.
Azriel Darko says, sexy Eli.
Someone needs to start a fan club.
Yeah, is that a lady?
I hope so. There's no Yeah, is that a lady? I hope so.
There's no guarantees.
Is it a lady?
Do you want me to check out the profile?
Yeah.
I'm opening another link.
I'm opening my fly.
No, he's a hard rocker.
And nearly every video on his playlist involves, like, bloodstain heavy rock.
Yeah.
See, cool.
Yeah?
Cool.
Okay, get with it.
Eli needs a raise
then someone else
put underneath it
no, he's just short
that's all.
I tire.
Sampler 19
Is Eli alright?
That tape looked pretty tight
like interrupting
the blood flow type.
Was it in the Waldo thing?
It was quite interrupting
the blood flow type, yeah.
Where specifically?
To the arms.
Right.
Grant says,
Eli kind of reminds me of Manny from Black Books.
Which is whose character?
Bill Bailey's character.
Yeah, I've had that before.
Actually, you are a bit of a cross between
Bill Bailey's character and Irish comedian
who's in that show.
What's his name?
Dermot?
No.
Who's the guy in Black Books?
Dylan Moran.
Dylan Moran.
Yeah, you look like him as well.
A cross between him and Dylan Moran.
And Bill Baileyan and Bill Bailey
and Bill Bailey
this is all
this is all great
that isn't Wally
he looks like Bob Hoskins
as Smee from Hook
alright
that's not a bad one
I'm going to quote that
yeah
someone said
Eli would look great
as a poor man's
My Little Pony
mate now they're getting pervy
that's obviously a brony
isn't it
yeah it's a little bit
he's a dirty brony
and he wants to see me in trestles.
Someone called Gia Aro says,
Oh, man, that dwarf is so adorable.
I want to sing songs like in the Hobbit movies.
Whoa.
I don't like this bottom half of the internet stuff.
Oh, I love it.
What else?
There's another one in here somewhere.
That dwarf.
How dare he?
Not only insulting to me,
it's insulting to actual dwarfs.
Yeah, well, you know,
you're in the same...
What?
Ring pool.
Here's one.
Except no substitutions,
simply says,
British Danny DeVito.
Yes!
Yeah, you are a bit like Frank.
You're grotty.
Yeah.
And you fucking eat
cat food out of a tin.
This is my ego.
I'm not going to be able to leave the room.
My head is expanded so much.
Some guy says,
bless that man for putting up with this for our amusement.
You should congratulate him on his amazing moustache.
Mate, everything.
Make a copy of this,
and I'll, you know,
take it to my next job interview.
Really?
You're going to read out YouTube comments
as proof of your acting capabilities?
Okay, here's someone,
here's someone who's put a bit of effort into this one. It's a bit of a rambling
story, but One Life Zero
Continues says, behind the scenes
Eli once rescued Stuart after
a unreleased Poundland
special went horribly wrong, and the ritualistic
burning of Tat was considered a blood sacrifice
that brought back the eldritch known
only as Kimmy into our world.
Stuart was driven mad and sat
gibbering on the floor whilst Kimmy lay waste to Norwich,
stopped only by Eli and his fantastic hair.
Stuart could only pay Eli back in the only way he knew how,
by including him in his videos.
Being such a chill guy, Eli is happy to be Stuart's butt monkey.
As he knows, he only has to mention the name Kimmy
and Stuart will fall to pieces.
What?
That's in my head canon anyway. That's the equivalent of shipping. As he knows, he only has to mention the name Kimmy and Stuart will fall to pieces. What?
That's in my head canon anyway.
That's the equivalent of shipping.
That's like some fanfic fucking shit.
Yeah.
Isn't it?
Isn't it?
You've become part of internet fanfiction.
To be fair, I've seen stories go much worse where it's like, and then Eli takes Stuart in his mouth.
No, he doesn't.
No, I've not seen it, but I can imagine it would be like.
You can imagine it?
What?
While you're lying there alone at night, you imagine it?
Rubbing my fucking trumpet.
That's not fanfic.
What weird convoluted fantasy that is.
Calm down.
You lying there, thinking about someone else,
writing dirty stories about me and Stuart.
It's protracted and very meta, but it still works.
I sit there rubbing my meat trumpet as I'm thinking about you.
Meat trumpet.
Are you crying and being cradled by Stuart after romantic tryst?
Is that the end of the comments?
I don't know.
I'm looking through the last of them.
No, there's only a few there.
Okay, I'll end with this one.
Liam Flanagan says,
aw, he looks like a homeless man.
So there you go.
If you want to listen to,
if you want to see more Eli,
he's coming up on the Bartians channel
more often than not these days, aren't you?
I certainly am.
You've got your little fan hook.
You need to watch your back, boy.
I'm just a producer.
I don't need to be.
Yeah, but I might fucking oust you there as well.
Yeah, really?
Yeah.
Because then you can't fucking organise a fart in a jacuzzi.
I can organise a fart in a jacuzzi.
No, you couldn't.
Yes, I'll take you through it.
Go to jacuzzi.
Yeah.
Put bum in jacuzzi.
Farts.
Right.
There, I've got a little itinerary there.
Yeah, it's good.
Do not follow through notes
you never follow through
on the stuff you fucking do
how come we just get
all nasty immediately
it just gets nasty
meat trumpet
farting in saunas
jacuzzis
whatever
farting in a sauna
can't be the best thing in the world
no
oh
all that dense
thick air.
Yeah.
You literally chew on it.
You could chew on my grantees.
Oh, God.
I've got a cough.
Anyway.
You need to inhale some sublutamol or something.
I'm going to do that right now.
But first of all, I just wanted to say that, yeah,
Boshans every Friday on YouTube.
Weird tatting games and challenges and food games and all kinds of stuff.
And Eli's on it and I produce it.
So, you know, enjoy that.
At Barsians.
Ladies and gentlemen, put down your pencils, take off your glasses, relax the belt on your trousers,
and prepare to receive another instalment of The Price of Shite.
It's The Price of Shite, everybody.
Have you got a new jingle for it this time?
Well, you know what I thought on the jingle?
Yeah.
I thought, you know like McDonald's is just like...
And then you know. I love it. love it yeah yeah we need something like that a mini one of their they're called something in the sting they're called a sting or something like that i think
yeah it's like a mini thing so i've condensed the jingle into this oh it's a fucking price of
and that's right okay that's it no uh i see you're getting at, but it does need a kind of...
And that's right.
Yeah.
And that's right.
That's good.
Yeah?
We'll go with that, yeah?
So now, ladies and gentlemen, it's time for the price of shite.
And that's right.
Okay, good.
Yeah?
Item number one.
Ooh.
And you get extra points for identifying the use of this object.
It is...
Yeah.
Mini owl bowl container.
I'm sorry.
Make that into a sentence and try again.
It's a what?
It's a ceramic owl mini thimble size,
slightly larger than a thimble, ceramic container.
Is that what it was on the sticker?
Is that what they wrote on the sticker when you bought it?
They didn't write anything on the sticker,
just the price,
which you need to guess.
But yeah,
it's an owl ceramic.
It's a small ceramic
owl shaped container.
But it is very small,
isn't it?
It's very small.
Let's have a look at that.
Yeah.
Is it ceramic?
Yeah, I guess it is.
Yeah, it's ceramic.
It's a little owl.
I mean, it's nice.
I like it.
It's quite nice, isn't it?
It's quite a nice finish on it. They've glazed it. Yeah, it's obviously because it's a little owl. I mean, it's nice. I like it. It's quite nice, isn't it? It's quite a nice finish on it.
They've glazed it. Yeah, it's obviously because
it's a brown glaze and it's got eyes.
It's got the owl's eyes
on there. Definitely an owl. Do you think this has
been glazed in a
furnace, like properly? Yes, it's been
a kiln glazed. It's quite thin, isn't
it? It's quite delicate. But, the
size, it's not a shot glass, is it?
It's too small for a shot glass. Oh no, it's way too it's not a shot glass, is it? It's too small for a shot glass.
Oh no,
it's way too much to be a shot glass,
but it has a very,
very,
it's,
it's,
it's,
it's not a thimble either,
is it?
No,
it could,
no,
it's too flat.
It needs,
it needs to have dimples.
It's got a flat bottom,
it can't be a thimble.
No.
It has no use.
It really does.
It's a purely,
purely ornamental ceramic container.
You know,
I always accuse you of buying stuff
for the price of shite that you want.
Which is, you know, fair enough.
It's not.
It's indefensible, in the same way as Brexit, but...
Oh, let's get topical with a podcast
that will be nothing years from now.
They'll know.
Yes, but I do actually quite like this,
because this is just the right size
to go on my shelves of tat.
I don't know what it's for.
I would argue...
It's weird, because if it was going to be a lid to something, it would go upside down.
Therefore, the owl design would be ridiculous.
You know?
Oh, yeah.
It could be like a bottle stopper or something.
No.
Do you actually know what the answer is to this?
I do not know.
Oh.
No one told me.
It was just there.
Paper clips?
Put little paper clips in?
It is just a very small container.
It is just a very small container.
It's a very small owl themed container. It's a small owl. It's all it is. That's all it is. It just a very small container. It is just a very small container. It's a very small owl-themed container. It's a small owl.
It's all it is. That's all it is.
It's a small owl container. Stop trying
to delay the point where
you have to tell me
what's the price of this shite? What's the price of this shite
now, Paul? I really want to know. I'm going to guess
that that wasn't all that much.
Well, it is
Cheap Show. Obviously, but
even within Cheap Show's parameters,
I'm going to say that is 35p.
35p, that's your first guess?
Yeah, I'm going to write that down, 35p owl.
Okay.
35p owl.
That's our first item, the owl.
35p owl.
And of course you can't see...
Can you put a pencil in it?
I mean, you could, but it would over-tip it.
It looks like it's going to over-tip it.
Two pens in that.
If you put more than one pencil in it, it's, you could, but it would over-tip it. It looks like it's going to over-tip it. If you put more than one pencil in it,
it's coming straight over.
It really is a completely useless piece
of shite. That's the way we like it.
That's the way we only want it on this
show. Okay. Well, having said
that, here is an item with no
use, and we go to a very pragmatic,
very usable,
very usable item. Dependable.
This is Galley Brand Waiter's Friend.
Right.
Oh, it's a...
It's a bottle opener.
It's a bottle opener.
Why did you say fucking bottle opener?
Well, it's because it's branded Waiter's Friend.
Oh.
It's not just a bottle opener, Paul.
Yeah.
This is...
A Waiter's Friend.
It's a Waiter's Friend.
But doesn't that sound like a euphemism for something?
You know, have you heard about Gary?
Yeah, he's a...
Let me just put it this way.
He's a waiter's friend.
Oh, alright, yeah.
Don't mention it to him.
I think he's sensitive about it, but
that's what I've heard anyway.
Yes, anyway, so, if anyone's got
a good euphemism for what a waiter's
friend would be, please let us know.
But it is just a... I'm taking this off now.
Look, the good thing about this is they've upcycled
it. Yeah. They've got a
little twizzers. A little
bag tie and they've reattached it
to the original card. The galley card
which will affect the price.
You think it's going to affect the price? Well, you know,
if you're buying Star Wars figures,
if they're fresh on card, new as
on card, it does affect the price, doesn't it?
But there are a lot of creases and folds to that card.
It's a bit battered.
Yes, but it is the original piece, isn't it?
That is true.
And for a collector, Paul, that's very important.
All right.
I get it.
If you were collecting, you'd like to know that this is a galley brand.
It's a waiter's friend.
It's a lovely item.
So the waiter's friend there.
And of course, the waiter's...
Let me just get it.
I can't get it. I can't get it.
I can't get it out of the cart.
Don't damage the box, it'll ruin the price.
It's alright, I bought it now. So, of course you've got the corkscrew. Yeah.
You've got the bottle opener. Yeah.
And also a little
blade. Now the blade is for cutting the
throat of the customer
when he insults your religion.
Oh, is that what that's for?
I didn't know waiters...
Stab in the eye.
Yeah, an eye-stabbing tool.
When you just can't take any more...
Of their shit.
Of their...
They're talking down to you.
Excuse me.
You know the ham and pea thawp?
Can I have it without the ham, please?
Where's my waiter's friend?
I'm going to stab his eyes out.
Fucking asking a pea and a period soup again.
Ask again.
Ask again.
It's the Rosen.
Right, yeah.
So, a little blade there.
Okay, so it's got three tools in one.
Yeah.
It's not just a corkscrew.
No.
It's a waiter's friend.
And it's Galley brand.
Yeah.
There's no date on it, but...
Why?
Do you think it's got a sell-by?
Well, you'd just like to know the vintage of these items, don't you?
Dishwasher safe.
Again, it might affect the price.
Dishwasher safe.
I wouldn't put it in a microwave.
But why would you?
Unless you were cooking something very small on the end of the corkscrew.
Perhaps a tiny cocktail sausage.
You still wouldn't use the microwave for that job, though.
It's a bit overkill.
So, don't put it in the microwave.
And a little background on the company.
Yeah, please do. We've got on the back in the microwave. And a little background on the company. Yeah, please do.
We've got on the back of the card,
this new as-on card.
Yeah.
Galley Homewares Limited, London, NW9.
So, London boys.
So that's like Walthamstow or something.
Buy British, yeah?
Yeah.
Buy your waiter's friends,
British made, Galley Homewares,
London, NW9.
Yeah, no, not Walthamstow.
More like Wembley way.
Oh, yeah.
I'm getting confused
with the direction
out there
out those ways
so
I'm going to need a price for that
oh well I'm going to have to go
and guess and say
it's a nice piece of kit
it's a
on the card remember
yeah on the card
yeah
I'm very aware of that now
thank you
I'm going to say
that is
straight up one pound
okay
and now
let's have our third and final piece of shine,
ladies and gentlemen.
Excellent.
Now, for this price of shine,
it was unpriced in the shop.
Unpriced?
Yes.
I bought these all from Raise My Voice Foundation,
which meant that the lady who was in the store
had to sort of make the price up on the spot.
So bear in mind.
She gave it a look and went, that's about it.
Yeah.
Okay.
This is, see, this also has got a bit of a mystery purpose.
So I'm just going to hand it over to you, Paul.
We'll do this a bit differently.
I'm going to hand it over to you, and you just describe, say what you see.
Okay.
It's a small penis with warts along the ridge of it.
No, no, no, no.
That's the wrong thing.
This thing.
Oh, okay. Sorry. Leather. It's a tiny little leather it. No, no, no, no. That's the wrong thing. This thing. Oh, okay.
Sorry.
Leather.
It's a tiny little leather square.
On the bottom, it's flat.
On the top, it's segmented into four triangles with a gold, I imagine, leaf kind of pressing pattern.
It is.
When you pull it, it unfolds out like one of those things at school.
You know, the whole thing used to go.
Who were you, Mary?
Yeah.
Say one or two or three or four.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You are a shit.
Yeah, that's the one.
Do you remember those?
Yeah, I do.
What were they called?
I can't remember.
Decision makers or something.
You fancy...
Choose blue, red, green or yellow.
Green.
You are a poo head.
Ah!
So it is a bit like one of those.
Yeah.
And then you pull it and it all folds out.
As you pull the top out, it folds out into a little boxoid shape.
Yes, and then what do you do with that?
Well, do you know what I think it is, actually?
I genuinely think it is.
I think it's a purse.
Yeah, that's right.
I think you put change in it.
Yeah, coin purse.
Coin purse, put a change in, and then it goes, pull it,
and it folds back and there's a little...
Shall we try?
Yeah.
I'm going to get a coin out.
Let's try this.
Ladies and gentlemen, you won't believe this,
but Eli has money in his pocket.
That's big news.
That's the biggest news story you're going to hear in this section.
It's 2p.
All right.
Okay.
See if this works as a coin purse.
So you've opened it out.
I've opened it out.
I've got two coins here, two pennies, two British one penny pieces.
For how long?
I'm just going to put them in.
Right.
It's in there.
Look at that.
It works perfect.
And the money won't fall out if it's in your pocket.
That's good, that, isn't it?
Yeah.
So that is quite practical.
Okay, so we want the coin purse.
See, that's a nice little bit of objet d'art.
You like that, yeah?
That is a really nice bit of objet.
That's your favourite piece today, you'd say?
Yeah, I would argue that it would be.
Your decorative coin purse there.
I'm going to go ahead and say two quid.
Okay, so let's
go back from the start, see how you did, Paul.
Now, I've had an idea as well.
We need to keep a
score, because
when you get the shite next time, I'll try
and beat your score. Okay. So
we'll just add up all
of the difference into one amount.
The problem is, what if I pay for more expensive stuff than you in one week?
The difference will be greater if you're wrong.
So it won't be fair.
No, no, no.
This is why we can't do rules on this fucking show.
Every time we come up with rules, it's like, no, that won't work.
It will work.
It won't.
It's a start.
All right, okay.
So you're going to record the difference now.
So it has to be point system, like two points if you spot on,
one point if you're within 50p, zero if you get it completely out of that.
Okay.
And that way, at least there's points for being close or whatever.
Yes, you've invented another layer of rules there.
Is that all right, though?
Are these acceptable to fucking King Eli Taskmaster?
Yes.
Taskmaster agrees.
Right, good.
Okay, so our first item.
I bet you've agreed because you know I'm completely out,
so therefore I'm not going to get any points. Well, no, you haven't done too badly this week. Oh, all Right, good. Okay, so our first item. I bet you've agreed because, you know, I'm completely out to this. I'm not going to get any points.
Well, no, you haven't done too badly this week.
Oh, all right, cool.
So, the mystery owl goblet.
Yeah.
It's probably some kind of occult item with a great deal of magic.
Maybe.
It might conjure demons.
It probably does conjure the owl demon.
Demon.
Known as...
Blart.
Paul Blart Malkoff.
Why is that funny?
That's not funny.
It's not funny at all.
I know, it made me laugh.
It's not just stupid fucking words.
Yeah.
So...
The owl.
The owl goblet.
Yeah.
You said...
I said...
35p.
One pound.
What?
Way out.
Really was.
It's ceramic, mate.
Yeah, but it's tiny.
You can't charge 35p.
Nothing costs 35p.
I thought that might have. Nothing. That spoon, actually. That was alright. No, that was's tiny. You can't charge 35p. Nothing costs 35p. I thought that might have.
Nothing. That spoon, actually.
That was alright. That was 50p, that spoon.
Still, though, 50p? That was made
of purest nickel or something.
Port Sunlight.
I don't know what it was. So, the owl
was a quid. No points there for me.
But, I do gain an owl.
Now, moving on to... Isn't that always the way
it should go? No matter what happens, at least you can walk away plus one owl.
Yes, I'm an owl up.
So let's move on to our...
See, now I doubt that I've got the rest of the prices right,
because if that was a pound, then that can't be a pound.
You've said what you've said.
I know.
What did you say for the galley?
I said a quid for that.
Waiter's friend.
It was £1.50.
Flat quid.
£1.50.
Point. you get a
point all right waiters friend one point all right so i've got one point and out of a possible
four so far now your favorite item yes the uh square coin which i can remind you the lady
just came up with the price out of plucked it out of thin air just plopped it and you said two
pounds our survey said it wasn't a survey, but
I just feel like saying that.
Two pounds. Oh, I'm on. You're dead
on there. It's very well done.
It was your favourite item, and you also
did right by it, by getting
the price extremely right. I'm very happy with that.
Very, very happy. It's a good result for you there,
Paul. Very good result. So, out of a possible
six points, I've got three.
Yeah. Four.
No.
Three.
Three overall.
I was counting up wrong, but yeah, three overall.
Well done.
All right, good.
And that's the fucking Price of Shite.
And that's right.
Thank you.
And that's right.
I can't remember how the tune goes.
I'll edit it in.
Those who listened to our live show last episode
we went to MCM
and VidFest
I can't say it again
VidFest
Let me start again
I'll say it
Anything you want me to say
I can say
You just pause
and I'll say VidFest
Alright
VidFest
Fuck you
So
VidFest
Now I know how it feels.
Dick.
Oh, the pain.
Right, come on.
Right, okay.
So those who listened to the last episode of Cheap Show that we did live at MCM and...
VidFest.
Thank you.
Will know that one of the things I got for the price of shite was this.
A best of the 80s looking annual.
So it's basically a reprint of a bunch of crap
that came in the 80s.
It's a nostalgia
trip.
It's a nostalgia trip.
Yeah, and it's a big annual
full of things
that were popular in the 80s
that was covered by the magazine
Look In.
When do you think
Look In finished publishing?
I can actually tell you
we've got all this news
and stuff here
if you want to know
a bit more about it.
I'd like to know
if it survived the 80s.
I think it probably did
go into the early 90s.
Spoilers, it did.
Right.
But not far deep into it.
So basically,
I remember growing up
with Looking Magazine
in the 80s.
I do vividly.
It was the magazine
I'd always get
at the newsagents.
I would ask the newsagents
to put a copy
on the tape
and get it
and pick it up.
Was it like a cobbled street
you walked down?
No.
The smell of freshly
baked bread?
No, it was like an estate
with like young'uns
cutting up children.
Right. And so like, explain Looking because it was like an estate with like young'uns cutting up children. Right.
Cutting up old ladies.
And so like, explain Looking
because I was like
much more metropolitan than you.
I was a little provincial.
I had Spider-Man comics
and things like that.
Looking Magazine basically
is a children's magazine
based on ITV programming
in the United Kingdom.
Right, so it had...
It was like a junior TV Times.
It had some listings.
It had the TV Times in it.
It had the listings.
Just for the children's section of the programming of that day,
so the CITV stuff.
Just on that day?
Yeah.
No.
That week?
That week's programming, but just for CITV, just for that channel.
You know, the couple of hours of a day that ITV gave to kids' shows, right?
Usually between like 3 and 5 in the afternoon.
Yes.
The magazine ran from January 9th, 1971, so well before my time,
and it lasted until
the 12th of March, 1994.
Okay.
So, you know.
That's quite a long run.
Quite a long run.
71, wow.
Yeah.
And I had loads
of these magazines
because I would obviously
get them every week.
And when I moved
to Southampton,
my mum went,
here's a bunch of shit,
get out of our attic.
Yeah.
And in one of those boxes
was this stash
of looking magazines that I've got in front of us right now. It's a bunch of shit get out of our attic and in one of those boxes was this stash of looking magazines
that I've got
in front of us
right now
it's a real treasure trove
I've got
I had way more of these
than I thought
and I think I've still got
tons of these back home
so I just thought
we'd go through
looking magazine
and have a little look
in some of the things
I'll give a bit of background
more to people listening
from outside the UK
who might not
have either been
alive when the magazine
was out
because I can imagine
some people listening to this were quite young and don't know what looking magazine is or or what
a magazine is or what paper is they just don't know it's all digital on my iPads and our tablarts
and stuff on our surfaces um here's what Wikipedia has to say about the format of looking magazine
looking had interviews crosswords competitions and it had pictures and pinups of TV stars
and pop idols of the time.
It also featured quite a lot of comic strips
based on kids' TV shows,
all of which being shown on the ITV network at the time.
When the magazine began publication,
it was edited by a guy called Alan Fennell,
no relation to The Herb,
and some strips were written by Angus Allen.
Lots of people changed hands.
The covers
interestingly in the
70s were paintings
by a guy called
Arnaldo Puzo.
Right and they
were like oh I
love that.
And here's the
thing he was an
Italian working in
London who created
cinema posts in the
1960s including
designs for the
carry-on films.
And so his art for
the very early 70s
like if you look at
the beginning of this
magazine, you can see
how a lot of the people are drawn on the front.
Yeah, I love that.
That's all by Putsu.
Isn't it? It's great.
It's just all gone, that whole approach to magazines.
Where they'd actually do a hand-drawn
picture of a
celebrity or TV character.
Anything from You know
Tom Baker
To Wurzel Gummidge
To Adam Ant
To Madness
It says here
On Lucky Magazine
Cover
It says
Madness make a film
With big set report
Did Madness ever make a movie
Or a film of any kind
They were very big
Madness
They were
But I don't remember
Them making a movie
I need to look this up
They made videos
Didn't they
When they were all
Sort of all up Each other's arses,
walking along.
Now, you're confusing that with the film Society.
No.
You know, they're all walking along.
Hang on.
Apparently, there is a movie.
What's it called?
Take It or Leave It.
Made in 1981.
Budget was £400,000.
Music compiled by Madness.
From humble beginnings as a British pop band,
the group Madness become an international pop sensation.
So it's the story of them becoming a pop sensation.
It's like the Madness story starring Madness.
Yeah.
I'd never heard of this before.
We must view this.
The film traces the band's history from pub gigs to hitmakers
and we're the first time fans can actually buy the accompanying soundtrack.
This is from the Guardian article in 2013.
Directed by Dave Robinson, the owner of Madness' original label,
Take It or Leave It coincided with the release of the band's third album, Seven,
and incorporated songs from their earlier two records.
What? Their third album was called Seven?
Yeah.
That's stupid, isn't it?
1981.
It's a mixture of documentary and drama following the ska pop band
as they gamble around Camden,
tracing their history from pub band to hit makers and their first overseas tour.
It contains the songs such as Baggy Trousers, The Prince, and live cuts B-Sides,
and one song, Sunshine Voice, which has never appeared on record.
Ah.
I never knew that existed.
You never knew that.
Until right now.
Thanks, Looking Magazine.
Oh.
Now I know.
So, anyway, so, yeah, there's the artwork that was done.
It covered...
Okay, so here's the great thing. It was primarily
a TV magazine. Also
featured articles on sport. Some were written
by Brian Moore. Football, I think.
Yes. DJ, Ed Stewart,
was a regular face in Looking Magazine.
He was the one who was called Stewpot. Stewpot, yeah.
Stewpot, yeah. Has he been... No, hang on. Has he been...
What?
You trade.
Shall we look before we go any further?
Yeah, let's not.
Because isn't it sad we live in a time now
where it's like we can't even make fun of a DJ from the 70s
on the off chance he had full cockage in a five-year-old.
Oh, full cockage.
No, I think Stu Pot's all right.
It doesn't say anything outwardly that he fucked kids.
I can confirm, though, he did die at the age of 74 in 2016 of this year.
Yes, I actually remember hearing about that.
In Bournemouth.
Okay, well, let's just have a moment and just say...
Just out of interest, in February this year,
there was an hour-long tribute presented by Annika Rice.
So, and he used to be
in Luke in a lot
yeah he used to run
he ran a page
on that magazine
called Stu Potts News Desk
which ran until 1980
right
there was cartoon strips
in there as well
what Luke in would do
was they'd do cartoon strips
of like pop groups
and TV shows
and cartoons
TV shows
I can see here
there's the five star
five star
rain or shine
it's you and me.
They were huge.
I didn't know they were British until much later.
Systematic.
Do, do, do, do, do.
I never can get enough.
Oh, oh, system.
Oh, we're down nostalgia lane here, aren't we?
Just a little bit.
So they had, it's a bit racy
He's five star at the swimming pool
In this one
What
Oh dear
Didn't they all take
Tons of cocaine in the end
And like split up
He's dreaming of a fish
Is that the punchline
To that whole strip
Basically yeah
Wow
There was a load of
He's drinking like a fish
He's drinking tea
Anyway
Over the course of it's like
What 25, 30 year history
The picture strips The comic bits we're reading now,
cover TV and music.
Some of the cartoons made sense that they had in there.
Like, for instance, they had Cat Weasel, Bionic Woman.
They had Logan's Run, Dick Turpin, Knight Rider.
Logan's Run, was that a TV show as well as a movie?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Weird, isn't it?
Chips, Wurzel Gummidge, Battlestar Galactica. I used to love Chips. I was into't it? Chips. Wurzel Gummidge, Battlestar Galactica.
I used to love Chips.
I was into Chips.
Chips and Wurzel Gummidge.
They were my two favourites.
Really?
That's an odd selection, isn't it?
The California Highway Police.
And a scary living scarecrow.
A guy who can change his heads.
A creepy...
Blah, blah, blah.
Sally.
I don't know.
It always used to creep me out, that.
You didn't like it?
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da. That was the theme, wasn't creep me out, that. You didn't like it?
That was the theme, wasn't it?
What, if I only had a brain song?
No, no, no, no.
Let me look for it now.
I'll play it.
Wurzel Gummidge.
But he released it as a single I seem to remember.
Wurzel's song.
I'll play a little bit of it now, actually.
Hang about, my dears.
Won't keep you but a minute.
I'm putting me singing head on, you see.
Can't sing without me singing head on, can I?
That's it. Off we go.
Till Mother Nature ends
I'll be Wurzel to my friends
And just like John and Sue
You must speak my language too
Not Yackety, if you please
You must speak in Wurzelese
You put a Wur after W
And a Wur after O
You put a Wur after R
And it's away we go
Put a Wur after Z
And put a Wur after and put a W after E
a W
after L
a Z
after W
and you're
with me
horrible
horrible
absolutely horrible
not very memorable
no
doesn't stick out
but I used to like that show
yeah that's fair enough
I used to like that show
but also
they had comic strips
based on
weirdly
On The Buses
On The Buses
is one of the most
weirdly awkwardly
sexualised sitcoms
about dirty old men
who are on the buses
channel
little folly girls
yeah
dolly girls
dolly
dolly girls
yeah
Hot Doctor At Large
was another one Hot Doctor At Large not Hot Doctor at Large was another one.
Hot Doctor at Large?
Not the Hot Doctor at Large.
That's a different show
altogether.
Please, sir.
Remember that?
That was an extremely
racist one, yeah?
No, that was
Mind Your Language.
Right, yeah.
It was like a guy
teaching English
to a bunch of
English.
Let's all get racist now.
Oi.
Kung Fu.
Man About the House.
The Benny Hill page.
There was a Benny Hill comic strip.
Did everyone slapping the little bald man?
I can find out for you now.
It just says the Benny Hill show.
I just don't want to read about Benny Hill right now.
Is that all right?
Fine.
I don't want to.
But also, there was a lot of music bands that were turned into comic book strips.
So, Five Star, as we've touched on there.
Madness. Beatles, Elvis Presley,
Bross, Kylie and Jason, and miscellaneous, the Smurfs.
There's also a thing they had that when they were young,
which was like the life story of certain celebrities, right?
And what I love about this is in the looking annual that I've got here,
the best of, it has the story so far of the Crankies.
Now, people in the UK might know what the Crankies were.
A double act of a guy
and his naughty, naughty, naughty
Scottish little naughty boy.
Who was?
The guy's wife and real wife.
The guy's actual wife.
Jeanette Cranky.
Jeanette Cranky.
They're still going.
They're still going.
If you want to do any research
on the Crankies,
especially their social life,
I highly recommend it.
Simply down to the fact that it's creepy as fuck.
And they swing their little tushies off.
Oh, God, they do it.
They were heavy swinging.
Supposedly, one of the stories is,
after some panto,
Jeanette Crankie,
who we need to point out,
Jeanette Crankie is a very, very, very small woman.
Yes.
She's not like, you know, what people would call a dwarf or whatever.
She's just a very small woman.
Married to a guy who's, you know, very, very tall.
Normal height.
Yeah, regular height.
Standard man.
Yeah, average, standard Scottish height.
And, you know, that in itself, thinking about them on stage
and that double act and then going backstage and, you know,
noshing him off after a good gig.
Come on.
They must have at some point
fucked while she was wearing
that schoolboy uniform.
I would have thought so, yeah.
It's probably a prerequisite
for him getting wood.
Backstage, yeah.
At the...
God.
Put the fucking costume on.
I can't get it on.
Pretend you're a child.
Oh, God. Anyway, the point being is apparently after one episode I can't get it up pretend you're a child oh god
anyway the point being
is apparently
after one episode
after one
this is why we can't
share this show
with Barshan's audience
after one night
at some gig
apparently Bobby Davro
like entertainment
impressionist
wants to
a note to Jimmy Cranky
Jeanette Cranky
sorry
saying
why don't I ever
get invited to your
orgies
and I was just like, ah, dirty.
Dirty, Davro.
Oh, God.
Oh, no.
So you've got the Crankys in there.
Wait, wait, wait.
The Crankys on Mastermind.
Do you want to hear it?
There's a little, yeah, let's do this.
This is the Crankys for those who don't know what they are.
This is one of their sketches.
So I think it's Jeanette Cranky as Little Cranky
Jimmy Cranky on Mastermind
Notice there's no laughing in this sketch so far. You're shining a wee bit.
You don't want to shine on the telly, do we?
Don't bother me.
Just carry on, Mingus.
Well, here we are in the gothic splendours
of Bessie Boot Bicycle Shed,
and may our next contender please take the chair.
This is awkward to watch, let alone listen to.
I said take the chair.
Don't put that down, you stupid boy, in yourself.
Your name, please.
Auntie Maud. How do you do?
Not your name, Auntie, my name.
James Cranky, Esquire.
And your chosen specialised subjects?
Lumericks between 1876 and 1948,
General Knowledge between 1924 and 1946,
and Ghostbusters between 1999 and 25 times 50.
Mr. Cranky, you have one minute to answer questions
on that wide variety of subjects starting...
Now, where are the Andes?
At the end of Maristis?
Correct.
What would you expect...
Fucking hell.
Ancient chips?
Oh, huh.
Correct.
Complete the following limerick.
There was a young girl from Capri
who did nothing all day but drink tea.
Cup after cup after cup did she sup.
What do you think?
What do you think?
Then she did nothing but fucking wee.
Wee.
She slashed.
Let's find out.
Till she was dying to...
Jimmy!
No, you can't say that.
It's too rude to say wee.
It's too rude to say the word wee-wee.
It's a natural process.
It's this kind of thing that makes it shameful.
Let's see this through.
What kind of flowers do frogs like?
Crocus.
Correct.
Now, if you had five pounds in one pocket
and ten pounds in the other pocket
and three pounds in the back pocket,
what would you have?
What do you think the punchline is?
Shat myself.
Can I have a guess?
Yeah.
I've got someone else's trousers on.
Right.
Something like that.
Yeah.
All right, here we go.
Somebody else's trousers on.
I promise you I have not watched this clip.
Word for word.
I promise you I've not watched this clip
until right now as well.
All right, here we go.
Complete the following limerick.
A man who was watching the telly
developed an itch down his welly.
It went up his arms,
his legs, feet and palms.
And his cock was not half smelly.
Because he had some kind of bacterial infection.
Ow!
I can't laugh because it hurts my back.
Oh, God.
Let's see what the answer was.
Smelly. Something smelly.
And he ended up scratching
his...
Willie. Willie
doesn't even sound like welly. Belly.
Telly. Felly. Belly.
But belly is not... isn't a
rude word. So why did they cut it out?
Maybe because she was meant to say fat cock end.
Maybe. Hang on, let's see this up to the
end. At the end of that round, Mr. James Cranky,
you have scored 136
points with no passes.
Thank you very much.
Marvelous, Jimmy. Absolutely marvelous.
Hello.
I'd love a go, you know.
I need to sit in your chair
so... Fire away, Agnes!
Now, you may be listening to that and think, what the fuck?
It's not exactly up there with the two Ronnies mastermind sketches, is it?
It looks like it's filmed on a stage,
like with an audience that potentially should be watching it.
But did you hear any laughter in that sketch? There was no laughter.
Not even dubbed?
I don't know where it comes from.
However, what I will say is, because our opinion will vary,
underneath that in the video comments section on YouTube,
it does say, Miranda Hall, we need more shows like this.
It was great.
I still laugh at it with my mates.
Wow.
Tame.
For balance, Brittany Roman of Hollander has simply written fucking pathetic
underneath it.
And then someone replied to that by saying, that's hard.
It was a kid's show.
Yeah, come on, Brittany.
I remember watching this
when I was a kid
and found it funny as fuck.
I always found it
deeply, deeply unsatisfying
as a kid.
Yeah.
Do you know what I mean?
They come on,
you think, oh no.
Yeah.
You know?
Oh no, I don't like this.
I don't like it.
This makes me feel dirty.
Yeah.
No, not dirty,
just didn't like it.
So, Lucky Magazine. Tons of stuff like that. You found, what have you found in your Lucky Magazine? What makes me feel dirty. Yeah. No, not dirty. I just didn't like it. So, Looking Magazine.
Tons of stuff like that.
What have you found in your Looking Magazine?
What makes me laugh, right?
Yeah.
What makes me laugh is you've got the letters page.
Oh, yeah, the letters page.
So, like Radio Times or TV Times, readers could have a right to reply
and get in touch and say, this is our opinion on TV.
So, Looking Magazine had a section where kids could write in and voice their concerns or, you know, extol the virtues of a show that they like.
Some of these kids got really opinionated as well.
Oh, go on.
Written by their mothers and fathers, probably.
Yeah.
Apparently, this little girl is 10.
Right.
And this is her letter.
I've noticed that the BBC's Wogan is getting incredibly boring.
What's a 10-year-old watching Wogan for?
You're 10, of course it's boring.
It's just a bunch of beige things happening.
They always have people who've just written a book or something.
Why can't they have more well-known people?
When Bruce Forsythe covered for Terry Wogan,
I thought it was much better.
It's so 80s, isn't it?
It really is.
Okay.
What really gets me is it's all these letters.
Yeah.
This is what gets me.
The first letter, it says Sophie Howard-Jones,
and then underneath it's got,
please send us your full address, Sophie.
And then you've got Alison Dew.
Oh, that's a fancy Dew.
No, it says, please send us your full address.
And then you've got Wogan Woe, which is the one I read out.
You were so annoyed about Wogan,
you forgot to send us your address, Alison.
And then it's got here.
Let's have your full address,
please, Verona.
Underneath one of these.
Getting more angry.
At the end,
they're like,
we told you to send
the fucking address,
you dicks.
And that just reminds me,
I always,
all these letter pages
in mags like that
always was like,
send us your address.
Send us your address.
So we know exactly who to laugh at. If I got a letters page in this, I'm going to have a look. I bet it has. All these letter pages in mags like that always was like, send us your address, yeah? Send us your address.
So we know exactly who to laugh at.
Have I got a letters page in this?
I'm going to have a look.
I bet it has.
Oh, yeah, there's one here.
Please send us your address.
Okay, so who's pissed off now?
Okay, 2chatty reads this letter by Thomas Cornett in Leith, and he simply says,
I used to watch blockbusters all the time,
but now I've stopped because Bob Holness chats too much and doesn't get
on with the questions. Ooh, get on with the
questions, Bob. Oh, dear. Did he send his address?
Is there anyone in that whole issue who hasn't
sent their address? No, so far
they've all sent their address. Well, that's weird.
There's at least three people on
this copy who didn't send
their address. They must have got real tight on
it and said, look, we're not going to... There must have been
an issue where they said, look, this is the ultimatum. Yeah. If you on it and said, look, we're not going to, there must have been an issue where they said,
look,
this is the ultimatum.
Yeah.
If you don't send
your full address,
we're not printing
your fucking letter,
you little shit.
That man you've got
has got a pop star
called Spagna
on the back.
Spagna.
Do you remember her?
Yeah,
I know what the song is as well.
Call Me.
Remember that?
She's like,
I'll find it for you.
This was a big hit
actually at the time.
Do you remember this? I do.
Hey.
How long? How long?
It was five inches.
It's the average, you know.
Not.
That is the average.
Is it?
Five sparrow beaks.
You don't mention yours in hands.
No, it's sparrow beaks.
That's the international penis length measurement.
Yes, I remember this one.
This is all right, isn't it?
Nice bit of 80s dance.
Just that production.
That Stock Aitken and Walkman kind of thing.
I think she may have been Stock Aitken and Walkman.
Maybe. It's very likely.
It's a very Stock Aitken and Walkman sort of thing. Call me.
Call me.
Baby, baby, call me, yeah.
Call me.
Alright.
Call me, yeah Call me Alright Call on me
You get the gist of that
So do you want to know a bit more about Spiderman?
These days, you know what that song would be these days?
What?
Snapchat me.
Snapchat.
Facebook me.
Facebook comment me.
Doesn't have the same ring to it.
Hashtag groovy.
It doesn't have the fucking same ring to it, does it?
Fucking, yeah.
So, funnily enough, yeah, Lucky Magazine has Spania on the back cover.
You can cut off the back page because it has all the facts about the person and keep it in a scrapbook.
Oh, that's good.
And they've got the little line for you to cut so you know where to cut down.
Exactly, exactly.
So you weren't ruining your magazine.
Well, you are.
You are essentially ruining it, but at least it's got a nice straight line.
So she was born in 1957, 16th of December, in Italy.
She's a Sagittarius.
Her hobbies include painting, playing the piano, and sleeping.
Favourite singer, Stevie Wonder.
Favourite drink, milk, because it's a kids' magazine.
She couldn't go, white Russian!
Dislikes people who don't like animals,
likes animals, and would most like to meet...
Benny Hill!
Are you joking?
No! Benny Hill!
Spania wants to meet Benny Hill.
Now that would be something, wouldn't it?
You'll never know if she got her dream.
But yeah, I've loved going through these magazines
and finding out all the weird...
Like, you've got the TV listings there on that page.
What was on TV in that time?
Tell us the year.
This is a copy I've got from 20th December 1986.
Okay.
I was 11.
Oh.
And what do you want?
Channel 4 or TV AM or Yorkshire?
You just give me a taste of what you want.
Because it's all by region.
Because look at this thing.
Nowadays,
we don't really have regions
in the UK
because it's all like
ITV1 and 2
but in the past
it was Anglia,
Borders,
Central,
They were all different
separate companies,
weren't they?
Part of the ITV network.
Granada,
HTV,
London Weekend Television.
On Yorkshire?
Yeah.
On Saturday?
You've got number 73,
remember that?
I do remember number 73.
Hey you,
get ready to get on your feet,
get into gear
and hit the street.
Then you've got The Making of Santa Claus.
The movie with John Lithgow and Dudley Moore.
Is that right?
Yeah.
That would have been right.
That would have came out by then.
You've got gymnastics.
Awesome.
The A-Team.
Great.
Beatles About.
What a great line-up.
What a great line-up of TV.
You are so nostalgic for the 80s.
It's hard to believe.
Well, not in a kind of I love it way.
Just the kind of, oh, it's so bad, I love it.
It's so bad.
Where are we? 1989, February. Pick a day. Saturday to Friday. Well, not in a kind of I love it way. Just the kind of, oh, it's so bad, I love it. It's so bad. Where are we?
1989, February.
Pick a day.
Saturday to Friday.
What day do you want?
I'd like Wednesday.
Wednesday.
Okay.
On Wednesday, you could watch at 4.20,
Dog Tanyan and the Musker Hounds.
Row, row, row, row, row, row, row.
Row, row, row, row, row, row, row.
That one.
Young Charlie Chaplin.
Was that a movie?
No, it was a TV show, apparently.
Home and Away.
This Is Your Life.
And then Coronation Street.
Kill Me.
Kill Me Now.
I Can't Stand It.
Kill Me.
Saturday, Motormouth was the in the mornings.
Chart Show.
Athletics.
Woof.
I used to like the Chart Show.
Yeah?
Was that show where they had the videos and they just had little boxes popped up with text?
I love that show.
That's all you need.
You don't need some fucking DJs.
You don't need them.
Now it's Box Fizz with Wanga and...
Yeah, so Lucky Magazine was a big part of my 80s.
P.O.B.'s programme.
P.O.B.?
Yeah.
Duh, duh, duh.
P.O.B. is disturbing.
Look up P.O.B. everyone on the internet.
What I will say before we end this section...
Oh, look, there's a Walkman on the cover of this.
Yeah, look at the back.
Oh, look at this. Heinz
Bean Street Kids branded Walkman
that you could win. How good would that
be? That would be fucking wicked. Do you remember Heinz
Bean Street Kids? What were that? Just a cartoon. I think
that went with the advert for it.
I remember, you used to get, every now and then
on looking, you would get flexi-discs.
Yes. Little vinyl things, but they were
made of plastic or whatever it was. They are flexi discs yes your little vinyl things but they were made of you know plastic or whatever it was they are flexi discs i had one i've still got in up in
an attic up in my house up north up in uh the jets crush on you do you remember that yeah you do
crush on you goes like that no but that was the i had two flexi discs in my time right one
was that and the other was from the Care Bears comic book,
which had a song from the movie.
Two flexi discs that were all...
How did that Care Bears song go?
I can't remember.
I really don't care as well,
but I do remember this.
Whatever Happened to the Jets.
They made this song and then...
And that's it.
It's pretty good, this.
Pretty funky. made this song and then and that's it yeah it's pretty good this pretty funky
they're nice i like that yeah cindy bass
I spilt my slash on you.
Anyway, just on balance,
Lucky Magazine dealt with the ITV networks,
which for people outside of the UK were the commercialised channels that were paid for by adverts.
The BBC had its own going live and things like that,
but they had their own magazine.
Which was not adverts.
No, it was called Fast Forward.
I do remember that.
Fast Forward was the BBC equivalent.
I've got a copy of it here.
And for some reason, they thought it was great to have Jonathan Morris
from Sitcom Bread as their cover star. He was huge, wasn't he? He was for a bit. I've got a copy of it here. And for some reason, they thought it was great to have Jonathan Morris from sitcom Bread
as their cover star.
He was huge, wasn't he?
He was for a bit.
People fancied him.
But he's got the wettest face
of an actor.
You think of the weakest,
meekest actor's face in the world
and it is Jonathan.
A watery chin.
I'm going to be a poet.
Yeah, it was awful.
I fucking hate Bread.
I hated Bread.
I hated Bread. He's dead now. I know. Good. No, not good, Paul. Yeah, it was awful. I fucking hate bread. I hated bread. I hated bread.
Carla Lane's dead now.
I know.
Good.
No, not good, Paul.
You can't say that.
She's a national treasure.
She's not a national treasure.
Liver birds, possibly.
Butterflies, okay.
Bread, fucking stop it.
Yeah.
Do you know how growing up in the Northwest,
and you've got people coming up and going,
Lilo, Lil, here's a tart.
You, Billy Boswell.
We're all on the dole,
but we're fucking ripping off the state
I hate you, Carla Lane
I hate you so much, Carla Lane
Oh right, God, I didn't realise
There was this well of anger
Anyway, so it was pretty much the same format
As Looking magazine
Look at Grange Hill
On the back, some sports information
Does it have letters where they go
If you don't send your fucking full address.
Unlike looking, our patrons always give their address.
Sometimes they're bank details too.
The big number ones.
That's a page about Bruno Brooks.
Not hitting Anthea Turner.
It's the history of the charts, apparently.
1952, November 14th.
The first ever charts were compiled.
And you know who was the first number one?
Go on.
Monroe.
Something Monroe.
No, it says here it was Al Martino.
Oh, yeah, of course.
I don't know who that is, though.
He's right.
I got it wrong.
Sorry.
It was Al Martino.
In 1987, the first single was released on CD to be sold.
Who was the artist?
First CD single?
Yeah.
Who was the artist, do you think?
Give me a clue.
He's a boring tantric sex twat. Sting.
Yeah.
So there you go. There's that bread.
There's a comic strip about bread.
There's a comic strip of bread. Gotta get up
gotta get out. Grab the
wheel by the throat and shout.
Fucking buy it, sell it, the game's getting
hard. We're all scouters and we're ripping
you off. Making stuff and
catting all that shit.
Fucking dolls.
Jesus, Paul, Paul.
We're stereotypes and you fucking love it down south.
We're the fucking show bread.
Bread.
Fuck is horrible shit show bread.
You're going to watch it though.
Bread.
It's about a fucking horrible family.
Fucking bread.
All right, you didn't like bread.
We got it.
Really didn't like bread.
Oh, there's a Sonia pull out
Oh she was rough
Sonia
A Scouse singer
Yes
There's a chart show
Pink Panther
Peabrain
Gordon the Gopher
Tom and Jerry
Article about dogs and cats
On TV shows
Talking about the film Willow
What else is there
The Hello Hello
There's an Hello Hello
Comic book strip
Wow they just
A comic book strip
About funny Nazis
And Gestapo
in France.
During the Second World War.
Yeah.
And then telly addicts.
Oh, look, it's got a word search there.
That I've filled in.
You've filled it in.
I've done a good job there.
Anyway, there's Fast Forward magazine.
Oh, no, there's a letters page.
Shall I read the letters page
out to end?
One or two.
Right, let me find out.
Oh, look, in our kitchen
we've got a chicken
just like the one
they used to keep money in
in bread.
If so much money goes in, why don't they spend some time repairing Billy's banged up beetle?
Well, Michael Lyons of Solihull, they do it because they're scousers and they're always on the rob, apparently.
And they keep money in there for things like, I don't know, playing bingo and booze and fags and tabs.
Call a line.
I'm really pleased Doctor Who is back again but only one 30 minute episode a week
is it not possible
to have it on twice a week
at least
says Frasier Christie
of Fife
the Doctor Who bots
have told us
sadly our decision
to not have more programmes
on during the week
will not change
Doctor Who will be
once a week
at the moment
we're sorry
listen Frasier
do you know how much
expensive
how expensive it is
to make a bloody
sci-fi serial
you know
you bloody write it then
if you want it twice a week
yeah
self important
yeah
privileged
and finally
finally to wrap this up
a letter from Angry Becky
that's what she's put her name down
as Angry Becky Liam
from Doncaster
she must be angry
here's how angry she is
she writes
get Sonia off our TV now
off now
Sonia off now
she's an imposter she's a twin of Kylie Minogue I'm a great fan of Kylie Sonia off our TV now off now Sonia off now she's an imposter
she's a twin of Kylie Minogue
I'm a great fan of Kylie
Sonia can't even sing
she can't dance
and all she does on her videos
is stuff a mic up her nose
and prance around with a trendy man
give her an early pension
and retire now
ooh
fuck that bitch
yeah
well it's funny
because in terms of longevity,
of course, Kylie did win that particular battle, didn't she?
Yeah, she really did.
And I love Kylie.
She is a pop princess.
Of our hearts.
And I wore all my fingers in it.
Any funny face
That seems to be commonplace
Project you right into space
Without any warning.
No time to be yawning, while the lands are in shock.
Introducing Kevin and Kevin and Kevin.
What?
They've got Ghostbusters Crisp. Yeah, I know. Isn't that fucking great? I didn't know there was Ghostbusters crisps.
Yeah, I know.
Isn't that fucking great?
I didn't know there was Ghostbusters crisps.
I don't remember them in the old days.
The real Ghostbusters salt and vinegar flavoured potatoes.
Oh, look.
Ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to our Christmas show.
Little and larger one.
As you know, Christmas is a time for rejoicing and singing.
Oh, no.
Eddie Large is coming up from behind him.
Shut up.
Oh, no.
He's hiding a book behind him.
A big red book behind Eddie Little. Large
is coming up. Oh, he keeps turning around and then he puts the book away. What have
you got behind your back? A big fat bum, what have you? Little and Large, you're so funny.
Let's listen to more. You thought you were here to cure insomnia by singing. But tonight, Sydney Rasputin Little.
Screen and microscope, this is your life.
Oh, they're doing a little life sketch.
Oh, no.
That's my thought, too, Eddie.
You were born during the midwife's go slow on the 14th, 15th and 16th of June.
Your mother was very confused when you arrived, as she was expecting the guest, man.
There's a Ghostbusters poster in this one.
I took that out.
Bloody did, didn't you?
Times were tough then, Sidney.
All you lived on was powdered egg and powdered milk.
Every time you sneezed, you'd vanish in a cloud of dust.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Poor stuff, eh?
Oh, I love it in little and large.
I love the 80s.
You were evacuated several times during the war,
and your mother blamed the syrup of things.
Oh!
Oh!
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. during the war and your mother blamed the syrup of things. Oh!
Do you remember your first holiday in that tiny cottage in Ireland when you used to throw handfuls of peat on the fire?
No.
Good, cos peat doesn't either.
Oh! Oh, God!
Oh, I'm a-wrong-it-ow!
HE COUGHS
HE COUGHS
Oh, it's funny!
Oh ho ho ho ho!
You're the only prediction she ever got wrong.
Paul, come back to us.
Wait, I can't!
When the queen shook you by the throat and you said,
Do you mind, I'm trying to sing.
He does remember.
His accent, his accent.
It's so fucking funny.
Anyway, that's the little and large
show. Right, so
is that the end of our podcast? That's the end of the looking segment.
Yeah, let's go.
Right, and that's the end of another episode of
Cheap Show. If you want to follow us online, you can go to thecheapshow.co.uk
and there's our website with all the episodes on and facts and blogs and all sorts.
And if you want to see the pictures of the Price of Shite items,
perhaps you can shed some light on the owl object.
Yes, we would like to know about the owl.
Also, follow us on Twitter at The Cheap Show Pod.
I'm at PaulGannonShow.
And I'm at EliSnoid, E-L-I-S-N-O-I-D.
And also, why not check out Barshens if you listen to it?
Go watch Barshens on YouTube, B-A-R-S-H-E-N-S.
And yeah, if you like the show, rate, subscribe, and tell the world about it.
And perhaps you'd like to date me.
And maybe you'd like to, for some reason, lower your standards and date what the internet is calling the British Danny DeVito.
Exactly.
So ladies and gentlemen, I've been Paul Gannon.
I've been Eli Silverman.
Oh, the fun we'll have with syringes. We'll see you next time.