The Luke and Pete Show - Bagel Heads
Episode Date: August 6, 2020On today’s show, we have a chat about Jonathan Swan’s Donald Trump interview and ask what’s happened to all the planes since the coronavirus outbreak!We also reminisce about the 90s TV show Movi...eWatch and hear a clip from a man who has decided that every Star Wars film has the wrong title.AND we tuck into a load of emails from you lot, featuring one about things that only ever happen in movies and another on the Japanese ‘Bagel Head’ phenomenon!Get in touch at hello@lukeandpeteshow.com!***Please rate and review us on Apple or wherever you get your podcasts. It means a lot and makes it easy for other people to find us. Thank you!*** Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, it's the Luke and Pete Show. It's a Thursday, whatever time you're listening to.
It could be a Friday, it could be a Saturday. It's not up to me how you live your life.
I'm Pete Donaldson, I'm joined by Luke Miller. Hello, Luke Miller.
Hello, it's important that we don't get bogged down so early with the days of the week.
I know!
It's nice to give people an insight into the day the show is released. After that, let them do their own thing. I was pushing one of my many mosquito bites
to try and sort of maintain some kind of focus
because I'm a little bit sleepy.
I love it when you discover things.
What do you mean?
Like, you know, most people know about the existence of mosquito bites.
We did about 15 minutes of it on Monday.
Yeah.
Because you first, you got bitten by a mosquito for the first time ever.
And now you're still talking about it.
One, two.
They'll go soon
three
you got any calamine lotion
what lotion
I think it's called
calamine lotion
you rub it on it
I thought it was chamomile
like the tea
no that's different
that's different yeah
what have I been drinking
how are you
how are you apart
from the obvious
I'm good
just dealing with life
dealing with life
liberty and fruit
of the loom.
Has life been easier for you since lockdown?
Because the world's changed, hasn't it?
The world has completely changed now.
We don't know when or even if it's going to go completely back to normal.
How are you adjusting to the new reality, Peter?
I am doing a lot more whiskey drinking by myself.
I am doing a lot more looking out the window. I am doing a lot more looking out the window.
I'm doing a lot.
I'm just doing a lot of stuff.
Just doing a lot of stuff.
Did you see the great interview with
Donald Trumblard?
Yeah, I watched it earlier.
Where he's talking about the ratio
to...
Oh, we're going from...
You're doing population. He's going, well, that's not fair.
I don't think the President of the United States should have his own really colourful charts that confuses the interviewer.
Because that interviewer, Jordan Swan, he's obviously really good.
Yeah.
His face looking at it going, where did you even get this?
Yeah, yeah.
Have you coloured this in yourself?
Yeah, yeah.
Do you have a printer cord?
I know you've got the nuclear cords.
Is that an official disney
frozen coloring book but but one thing that's interesting pete and because you and i have a
very very small amount of experience in this area on a very low low level being the president
it's relatable yeah you're kind of president your own realm aren't you so it feels like you are yeah
um but when you interview someone who's really famous or really well known and when i don't mean
this to trivialize
what you do and i suppose by extension what i do we're normally interviewing people who a aren't
that famous and b it's about a trivial issue so in your case maybe about a movie or whatever yeah
my case is about a football player or something he's interviewing the most famous man in the world
probably yeah the most powerful man in the world who is. The most powerful man in the world, who is also an infant.
His bollocks,
Jonathan Swan, I think his name is,
his nuts must be massive.
It's not just that he can do it,
it's that he's doing it on film
and he looks fine.
He's not nervous, he's relaxed,
he's got his legs crossed,
he's doing his thing.
I just find that having a tiny bit of insight
into what it's like to interview people who are well-known
or who are talented, it can be really nerve-wracking.
I think just the ceremony.
He's just born to do it.
Knowing for a fact that that interview is going to be seen,
by the way, because he will flip out and do something mad.
So I guess the focus isn't on him, is it?
Well, no, it is because he's been held to account
and obviously we're heading towards, hopefully,
the end of a Trump presidency
maybe he'll just flip
and
don't say end game
that sounds bad
put Pence in
and make him
because you know
let's talk of him
changing Pence you know
really?
yeah
the smart move would be
to
say sorry and leave
toss yourself off
put Pence in
and then Pence can
can give you all of the freedom.
The smart thing to do is to say earnestly and honestly,
sorry about everything I've done.
I'm now going to retire from public view
and you'll never see me again.
He becomes a citizen again.
He is liable for a lot of crimes.
Peter, Peter, on the...
There'll be a lot of pardoning going on for Pence
if he gets in for the second term.
That's all it is now, just pardons.
Pardons, yeah.
But do you know, is it fair to say, do you think,
that it's actually, it's probably much easier
to interview and nail, if you're going for that kind of thing,
a semi-competent person,
when compared to someone like Trump,
who's just so out there,
it's like nailing water to the wall,
because you just don't know what's going to happen next.
He's completely shameless.
Gets away with everything, lies, gaslights to the point of...
I mean, gaslight gives it too much ceremony, doesn't it?
It's just talking nonsense.
Oh, it's a thing.
No, it's not a thing.
And this is the interview for Axios on HBO we're talking about here,
which has been released in chunks, right?
But it's not been fully released yet, as far as I've seen.
I wonder why because if we under if we accept that he's completely torn up the rule book trump so
for example i don't know if many people expect him to do these traditional debates with joe
biden because i think he'll get spiked if if the if the bets are off completely why is he even doing
this why is he doing the one with with axios, yeah, I think his play is that because of coronavirus,
obviously his main, the Democrats,
the Democrat challenger effectively can't do as many events,
can't do as many speeches.
So he thinks I've got the nation by the balls
when it comes to eyes and ears.
So I'm going to do it. The problem is his Democratic challenger
also is a bit of a bumbling idiot.
So that kind of serves him quite well
that he hasn't had to do a lot of speeches.
Exactly, exactly.
But Trump obviously fancies himself
as someone who can turn this all around.
He can't be tamed.
He can't be tamed.
No.
He can't be tamed.
The problem with Biden is he probably,
Biden knows his limitations and he's probably got a good be tamed. No. He can't be tamed. The problem with Biden is he probably, Biden knows his limitations.
He's probably got a good team around him.
Yes.
Trump is unaware.
No, I hear what you're saying,
but I'm doing it anyway.
Yeah.
He's slurring a lot at the moment.
There are rumours that he's not very well.
Will you please let me write the names down
phonetically for you?
Give me more European strength Sudafed.
We've all had it cut here.
You haven't written this name down.
That's just Smith.
You should be able
to say that one.
Speaking of coronavirus,
I saw an interesting story
that I thought might
pique your interest, Peter,
is that,
I don't know if you've
seen this,
but due to a huge
decline and collapse
really in demand
for commercial flights,
airlines have had to
do something with
their planes, right?
Right.
Because they don't know how long the downturn is going to go on for
and how long they need to keep these planes for
and because it's very expensive to keep them traditionally
and there's not that much space
because they need to be an easily grabbable distance from airports
and that kind of stuff.
Guess what?
They've started storing them all.
Ooh.
They've started storing them all. They've started storing them all.
You're never going to
guess.
It's like the NBA,
Disneyland.
Yeah.
They're all in Disneyland.
No, they're all being
stored in different
deserts around the world
because it's dry, it's
not humid, so they're
not going to be
dilapidated as quickly
and so there are now
facilities opening up
in places like the
Mojave Desert, in other
deserts around the world,
because they can be stored cheaply, long-term,
cheaply relatively speaking.
I think it's apparently, according to the article,
it's around $5,000 a month per aircraft.
Nice.
But that is still a lot cheaper than it would be.
So they land them presumably in an airfield
and they just drive them over to their little parking spot.
in an airfield and they just drive them over
to their little parking spot.
Little parking spot.
Do they have one of those cool
kind of like semi-reflective
silver foil...
Over the windscreen.
Yeah, well, because obviously
it gets incredibly hot in the desert.
I don't need to tell you that, desert boy.
It's confusing.
But do they put like a posh card?
They put like a covering?
I don't know.
But mind you, planes do spend a lot of the time
a little bit closer to the sun than we are.
So I imagine they're probably all right.
But apparently 14,000 aircraft,
which is equivalent roughly to two thirds of the global fleet,
have been grounded around the world.
Could they not, bearing in mind that one of the things that I heard,
you know like when they isolate people on COVID wards
and they circulate the air in a certain way to get rid of all the impurities,
so the nurses and doctors...
Is it like the Michael Jackson oxygen chamber?
It's like the Michael Jackson oxygen chamber, which is very, very clean air.
Apparently the common Boeing 747, for example,
has a system that is up there with that level of cleanliness.
So could they not have parties in there,
big old parties where no one is getting in at all?
Not everything points towards how you could get to your next party.
Have a party.
But the fascinating thing about it,
and I think this has gone underplayed actually,
is the world has obviously changed since this has all happened.
We don't know, as I said earlier,
how it's going to come back to normal
if it is at all
but after 9-11
only 13%
of commercial
jet fleets
relatively speaking
were grounded
but because of
COVID it's 66%
so it's a massive
difference
I guess a lot of
passenger planes
have been
converted into cargo.
Bits and bobs.
No doubt pilot Neil and all the other pilots
who listen inexplicably to our nonsense.
They've got nothing on.
They're probably doing nothing.
I imagine they're probably talking to their union representatives.
We hope so.
Apparently, Delta Airlines have parked their fleet at a boneyard,
as they call it in Arizona.
American Airlines are a former military base turned storage facility in New Mexico.
The point being, they're all at places which have got very dry air to stop the corrosion, I think.
And they're away from the sea, obviously, to stop the corrosion of the planes.
Because I guess what's going to happen is if we do return back to normal,
there is going to be a huge amount of work to be done to make sure they're airworthy again, right?
They have to do a lot of checks,
don't they?
Apart from EasyJet.
That is libelous!
We've distanced ourselves
from that
and our brand new
EasyJet.
Do you know why?
Because I got stuck
in Krakow
for 25 hours once
because of EasyJet.
Come on,
I mean,
look,
that's just to do
with planes
just arriving late,
isn't it? It's just because the planes are constantly in the air. I mean, there's late and there's that. I mean, look, that's just to do with planes just arriving late, innit?
It's just because the planes are constantly in the air.
I mean, there's late
and there's that.
I mean, if you were late
for a record by half an hour,
fine.
If you were late for 20,
by 25 hours...
Not fine.
You'd have a right go at me.
No, but I would have more
of a go at you
if it was 25 hours.
Well, if I hadn't explained...
I mean, 25...
No, I don't think you would.
I think you'd have more go at me
if I had half an hour
because I'd go,
get someone else in.
Let's do it over Zoom.
Unless what happened was,
exactly what happened with this easy jet flight
is that you were hit by lightning on your way here.
Exactly.
The 25 hours is actually a very good turnaround
for a human being to be hit by lightning.
Yeah.
I mean, Ryanair have said today
that the Welsh government would have to shut Cardiff Airport
if it wanted to stop its international flights
at the start of July.
Are they just threatening to land them?
What?
I think Venezuela or some head of state at the height of COVID
were actually just blocking the runways with bits of cargo machinery and stuff.
Sounds like a movie.
Yeah, planes were coming into land and they were going,
you ain't landing there, son.
Get back up there.
You've got gotta go to Mexico
or somewhere
or Cardiff
yeah talk like that
do you know
speaking of
something completely
different actually
you know I mentioned
on Monday
that my wife and I
watched Aliens
the second
yes the second
in the franchise
is that the one where
Ripley does the
basketball shot
no it isn't
mate
no
Alien 3 is that no it isn't mate no Alien 3 is that
no
it isn't Alien 3 either
Alien vs Predator
whoever wins here
we lose
yeah that's a great
tagline by the way
I don't know
I think that might be
Alien Resurrection
shit
but because she is
re
resurrected
yeah
and
anyway
I don't think people
I don't think the purists
and then they can get in touch
hello at lukeandpeach.com I don't think the purists, and they can get in touch, hello at lukeandpeach.com,
I don't think the purists recognize resurrection as part of the pantheon.
Because it was released as a quadrilogy, wasn't it?
Alien, Aliens, Alien 3, and Alien Resurrection.
But I think the first three are the only ones that are noticed,
sort of kind of respected.
However, we watched Alien 3 last night because my wife loved Aliens
and she said,
I've seen the first one,
I've seen the second one,
I really want to see the third one.
And no matter what I did to try and put her off,
she wouldn't be deterred.
So we watched it last night
and it is shit.
I'll be honest here.
I think it came out in about 1992.
I watched it when I was about 14
with my friend Dave Watson, one of my
best friends at the time. D-dubs. D-dub, yeah.
He and I were obsessed with Aliens
and we watched it. And I remember us really liking it
and it got panned critically
and a load of stuff came out that Sigourney Weaver,
who was a really powerful person in Hollywood, was
a producer of the film. David Fincher,
it was his first movie that he directed.
He didn't really have any power, so the whole film
was just a mess. And the
CGI, I mean, Pete, you should
just watch it for that, because it is horrific.
Crap. Gross. It's horrific.
Inherent.
It reminded me of some of the stuff you would knock out
in a couple of hours for our live stuff. On Blender.
Yeah. It's that bad. How dare you?
It's that bad. But the thing that makes it
bad is that the puppeteering is
obviously amazing amazing because the
alien itself is iconic right it looks really frightening even now so they do all these
prosthetics and these puppeteering for the close-up shots yeah so his head will come around
the corner and it's terrifying yeah then it'll cut to a long shot and it looks like a windows 95
screen saver it's bad anyway the other thing about it is that I was hoping it would stand up and that I
wouldn't mind it and it aged quite
well. It is so
bleak. It's
unbelievable. There is not a
single witty line or joke in
the entire thing and it's almost two hours
long. They've gone for serious. They've gone for a
serious space thriller rather than...
Those things need a little bit of levity, don't
they?
You need a little bit of levity, don't they? You need the
little bit,
little bit,
little bit of dinner
before the thing
comes out the belly.
Yeah.
That's from the first one.
Everyone's having dinner,
everyone's having a nice time.
Yeah.
And then,
oh,
someone's come out the belly.
Yeah.
Basically,
the film is about a woman
who's got an alien
living inside her
and has to kill another alien
before the other alien
comes out of her own chest on a prison planet that's been abandoned full of inside her and has to kill another alien before the other alien comes out of her own chest
on a prison planet that's been abandoned
full of murderers and rapists.
Oh, by the way, the bit I missed out...
Abandoned by the prisoners and rapists.
No, it's full of them.
Full of them, right.
They're there.
They're there.
The first...
Australia.
Alien 3...
Alien 3 also starts,
the best bit is,
I missed out the best bit,
the two most lovable characters
in the last movie,
they die in the first scene.
Nice, get out of the way.
The only time you see them
is when they're cremated,
quite literally.
Good.
So yeah,
apparently it's been reassessed
as this kind of
depressive realism cinema.
Yeah.
You're not buying it.
Why would you want to watch it?
Why would you want to watch it?
No one's ever thought I'm going to put Alien 3 on.
What was your wife's opinion of it?
Also a little bit depressed about the whole situation.
She said, diplomatically, because she's a much nicer person than me,
she said...
At least they got it finished.
The plot was not good and I didn't like the script.
Fair enough.
That's like the sort of review
you'd see on Movie Watch
in the 90s.
I'm a Movie Watch
and I give it a five.
Yeah, she,
oh, I do remember Movie Watch.
Was Alex,
your friend Alex on that?
No, it was,
it was,
angry man,
big breakfast,
London.
Johnny Vaughan.
Johnny Vaughan.
Yeah, why do I have to,
it's like having an Alzheimer's
patient in the studio.
It is, yeah.
You can only say the words
around the name. Yeah, and that's how I do it. I sort of like go Alzheimer's patient in the studio. It is, yeah. You can only say the words around the name.
Yeah, and that's how I do it.
I sort of start in the outside of the hedge maze.
What's in the middle?
What?
What's in the middle?
Your self-respect.
Have you heard this little thing that somebody put together
about every Star Wars film having the wrong title?
Oh, no, I haven't.
It is beautifully done.
And you are a bit of a Star Wars man.
You know your Star Wars. I'm married to one title. Oh, no, I haven't. It is beautifully done. And you are a bit of a Star Wars man. You know your Star Wars.
I'm not really.
I'm married to one.
Right, okay.
So maybe a good lady by foot might enjoy this.
Basically, he's pointing out that...
How many films are there?
Nine films?
Yeah.
In the entirety.
He's basically pointing out,
it's only a minute long,
that every Star Wars film has the wrong title
due to the plot referring to a different title in the series if that makes any
sense okay i'm gonna put it starts at the at the very first title and ends at number nine this is
why every star wars film has the wrong title what happens in episode one we meet anakin skywalker
the rise of skywalker years later we find out that palpatine leader of the clones.
Not a new hook. In Episode 5, Yoda teaches Luke how to use the Force. The Force awakens. In Episode 6, both Yoda and Anakin die, which makes Luke the last Jedi.
After the Empire is destroyed, a new Empire comes.
The Empire strikes back.
Come on, guys.
In Episode 8, Luke trains Rey and then sacrifices himself to give the Resistance a new hope.
Finally, in Episode 9, Palpatine returns from the dead, making him
the Phantom Menace.
Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
Lucasfilm, hire me, please.
That is a great TikTok.
That is a great little dance,
some kind of musical bed underneath.
Yeah.
I don't like it when people say at the end,
thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
What, do you reckon it's a bit hack?
Yeah.
That's a very good piece of work, that.
He's ruined it, yeah.
He's had a good think about it, though he's ruined it yeah he's had a good
think about it
though hasn't he
he's been a little
bit playful
but yeah
I like it
Lucasfilm
please hire me
I don't think
they're going to
hire you
on that basis
well I mean
the job's
A the job's
already done
B I don't think
they are going
to be able to
change all the
merchandising
to reflect
the changes
also
what scenario exists what scenario exists?
What scenario exists?
Where the head of Lucasfilm, let's say George Lucas,
I don't know what his name is.
Let's rename all of them.
Calls this guy up and says,
so it looks to me that your skills are that you've got quite an annoying voice
and you're very wise after the event.
Yeah.
What job would you like?
Yeah.
That doesn't happen.
Well, to be fair, most new films are remasters.
Most new video games are remasters.
So this is perfect
there's a remaster
of Alien 3 by the way
oh what
30 minutes longer
no thanks
what happened
is it just more
I'm trying to think
what happens in Alien 3
is that the one
where they've got
the yellow
exoskeleton
no that's Aliens
well you're confusing me
with your Aliens
and your Aliens 3
there's no film
called Aliens 3
for goodness sake go to a break.
What's mucking me?
I've told you, I've been nuts.
It's not Mork and Mindy either.
It's a completely different thing.
We're going to have a break.
And when we come back,
we're going to do some emails
from those of you who've emailed
hello at lukeandpeatshow.com.
See you in a minute.
Nanu Nanu!
It's the return of the original Mork and Mindy,
Luke and Pete. Who's the alieno! It's the return of the original Mark and Mindy, Luke and Pete.
Who's the alien?
And who's the attractive lady?
Was he really an alien?
Or was that just a lie?
I think he was, yeah.
He wore some funny...
He just wore kind of like kids' clothes, didn't he?
Yeah, I think so.
He would not be judged...
That character would not be judged favourably these days.
Dressed as a child.
What do you make of Robin Williams?
Very much dead.
Yeah, he is dead.
He's dead.
Called his daughter Zelda.
Did he?
Yeah.
Legend of a character and like a performer.
That's good.
Oh, did you see this week?
His range was unreal.
Oh, yeah, no.
Yeah, he's got a lot.
He had a lot of strings to his bow and the world is worse off for his loss.
Did you see that somebody, a quite well-known writer,
he wrote The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas,
releases a new book,
and he's, at one point, with a character,
this modern character, I think, in a modern world setting,
he has to dye some clothes.
Right.
And has to dye them red.
And he basically has the recipe of how he would dye the clothes and I said dye them red and he
basically has the recipe
of how he would dye
the clothes red
this character
and he mentions
three or four ingredients
from the new
Zelda game
that you and I
have both played
what?
he lists like
Hyrule Mushroom
and a
so on so on
why?
because he googled
and he didn't notice
that what he was googling
to dye something red
was from a Zelda wiki.
Made it into his novel?
Made it into his novel.
And he's owning it.
Wow.
Like, everyone's laughing at him.
What's his name?
Is it John Boyne?
I think it might be, yeah.
I haven't explored it yet.
That is astonishing.
Yeah.
Because there'll be
script editors,
proofreaders, researchers, everything.
And none of them, look,
and everyone have got their heads stuck in a book.
None of them are playing Zelda.
I just didn't know that Zelda was real.
Look, it is.
It's become real.
It's been put in a book.
That's amazing.
Yeah, it's good, isn't it?
2020 just finds more and more creative ways to be weird.
I mean, that's the best, better way to be weird, isn't it?
Rather than everyone dying.
Yeah,
no harm done,
is it?
I'm reading a book
at the moment
called Labyrinth of Ice.
Cool,
that sounds like,
was that from the
Dragonlance Chronicles
from the 90s?
No,
it's a non-fiction book
about the Greeley
Polar Expedition.
Oh.
But I'm not going to go
too much into it
because I haven't
finished it yet.
Maybe I'll tell people
what it's like when I've finished it, but so far into it because I haven't finished it yet maybe I'll tell people what it's like
when I've finished it
but so far it's absolutely very very good
hello at lukeandpetech.com
is the email address to get in touch
we love to hear from you as we always say
and I'm going to open this episode Pete
if you don't mind
there's an email from Brendan
who actually signed off his email
your pal Frenden
oh nice I like that
that's a lovely little playful play on names.
Yeah.
He says, I can't believe I haven't heard that before
because I've met a few Brendons over the years.
Yeah.
He's talking about the idea that we said only exists
in kind of 80s and 90s American movies
where homeless people warm their hands on barrels.
Do you remember that?
Yes, I do remember.
He says, hello, Luke and Pete.
I didn't believe either that anyone outside of movies
would stand by just warming their hands
by a sweet, sweet barrel fire.
You have to have fingerless gloves.
Gloves, 100%.
And so I found myself at a winter festival in Detroit
doing exactly that.
Picture Winter Wonderland in Hyde Park,
but it was minus 20.
Let me be absolutely clear.
We would be setting fire to barrels or anything
to stay warm if you were there
warming my hands by the barrel felt very cool
I think because it was so movie like I did it for even longer
it was also the first time I'd had s'mores
do you know what a s'more is?
is it a graham cracker
with a squidgy little
squid inside
chocolate and marshmallow
making me reminisce about it
it was the first time he'd had s'mores
as he grew up in the 80s, 90s
and a strict diet
of 100% American TV.
I can say that they are
as delicious and unhealthy
as they sound.
Like you said, though, Luke,
it doesn't happen in the UK
or my most native Australia
or most of my native Australia.
I believe most of the stuff
that happens in the movies
happens in the USA.
It's a strange and wonderful land
where everyone could be confident,
a confident news presenter
at the drop of a hat.
Look, that's a bit of an odd last sentence,
but he's absolutely right.
It is a place, the US,
where everyone's brilliant on camera.
You find news reports that go viral
of people going into the backwaters
of the middle of nowhere in the US
and interviewing someone,
and they are camera ready.
It's mad how much they understand Americans who I've got a great affection for. It's an amazing country. A language they didn camera ready. It's mad how much they understand Americans
who I've got a great affection for.
It's an amazing country.
A language they didn't invent.
Yeah, they're just brilliant at performing.
Everything is an extension of the entertainment industry.
Anyway, Brendan says,
keep up the good work, your old pal, Frendon.
Everything's an extension.
It is.
Did you say that to your wife?
You're an extension of the entertainment industry.
I think that they understand
that to be successful in something, you've got the entertainment industry. I think that they understand that to be successful
in something,
you've got to sell yourself.
The way that manifests itself,
whether it be politics
or sport or movies
or whatever,
they just,
everything is entertainment.
Yeah.
Everything,
well,
everything has to,
you have to express yourself.
I love it.
I love listening
to American people talk.
American people talk.
Do you love listening
to me talk?
No,
because you're not American.
You never will be, mate.
I don't care how many times you visit.
Yeah.
It's like you in Japan.
No, they'll never accept me.
No.
Mainly because of the crimes
I've committed over there.
James Young!
Yo, James.
I hope I don't have to
reject your name later.
Hi, guys!
The other week I was asked
by my boss if I wanted to speak
to Rio Ferdinand before
and after the Manchester City
versus Crystal Palace game
on BT Sport
as their fan of the wall
thing they have. Oh yeah.
They probably should have sat in the
in the ramble but sod it let's do it
here. Anyway three hours before we go to air I get
a phone call from a Navas producer
who has to tell me that those plans are being scrapped
because someone had held up the sign the night before
during the Newcastle game that said Robbie Savage is
a wanker so they weren't doing any more live content.
I saw that, yeah.
Just a message out there to people who think they are being funny.
Have a think about your actions because I know two people
who got a huge bollocking for it and it ruined a really good opportunity for me.
It got me wondering what stupid, freaky things have stopped you
from doing quite big things in your life.
Enjoy the show.
James.
So, James, I can answer your question directly,
straight away, straight off the dome piece
by saying that when I was at school,
a load of naughty kids,
I wasn't included,
from the basketball team,
for some reason they were kind of naughty kids,
the basketball team at my school,
had smashed up a visiting school's minibus,
slashed the tires, smashed all the windows.
Okay.
As a result, we weren't allowed to do any sport
for the final two years of my school year.
That seems excessive.
No one was.
I think it was impressed upon our school
by the local educational authorities.
Oh, what, the normal resources?
Oh, right, okay.
That we weren't allowed to participate.
Would that be allowed nowadays?
Don't know. Because that's just stopping kids. That's just making people fat, fat, aren't they we weren't allowed to participate. Would that be allowed nowadays? Don't know.
Because that's just stopping kids.
That's just making people fat, fat, aren't they?
No, you still do PE,
but you couldn't play against other schools.
Oh, that's fair, yeah.
What do you think about that?
I agree.
That's so mean, I think.
Don't slash tie it.
Well, if it wasn't that,
I think that year should be punished as they go up.
But like, I think...
No, I was in the same year.
Yeah, so...
That's exactly what happened. Did the whole school, though? I, I was in the same year. Yeah, so... That's exactly what happened.
Did the whole school though?
I think it was just for a year.
Right, okay.
I was demonstrably not involved.
Look,
it's your year.
It's all team,
it's all team Luke Moor.
I ain't going to say anything to that.
Like, they were hard.
They had knives.
So,
I feel James's pain.
Sometimes things can happen
and you end up being
the victim of a bit of
the old friendly fire.
Yeah. It's disappointing. My, yeah, a bit of the old friendly fire. Yeah.
It's disappointing.
My, yeah, my, my,
I'm just being a friendly fire.
Well, not really.
My mate is in Iraq at the moment
and he is very disappointed
with these lodgings.
Oh, really?
He's very disappointed
that his Baghdad base,
he's basically in a shipping container.
I was like,
what do you expect?
Get himself to your flat.
What do you mean?
Probably be bigger than your place, wouldn't it?
Yeah, probably.
Oh, yeah, it's got air conditioning.
It's a shipping container with some air conditioning
and a bed, a couple of beds.
One thing, going back to the Americans again,
one thing they don't fully appreciate
unless they visit regularly
is that we don't have really air conditioning facility here.
So unless you're in a public building, if you can look if you're american you look at british weather you go oh
what so 32 or whatever they would say like 890 it's not that bad we get it worse here but they
have air conditioning everywhere in the us apparently there's a call for a lot of european
cities to have i think france is doing it um have you know like the front of a shop um to keep the
uh obviously the run of the air conditioning constantly uh but if you've, like the front of a shop to keep the, obviously they're running the air conditioning constantly,
but if you've got like an open shop.
Like a curtain of air.
Yeah, well, they try the curtain of air,
but apparently it doesn't really affect that much.
So there is a call for a lot of EU states, member states,
to have a rule that you have to have the doors closed,
or rather, you know, you have to have automatic doors.
Oh, for energy efficiency.
For energy efficiency.
Yeah. But the British have just never thought of
approaching that.
I think it's a good idea though. I do too.
It makes perfect sense. The thing, talking
about energy efficiency and
with a slightly different angle in terms
of health, the thing that really pisses me
off is when people leave their engines idling.
How's that?
So you just leave the engine turning over
while you're sat there waiting.
Right.
And the worst example of it,
it's actually illegal in some states in the US,
but it's legal here.
Right.
But the reason it's so bad
is because the most prevalent example of it,
so you know,
I don't know if you know now,
but there's a lot of modern cars,
when you stop at a traffic light or in traffic,
your car will just cut out.
Then when you take your foot off the brake,
it comes in again.
Right.
And that's designed to save fuel,
but also be better for the environment.
Yeah.
But what happens a lot is that thoughtless parents
outside schools waiting to pick their kids up
just sit there with the engine running.
Is that to keep the radio on?
No, you can do that anyway.
Right.
Yeah, you can do that anyway for an amount of time.
So what does the engine do?
So the engine's just doing it, but ignoring the wheels.
Yeah, it's not in gear.
The wheels aren't in gear, right?
It's not in gear.
So it may as well be running some wheels, but it's not.
But the health outcomes for kids who go to school
in bad air quality areas is so bad.
This is terrible.
So you see signs outside schools where i live now saying
don't leave your engine idling don't leave island because there's no legislation to stop it's not
illegal i don't think people don't use the word people only use the word idling when it comes
because that i do you to me my brain's always ticking over yeah you know you're not doing
nothing um but you know i mean it's a really really bad thing to do for the environment but
also for fuel efficiency but chiefly for the health of your children.
Just stop doing it.
Stop doing it, guys. I rarely say something
about what's good for kids
because I haven't got kids myself.
I don't want to preach
on how people should parent
but you should not be doing that.
Don't go on air, Pete.
No, you're a very...
Kids love you
because you look like
a cartoon character.
I don't look like
a cartoon character.
You do a bit.
Yeah, I do.
I cannot disavow you
of that notion.
There's an email from Lisa.
Hi, Lisa.
My podcasting experience took a hilarious, yet at times delightfully strange turn
when my husband told me to listen to your show.
Never look back.
Always recommend to anyone that listened to me.
Anyway, what are your thoughts on the Japanese bagel head trend?
Give it a Google.
Are you familiar with these guys?
I'm not.
I'm having a look now real quick. Type it in. Japanese bagel head. Type Japanese bagel head trend give it a Google are you familiar with these guys I'm not I'm having a look now real quick
type it in
Japanese bagel head
type Japanese bagel
head
it's also
I think Canadians
like doing it as
well
okay
hmm
very strange
very interesting
oh no
come on
it's putting an
implant on your
own head
yeah
I think it's
more kind of
is it saline
I don't know
can you take it out I think it's more kind of, is it saline? I don't know. Can you take it out?
I think it's a temporary
sensation. Apparently
the bagel head procedure
was first done in Canada by Jerome
Abramovich in 1999. It was brought to
Japan in 2007
by Kropi Maeda.
Why would you do it? What's the point of it, Pete?
It's fun. You just put
saline in your forehead.
Is it fun?
Say again?
Is it fun, though?
Well, I don't know.
You just give a little bagel head,
and then your body absorbs all the saline.
It probably helps with a hangover,
if it absorbs all that saline real quick.
Wouldn't it dehydrate you if you did too much of it?
Well, no, no.
You put yourself some saline drips, don't you,
to get the salts up?
I think it might.
I get really confused about salts salts because remember in the 80s
when the Ethiopians were obviously dying of starvation
and also all of the waterborne diseases.
So kids were sadly losing their lives because of the effects of constant diarrhea.
Right, yeah.
So salt solutions were very, very important.
So I always get confused because we're told that salt's bad
in every incarnation, but it's not.
And I'm sure some doc would probably rock along at some point
who shouldn't really be listening to the show
because we're full of nonsense.
Hello at linkpeachshow.com.
If you are a doctor or a pilot, I would like to get into that.
Shall I give you my best guess?
My best guess is that you probably need
a level of sodium in your body,
and if you're short of it,
you need to be pumped with it,
and if you've got too much of it,
you need to be diluted of it.
Desalinated?
Yeah.
How would you do that?
I guess you just drink plenty of clean water
if you need it,
and if the doctor decides you need to up it,
your salts and stuff,
he'd put you on a saline drip
how salty are you right now?
you're pretty salty
most of the time
you're going to find out
in a minute
listen let's wrap this show up
and then we'll go and find out
just how salty I am
let's have a wrestle
hello at lukeandpeacher.com
is the email address
to get in touch
we will be back on Monday
with yet more of this nonsense
of course
shout out to Katie Baxter
our excellent producer
shout out to Stakhanov
the excellent production company
that we would say is excellent because we founded it go producer shout out to Stakhanov the excellent production company that we would say is excellent
because we founded it
go and check out
other Stakhanov productions
just by searching
stakhanov
S-T-A-K-H-A-N-O-V
dot studio
which is our website
five star reviews
are always welcome
give us those
wherever you get your pods
and have a great weekend
and we'll see you on Monday
say goodbye Peter
peace out burgleheads.
This was a Stakhanov production.