CheapShow - Ep 359: Stars Over 45
Episode Date: November 17, 2023It's sadly time to say goodbye to America in the final episode of our Los Angeles Trilogy! However, if they are going to go out, they're going to go out in style! They're going to go BIG and then GO H...OME when they somehow manage to wrangle the biggest guest of their weird existance! Joining Paul and Eli this week is comedian, actor, musician and slightly bemused human, Tim Heidecker (Tim & Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! On Cinema, Us, Office Hours)! How will he fare in a world of rockney, music mash ups, horror themed hip hop, cockney geezers, Disney education books, walkie talkies and Buddha boards? They're also joined by Brian Wecht (Ninja Sex Party) for a mix of vinyl treats and Price of Shite tricks! As a grand finale, Noiselund graces the economy comedy podcast with one more LA G-funk type track (kinda), taking us out in style! Thanks to Tim Heidecker for taking the time to record with us! Thanks to Brian Wecht for looking after us for a week and to Leighton Gray for being our technician for this recording! "The Cool Cat Of LA" by @noiselund See pics/videos for this episode on our website: https://www.thecheapshow.co.uk/ep-359-stars-over-45 And if you like us, why not support us: www.patreon.com/cheapshow If you want to get involved, email us at thecheapshow@gmail.com And if you want to, follow us on Twitter/X @thecheapshowpod or @paulgannonshow & @elisnoid Find out more about Tim Heidecker here: https://www.timheidecker.com/ And discover "Leighton Night with Brian Wecht" with @bwecht & @graylish @leightonnight www.thecheapshow.co.uk Now on Threads: @cheapshowpod Like, Review, Share, Comment... LOVE US! MERCH Official CheapShow Merch Shop: www.redbubble.com/people/cheapshow/shop www.cheapmag.shop Thanks also to @vorratony for the wonderful, exclusive art: www.tinyurl.com/rbcheapshow Send Us Stuff: CheapShow PO BOX 1309 Harrow HA1 9QJ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's a hairy patch hole.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh, no, who's there?
Oh.
Who's there?
Oh.
Oh.
Where was all this a few weeks ago?
Oh.
Hey, where was all this a few weeks ago?
When me and you, Mr. Silverman, me and you were recording.
Mr. Silverman, can we drop this shit for once?
Where were you? Can you get a different approach? Naughty boys, Mr. Silverman, can we drop this shit for once? Where were you?
Can you get a different approach?
Naughty boys, Mr. Silverman, all of this.
Think about the fucking persona you're building.
That you're sort of a kind of chummy, saggy man-child
who's all naughty with his chubby, saggy naughtiness.
I did, I do.
But it's the same joke.
Okay, so you've done the same fucking
cum knob gags
for the past
eight years, mate.
Cum knob gags.
Name one cum knob gag
I've made.
Any time you say
spoff or rubbing your nubbage.
That's not a joke.
It is.
You're right.
It fucking isn't, mate.
You've pointed that out correctly.
Those are just words.
The point is,
words aren't jokes, Paul.
You know what?
Let's never make a joke again
in case they're slightly similar
to someone else's joke.
That's right. Let's never do a knock-knock gag again, Mr. Silverman. You're right. No, Let's never make a joke again in case they're slightly similar to someone else's joke. That's right.
Let's never do a knock-knock gag again,
Mr. Silverman.
You're right.
No, let's never do a pun.
Let's never do anything
that's ever been done before ever.
You're right.
No, you're right, Mr. Silverman.
You're absolutely correct, Mr. Silverman.
Don't stop calling me that.
Let's never do riffs on popular material.
That's right.
Let's never do shows like The Fast Show
where they riff on popular catfails over and over.
The Fast Show?
Because it's been done.
Because it's been done,
isn't it, Mr. Silverman?
Let's never do anything
ever again, Mr. Silverman.
If you're not going to finish
with this bit, Paul,
I will leave.
Please leave.
This is the introduction
to this week's episode.
This week's episode
is our final
from Los Angeles.
Don't open the door
and then sit back down.
Either fuck off
or come in. All I was trying to say... back down. Either fuck off or come in.
All I was trying to say... No, you either
fuck off or come in. All I was trying to
say, everybody, is I wasn't trying to
shame you. I was just saying, ooh,
isn't it this interwoven web
of comedy references and semi-references
moving in a... A!
Erudite what? A! You found my
badge. You found A. Yeah, I found
the letter A from a couple of weeks ago
when we played that word game.
Mastermind word edition.
Listen, anyway, basically this is our last episode
from Los Angeles.
One of the earliest that we recorded, funnily enough,
but we thought we'd save it till last.
Well, it was the first one we recorded.
Well, we were doing bits in the walkabouts beforehand.
I suppose you're right.
So, yes, it kind of was a very early recording session for us.
But this, what you're going to hear,
is our big-name guest for our LA trip
Tim Heidecker
is our guest and it was a fun
show we were very nervous beforehand
it was quite a surreal experience
arriving in LA we were very jet lagged
and then tired because we walked around the whole
day before yeah we did we did
still jet lagged and then Tim Heidecker comes around
and just knocks on your door
hello come in but hopefully there'll be some enjoyment here for some of our listeners and possibly jet lag and then Tim Heidecker comes around and just knocks on your door. Hello. It was a bit nerve wracking, but
hopefully there'll be some enjoyment here
for some of our listeners and possibly
Tim Heidecker fans. If they're listening, we apologise
that you had to put up with what this is.
This little bit you had to listen to. You didn't have to go on a rant.
Oh, oh look. There's Tim Heidecker
in a podcast. I like Tim Heidecker. Let's listen
to this podcast. What the fuck
is this? Some cunt
berating his good friend. Two cunts berating each other. Oh, two cunts? Two cunts. One podcast. What the fuck is this? Some cunt berating his good friend.
Two cunts
berating each other.
Two cunts?
Two cunts.
One podcast.
It's coming to you.
So,
this is our final episode
in LA
for you to listen to.
It was us
and Brian Wecht
talking to Tim Heidecker
and playing a few...
And me, I was there.
You basically were there,
but again,
going back to what I said
at the beginning,
where was all this
vaginal music stuff? You didn't do that in front of Tim Heide said at the beginning, where was all this vaginal music stuff?
You didn't do that in front of Tim Heidecker, did you?
What do you mean, vaginal music?
He started the song today, literally just five minutes ago.
I was warming up.
In fact, four minutes and 47 seconds ago.
I was simply warming up my brain goggles.
By talking about...
Now I can do a song if you want.
Is there anything else you'd like to say before we get into the episode?
That's the important thing here.
This is meant to be an intro
to our Tim Heidecker episode
Enjoy the episode everyone
we enjoyed making it
We did
Although it was a bit nerve wracking
We were absolutely terrified
So with all that being said
See for yourself
Here it is
Episode
I thought that I
What?
Did nothing?
Me and Tim had a little
Yeah?
A little thing going
Did
Yeah?
A little comedy
Yeah
Yeah?
Yeah
Master players You know Paul when two master players What? Begin a game of comedy Yeah. A little thing going. Did, um, yeah. A little comedy, yeah. Yeah? Yeah. Well, why don't you...
Master players.
You know, Paul, when two master players...
What, begin a game of comedy chess?
Yeah.
They see each other, they admit they're in the level of mastership, and then it's like
you, you know, coming up behind...
Jog on.
Jog on.
He's doing the wanker.
Jog on, Mr. Silverman.
We'll leave it to you, the listener,
to decide if Eli and Tim Heidecker
had a quote-unquote thing going on.
Right?
We'll come and we'll see you.
No, enjoy, really.
Really enjoy.
Oh, in seriousness, enjoy it.
Sorry, Paul.
Enjoy, and we'll see you next week.
Here we go.
Here's the episode.
Press the fucking credits.
Pop, pop, random.
Pop, pop, random.
Paul Gannon.
Eli Silverman.
Welcome to the Jeep Show.
Sources and words and phrases.
Two things I'm responsible for.
Chodney.
Chodney Borough.
I hate you.
You've got to be moved with posse.
Jeep show tonight.
Jeep show tonight. It's the Price of Shine
Welcome to Cheap Show
Hello, welcome to Cheap Show, the economy comedy podcast where Eli, I'm doing a change up
Do you know what I usually say? Charity shops, bargain bins, thrift stores
No, you don't say thrift stores, that's the American thing
Is it?
what do I say?
you say charity shops bargain bins
bazaars
jumble sales
jumble sales are important
pound land
pound land
yes
of Great Britain
and bring you that
but we're not doing that this time
because we're in
instead we're in Los Angeles
and we are going through
the thrift stores
the goodwill
and the dollar trees
of Los Angeles
to bring you the treasure
we find amongst the trash.
And this is a holy day for Cheap Show, for we have two of the most beloved people.
And that's gone off.
Your thing's doing something.
Your camera's doing something.
You know what?
Just turn it off.
I'm just going to turn it off because I could spend 15 minutes playing around with that
and have an emotional breakdown.
But I thought, let's just pull back on the embarrassment.
Hello.
Welcome to Cheap Show.
And we have two very special guests with us this week.
And this has been years in the making in some respects
because you've always threatened to come out to LA
and bug you personally.
But first of all, I want to bring on to the show
a wonderful, beautiful human.
Someone I have, if possible, romantic attachments with
in the future.
But until then, we're just friends.
And that friend is Brian Wecht.
Hi, everybody.
Where might people know you?
They might know me.
I'm half of the comedy band Ninja Sex Party.
They might know me from Game Grumps, the podcast Late Night with Brian Wecht.
And where else?
Starbomb.
Starbomb.
Like band.
Comedy music in general.
In general.
Thank you.
Thank you for being here today. Can I shake your hand? No. Okay. Starbomb. Like band. Comedy music in general. In general. Thank you. Thank you for being here today.
Can I shake your hand?
No.
Okay.
He always tries to touch.
Yeah.
I am a toucher.
I don't want to disturb the microphones.
See, I was planning on Jim sitting there so I could touch him.
Here we go.
But if he's not going to sit there, then I'm going to have to touch him.
I'd be happy to.
Here.
Oh, yeah.
That's what I needed.
Thanks, Paul.
That's all I needed.
No, it really is lovely to see you guys.
I noticed you let go quite forcefully.
Well, yeah, I'm trying to do your show.
All right, okay, fine.
Okay.
All right, wonderful.
In that case, it's the other guest I want to get to.
I mean, I love you.
No, no, please.
Don't get me wrong, but you being here is almost ancillary.
D-list at best is what I am, so please.
Well, no, I would put you C, because honestly, you're a C in my eyes.
I appreciate that.
But here, no, is the real star.
In my opinion today, I'll be honest, when I sent this email to this guy,
I thought he would say no and I wouldn't have to have a panic attack
on a day away in Los Angeles.
But unfortunately, he said yes.
So now I have to deal with the fact that right here, right now,
we are joined by the one and only Tim Heidecker.
Hello, sir.
Hello, thank you.
Thank you for those kind words.
We do our best to make our guests wonderful and uncomfortable.
How do you make someone wonderful?
You need to...
Honestly, Paul.
Yeah.
Just a little note now.
Okay.
Take a breath.
Think of the word in your head.
Picture the word.
Yeah.
Is that the correct word to say right now?
We are under a little bit of a time crunch, though.
We are.
And I am racing through this.
Okay.
Because I don't want to waste Tim's time.
Just spout a load of nonsense.
No, no.
If you would like to have a discussion about the words I choose.
I do.
I always do.
The words I choose under pressure.
As you just sit there.
Look at you.
Laid back.
I'm fine.
I'm on the back of the chair.
I disagree with the phrase fine.
Anyway. Hello, Tim. Hello. How are you? the phrase fine anyway hello tim hello how are you all right all right good doing all right we don't really do an interviewee thing but i did want to ask you one thing because as people who
listen to us probably know a large part of some of our structure is taken from on cinema and i
wanted to just ask you very briefly about that because maybe i'm wrong but it sounded like between you and greg it was a not a side hustle for one of the better
phrase but it sounded like something you did for a laugh and then it's grown into well the high
network and things like that are you surprised by that or is it something that you willingly dove
into uh no not surprised it uh it did sort of take on a life of its own from a fan side it was not
something that that that uh had a huge audience at first it still doesn't have a huge audience but
um yeah we we did it for fun we did it when we could and the more we did it the more we liked doing it the more we also uh the more we did
it the bigger it the bigger the world became not necessarily the audience but the the story yeah
the story got bigger and and uh so um i'm never i don't i'm not there's nothing surprising about it but there does feel a certain uh pressure
or uh responsibility to do because so much of it we feel has had a very high level of quality to it
that there's a responsibility and a bit of a pressure to maintain that you know are you 10
years in oh more than that how many yeah uh well about about maybe 12 years yeah and it has just
i mean obviously we're subscribed to the high network we follow it we see the oscar specials
and it does seem like half the problem is not so much the content but what do you do to not outdo
or change it and keep it fresh for you because yeah well i mean it's we we've been meeting a lot
lately because we're planning on on shooting again soon as soon as i think we can shoot now
some of the the strike stuff has kind of worked itself out uh which is very complicated but um
yeah we're meeting there's still things that make us laugh i i think when it's all done when it's
all said and done you will be able to find the best you know you'll be able to see the peak and the and that might not be
where i don't know it's hard it's hard to judge while you're doing it but um there's stories left
to be told there's things that we want to resolve in some ways uh and keep in mind and make it keep
it funny and surprising and all that stuff and we're constantly
inspired by the world and uh things that we you know new podcasts that we're obsessed with that
are awful new new new new hucksters new not you guys yeah no new new scams out there new con men
you know they're there there's so many to choose from.
So we always have our ear on those particular railroad tracks.
I think AI is going to be the next one.
Well, we've done a little already,
and some of it we use as a practical tool, actually.
Like, you know, there might be some investigative journalism happening on the show that will just use AI to help make feel more like one of those poorly produced, you know, YouTube investigative journalist things.
It does take a lot of effort to make something not bad, but you know what I mean?
It takes a lot of effort to seem like it's slickly unprofessional to some extent.
Yes. So, yeah. And Brian, you slickly unprofessional to some extent. Yes.
So, yeah.
And Brian, you've got an album out, haven't you?
Yes.
That's all.
Plenty.
Thank you.
Okay, great. Thank you.
We're done with it.
I appreciate that.
I would do the same.
I don't like being in this position.
You understand why you're here.
I get it.
You're like a transatlantic buffer between all incompetence.
You're at my house.
I understand why you had to include me.
Exactly.
That was the real... Thank God.
Jesus.
I was hoping I wouldn't have to explain that.
Right.
I do want it to be clear.
I did not invite myself onto this show.
No, no.
I wanted you here because, again, we've had you on the pod before, but it's always been
in a play this role or do this voting thing.
And you were in the first episode when you lived in London.
Yeah.
So when I lived in London, the first time they did this, as I said, we were comedy friends,
and they were doing it upstairs at a pub,
and I was just about to move here,
and they had me on stage with them on Sheep Show 1.
And did you have to eat something?
Sponge.
I did.
It was a giant bag full of, yeah, I don't remember what,
but cheap candies, I think.
Yeah, most people block out.
No, Sponge was a stew.
Sponge is a sort of candy thing.
Now while we're on it, Paul,
I thought the other day,
wouldn't it be great?
What am I going to have for lunch?
Sponge.
Wait, is that a real thing?
What is the closest thing we have in America to a sponge?
It's like a mound.
Wait, hold on.
Coconut mound.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I thought you meant just a mound of... That's what they're called though, right? Yes, yes. Mound, coconut mound. Wait, hold on. A coconut mound. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I thought you meant just a mound of...
That's what they're called,
though, right?
Yes, yes.
Mound, coconut mound.
Yeah.
It's similar to that
in the shape.
Okay.
It's sort of a pack
with two mounds in it.
Is it sponge American, though?
No, Mexican.
I'm sorry to get hung up on that.
Can you spell sponge?
S-P-O-N-C-H.
I see.
Sponge.
Great.
Thank you.
Sponge for lunch.
Who's the sponger of the...
Interview segment out of the way. We've got going to crack on so the first thing we do is silverman's
platters silverman explain the platters um we i collect vinyl uh novelty vinyl or um unusual vinyl
um and then we listen to them and we say whether it's a platter as in it's a legitimate record that we all like
or a splatter which is a liquefied record that is shot through some kind of uh a cannon against
the wall you could melt down vinyl and then splatter it willy-nilly being here in los angeles
must have must be a great this must be a boon for you we We were in Amoeba yesterday,
and I wanted to spend more money and time there,
but we had to go.
Although I don't know if stuff has been picked over here too much.
Well, the thing is, the stuff that I'm into,
apart from the novelty stuff,
it's like disco and funk sold. So over here is where it was all made.
I mean, you know, from 60s and 70s up to the 80s.
And you'll have better exposure.
That doesn't mean it all stayed here.
No.
Because I travel in my band, a tour, my drummer and guitar player, both avid record collectors.
And on this tour we did this summer, we went to the smaller cities.
And that's where gold can sometimes be.
Because the bigger place, you know, you go to or new york all everything's overpriced and all the collector you know the people that know this stuff are
a lot of them live there so you go to like oklahoma city and you hit hit uh gold absolutely
and but the thing is as well um in britain you'll have a lot of like rock and roll stuff it's like
it's destroyed and you come out here and you can still find like a clean
Little Richard
single or something
where In Good Condition
is a thing
yeah
and also
I mean Amoeba
there's nothing
there's no record shop
that's surprising
even in London
there's nothing
that they do
V-Wendt
Tower Records
went
Virgin Records
went
and of course
I get reissues
and all of the reissues
were in there
all of them
Rough Trade
doesn't have that reputation?
No, no.
I go there, and they have the in-stores, and they kick everyone out.
I can't dig in there, and it's like, come on.
I was telling these guys, too, that the old Amiibo was even better than the current one.
Oh, I haven't been to the new one yet.
Oh, maybe I have.
It's great, but it doesn't have quite the extent and the breadth and the weirdness of the one that was there before.
You just don't get that vibe here in the uk anymore because that whole industry's been
sucked out the the old one had a particularly cool like jazz and classical section in the back
where there was just a bunch of weird like old jazz and classical box sets that out of print
forever you know operas and stuff that would just be impossible to find anywhere else i think they
called a lot of that stuff for the new place.
Yeah.
Well, with that in mind, let's crack on.
We've got a few tracks for you to listen to today.
We're going to play a little bit of them.
We're not going to sit for the whole track.
But the first one is something we've wanted to talk about in a while.
And because it's close to Halloween,
we thought we'd present you with a track that you might know,
you might not.
I think it's a lost Halloween hit.
It's not the Monster Mash, is it?
It's not the Monster Mash.
What if that was what he had for me like yeah it's the monster
man i know we know i know that we all know the monster it would be great if the monster mash
just never showed up in england right it's been 60 years and you guys just missed it somehow right
the guy sounds like boris karloff what's that about no so this track is called amityville
house on the hill by an artist called Lovebug Starsky,
and we're going to play a little bit for you.
Lovebug Starsky?
Lovebug Starsky is his, well, it's his stage name.
His real name, Kevin Smith.
No relationship.
What year are we talking here?
This is 86.
Okay. I'm an eagle.
I'm an eagle.
I'm an eagle.
I'm sorry.
Well, I was going to a party in Amityville.
Matter of fact, it was the house at the top of the hill.
But I wouldn't ever win for nothing in the world except I got an invite
for one of my girls. When I got to the house, the grass was over the fence.
The atmosphere around would keep me in suspense. So I rang the doorbell
like it ain't no thing. And this gruesome guy came and said,
Hello, Swarovski. I understand they call you the love bug.
What a cute little bug.
I'd like to put you between my fingers.
It's the house on the hill.
Amityville.
House on the hill.
House on the hill.
So he grabbed me by the collar, picked me off my feet.
And all I could hear was this spooky beat. And when he finally put me down, my heart felt like stomping. The House on the Hill And that's the gist of that.
Wow.
So, this was apparently a much bigger hit in the UK
than it was anywhere else in the world,
despite the fact that the artist himself is American.
Again, like most good podcasts, we will research our stuff from Wikipedia.
So he's known by the name Lovebug Starsky, American MC, musician, record producer, began
his career as a record boy in 1971 as hip hop first appeared in the Bronx, and he eventually
became a DJ at the Disco Fever Club in 1978.
Apparently, he is one of the two people
who may have come up with the term hip-hop.
Allegedly.
Really?
Starsky claimed that he coined the phrase
while trading the two words back and forth
while improvising lines with Keith Cowboy
of the Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five
at a farewell party with a friend
who was heading into the army.
And that's it in a nutshell.
Wow.
And then he goes,
I picked up the mic and started saying a hip hop,
the hip hoppity hop hop.
Yeah, but that's on
Rapper's Delight as well.
He's saying this is before
Rapper's Delight.
He's saying this is before that.
So we're talking 78 or so.
And then with the height
of his career,
I'm just going to paraphrase,
he ended up going to prison
for five years
for drugs and violence
and then came out
and tried to relaunch
his career in Las Vegas where it didn't really pan out for for him and then he passed away a few years ago in 2018
yeah quite quite young yeah sounds like he should have gone to blackpool
but or somewhere in england somewhere lower key yes margate is probably good brighton would have
been a good scene for him it's what's what's a good hip-hop scene in the UK, actually? Oh, Exeter.
I once went to Exeter,
and because we were into hip-hop,
and we were breakdancing on the street.
Sorry, this is new.
You brokedanced?
Yeah.
Can you do some now?
Well, I could probably still spin on my back. I'm going to say this is my house,
no breakdancing.
No.
Okay, I'm just going to put the kibosh on that.
We were in Exeter, and we were just just because we looked a bit hip-hop they were
we were like taken in by some local hip-hoppers what like like fagans ragabond ragabond i don't
know what you're trying to say i need to take a sit back and imagine the word above me ragamuffin
or vagabond i believe vagabond yeah but i think you can see lovebug starsky's lack of
judgment there you know the drugs and the violence thing because he puts a captain kirk impression in
the middle of his halloween record yes very strange but i can imagine they were he was trying
to lean into because didn't let me get this right originally the the whole west coast east coast rap
scene began with like monster rap music.
What was that genre?
Yes.
There was.
Yes.
Well, novelty.
Yeah.
Horror novelty was a thing on the West Coast.
And one of the one of the first West Coast rap records was a sort of Frankenstein thing, I think, or a mummy.
Yeah.
Well, because there's that kind of Houdini freaks come out at night thing as well which that reminds me very much right yeah yeah so yeah love bug he has a very specific uh phrasing which is
so thoughts brian what do you make of it would that be something you would listen to at this
halloween season oh 100 i love that i thought it was great like it uh like a lot of uh novelty rap uh i should say unlike a lot of
novelty rap it wasn't immediately off-putting yeah you know there especially what year did you
say that was 86 87 yeah so this is like prime rap and rodney era kind of rap and duke all a lot of
really bad novelty rap that that i thought was very solid compared to a lot of that stuff.
Because we've talked about this in the podcast before,
but in the UK, rap was seen specifically as a novelty thing
for comedians to try and get a foot in the charts.
So Kenny Everett had snot rap, for example.
And it was all that same kind of real basic rhyme structure,
but with the inflection of their character upon it.
Almost every comedian did like a comedy rap record.
Roll and Rap, we had Morris Minor and the Mages that trying to do Beastie Boys. Rodney Danger comedian did a like a comedy rap record rolling right we had morris minor in the majors that trying to do beastie boys rodney dangerfield did it had a
rap rap record rapping rodney yeah and that is a yeah yeah but no i mean i only listen when i'm
talking that's fair enough that that rodney rap is pretty great honestly that well the the music
is great the rapping is terrible but the rapping is a pun machine kind of thing isn't it all well
timmy's just doing his stand-up well you know like i told you i've got the 12 inch version of
the rap in rodney and there's an actually a live set on the other side which is obviously much
better yes beautiful and it's one of those ones where he used to have people like uh calling back
back to him the you know oh he's like material yeah because they were all like his fans he had
a whole sort of uh call and response thing yeah that's cool his joke he had joke families joke categories so it was this
before the uh the nightmare on my street no this is after it was a little after i think yeah because
yeah that was that was referenced as an inspiration for this track i see um but like there wasn't too
much of it tim what did you think of it would that be something you would play at halloween party i mean no i wouldn't play i wouldn't uh
no i i didn't care for any i don't care for that genre yeah uh i don't listen to that i wouldn't
listen to that i mean at a halloween party sure yeah i mean throw it on who cares but it wouldn't
be on your spotify players no i thought it was self i thought it was like one of those novelty
uh or not novelty but like like self-pressed records.
I had no, listening to it,
I thought it was like something that you found
that no one had, I didn't,
I would never have guessed it would have been a hit.
It's strange.
If you look at like compilation albums in the UK,
like now six or whatever it is,
you'll see that on side three.
Okay.
Crazy.
But you won't, when I was in Amoeba,
I looked at their now Halloween album.
Four sides, not a single one of them had this.
It's just a completely ignored track in this country.
I'd never heard of it before.
No.
And it's strange because I thought
this would be something that we bring to the plate
and maybe, oh yeah, we've heard this move on.
But no, it's weird how it hasn't translated
to the country it originated from.
Yeah.
So, Eli, your thoughts?
He's a bullshit artist.
Right, to the point, yeah.
Like we said before, Amateurville is not on a hill.
It's not on a hill. So he's going for Hville is not on the hill it's not on a hill
he's going for haunted house on the hill yeah yeah no so brian platter or splatter sir platter
for me oh platter okay tim platter or splatter uh gotta go splatter here fair play i'm gonna
say platter just because of the nostalgia value for me and i'm not gonna vote because i want tim
to like me uh right so we have our next track, which is.
So have you ever heard, Tim, of Stars on 45?
Stars on, no.
This is an interesting thing.
This is, again, one of these things where it seems to have been a bigger hit in the UK.
Certainly more notoriety around it.
Well, I was telling these guys I had only heard of it because I forget which Weird Al album it's on.
But he has a track called
polka's on 45 which apparently is a reference to this series which i didn't clock until
fairly recently so they're can i guess that they're sort of um medleys of the hits yeah
exactly yeah so we're going to play a little bit of that for you now because we have a few
we're not going to play all of utmost so uh let's do this one कर दो कर दो
कर दो
कर दो
कर दो
कर दो
कर दो
कर दो
कर दो
कर दो
कर दो कर दो कर दो Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, leaning into the rock more than i would think yeah same that's a five minute track and what
you're going to get in those five minutes is
Star Wars theme, the Miko take on that.
We've got Can't Give You Anything, Kung Fu Fighting, Layla,
All Right, Fire, Do You Think I'm Sexy,
Martin Baker, YMCA, The Good, The Bad and The Ugly,
Don't Stop Till You Get Enough, Suicide is Painless for MASH,
Get Off, Stars on 45, Baker Street,
Get Off, is that the, well, it wouldn't be Prince,
because this was 81. Foxy track. Oh, that's good. Betty Davis Eyes, and then 45, Baker Street. Get Off. Is that the, well, it wouldn't be Prince because this was 81.
Foxy Track.
That's good.
Betty Davis Eyes
and then Eve of the War.
Oh, wow.
The Jeff Wayne.
And that's the mixture
you get from that.
And this is volume three.
Do you know the
Jeff Wayne
War of the Worlds musical?
I don't think so, no.
It was a,
well, these guys should speak to it.
It was a big hit in the UK
and is a straight up musical
based on the War of the Worlds.
Oh, cool.
Very like disco, 70s pop element. It's got elements of prog to it was a big hit in the uk and is a straight-up musical based on the war of the world oh cool very like disco 70s pop element it's got elements of prog to it as well it's got elements of folk honestly pretty great like yeah seek that out it's interesting because again it's
one of these things we're in the uk it's it's everywhere like the royal albert hall will do a
live performance of it with giant because it's a jeff wayne obviously adapted the war of the
world who's jeff wayne did he come from a band or anything like that? Just a guy
The gist of Jeff Wayne
Was that his dad was a famous
John Wayne
Yes, was a famous musician
Who wrote musicals
His son, Jeff Wayne, worked with him on a few musicals
Before working in jingles
And then took all the money he made from all this work
And into his passion project
Which was I want to do a a concept album around
the book and they went through many they went through the center of the earth which ended up
being uh jules verne center of the earth which ended up being who done who did that early rick
wake wake when okay and so that became this big album sold narrated by richard burton like am i
being cynical in thinking maybe he went for war of the worlds because it was out of copyright and
he didn't have to pay the...
I don't think that's cynical at all.
No, the idea was he wanted to tell a story
and he was either looking at HG Wells or science fiction writers at that time.
He was going for all of them and eventually War of the Worlds fitted his vision,
I think, better because it was grander and more operatic.
I'm angry with him because...
Jeff Wayne.
Yes.
Go on.
Because that album, fine, good, you like it
Whatever
But
Thank you
I think from like 1980
All the way through that whole decade
He released a different exclusive
You know
Remastered version of that record
Well I want to see something else
Well the reason why it was a hit
Was because it was getting played on radio stations
But they were sick of playing the 17-minute version
of, like, Eve of the War.
Yeah, the songs are really long.
So then he remixed the album for the first time
to make it into singles
so that a radio station could play.
I mean, that's all in there.
That's besides the point, really.
Yeah, let's get back to these...
So I was on 45.
This is fascinating to me
because they're Dutch.
They're a Dutch novelty band. That's the name of a band? Yeah, they're one group they're a dutch novelty band that's the name of
a band yeah they're what they're one group of musicians i didn't know that either what is the
point of it like what what do you when do you when do you listen under what circumstances do you
listen to that record parties party but it doesn't make sense for parties to me because it's so
abrupt yeah changes they're they're not clever transitions they just like change so what's it and these were popular hugely popular unpopular people parties yeah it was a
lazy way of keeping your party going but also it's got that musical blue bull where you go
and then it cuts out before the bit maybe for context it was hard to dj then right like you
needed the gear and this is sort of a shortcut
but this seems to be a i mean i know this band is dutch but it seems to be a particularly british
trend because this ultimately led to i don't know if you know jive bunny oh dude i was just about to
say that was a big hit uh it was the swing swing okay swing the mood which was where they adapted
a bunch of like 1940s like glenn miller swing stuff uh it's almost exactly the
same format as that tiny snippet i remember i have a very clear memory of going on a camp trip
to montreal when i was 16 and going to a record store specifically to look for the jive bunny and
the master mixers record because you couldn't get the full record here so and it was a bunch of like
50s and 60s stuff in addition to glenn miller didn't it didn't the
glenn miller i could talk about this forever uh i think the swing the mood it had a didn't have a
hello baby in there hello baby one of those in there or something like that oh yeah because
they mixed the big bopper that's right yeah it was like they laid over so it was like 40s and
50s kind of stuff kind of thing and then they had a whole album off that where they would do a glam
one where it was all and then they'd be on top of the pops it'd be a big bunny with the big head like a big furry bunny
mixing this was missed all this what years are these 80s yeah i was like 15 16 so like 89 something
like that but but this is the thing yes those songs aren't particularly artistically worthy
but at the same time it introduced me to music i hadn't heard before that 50s you know run around
sue i first heard,
and that became one of my faves.
Yeah, Run Around Sue, that's right.
And that was like one of my faves.
That was about the part of the song
I always liked the best when it got to.
And then it was like,
oh, there's a real whole song.
I think I was introduced to all that music
through movies.
So you had like that movie Clue.
Sure.
Had that great,
a lot of doo-wop in like late, early 50s.
Right, because that was a period.
Yeah.
And of course, Back to the Future,. Right, because that was a period. Yeah, and of course,
Back to the Future,
you know,
Peggy Sue Got Married.
There's a lot of 80s movies
that were nostalgic
of the 50s
and early 60s.
Stand By Me.
Stand By Me.
Yeah.
When you look at the list
of the biggest selling
singles of all time,
most of the ones
at the top
are ones that were hits
back in the 50s
and 60s and then were in the back in the 50s and 60s
and then were in films
in the 80s.
Yes.
People were still buying.
Yeah.
I remember hearing a lot of music
for the first time
from Quantum Leap.
Oh.
Like, you know,
because they would go through
from the 40s through the 70s
and there was a bunch of, like,
good 50s music there.
Because I think it was
that idea where these creators
were coming through
and they were inspired
by the things that they enjoyed when they were younger, like the serials and the music. Because I think it was that idea where these creators were coming through and they were inspired by the things that they enjoyed when
they were younger like
the serials and the
music and like obviously
the Blues Brothers was
an example of it
rescued R&B.
The Blues Brothers for
me was a big one.
You know and it put a
lot of those acts back
into the charts again
and revitalised their
careers and now we see
it again because a lot
of the films lean into
the 80s.
That generation that
grew up in the 80s is
now making content which
is.
It doesn't work as a party record.'re right because it's too it's terrible
frankly yeah here's the thing so there's a beatles one they did a beatles one because
it's a beatles melody but it decides to start with venus and then sugar sugar by the archers
archies before it gets into the beatles for no particular reason unless it's that it's a
hangover from the previous track on the album. Can I hold something for you?
I mean, shall we have that conversation?
Yeah, thank you.
Because you know where I'm going to go.
Yeah, I know where you're going to go with it.
I easily fall into smoke quite quickly.
I'm trying to help you.
Please, you would be helping me.
That's the trick.
Right, so let me just do this one again.
So we've got Stars on 45, Beatles.
So I'm just going to skip to a little bit into it. your window you know
if you break my heart
I'll go
but I'll be back again
cause I
told you once
before goodbye
but I came back again I hate it.
Yeah, same.
Yeah, right?
It kind of...
Wait, so hold on.
Yeah.
They didn't...
It's not...
Is it samples of the original?
No.
Or they just re-recorded that?
Absolutely. I mean with the other one. They they just re-recorded absolutely i mean with the
other one they're all re-recorded yeah okay great uh which which surprised me because they did use
a lot of abba for some of their stuff and a lot of motown but it was all re-recorded i think it's
just before the era when sampling technology came through because drive bunny that samples
that's probably drum machines that sounds like it sounds like because this is 1981 these were released and it was huge in the uk absolutely way too big but uh just let
me read this the beatles sound alikes were established dutch singers john lennon's part
was sung by mass boys in the 1970s dutch pop group smile and paul mccartney and george harrison's
part was sung by sandy Sandy Coast from a band called
Hans Verlum
I think that's how
and a band
they also had a band
called Rainbow Train
which sounds better
than they'll probably sound
I like that band name a lot
it's a great band
Rainbow Train
well you are
you were wondering
about the inclusion of Venus
on the Beatles thing
but that's
what they called
the Venus
the original Venus guy
Blue
Blue
Blue I'm just going to let you say the word Venus guy. Blue, blue, blue.
I'm just going to let you say the word blue until you stop.
Until you turn blue.
They were a Dutch group anyway.
Yeah, they were a Dutch group.
But then these albums are so popular in the UK for whatever reason,
loads of albums.
I remember them being played at parties.
I remember going to like working men's clubs for Manan's 60th
and someone would just stick on the Now 45 and then go away for a pint.
It was that kind of thing. To the point where Chaz and Dave,
British Rockne singer songwriters.
Did you say rock?
Does that mean rocking Cockney?
Rockne was a genre.
I guess they created,
they created a whole genre.
I've never heard of that.
Have you never heard of Chaz and Dave?
No.
Like rabbit.
Oh yeah,
I did.
I just,
that song is insane.
Yeah.
And the sideboard song.
You should play that song.
Well,
I'll play it for you.
Our driver, we just toured in the UK in the spring,
and our driver was playing us that.
Rabbit, Rabbit.
Rabbit, Rabbit.
Have you heard it before?
No, no.
And the thing that everyone brings up with Chaz and Dave
is they are on Eminem.
They're the most sampled,
one of the most sampled pieces of music ever.
It was from Rabbit, right?
Yeah.
It was kind of like
Boogie Woogie Blues
but with a very Cockney,
Knees Up Mother Brown
kind of attitude.
But they wrote songs
that I think are just beautiful.
Like, what's that one,
the ballad that they did?
Ain't No Pleasing You.
It's incredibly moving.
Stone Cold, beautiful song.
So they did a take on Stars on 45 called Stars Over 45
to suggest that maybe the songs that they want to celebrate
are a bit older than 1980 or so.
We're going to take this opportunity To sing us some old time songs
We've got a clap trap on the off beat
And a bass drum on the on
Stars over 45
We've got to keep them songs alive
Them boys deserve some credit
Don't forget it
Hit it
Hit it
Hit it
Hit it
Hit it
Hit it
I'll go window cleaning to an anonymous bob
For a nosy potter, it's an interesting job
It's a job that just suits me
A window cleaner you would be
If you could see what I could see
When I'm cleaning windows
In my profession I work hard But I never stop
I climb this blinking ladder
Till I get right to the top
Honeymooning couples too
You should see them fill and coo
You'd be surprised at the things I do
When I'm cleaning windows
One, two
Is that like a British dance hall song or something?
When I'm Cleaning Windows was George Formby.
He was a banjo-lele.
Right.
Wasn't it?
Well, it's similar to the Weird Al's Pocos on 45,
which was very entertaining, very clever,
very well arranged.
But yeah, weirdly, it comes from something lesser.
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, the stars on 45 is very literal and not funny.
Just sort of, we can do this.
What I wonder then about the Weird Al thing is,
was, I mean, it's clearly a reference to it.
Was that, how was that on his radar?
You know, it seems like a British thing.
What was the...
I'll ask him next time I have to make conversation with him.
That would be great.
That would be very interesting.
You're on a bullshit podcast talking about a megamix of 1981 and could you please define your influences the thing is one
more point on chas and dave they it's sort of trends isn't it you've got the stars on 45 thing
there's a lot of party records uh made but because we said like just for parties because it you
wouldn't have two decks at a party and so you you put something on, you could just flip it once and you know,
everyone could dance.
But there's also these Mrs.
Mills records,
these sort of,
I don't know who that is.
She's this sort of middle-aged woman who played the piano and did old sort of
numbers.
And she sold like 8 million records or something.
It's crazy.
It's like when you go to a charity shop,
here's what you're going to find.
You're going to find James last.
You're going to find Mrs.
Mills.
You're going to find Mantovani. Mantov to find Mrs Mills. You're going to find...
Mantovani.
Mantovani.
In the UK.
In the UK, specifically.
Because I don't know any of these guys.
And Barbra Streisand.
That Streisand and Christofferson record.
Wow.
It could have thousands of copies of that.
It's like a plague, that album.
It infuses every charity shop in the UK.
But Chas and Dave did their Cockney Jamboree or whatever.
So they dipped their toe in that.
And they're good, those records.
I've got like 12 inches.
So that's similar.
That's what I'm saying.
They've sort of knew about the whole Stars on 45 sort of format
because those Cockney party records around the old piano
are kind of that kind of thing as well.
But the weird thing about those albums is
that they're true to the source of the songs,
which is great.
They're keeping those old songs alive.
They're also king with some of the rather objectionable phrases and words
that were used in some of the music.
So it's one of those ones we go,
this is a great song.
Don't listen to the next 30 seconds
and we're back and carry on with it, right?
So, Stars on 45.
Brian, let's start with you.
Platter or splatter?
Splatter. I hated it.
Splatter, splatter, splatter.
Yeah, yeah.
Splatter for me.
For me, it reminds me of being alone
in the corner of a working men's club
while my
nan got pissed and tried to kiss my uncle as that starts.
There was some kind of incest controversy in your family.
My dad's uncle.
You know what?
Your dad's uncle.
You know what?
Can we,
for the sake of my reputation,
ignore what I said for the last minute?
All right.
Is that all right?
Can we all agree that sometimes I pick examples that aren't the best for me
to pick out?
You edit this as far as I'm aware, right but i keep it in i keep it all in because
i was sitting in a working men's club men's club listening to that record and your nan
your grandmother was trying to get off but not my my nan's direct uncle it was on my dad's side
well i thought so what is a working men's club specifically? A pub.
Blue collar bar.
Yeah, blue collar bar.
I see.
It's a pub for the community.
So you'd have to be on their books to be allowed to go in and things like that.
Ah, okay.
Yeah.
So it's like a, no, this isn't the right, VFW type.
Yeah, no.
Place maybe.
They used to have bring your wife night.
Ah.
Because she was told to stay at home.
And it was all the racist pre-modern era
comedians sort of uh were there but really i mean that's when i remember first seeing you know lily
savage paul o'grady do you know that i don't know okay big uh big uk comedian uh basically drag
before drag exploded he was paul o'grady was one of the first drag acts to really break into
mainstream because they were going to do lily savage was like a character and then did blankety blank
which you know is the u.s version of match game um anyway stuff like that but it was where i saw
a lot of those acts that became mainstream because britain has an eye as a habit of taking the club
and this is the 80s 70s 80s they would take all those club acts that were successful and give
them game shows or like entertainment shows to do so that's why you'd have i shouldn't
really just go uh ted rogers you know ted rogers right no but this is what's interesting to me is
hearing these names which are huge stars presumably in the uk that are not on my radar right at all
this makes well i'm a huge uh huge and a lot if you want to talk about my inspiration, is Alan Partridge, Steve Coogan.
And I devour everything that he puts out,
and up to this day, his audio books, his podcasts.
And knowing full well that I'm going to miss 30% of the references.
That's right, because there's so much.
But I don't really care.
I understand the general, like, it's almost like a placeholder.
But he'll make references to all kinds of British television personalities but I don't really care. I understand the general, like it's almost like a placeholder. It was one, you know,
but he'll make references to all kinds of British television personalities and chat show hosts and comedians and actors.
And I won't know half of them.
And then sometimes it comes across your radar later.
You're like,
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
That was,
yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That happened.
It's strange.
Cause I mean,
again,
we're huge Partridge fans here.
There's something about them.
I mean,
I don't know if there's another comedy character in creation that has that much history too and
that much because we're working on it i would say you're only second to that because with partridge
it's not just i'm alan party it's the day-to-day it's on the hour yeah it is like the stand-up he
did beforehand and it's hard to find a lot of that stuff too like if you miss it what i think is uh yeah some of it is i mean uh certainly the very early stuff yeah i i think it
gets better with age the newer stuff i mean i think the character's funnier now to me than he
was 20 years ago the latest podcast from the ost house is funnier than I'm Alan Partridge, you know, because I think it,
it started broader or it certainly had a point in it when it was broad and it
was playing on,
it was playing like the,
like the,
like Seinfeld would play here,
like pretty big with an audience studio audience.
And now it feels like he can kind of just be very weird and dark.
And I thought when they made the,
the alpha Papa movie was when they kind of transitioned to like, Oh, this is getting really weird and dark and specific. I thought when they made the Alpha Papa movie
was when they kind of transitioned to like,
oh, this is getting really weird now.
I really enjoyed that.
But it still somehow holds together
because the character is extremely broad and weird.
Well, he's funnier when he's failing
and it makes sense that he's, you know,
now the podcast is he's trying to rationalize
why he's doing a podcast and why he's not on the BBC.
It's a great position for that character to be in.
The latest book's fantastic because it's about him
trying to find a new purpose now that things are
working out. There's the whole idea of easy tackling
council culture to an extent, but also
the whole idea of rehabilitating
old landmarks because it gets you a TV deal.
Yeah, that's all he can.
It's beautiful.
One aspect of that might be that he's
more appropriate age for the character
than he used to be
it's like Bob Dylan a little bit
I love Bob Dylan
I'm a huge Bob Dylan fan but as an
older man his music almost makes more
sense than a 22 year old kid singing
you know what I mean
great point
thank you very much right let let's move on our section then we'll do the price of shite you
want to do the thing do the thing do the thing it's the fucking price of shite it's the fucking
price of shite it's the fucking price of shite it's the fucking price of shite that's not how
the theme goes halfway through i had done it wrong but i thought as a professional co-host
have you taken it out to bounce away with that have you taken any what any thoughts that just
slowing down internal no why would i why start now oh ten years so i do the end bit then it's
the funny thing to me is you're the one that's drinking the Red Bull.
So I don't know how that's happening.
Is he psychically
transferring over to him?
What?
The nervous energy?
Depositing your...
Depositing...
What?
Okay.
It's the fucking
Price is Short.
No, you fucked me up now.
I was going to say
this sounds exactly
like the thing he just did.
How does the fucking thing...
We've been doing it for years, how does it go?
We could spend ten minutes working this out, or we could just do the game itself.
Well, we've got fucking shit items.
Also, Paul, it's not the fucking Price is Shy, is it?
It's the fucking Price is Shy adjacent.
It's part of the same segment.
It's all part of the beautiful world that we call Cheap Show.
Oh, it's the fucking price of shite.
It's the fucking price of shite.
It's the fucking price of shite.
That's right.
Thank you.
If you do want to go for a walk
while we're doing this,
we can go ahead and do that.
Right, so we have...
But just to let everyone know who's listening,
we won't be guessing the prices of these items,
will we?
No, we're going to be showing them one by one
and you'll say, again,
in that whole lovely...
Shitification of this podcast, we'll be making be showing them one by one, and you'll say, again, in that whole lovely... Shitification of this podcast,
we'll be making binary decisions on the item.
So we went to a charity...
We went to a Goodwill store just off Third Street Promenade,
and we...
It smelled so badly of human defecation.
It smelled pretty bad in there, to be fair.
There's a weird thing that I've noticed about...
In Britain, the thrift stores, the charity shops,
are kind of like going into someone's spooky attic
and looking at all the cool shit that they have there
and then, oh, I'll have that.
Oh, taking it away.
Here, it just feels like they've just dumped things on the shelf
and then people tear away at them
and then go and buy what they've got left
because it's mostly clothes.
I think that's pretty fair, yeah.
Yeah, and also, hugely overpriced.
Well, it sounds like you're in Santa Monica.
We were.
This is like going to the nicest part of London.
Yeah, it's like Islington, I guess, or High Street, Kent, I guess.
Something like that.
But even by those standards.
Notting Hill.
Yeah, Notting Hill is also a counter.
I mean, do you have any other nice places in London you want to?
Kensington.
Hampstead Village.
Hampstead, of course.
I thought you were born in America.
I was born in Hampstead Village.
So I've got five items, one of which I did buy in in the uk and you'll have to figure out which one that is okay so here's
the first thing we bought it is called a phone holder now we do have those in america this is
something you wear around your neck sure yeah okay here we go like this looks a bit like a
stethoscope it does doesn't it and then you put it here and then that goes on here like that oh my
god and then yeah this is a sample phone just so, my God. And then, yeah, I don't know.
This is a sample phone, just so you know what the thing looks like.
I can use that.
Yeah, that's actually very smart, very practical.
And then it's like, hello.
Right.
Yes, it would work.
Immediately fell.
Wait, can I touch it?
You've broken it.
No, I just didn't screw the knob on tight enough.
Well, that's what I've heard.
I've heard that.
It's actually far sturdier than I would have thought.
Do you want to get in on this?
Yeah, it would be great.
Oh, I hate that.
And then you can talk loudly on the bus.
Definitely without the phone holder on it,
it's pretty off-putting with just the knob.
Yeah.
So what are we saying about this?
Yes or no?
This cost $9.
And this, I honestly guarantee,
if I went to the UK and got something similar, it'd be one or two quid.
Perhaps, is this supposed to be lightly used?
Perhaps? I don't know.
Okay, who knows.
Whatever you want to take away from that.
There's your first item. Paul, I think I've got
the binary. Is this thrift
store gold, or is it getting old?
No.
You don't often come through, but that works.
I thought that was great.
I like that.
I'm going gold.
I'm kind of jealous, I kind of crave that.
If you want to take anything-
Simply for masturbatory purposes.
It's true, it's a hands-free sex device, isn't it?
Yeah, you can get both holds around the back, also it could double-
Cup holder to the side.
It could double as a sort of avant-garde necklace.
You know what, I'm gonna say, given that you put your phone in it
and the phone immediately
fell to the ground,
I'm going to say getting old.
It really did not demonstrate
its utility to me.
That could be a user issue
and not the item.
It could be,
but I don't have enough information.
Look at me.
So, Tim liked it.
What about you?
You didn't like it.
I said getting old.
We said getting old.
Tim said gold.
Gold, yeah.
Anything you want from this pack
you can take home as a gift
from us. Reminder, don't reveal where you got it. Yeah. Anything you want from this pack, you can take home as a gift from us.
Reminder, don't reveal where you got it.
Yeah.
What is this like?
It's a Nerf walkie-talkie.
Works up to 1,000 feet.
Oh.
It's stretching the Nerf brand too thin already
because I can see they're not soft.
No, you could throw this at someone's head
and it would hurt.
They would say that's not Nerf.
You do have to clean this up.
I thought you were doing that. No, I it look turn it on hello i couldn't hear that
i'm gonna go outside
is this what's the talk is this the talk button on the side
oh no wonder i couldn't hear you keep the channel open
hello I'm Paul Gavin in the garden
I can't hear you
can you hear me Jack over
no over
roger
you can come back inside
we're kind of short on time now
back in I'm frightened
it's great I'm frightened. It's great.
I'm angry with me.
It's a decent walkie-talkie.
It does.
It works well.
Yeah.
The sound quality is actually pretty good on this dude.
So he heard that.
We heard it, but I can't say...
I think we were talking over you.
I'm going to come back in.
Come back in.
Yeah, come back in.
Over.
Roger.
No, Paul.
Well, one day you'll get it right. That was... That was great. Surprisingly quite good. Yeah, come back in. Over. Roger. No, Paul. Well, one day you'll get it right.
That was surprisingly quite good.
That was good, decent.
Given the walkie-talkies that I got as a kid,
these are far better.
Yeah, that's a, what is it again?
A good thing.
Gold.
Gold.
Gold.
Great for kids.
I'll go with gold on that, too.
I think we're going to use it when we go for a walk later in the week.
My nine-year-old would lose her mind if later in the week. My nine-year-old
would lose her mind
if she saw that.
If your nine-year-old
wants to have that.
Oh, are you kidding me?
No, you can take that.
I'm not putting that
back in my suitcase
and taking it all the way home.
If I can get a good home here.
Oh, she'll love it.
Cool.
Item number two.
Item number three.
This one I quite like the most.
It must be from England.
Butterboard.
What's a butterboard, you ask? What is a butterboard? According to thisland butterboard what's a butterboard you ask what is it according
to this butterboard is inspired by the zen idea of living in the moment you simply paint on the
surface with water and your creation will come to life in bold design then as the water slowly
evaporates your art will magically disappear leaving you with a clean slate and a clear mind
it's like a much easier mandala yeah it's it's basically Etch-a-Sketch.
So it comes with
a little stand,
a little thing like this. I think it's
disrespectful to
Buddhists. In what respect?
Well, you wouldn't call it a Christ board, would you?
Or a Muhammad board.
Don't call it a Muhammad board.
Christ was too wild. What if you drew Muhammad on that?
That would be
Well then it would evaporate
half the time
That's a good philosophical question
Eli
You need wet wet
There's nothing
That's coffee
That's water
I did look into it
before I dipped my brush
Oh yeah
That seems very relaxing
Honestly I was not on board
But now I am, this is very cool
It's quite a nice brush actually
How long does it stay like that?
About a few minutes, and then it dries out and fades away
So it's meant to be Buddhist, why?
Because everything must flow
This is honestly pretty cool
Everything passes, does it? I guess, all things must
What if you, I don't know, you discovered
Some kind of secret
the secret to enlightenment
take a picture
and then it's gone
yeah
I wouldn't use it
to write notes
for the forthcoming show
just in case at all
oh that great idea
I wrote down
again I'll say
this is honestly
the perfect kid toy
because it's
they can do art stuff
you can't really
make too much of a mess
I have to say something
you claimed
the walkie
talkies i'm claiming this yeah do it i think that's fine if you want to have a manly fight
in the garden as i throw water at you and go come on you sex beasts we can do that i i like this
thing a lot this is gold okay but we don't know whether that was i have a 10 and a 7 so they're
gonna if you want it it's yours right next item this is a quick one walk disney simple science it's a book from disney that teaches simple science so i'll let you
i'm gonna jump and suggest this is from the uk why do you think that i don't know it doesn't
seem like our disney products would be uh this educational here I think they outsource that to the other countries,
but I might be wrong.
There was a range of these books.
There was everything from maths to creativity.
Oh, I'm wrong because there's a...
Oh, that's a receipt from a different thing altogether.
You can use that as a bookmark, I believe.
So Walt Disney teaches simple science.
Brian, as a science-minded man,
have you explained that yet about your science background?
No, I haven't't so before I left
to do comedy full time
I was a professor
of theoretical physics
oh cool
so I
me too
yeah most people were
very similar
so I used to
used to be a professor
I'll be honest
there doesn't seem to be
any science in it
I'm almost 50 years old
I can't read this
in this light
alright okay
do you want to borrow my glasses
no
we don't have to read it at all.
I think we should just move on.
But that's the next book.
Walt Disney.
You can do Alphabet, Numbers, Adventures, and Colours and Shapes.
Yeah, it's a nice looking book.
It's got to be from the 80s.
Oh, I don't...
That's a good question.
I think this is...
I was trying to check a date.
I couldn't find a date.
It could be earlier.
Fuck me.
I also need my glasses.
This is tragic.
No, there is no date, actually.
Oh, there is no date?
No.
I think it is feels right.
But yeah, there's a whole range of them
and they're all designed to teach kids
and using the IP of Disney to impart knowledge,
which can only be a good thing.
I like.
84.
84.
Ooh, that was in the Adulterums era of Disney
where they were doing anything they could
to keep the brands going.
Yeah.
And finally, the final book.
Oh, no.
Gold or old?
I feel like I can't make an informed judgment,
so I'm going to be charitable and say gold.
As an American, do it anyway.
I'll say gold.
Gold.
I like the whole look of it.
I like the design, yeah.
Yeah, the design's great.
I'll say this is thrift store gold as well.
I'm giving that one to my mum
because her living room is a walk-in Disney store
and it's repulsive, actually. We've got peter pan doing refraction that's cool that's who i turn shadows
oh that makes sense for him yeah um huey louie and dewey making a cake with their gran great
look their gran is snogging uh another relative so the final thing is difficult riddles for smart
kids 300 riddles and brain teasers
that kids and families will love.
I'm going to impress upon you a few now.
We'll start with Brian.
Okay.
I am a cold man without a soul.
Right now for the riddle.
I am a cold man without a soul.
If there is a warmth in me,
it will slowly kill me.
What am I?
I'm going to say I'm a snowman.
I am a snowman.
That's not hard.
Hell yeah.
Do you want a hard one?
No.
I'll give you a hard one.
I don't want to do it.
Yes, okay.
It's carry on cheap show.
Okay, Eli, we'll do you.
I'm ready.
At school, Joe has three friends,
Tim, Violet and Paige.
Two of them play football.
Two play tennis.
Two play golf.
This is a good school. The friend who doesn't play golf doesn't play tennis and the. Two of them play football, two play tennis, two play golf. This is a good school.
The friend who doesn't play golf
doesn't play tennis
and the one who doesn't play football
doesn't play golf.
I'm out.
Paige doesn't play football.
I need another riddle.
I'm out.
I'm not doing this.
I don't care about any of those people.
Well, fuck them
and they're stupid.
They sound like preppy wankers.
What flies when it's born,
lies when it's alive
and runs when it's dead?
Cheese.
Cheese runs when it's... and runs when it's dead. Cheese. Cheese runs when it's...
What were the three again?
It says what flies when it's born,
lies when it's alive,
and runs when it's dead.
Hmm.
I gotta say, I think I'm stumped on this.
Runs when it's dead.
It must be melting.
Melty.
Yeah.
What is it?
Butter?
I don't know why you're making that noise, man.
Because I'm excited that you're close to the answer.
Oh, cheese.
No.
It's something that melts.
It's a snowman again.
Is that the...
This is...
This is disturbing.
That noise is really putting me off.
The answer...
I agree with you.
The answer, number 69...
An ice sculpture. I'll give you
that. It's a snowflake.
It runs.
It flies when it's born, so it's in the air.
It lies when it's
alive, rests upon the snowy ground,
and then runs when it's dead, as in
melts into water and dribbles away.
Very poetic. I might object to the use of the word
alive there.
Yeah, absolutely.
Terrible.
Right, we'll end with this one. I hate riddles.
Tim, we're going to end with this one.
Yeah, riddles and fuck me off.
This is an evil riddle, apparently.
This word, what word looks the same upside down
and backwards at the same time?
What word looks the same upside down
and backwards at the same time?
Yes, so there is a word in the English language. I that's the word boob ooh poop no because that would be boob
yeah is it ooh uh you are close no you're not close i said that hi no no what's a letter no
one's leaving here until they fucking get this what about oh about O-Ho? Dad. O-H-O?
O-Ho?
No. Come on.
Oxo.
Oxo. I mean, you're right.
There are probably lots of words that may be...
Oxo does. Oxo works.
What word looks the same upside down?
It's a brand of gravy cube.
Yes, it's a kitchen,
but I wouldn't say it's a word.
It's not a word.
It's a proper noun, isn't it?
So what word looks the same upside down and backwards at the same time?
The answer is...
Swims.
Sure.
You are so not impressed with that.
So, is it gold or is it old, Mr. Brian?
Old.
And Mr. Tim?
Gold.
And Mr. Eli?
I'd say old. I don't like the cover art either.
Right, in that case, I will end by saying, which one do you think is the UK item? Brian, start with you. And Mr. Tim. Gold. And Mr. Eli. I'd say old. I don't like the cover art either.
Right, in that case, I will end by saying,
which one do you think is the UK item?
Brian, start with you.
Oh, I think I'm going to have to go to the Disney book.
Something about the typography on this that, I don't know,
it doesn't seem British to me.
And the other ones seem British, so I'm going to say that.
Fair.
Tim, what have you got for us?
I'm also going with the Disney book.
Fair play.
And Eli?
I know the answer to this, so I don't think it's fair for me to throw my hoop in
Do you throw a hoop in?
You can
Throw my shoe into the ring
Hat
Towel, hat, shoe, ring
Got it, the answer is
You were right, it is the Walt Disney Super Saiyan
First instinct
First gut Something about the yellow I don't know is you were right it is the what gives me supersized book first instinct first gut
something about the yellow
I don't know you thin sliced it
and you just knew yeah there was a level
because I feel like I was familiar
with a lot of the American
versions of those things that I had when I was a kid
and that doesn't look like the stuff I had
the yellow I would never you know something about
the color but then I was worried because
then I saw Bantam Books which is I believe
an American publisher
now to be fair
this was published
in Canada
America
all that counts
is where you got it
all that counts
is where I got it
and where we got it
was where you got it right
so that is that
and that is
Cheap Show
for this week
I just want to thank
Brian Wecht
for coming along today
thank you very much
Tim Hydeck
for gracing us
with your presence
we are deeply appreciative and Eli as ever thanks Paul thank you and I I want to thank Tim Hydeck for gracing us with your presence. Thank you, Tim. Deeply appreciative.
And Eli, as ever.
Thanks, Paul.
Thank you.
And I just want to thank Leighton
who's been managing this today.
Thank you very much.
You can speak.
You're not a silent partner.
It's fine.
You're not allowed to speak?
No, you're not allowed to speak.
You've been always welcome to chip in.
Do you want to come sing?
Come, come, come, come, come.
And tell them,
oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
tell them about your podcast as well.
Do it.
Brian and I co-host a show
called Leighton Night with Brian Wecht
where we do comedy interviews and talk about cum a lot. Can I about your podcast as well. Do it. Brian and I co-host a show called Late Night with Brian Wecht,
where we do comedy interviews and talk about cum a lot.
Can I say cum on this show?
Please do.
Great.
In fact, it's been mostly what we've been doing for 10 years here.
We are spooge crazy.
Yeah.
Usually.
It's only when we have guests that we turn it down. We have so many words for it.
Spoff.
Spoff is a great word for it.
It's your favorite word for it, isn't it?
It's my favorite word.
Anyway, Tim doesn't need to hear about what words we have for cum.
Tim, I know anyone who listens to this knows about you,
but point them in the direction of what you'd like to talk about,
what you'd like to extol today.
Oh, join us every Thursday morning for Office Hours Live.
We absolutely have a blast.
We've been on a real tear, and it's a lot of fun.
It's a live call-in show that we do in the mornings,
and we've been doing it strong for years.
And is that online? How do it's on uh youtube we have a patreon patreon.com slash office hours live or
uh yeah it's a podcast for me it's a tv show it is a tv show it's multi-cam okay it's in my garage
yes a visual element to it but it's also it, it started as a podcast, it still is.
Great, I will check that out, because I only know
One Cinema. And if anyone wants to do check out
One Cinema, don't start with the recent
stuff. You're going to have to go back 10 years and start
with it. And please do.
It's a beautiful slice of comedy
genius, and so that's all I want to say.
Look, as I say, I'm awkward and weird,
but I do want to say thank you, Tim, for coming along today.
It means the world to us while we're out here.
Enjoy your stay in California.
You got a nice week.
Are you here for the rest of the week?
We're here till Thursday.
We're going to do a bit around the bound.
It'll be a beautiful week.
Doing Disney with these guys
on Wednesday.
And that's all we need to talk about.
You can source support us
if you want to source support us
on patreon.com forward slash cheap show.
Years and years of extra videos
and behind the scenes things
as well as the amazing
Cheap Show magazine
that event does for us. Please check out noiseland's uh youtube channel because he's
done our new theme tune and also did top-notch western romance so please check him out and
everything else is thecheapshow.co.uk for everything else that's your one-stop shop
and that's it eli final thoughts i don't have any that's it okay see you next week
on the cheap show bye bye everyone bye bye
thanks folks
bye
Eli can get fucked
I am daddy
Gannon
cool
sweet
sweetheart
of LA
have all the ladies
love me
all the gentlemen
wanna be me
and they see me
walking down the strip
and they know who I am
and a big ball
Gannon
and I'm driving a van
and my vine goes
bing down
my wheel goes
bush town
my vine goes bing down my wheel wheel goes bush-hound The vine goes bing down, the wheel goes bush-hound
Cos he's the cool cat now, he's the cool cat, cool cat of LA
Cos he's the cool cat now, he's the cool cat, cool cat of LA
Oh, they must be coming for me, cos I'm a cool cat, cool cat of LA
Baddie, Ganon, cool
Cos he's the cool cat now, he's the cool cat, Cool Cap of LA Baddie, Gammon, Cool Cos he's the Cool Cap now
He's the Cool Cap, Cool Cap of LA
Oh, they must be coming for me
Cos I'm too fucking red hot sexy
Er, don't trust me
I'll frost ya
They must be coming for me
Cos I'm too fucking red hot sexy
Er, don't frost me
I'll frost ya
I have needs
Yeah
A man with needs, Paul
Finger bash my finger hole
Just saying, I have needs Yeah A man with needs, Paul. Finger bash my finger hole. Just saying.
I have needs.
Yeah.
A man with needs, Paul.
Finger bash my finger hole.
Is that all you've got now?
Yeah.
Cos he's the cool cat now.
He's the cool cat, cool cat of LA.
Uh-huh.
Cos he's the cool cat now.
He's the cool cat, cool cat of LA.
Uh-huh.
Paul Gannon.
Cos he's the cool cat now. He's the cool cat, cool cat of LA Uh-oh Ball of gas He's the cool cat, meow
He's the cool cat, cool cat of LA
Baddie, Gammon, cool
He's the cool cat, meow
He's the cool cat, cool cat of LA
Finger bash my finger hole
Cool cat of LA
Finger bash my finger on
The Cat of LA
You must be coming for me
Because I'm too fucking red hot sexy
And we're done
Thank you
You're welcome