The Luke and Pete Show - Episode 15: Conversation Lozenges
Episode Date: September 11, 2017Luke's been to Atlanta checking out whale sharks, and while he was there Pete was back in the good ol' UK judging a dog competition with an 80s pop star despite never owning a dog in his entire life a...nd not knowing any of the breeds. It's great work if you can get it.Meanwhile, the boys also talk about the origins of Lovehearts as well as everyone's favourite tongue-replacing parasite. And don't worry, these two things are unrelated.Bother us: hello@lukeandpeteshow.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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so that cool urban vibe can mean only one thing we've asked someone cooler than us to create a
theme show tune i'm'm Ross from Friends.
And I'm Chandler from Raymond Chandler's books.
Could he be any more happy to be here?
Hey, how you doing, Luke?
It's Luke and Pete Shaw, and mine is Pete Donaldson,
and I'm with my friend Luke Moore.
Extended colleagues, I would say.
Extended colleagues. We've known each other quite a while.
Long time.
We still don't hate each other.
Too long.
Peaks and troughs. Peaks and troughs. Episode 15. Episode 15 known each other quite a while. Long time. We still don't hate each other. Too long.
Peaks and troughs.
Peaks and troughs.
Episode 15.
Episode 15 of the little peach show.
15 is an album title from the band Buckcherry.
I was not expecting a reference to the band Buckcherry,
but I got it and I enjoyed it, Luke.
Thank you for that.
Hard rock, turn of the century band Buckcherry. Turn ofstomach, mate. How are you doing? You all right?
Good. I can't even think of a single one of their songs. I'm all right. How are you, mate?
I'm all right. When I hear the word Buckcherry, I think of the band The Saw Doctors,
a band I have no idea what songs they do. I'd never heard them before,
but they were always in the section where the Spin Doctors were in WH Smith back in the day,
and when I wanted to buy my Spin Doctors CDs, they were always in the section where the Spin Doctors were in WH Smith back in the day. And when I wanted to buy my Spin Doctors CDs,
they were always in the way.
Two things I can give you about the Saw Doctors.
One is they always used to play Glastonbury.
I don't know if they still do.
Two, they're Irish. That's it.
Are they Irish?
Yeah, I think so, yeah.
Yeah, I believe so.
Well, I'm learning something already.
As an Irishman yourself, how do you feel about that?
We're only a minute into the show.
Did we talk about my Irish heritage? That I did a spit in the
tube thing and I found out that I was more
Irish than I thought. No, you haven't told me
that, but you do a good line
in... Spending money for no good
reason. Well, that, definitely, and you genuinely
do, but also in doing things
and then not telling me and they're always of really good interest.
I always thought that you were of Welsh
descent. I am. My mum's Welsh
but then I did that
spit in a tube
and find out where you're from
DNA test and
Does it give you your address
and everything?
Apparently I'm 1% Polynesian.
I don't know where the hell
that's coming from.
That's very specific isn't it?
Very good.
1% Polynesian
pretty much
something like
60% English
and the rest is Irish
and I had no idea
and I said
ma'am apparently I'm quite Irish and she said yeah both your great grand the rest is Irish. And I had no idea. And I said, ma'am, apparently I'm quite Irish.
She said, yeah, both your great granddads were Irish.
I was like, well, I could have said myself 60 good there.
My wife has...
My wife.
My wife is of Italian and Irish descent as well.
And she did...
Is it 23andMe?
Is that the company you used?
It was...
No, it was like Ancestry.co.uk, I think it was.
It probably goes to the same lab,
let's face it.
I think she used 23andMe
and I think,
I think she had like
a 1 or 2%
sub-Saharan African in there.
So I think it really is,
it really is
a melting pot
for the world
in which we occupy.
2%.
Yeah,
there you go.
I'd love to do it,
by the way,
because I,
my great aunt
researched my family tree
and two facts that came out about it.
One was that she found a man in the census
around the mid to late 19th century
whose occupation was imbecile.
What, his occupation?
It wasn't like a town idiot?
Just listed as imbecile, yeah.
Is that an occupation?
Secondly, I think I had some Romany,
some travelling Romany.
I'd like to know about it.
But listen, I haven't checked it.
I've seen your car.
It's two halves of different cars.
I love it.
I did used to have a car that was two halves and I didn't know.
A cut and shot?
Yeah, for about a couple of years, yeah.
The TV show Dream Team.
Do you remember the TV show Dream Team?
I do.
Do you remember Shane from Boyzone?
Yes, I do, yeah.
He once turned up to the filming of Dream Team
with two halves of two different cars.
And I think we all know how that was going to end.
Wow.
So, yeah.
How do you know that?
Because an ex-girlfriend's brother used to write for Dream Team
and he was told never to change his haircut in between filming.
And one time he turned up with a completely different haircut.
And he said, I got paint in it
so the joke is
he was told not to get
a haircut
but he got a haircut
it's not a joke
it really happened
do you mind just filling
while I just turn the
temperature in the studio
down a little bit
I can't figure out
how to do it
I tried turning it down
it started making
a crazy noise
and it kind of went kaput
I could smell burning
but that could just mean
me having a stroke
I don't know
but it's
I'll give it a go see how we go see how we just mean me having a stroke. I don't know, but it's...
I'll give it a go.
I'll see how we go.
All right, here we go.
See how we go.
You've got a very thick weave on.
I know I have, yeah.
We've only just got through summer, mate.
On my head, you mean?
All over.
Shall we do it?
All over.
It's peach fuzz.
Shall we do It's Been?
Let's go It's Been.
Hey, hey, check this out, Luke.
It's been!
That is a perfect volume.
Almost a temperature.
Perfect volume.
That's perfect temperature.
Yeah, I'm very impressed with that, Pete.
Well done, mate.
It's all right.
Well done.
Yeah, I've got a thick shirt on today.
I don't really know why.
I think I got carried away thinking it's the end of the summer
when it isn't necessarily yet.
It's kind of half and half, isn't it?
And I've got a cold as well, so I'm up and down.
I've just come back from doing the announcements for the Q Awards.
Right.
And I think I took too many cold and flu.
And I think I swore too much
in the announcements
well when I was with you earlier
to fight off the cold and flu you ate
in my presence an entire
chilli pepper with the seeds
yeah I styled it out but in reality
I was dying inside
it worked though it worked
you kept sipping from the water I remember seeing
if you're going to eat a chilli you're going to sip a little bit of water.
But that's not what you're supposed to do.
Everyone listening out there will probably know this already, but in case you don't,
water is not what you're supposed to have when you actually...
There's milk in it.
It's milk or yoghurt, yeah.
Yoghurt.
Who just does yoghurt on them?
Just in case you've got some yoghurt lying around.
A little petty fellow in your pocket.
What are you playing at, you pervert?
So do you want to go first?
Or shall I go first?
You go first if you want.
Yeah.
All right. All right.
All right.
I went to Dragon Con in Atlanta, Georgia.
You went to some kind of Comic-Con thing where people dress up as things.
It was blooming magnificent.
It was actually, it was really good fun.
The last time I went to one of those, I went to a video conference called Gamescom in Germany
and the smell.
Right.
When it's run off just of men. When they let the public in,
it was all,
it was B or Central.
Yeah,
I think the difference
between these types of things
in Europe
and then in the US
is in the US,
they genuinely are
almost 50-50 men and women.
Yes,
that's,
yeah.
It's really part of the main,
it's not even really
subcultural,
I would say,
it's just main cultural now.
Yeah.
It's not necessarily, or if it is a nerdy thing,
then I guess it's as many female nerds as it is male nerds.
But it's a fascinating place.
It's in Atlanta, a few hotels out there,
the Hyatt, the Marriott, and the Hilton.
And they all link together through a different sort of,
it's a walkway type thing, or a series of walkways.
And there's 82,000 people there,
so it's very, very busy.
In the hotels,
is there like a rule against body paint?
Because I imagine all the fixtures
just covered in like,
if you dress as like one of the,
who's that blue X-Men lady?
I can't remember her name.
I can't remember.
It's not really my area.
Phantasm, I'm going to say.
Yeah, that's definitely what she's called.
She's blue. She's covered in blue. And she's going to say yeah that's definitely what she's called she's blue
she's covered in blue
and she's going to
blow
she's going to
blow everything
speaking of blue
there are quite a lot
of people dressed
as the guy
in Guardians of the Galaxy
with the whistling arrow
oh that's pretty cool
and that's all blue
that's all blue paint
it's a good point actually
I didn't think about it
at the time
there was loads of people
with body paint on them
I didn't see anything
come off.
But it was interesting because in the evening,
it's basically just a party where everyone gets drunk
but dressed as characters.
And there were some genuinely impressive characters.
One guy who's a good friend of my brother-in-law who was there,
he 3D printed an entire Wall-E costume.
You showed me that and it looked very, very good.
It was built around
a mobility scooter.
It was definitely
a bit bulkier
than I remember Wally.
The thing is though,
Pete,
inside it,
he had,
so he had two
A dead body.
Yeah.
He had two cameras
on the outside
so we could see
where he was going,
powered by an iPad
that he was having
in his hand
and it had a fan
in it as well.
Amazing.
And he 3D printed
the whole thing. Not the iPad. But yeah you know but um it was really cool when he put when you
push him down the stairs that i mean that was it was it was uncalled for in hindsight but i'd taken
on i'd taken on like i'd taken on board a lot of alcohol so everyone just gets drunk in the
main areas i thought it was just like a uh they're like panels and stuff yeah so in the evening it's a bit of a party
and during the day there are panels
and I went to a couple of fascinating panels
and the one I want to tell you about
for those who haven't attended
or know what it is
it's like Comic Con
but I'd say it's probably got a little bit more of a sciencey bent
than Comic Con
right okay
and this one
this panel I went to
was with a professor in cryptography
from somewhere I forget where
who did a talk
on the world's oldest unsolved codes.
Okay, right, yeah.
Have I told you about this?
Uh, no.
It was fascinating.
Maybe you did, but it was in code.
Yeah, you can decipher what I'm saying.
So essentially, she gave a list of, I think, about eight or ten of the world's oldest surviving unsolved codes.
Right.
So either through a combination of not really knowing
where to start with them or what they're even for...
Yes.
...to more modern ones that are just evaded solving for a while.
So like the Voynich...
Is it the Voynich Manuscript?
The Voynich Manuscript is one of them.
Yeah, okay, yeah, yeah.
So the Voynich Manuscript is a book
which appears to be a guide to something.
It's got a lot of intricate paintings of flowers and
herbal stuff in it, but it's in a completely
different language and it doesn't really seem to be any
sort of form to it.
And the Guardian tough word search.
Yeah, and one of them was actually the Sudoku
in Saturday Sun.
Which I was keen to get
involved with, but it was beyond me too.
And the appeal of the Big Bang Theory.
Yeah, that is a... That will never never be cracked that is a conundrum there was no one there
was no one dressed as anything to do with the big bang theory oh really and there was also no one
dressed as avatar which surprised me uh again i mean the avatar characters are about seven foot
tall aren't they my wife said yeah don't overestimate it's impossible to underestimate
exactly how little cultural impact Avatar had as a film.
Which is fair enough.
But one of the codes which I found particularly fascinating
was an unsolved code on a sculpture in the CIA building called Kryptos.
Kryptos!
And the CIA, when they commissioned this piece of art to sit in the grounds of Langley, Virginia,
commissioned a sculpture and they wanted a code in it. And the guy who designed it designed the code so difficult that no
one's been able to solve it.
I mean, to be fair, you're in the big leagues if you're having to, you know, make a code
for the CIA. You could just make it up and go and people would be like, well, I can't
solve this.
But what I was thinking, well, that is possible. But what I was thinking was, it's in the grounds,
right? And you can see it from the work cafeteria.
They don't want to be selling codes on their lunch break as well.
But that's probably why.
It's the last thing they want to be doing on their lunch break.
It's a boss man's holiday, isn't it?
Yeah.
I'm working all day already.
So anyway, if you have sold either the Voynich manuscript or Kryptos
or any of those ancient ones from Egypt...
To get in touch.
Yeah, there's one that was discovered on Crete as well,
which I thought to myself, it was these two tablets with these codes on them.
But I thought, I don't even know if you can tell
if that's a code or not.
What, it's just people messing around?
Yeah.
Do you remember in the 80s,
there was a big Vogue 4 hidden treasure and stuff,
and there was that rabbit,
it was a golden rabbit or some wank like that,
and it was just, it was like a,
it was a book, I think,
and somewhere in the UK, a rabbit, a golden rabbit,
a platinum rabbit was buried
and it was worth like,
sorry, 20 grand, 30 grand,
something like that.
No, I think it actually existed,
but it really did capture
everyone's imagination.
With stuff like that,
I was playing a video game recently
and they had one of those
kind of,
one of those kind of like clues,
five women in a room,
they each have a
a piece of
a piece of cloth
a piece of fabric
what colours
the one with the red
is sat next to
someone from England
and the one on the right
and it's just really confusing
I'm like
I can't be bothered
no
like my time
is too
well it's not
it's not too valuable
but I just can't be bothered with it
I can't be bothered with riddles
I can't be bothered with magic I don't like magic really it's just a waste of everyone's too valuable but I just can't be bothered with it. I can't be bothered with riddles, I can't be bothered with magic,
I don't like magic really, it's just a waste of everyone's time.
The fact that you can't be bothered with it is absolutely your decision
but please do not make out to me or our listeners
that you've got other things on because that is not true.
I get confused with the little maze
in the Screwball Scramble.
I'd take the lid off that.
So I can see what's going on.
Yeah, it makes sense.
I work for a company who I won't name
because they haven't paid to be sponsored,
who did quite an interesting thing.
The SS?
No, no, no, no, no.
Peter.
Where this company dropped,
it was a football-based company,
and they dropped a parachute payment,
literally a payment from a parachute,
somewhere in the UK.
Oh, that is...
You first, to find it it you got to keep it right
i didn't get permission from the landowner so the farmer kicked off and i think a lot of a lot of
silly bother could have been avoided was not avoided that's the thing with um balloons have
you ever been in a balloon before hot air balloon hot air balloons because you can't really uh with
any level of accuracy figure out where you're going to land you can sort of roughly know where
you're going to land but you're probably of roughly know where you're going to land,
but you're probably going to miss by a good mile or something.
And if you land on the farmer's, you know, corn patch or whatever,
the bloke invariably, who is running the balloon thing,
usually has a bottle of whiskey and is...
Oh, right, okay.
So he pays off a landlord with a bottle of whiskey,
maybe 100 quid or something, and he's like,
sorry, I crushed your child.
I didn't know they called them corn patches.
They were corn patches.
Sounds like you put
in a verruca.
What's your it's been?
Hit me.
Well,
two things.
I went to a dog show
over the weekend.
Oh good,
excellent,
always fun.
I judged the best dog,
the best dog
that's good with kids.
You judged a dog show?
I helped judge a dog show.
You're not qualified.
No, I'm not.
I've never had a dog.
Did you tell them that?
It was me, my mate Sarah, and Sunita from the 80s,
who got changed into a dress and stilettos,
and the dress was made of dog biscuits.
What, actual dog biscuits?
No, I think they're like vinyl.
Fake ones, okay, yeah.
But, I mean, what's a dog to know?
No.
One way or another.
Well, smell, sense of smell. Very good sense of smell. Good point, good point. But, yeah, I had a lovely like vinyl. Fake ones, okay, yeah. I mean, what's a dog to know one way or another? Well, smell, sense of smell.
Very good sense of smell.
Good point, good point.
But yeah, I had a lovely time just hanging out with dogs.
Welcome to the dog show where your dogs are going to be judged
and where one of the judges has never even owned a dog.
You're not an authority on this.
Yeah, and to be honest, a radio DJ judging a dog show that involves children,
not a good look.
No, it isn't.
Not a good look. It reminds me isn't. Not a good look.
It reminds me a bit of when Alan Partridge did the Voice of the Fate.
Fire, fire, the fair's on fire.
I just don't like people, then.
For those who are, for the avoidance of doubt,
Pete was not at any stage implemented in Operation U-Tree.
No.
And doesn't expect to be in the future.
Who got the best award?
I was really taken with, it was a rescued dog from the future. Who got the best award? I was really taken with,
it was a rescued dog from the Ukraine.
Okay.
So, it's...
They're playing the sympathy card.
They shouldn't be allowed to say that.
I know.
There was a fluffy dog.
The thing is,
I don't know what the breeds of the dogs are.
So, basically, they said,
all right, so which one do you like the best?
And they said, Dashund.
Yeah.
I actually announced it through the mic as Datsun.
It's the Datsun.
I love the way that you're using terms like fluffy dog.
There was a fluffy dog.
There was a fluffy dog.
One that looked like he had like a mohican.
But the whole thing was supposed to be how good they are with kids.
This one was so shy.
It wouldn't go near anybody.
Did you give it the Molineux?
I gave it the Molineux.
It's just shy.
Dachshund.
But you know, the best thingux? I gave it the Not Anybody. Just shy. But you know,
the best thing about
watching crafts on TV,
I watch it every year
on TV,
is,
and it is childish,
but I'll make an
apology for that,
is when they describe
a dog and it's a
female dog and they'll
say something about
the dog and I go,
and she really is
a lovely bitch.
They don't need to
do that anymore.
It's fantastic.
That word's taken
on a life of its own.
It has.
I'm also obsessed
with,
look, the National Institute of its own. It has. I'm also obsessed with, look,
the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Okay.
That's come out of left field.
Because I watched a video on the internet,
as so many of my interests begin.
Basically, it's a place where...
Is this why you put something in the running order for me to look at?
It's a YouTube link with a description,
literally, dried piss.
Yeah, that's
pretty much it yeah i didn't click on that that's how the video opens right so i mean i'll stick on
i'll stick on the opening uh the opening few frames so we can hear it that's an advert for
asda your video beginning three one discover mark george right there we go let's pause this
chap you've probably seen this guy before
His name is Tom Scott
But he does some wonderful work
Online and beyond
Can you see that telly from around it
You can't
I can sort of see it
Anyway
Basically it's a man in a lab
Yeah
There's a lot of
Dockets
Dockets
What are the little dockets
Dockets
Basically a lot of shelving
With a lot of items on it
In jars and stuff
Dockets are pieces of paper
A lot of items
Well a lot of items on it in jars and stuff. Dockers and pieces of paper. A lot of items, well, a lot of items on shelves, basically.
Okay.
And this is his opening gambit.
This is a packet and bottle of freeze-dried urine.
Thank you very much.
There we go, that's all we needed.
Start with your best, get their attention.
So what is the point of this, Pete?
It's a National Institute of Standards and Technology.
It's a place where people can buy materials
that have been rigorously checked to be the purest example of that material is it
a government-run agency so it's a government agency there are competing brands and stuff but
this is the one run by the u.s government and it's fascinating so that when manufacturers like buy or
produce other examples of that same material uh they know that the material in question has the
same chemical composition uh as as the purest form of that thing
it's usually for like calibration purposes
or the urine's a good example
if you are testing for
drug addled urine
it's basically like a control
yes it's a control thing
and so you can buy
a small vial of
freeze dried piss basically
for $983
that's how much it costs
not worth it
well it's mainly the certificate that comes along with it.
It's not actually the item itself.
It's the certificate that comes along with it.
But it's the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
And you could buy just everything you think of.
So let me give you an example then.
So if I find a jar in the back of the cupboard,
and it's got no label on it,
and I think, this looks to me like crunchy peanut butter.
Right.
If I go to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, I can get a control of peanut
butter, check out the chemical composition and if it's the same, dig in.
If it's the same, dig in.
Well, dig in both.
You've already got the control.
If you've ordered the control...
It cost me $900.
I'm not eating it all at once.
So yeah, all these materials are like really precise examples from like cocaine to the
aforementioned powder of piss,
peanut butter, whale blubber as well.
And what I liked about it in the video,
the whale blubber is kept in the same place as the peanut butter.
So weird.
Right.
So very weird.
I don't know why you'd need a control for whale blubber.
Well, it's because they're at the top of the food chain, so that can kind of...
So if you find a whale that's been beached,
that's obviously got almost a snapshot of what it's eating because
it's the the apex predator isn't it i guess it eats everything no whales only eat very small
i'll come on to this in future weeks but whales only eat very small like krill or plankton
depending on the whale yeah i suppose so yeah i suppose it's garbage just it can so it can eat
like 20 000 calories in one swallow or something yeah I bet, yeah. Well, if you've seen them, well, they are big. Yeah.
They are big lads, aren't they? I mean, isn't there no knob in four?
Fucking big lads.
There was a whale washed up at Leon Solent Beach once.
Where I'm from.
Okay, right, okay.
Yeah, just one, seriously, 15 years ago or whatever.
Actually, it's probably longer than that.
That's when I was living back in the South.
Let's say, how old am I now?
About 20 years ago.
Yeah.
I woke up in the morning.
My mate was like, oh, yeah, what are woke up mornings mate mate was like oh yeah what you
up to so nothing come down to the beach all right went down to the beach loads of people there but
probably the whole town now it's a very small town anyway uh couldn't really see what's happening
and walked down a bit further a massive whale was was had been washed up on leon certain beach it
was probably i mean it's hard to say but it was massive dead yeah it what happened was because
the chat i'm not the channel the solent yeah it's quite a busy, but it was massive. Was it dead? Yeah. What had happened was, because the Solent,
it's quite a busy shipping lane,
it had been hit by a tanker or a dredger or something
and been killed and been washed up.
And that to get, like, about four JCBs
to put it on the back of a flatbed truck and drive it off,
because they can explode.
Yeah, because all of the, when it dies,
obviously all of the chemicals inside creates gas.
Well, it's happened a few times, hasn't it?
But do you remember,
I remember when,
it was a famous video back in the 90s,
I think, early 90s,
where a town had a similar problem.
They had this big, bloody big well
and they decided to blow it up with dynamite.
See, that's what I want to be a part of.
Did no go well.
No, I bet it didn't.
I would probably,
if I saw a well,
I'd probably climb inside
and it's going to help me run around.
There'd be so much room in there.
They're not that big.
They're big enough for me to run around in.
Little game of tennis in there.
Speaking of that, right,
this just reminded me of something.
When I was in Georgia, Atlanta,
I went to the Georgia Aquarium.
Right.
Have you been there?
No, I haven't.
It's absolutely amazing,
and it's just reminded me,
they've got four whale sharks in there.
They've got a tank so big,
it's got four whale sharks in it.
That's, that's,
I'd just get one.
And, well, I'll tell you what happened.
I'll tell you what happened. I tell you what happened I put a photo up
on my Instagram actually
so you can see how big they are
if you don't know
how big a whale shark is
which by the way
is massive
have you got like
something to compare it to
like a can of coke or something
there's loads of people
standing in the foreground
a can of coke
that's how you compare penises
we haven't got time
for that now
would you go to
the National Institute
of Science and Technology
and see what
I'm looking for
I'm looking for the dictionary definition of a penis, please.
Get me a wagger, because I'm being criticised for mine.
Left, right and centre.
And these whale sharks, they were...
I think they were taken from some Taiwanese fishermen or something.
And Georgia Aquarium did a deal with UPS.
Right.
UPS, the packaging guys.
Yeah, and so if you
ship these over for free,
we'll give you a
sponsor's right or something
or whatever on the tank.
Which they did.
And they got a jumbo jet
747
and they adapted it
and put the tank in it
and they flew them over.
Unbelievable.
The thing that reminded me.
Piscine.
SeaLife.
I know, right?
UPS.
How does a plane,
I'd love to know
what the maximum load
for a 747 is
because it seems
pretty heavy to me for that to be taken off.
You can keep a lot in there.
Have you ever seen like...
You know when they put the...
When you put all your bags in the hole, effectively, on a plane.
You like to think that it's like this massive kind of shell
that's all organised and stuff.
It's just literally just a pocket.
It's like a pocket that looks like it actually forms
the contours
of the actual
so it's smaller
at the sides
and bigger at the
you'd think that
there'd be like
some organisation
it's not.
Just pile everything
as quickly as you can.
Right.
It's really confusing.
What were you expecting though?
I was expecting like
like another level
of the plane.
You know like
the part that you live in
effectively
for ten hours or whatever. I thought like another one of them basically. know like the part that you live in effectively for 10 hours or whatever
I thought like
another one of them basically
depending on how long the flight is
11
to finish the point
2
5
depends where you go
depends where you go
just to finish the point
the thing that reminded me of it
is that if you know a whale shark
is able to
scoop up huge amounts of krill
and plankton and stuff
in one go
I think it's krill actually
little tiny shrimps
right
their esophagus is only the size of a 50 pence piece so it all goes through huge amounts of krill and plankton and stuff in one go. I think it's krill, actually. Little tiny shrimps. Right.
Their esophagus is only the size of a 50-pence piece.
So it all goes through one little tube?
It all just filters through, yeah.
So I couldn't climb through it?
No.
The whale shark isn't as big as, you know,
obviously like a blue whale or something.
You could probably squeeze yourself into an adult whale shark's mouth,
but that's as far as you're going.
Could I, if I wore ice skates,
jam my feet through its guts
and walk around like it's a suit
and go to Comic-Con?
Is it already dead?
Yeah, well, after I've punctured its guts
with my ice skate feet.
I don't see why not.
I don't see why not.
It would be quite heavy.
And skate my way through Comic-Con,
leaving shark entrails everywhere.
The smell would be outrageous.
It would be.
So you were on the National Institute of Standards Technology website,
and I went to Atlanta, and that's that.
That's that.
Let's have some emails.
Okay, Luke, don't gunge me, mate.
Pipe down, Pete.
I told you never to argue with the customers.
Never argue with the customers, Luke.
How many more times?
I know, I know.
Would you like some emails, Luke? Yeah, sure. I'll do the first one, anyway. All right. customers, Luke. How many more times? I know, I know. Would you like some emails, Luke? Yeah, sure.
I'll do the first one anyway.
All right.
Hello, Luke.
Hello, Pete.
Wrong order.
Don't like that.
About 20 years ago, I was working...
This is by Richard Bushell, by the way.
Richard Bushell.
Richard Bushell.
About 20 years ago, I was working away through a pack of love hearts
when I got one which had the message,
You prat.
Surely not. I let this happen
I can't
I can't
prove this
verify this
I've thought about this
every time I've had love hearts
since that day
but I've never seen that message
or anything similarly abusive
ever since
I remember it quite clearly
because I was about eight
and I had to ask my mum
what a prat was
but like Luke
with the Kit Kat
as the years have passed
I've started to doubt
my memory
has anyone else received an abusive love heart message please somebody get in touch but like Luke with the Kit Kat as the years have passed I've started to doubt my memory.
Has anyone else received an abusive love heart message?
Please somebody get in touch.
Hello at Luke and Pete show.com
Hello at Luke and Pete show.com
In America they're called sweethearts
and they're sold
Oh it's slightly different.
They're sold around Valentine's Day
and I was doing a bit of research into them
and they come
the idea and tradition of love hearts
or sweethearts
come from things called
conversation lozenges. Fuck off. I'm being serious hearts come from things called conversation lozenges.
Fuck off!
I'm being serious.
Oh, it's the conversation lozenges.
I'm being serious.
Oh, lovely.
And they started out...
Conversation lozenges!
Spit in my mouth, Paul.
Let's have a chat candy.
But they started off in little biscuits
with messages written on paper in them.
You crap.
And as technology advanced, they started written on paper in them. You crap. Yeah, and as technology advanced,
they started printing
on the biscuits themselves.
But what was funny
is that I found a website
which had some examples
of the first messages
printed on them.
Were these like 1930s?
When was this?
I think in wartime
there's some extreme messaging.
No, it was before that.
I think late 19th century,
I think.
Oh, right.
Thumbs up for slavery. No, listen to this. Some of them late 19th century, I think. Oh, right. Thumbs up for slavery.
No, listen to this, though.
Some of them are really funny.
Let me find it.
Here we go.
Right.
First one.
I am not too young.
Oh.
Young girl, get out of my mind.
Another one.
Mother knows I am out.
Mother knows I'm out?
Yeah.
What does that mean?
Is that like an out of the closet thing?
Or is it like...
Listen to the next one.
Can you polka
oh polka was big back then i've got two more one is i'll see you home right all of these are
threatening the final was brilliant please send a lock of your hair by return mail right that is
dreadful absolutely dreadful so this is richard bus You could have done a lot worse than you, Pratt. Could be worse. Yeah.
Can you, Pratt?
Polka.
Well, there's some new,
there's new love hearts
that came out a few years ago
and they're all just junk.
I'll read Pet.
That's the sort of thing
you say all the time.
Yeah, but I don't want it
on my candy, do I?
No, I suppose not.
Marry me.
Hot wheels.
Hot wheels?
Hot wheels.
That doesn't make any sense,
That doesn't make any sense,
does it?
No, totally.
Take a selfie. Yeah selfie it's got modern
I hate when I do that stuff
YOLO
yeah YOLO
YOLO's on there
tweet me
Skype me
miracles happen
60 years of love
what
I mean 60
yeah that is
60 years of love
and how do the Welsh
cuddle
it's
kutch
kutch
kutch me
that's presumably in Welsh-only factories.
I don't know.
Or Reet Pet.
I prefer the old ones.
I swear, for a little while, there was one that said, fax me.
And that was like, yeah, jeez.
Well, I don't know.
You say that, and I'm sure you're right,
but in 15 years' time, people will be laughing at Skype me, won't they?
Well, Skype...
How has the brand name
got on there it's an unloved brand i mean it's useful and everyone uses it but i mean skype me
should be conference call me it shouldn't be it should be facetime me it's like putting tannoy
me on instead of pa me it's a brand do you want an email in return i would like an email in return
thank you um hi guys this is from emmett he says you guys speaking about the parasite which causes frogs
to grow extra limbs
reminded me of
this little guy
that extra limbs
thing on the frogs
was a few weeks ago
yes
he says
Simothoa exigua
is a type of parasite
that enters a fish's gills
eats their tongue
and then replaces it
Jesus
I know it's quite horrible
but I kind of like
how smug he looks
sitting there
with a devious grin and he's included the photo and to be fair it does look quite cute but I kind of like how Smuggy looks sitting there with a devious grin,
and he's included the photo.
And to be fair, it does look quite cute, but that is horrific.
Love the show, lads. Keep it up.
I mean, disgusting.
Yeah.
I mean, it does look kind of cute, but it does kind of look...
It's a bit like Ninja Turtles with Kerrang.
Yeah, it does look a bit like that, yeah.
What was the name of the guy that Kerrang was in?
He's a big muscle man, isn't he?
A big, roidy guy, isn't he?
Yeah, what was he called?
I can't remember.
Did he have cool glasses as well?
He had, like, weird futuristic glasses and a belt.
Right.
And pants.
Bebop and Rocksteady had cool glasses, didn't they?
Oh, there was a Bebop and Rocksteady at Dragon Con.
Oh, was there?
Yeah, yeah, it was good.
I'll get you titles.
There was also an amazing array of good quality macho man Randy Savages as well, which is
great to see.
But yeah, anyway, this is a parasite, Pete, that replaces a tongue.
We don't like one of them.
I would probably have a, like a swiss army knife.
What, if you could replace your tongue with anything?
Yeah, because I'm always looking for, basically my micro is broken,
the button on it is broken, so I've got to get a screwdriver and jam it in.
I mean, it's probably quite dangerous,
but I've got a screwdriver that I keep next to the microwave that I jam into the button.
Okay.
They're about 30 quid, microwaves.
Say again?
They're about 30 pounds.
Yeah, but it's fine.
It's part of the button.
I would probably replace my tongue with a toothbrush.
That would be good.
Yeah.
Or one of those fuzzy brushes you get in airport toilets.
Yeah, the ones you can eat in little bowls.
And they've got really grimy toothpaste. They're disgusting. I've never had one. Of course I bought one. Yeah, the ones you can eat in little bowls. And they've got really grimy teeth.
They're disgusting.
I've never had one.
Of course I bought one.
Yeah, of course you did.
And one of those rings you put around your penis
that you get in the condo machine.
Moving on from that,
if you want to get in touch with any other
tongue-replacing parasites or anything else,
it's hello at lukeandpete.com
and don't get in touch with Pete about penises
because he's already mentioned them twice this week
and I don't want to encourage him any further.
More penises!
Let there be justice for all.
Let there be peace for all.
It's one small step for man.
You don't understand.
Willie was a salesman.
Say simply, very simply, with hope.
Good morning. Good morning, Luke Moore.
Good morning to you too.
It's quite late actually, isn't it?
Yeah.
We've both had a long day.
It's morning somewhere, mate.
I'm full of cold, I'm full of Lemsip.
I actually bought from Premanger a clementine.
No, a nectarine.
Okay, yeah. a nectarine. Okay, yeah.
A nectarine.
And the woman said,
would you like me to wash the nectarine for you?
Part of the service.
Was she doing the nectarine?
I don't know.
It reminds me of...
And also she asked if I needed a receipt.
And I was only buying a nectarine.
I will never need to prove that I bought a nectarine.
Can I bring this back?
It doesn't fit.
And it's dirty.
It's dirty.
It's dirty.
Someone I'm not going to name
because it would be unfair
to protect the innocent
or keep them in anonymous.
It's your dad.
No, it's not.
There's someone I've definitely
said it was my dad.
Someone I know used to,
it's just bizarre behaviour,
used to wash an orange
before they peeled it.
That's insane.
Yeah, because you,
I really wanted to say to them,
what are you doing?
Yeah.
How about that?
What do you think about that?
I'm a man who eats an apple.
I ate a car as well.
Yeah.
That's quite deviant.
I've seen a guy I used to know
used to eat the whole apple
and use the stalk to pick his teeth.
That's,
that's not good.
No.
There we go.
Fruit, fruit behaviours.
I saw a man eat a cream egg
and he had like a, he ate it in the messiest way possible. He had like. I saw a man eat a cream egg and he had like a
he ate it in the messiest way possible.
He had like a handkerchief
and he sort of managed to make
a literal meal and figurative
meal out of eating a flipping cream egg.
How did he do that?
He just had it all over his hands.
Just put it in your gob mate.
Unwrap it. Put it in your gob. Job done.
But he managed to get it
about five bites out of one cream egg. Madness. just put it in your gob mate unwrap it put it in your gob job done but he managed to get it he managed to get about
five bites out of one cream egg
yeah
madness
people
it's a big thing isn't it
for people to be annoyed
about other people's eating habits
yeah
I actually know someone as well
speaking of cream egg
who didn't used to like
chocolate
but liked the cream egg fondant
so he used to bite the top
of the cream egg off
scoop it out
scoop it all out with a finger
and then give it
not with a finger
and then put the chocolate in the bin
or give it to someone else.
Not that anyone else would want to eat it.
I was at Alexander Palace
over the weekend
watching Interpol
or a little while ago
and he,
he,
I was getting a drink
and I said,
Alexander Palace,
I hate it.
It's on a hill.
It takes ages to get there.
Terrible.
You either change it
wood green or blow up.
Terrible venue.
Terrible.
The sound's terrible.
It's dreadful.
I've seen brand new there.
I've seen Interpol there
and I thought both times
dreadful sound.
Anyway,
when everyone was getting
the drink,
it just took too long
to get bloody drinks.
They had two beer machines.
Better be careful
everyone's just buying lager.
Yeah.
You know,
cheap crappy lager,
well,
expensive crappy lager
and they've got like
just two crappy machines.
One urn of beer
or a,
you know,
urn.
An urn of beer.
My beer. And, of beer. My beer!
And they just had one
lad and they're all like about 16, these kids are about
16, kind of 18 I guess.
And they're pressing the button and the beer's coming out
really, really slow. And they're running out of beer.
They're just running out of beer.
The beer is not keeping pace
with the amount of people who want the beer. Anyway,
this one lad's job was to
just take the beer from the person who was want the beer. Anyway, and this one lad's job was to just take the beer
from the person who was pouring the beer
and put it on a table for other people to serve,
to the people, the punters who wanted the beer, right?
Was there a bottleneck?
Well, there was a massive bottleneck every time.
And he would, at one point, because it was all plastic glasses,
he would pick up the beer and it would squeeze slightly
so the foam would get on his finger.
And every time, I want to do this 20, 30 the foam would get on his finger and every time,
I watched him do this 20, 30 times,
he would lick his finger.
That's outrageous.
He would lick the beer
off his finger,
get the nice little buzz.
Was he pissed?
Well, presumably
after all that.
But he would,
but I wouldn't care,
like his supervisor
was watching him,
like talking to him
while he was licking his hand.
I was like,
stop licking your
flipping hand, mate.
How,
we're allowed to throw
on this show by the way.
Fucking hand. I went for a gin and fucking tonic anyway, mate. We're allowed to throw on the show, by the way. Fucking hand.
I went for a gin and fucking tonic anyway, so.
Pete, how expensive was it to buy a beer in Alexandria Palace?
The reason I ask that is because last time I went to Alexandria Palace,
I don't think they had a licence, and they used to give you vouchers,
and you had to go and exchange the voucher for a beer.
And the whole thing was so tedious, it was unreal.
Yeah, it was for
two lagers. It was
10 quids. It was about
12 quid, I think. Expensive. Why did you start
talking about that? I can't even remember. Can't remember, no.
Washing nectarines. Oh, yeah.
Washing oranges. Yeah.
Men Carter, though. Men Carter.
Well, Andrew Tate's come up with this
entry for this week's
Men Carter. Would you like to read it out? Because I realise that I'm incredibly stuffy-nosed.
So I find myself rather hard to listen to at the moment.
Yeah, I'll do it.
Apologies.
That's all right.
I think they prefer me anyway.
A little email here from Andrew Tate.
Have you already said that?
Yeah.
Oh, you have, okay.
He says,
Hi, lads.
This is fast becoming a favourite show of mine,
so thanks for putting it together every week.
Well, that's a sort of opening
and it's going to get you in the job.
It's going to get you read, isn't it?
It's going to get you read out.
He says,
I love the Baltic states of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia
in the same way Pete loves all things Japanese
and Luca adores Southampton.
I see what you do there.
I see what you've done there, mate.
He said,
I'd like to tell you two stories
that we don't really know about in this country.
First, I'll tell you about the Baltic Way,
also known as the Baltic Chain.
Ooh.
On 23rd of August 1989,
to mark the 50th anniversary of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
between Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany,
two million people formed a human chain
across Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia
in peaceful protest at the continuing occupation
of their countries by the Russians.
Two million people.
All put together.
The last occupying forces left the Baltic states
in, I think, 1994.
Some locals in the region I talked to
take this later date to be the end of World War II.
It amazes me and inspires me
that so many people would risk their few freedoms
and maybe more to become what we consider free.
Now, I looked at this Baltic chain.
I mean, it's over 400 miles long.
And in 1989, pre-internet,
how did everyone get together?
Exactly.
It's a hell of a flash mob.
To put that in perspective,
that is like a single unbroken chain of human beings
from London to Glasgow.
And I know that because I drove to Glasgow fairly recently.
It was just over 400 miles. So there you go. And every few feet from London to Glasgow. And I know that because I drove to Glasgow fairly recently. It was just over 400 miles.
So there you go. And every few
feet I throw to person. I did
not. I was nothing to do with it. And he said,
secondly, the Forest Brothers were the generic
name for locals of the Baltic states who
disappeared into the forests when first
the Nazis and Soviets, then the Nazis,
then finally the Soviets swept
across the region. They may have been fleeing
religious or economic persecution, fought for the wrong side, or various other reasons. There were tens, maybe
hundreds of thousands of people at one time or another hiding out in the dense forests. Some did
form small sabotage bands and attack the occupiers. A large proportion formed resistance bands
actively fighting the opposition forces. At one point, the authorities calculated up to a third
of the population of the region was supporting these Forrest brothers.
They were mainly wiped out by the early 50s, sadly.
He said, the person I want to draw your attention to, however, is what's considered to be the last Forrest brother,
who remained hidden from the authorities for over 50 years.
Janus Pinups, yes, real name, deserted the Red Army in 1944 and hid in the forest near his home until 1995.
1944 and hid in the forest near his home till 1995.
Wow. Only his closet family, closet?
Only his closest family and friends knew his location
and later his real identity when he had to get medical help.
So yeah, from 1944 to 1995,
Janusz Pinups was the last Forrest brother
who deserted the Red Army in 1944.
And I read up about this.
The reason it's like this is quite interesting.
So he was in a battle with the Red Army,
with the Soviets,
and he received a concussion and was knocked out.
Right.
And when he woke up, everything had gone.
The battle had moved on.
He was just on his own. Oh, so it must have just looked like a corpse, maybe.
Basically, yes.
I guess a dead body's lying around and all sorts of horrific stuff like that.
But he just woke up and was like,
well, I'm not going to go find the battle again i'm off i just walked off and i never and never and essentially
i guess he i guess he saw it as a perfect time to sort of desert from the army and and he
disappeared into the forest and that was that and he um there was also a apparent according to
according to the account i read he uh was very very careful and wasn't ever seen outside during
the day or anything like that um and he built a series of underground bunkers to maintain his anonymity.
But in the 80s, right? Check this out.
In the 80s, so a good 30 or 40 years later,
he accidentally, or for some reason, he had to be outside during the day,
and he ended up walking past a bus stop.
And there was a man waiting at the bus stop, and he recognised him.
He was like, are you...
And he was like, no. Oh, I'm you, uh... And he was like, no.
Oh, I'm sure you're...
And he was like,
you look exactly like him.
No, no, no.
And just legged it
and he never went back again.
And it was only in the mid-90s.
I think he might have broken his ankle
or something like that.
Right.
Or the occupying forces finally left
and it was all taken care of
that he was able to then
sort of come out
and say what had happened.
Is that how the Jungle Brothers were made?
It is, yeah.
And then now, yeah,
and he formed a hip-hop group, Jungle Brothers.
What an incredible story.
I think he died in about 2004,
so about almost 15 years ago.
Probably from like a really city disease.
Like, nothing he could have caught in the forest.
Well, you've probably caught it.
Probably, I've probably got it.
You're always ill, Peter.
Yeah.
What do you think about that, Donaldson?
I'm up for it. No, I'm not suggesting we do it. What I always ill, Peter. What do you think about that, Donaldson? I'm up for it.
What I'm saying is that I think
running into the forest and living in the forest
isn't really an option for us.
I just think it's nice
that that's an option for a lot of people.
If shit goes down,
I'm running for the forest.
Yeah, I mean, I don't think...
Which forest would you pick out of all of the many
we have in the UK?
Well, it's difficult
because the national parks
in England are...
I mean,
the national parks in England
are sort of lived in.
They've got villages
and towns in them anyway.
Yeah.
And, you know,
if you went somewhere...
Centre parks.
I mean, you could go
to Epping Forest.
I mean, you're not more
than about 20 metres away
from the road
at any point in Epping Forest.
Somewhere like Scotland you'd be too cold. Yeah. That from the road at any point in the Epping Forest. Somewhere like Scotland,
you'd be too cold.
Yeah.
That's the thing, isn't it?
We hear about people surviving.
We talked a number of weeks ago
about a couple of guys surviving
in the Cambodian jungle for 50 years.
I mean, it's impossible to imagine
someone like you or I doing it
because we just don't have
any of the basic skills
of finding the clean water,
starting a fire.
I read the other day
you can start a fire with a battery.
You can just use it, get a piece of wire.
That's the thing, you can start it with a battery,
but you need a piece of wire.
What, in the forest?
Because literally you don't get any wire in the forest.
Well, if you're wearing a watch or a belt or, I don't know,
I'm sure you could unwrap the terminals,
and to be honest, the foil that they wrap batteries in
is probably metallic and probably conductive.
One of the best ever Breaking Bad episodes
is, is it called Four Days Out?
Right. Remember that episode?
Where they go out into the boondocks
and they cook meth in the
RV, the crystal ship. Right.
And they, I mean
just one thing leads to another and the
generator packs up.
Oh no, I'll tell you what happens.
They accidentally start a fire,
and the generator catches fire,
and Jesse chucks all the water over the generator,
which shorts it out, and they're stuck there.
It's a brilliant episode,
and Walt fashions together like a battery.
Isn't it really annoying that I loved Breaking Bad,
and I love all these shows,
but the only episode I can really remember was the one with the fly in it.
Oh, yeah.
The most unloved episode.
Is that an example of a particular type of TV series episode?
Yeah.
To save money for another episode, yeah.
Oh, no, I think it's just the writers flexing their chops, so to speak.
Is it called like a Lyft episode or a a cupboard episode or something like that?
I know like the League of Gentlemen, the show that they did after the League of Gentlemen,
they did one just in a cupboard.
And I think it's a silent movie one as well where nobody spoke.
But I can't remember.
It's called something like a capsule episode or something like that.
Right, okay, because I actually thought it was quite interesting,
but I assumed, because I've often suspected with Doctor Who,
which is quite a high-budget TV series,
but it's a BBC show, right?
So they have to save money somehow.
So if they want to do a big finale,
they sometimes, I think,
will do a really sort of low-budget episode.
I imagine to save money.
And I always thought Fly,
which for those of you who haven't seen it,
I won't spoil you,
but basically,
they're stuck in a lab
making meth
and there's a fly
in the lab
and they're worried
it's going to contaminate the meth.
So they end up spending
the whole episode
trying to catch the fly,
basically.
Essentially,
I just viewed it
as a money-saving exercise.
But I'm also fairly sure
that a lot of people think
it's one of the best episodes of TV ever
because it's so tightly written.
But essentially nothing happened to it.
No, exactly.
I mean, a lot of...
It was like...
What films was I watching?
Hit for Late.
That was quite...
That's kind of like similar, isn't it?
It's all set in one place, isn't it?
You know what?
I just think...
This is another conversation entirely,
but I think that Tarantino, he's so self-indulgent,
it's unreal. That film was about an hour longer than it should have
been well he sort of uh likes to remind people of uh different genres that nobody really remembers
anymore he's really obsessed with like japanese cinema and old spaghetti westerns and stuff and
he brings these sort of characters to be fair though he brings these kind of characters back
uh actors back that uh perhaps don't have much of a career anymore.
It gives them a shot in the arm.
I don't think any of those things you just listed
are a reason to make a film three and a half hours long.
Just have it a little bit shorter.
I didn't think it was that bad to be honest.
I think most films are too long anyway.
I do, and there's too many films around.
I think this podcast is too long.
I agree, let's stop it.
Let's get the hell out of it.
Let's stop it, man.
Thank you for joining us.
We'll be back next week
with Luke and Pete Shaw
number 16.
Hot diggity dog.
See you later.
See you later.
Give us an email.
Hello at lukenpeachshaw.com Outro Music