The Luke and Pete Show - It's Been's back
Episode Date: May 4, 2020Since the lockdown started, memes have got danker, Kanye’s become a billionaire and Pete’s grown confident enough to challenge Post Malone on his drink selection. That's right, it’s another epis...ode of The Luke and Pete Show!Also, there's Nike tennis socks, more on the flaming tar barrels in Ottery St. Mary, some bits and pieces about Dave Grohl, and a delivery for Flat 3...Get in touch with us hello@lukeandpeteshow.com, we always love hearing from you!**Please take the time to rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or your preferred podcast provider. It means a great deal to the show and will make it easier for other potential listeners to find us. Thanks!** Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to the Luke and Pete show episode, Who the Heck Cares?
It's 2020, everything's topsy-turvy and upside down.
Mine is Pete Donaldson and I'm joined by a man by the name of...
I'm Luke Moore and I'm sponsored by Nalgene.
Oh, Nalgene. Have you got your little Nalgene?
Yeah, I forgot to unscrew it before we started,
so let me just do that now, off mic, so you don't get annoyed.
But you carry on, mate.
So you didn't hear that, did you? I've already done it and you don't get annoyed but you carry on mate so you didn't hear that did you i've already done it you didn't hear i didn't did you move it yeah the problem with um broadcasting uh in bedrooms things like that is that you don't
actually unless you've got a a specific setup which i do actually have because it makes me
feel comfortable uh you can't actually hear what's going into the microphone so
no you don't know whether you're breathing heavily into the microphone you can't actually hear what's going into the microphone so no you don't know
whether you're breathing heavily into the microphone you don't know whether your nalgene
bottle is making a noise it's uh it's it's all rather upsetting yeah so so for people who who
don't know about broadcasting um welcome to the club i'm in it um you you normally can hear
yourself so that's why it's infuriating when you listen to the radio or watch TV.
Actually, no, not TV.
When you listen to the radio or a podcast and people go off mic
or they sound ridiculous, that's just because they aren't listening
to themselves.
I'm talking to you, ex-pros, sometimes on TalkSport.
But in this situation, you can't actually hear yourself anyway.
Well, sometimes they don't want to wear headphones, are they?
No, exactly.
Yeah, sometimes when you interview someone, and again,
I'm talking about the rock stars and the indie pop stars,
when I chat to them in my past as a radio DJ,
a lot of them just sort of just don't like uh headphones because messes up their hair doesn't
really go with their sunglasses or whatever and it just means that they don't actually know how
loud they're being so I have to kind of ride the levels a little bit and it's just it's a bit of a
nightmare guys that's your business you know a microphone as you would be no doubt I'm surprised
to hear um when I do a ramble meet so I interview someone in our studio or I'm on the radio,
it's not an option to not wear headphones.
I don't care who they are.
I'll just tell them they have to wear them.
Yeah.
I will always take it down to when I was on the red carpet
for the Brit Awards probably about six years ago now,
a man by the name of David Grohl came down,
a man who I probably would have liked to have a chat with.
But obviously the big swinger, the big swing and Willie in absolute was the Drive Time show.
So what I had to do instead of interviewing him myself and sending the audio down the line,
I had to put some headphones on Dave Grohl's head and he was interviewed by.
That's poor. That's poor.
It was a little bit upsetting because obviously I don't work in radio anymore
and that was
one of the ones
I'd quite like to
tick off the list
I don't know what exactly
I'd say to Dave Grohl
I'd probably mention
the song My Hero
which is about a guy
called Chip Donaldson
my name's Donaldson
I always felt an affinity
with that song
I've mentioned that
on the podcast before
but yeah
a little bit disappointing
to be honest
one of the few people
I never got to interview
did I tell you
that my friend Oli
got pulled out of the crowd
at a London food fighter show and played a song with them
that's pretty cool lovely old job that's nice yeah so they they apparently dave grohl went
through this period a lot yeah if you're bringing people and people out the crowd and then my friend
ollie um he's a quite a good guitar player and they pulled it they said can anyone play so i
can't remember which song it was but can anyone play this song and he was like yeah i can and
he got pulled out and he absolutely caned it. There's a video of him on his private Facebook doing it.
It's actually very good.
The one thing that's funny about it is that Oli isn't like,
he's not uncool,
but he's not like particularly standout cool either.
And one of the things that's quite funny is that it's almost a bit like
seeing a non-professional footballer try and play football with professionals.
It just looks mental.
It's the same with rock artists.
It's the same with musical artists on stage.
They're so good at it most of the time.
Even the ones who have that kind of indie aesthetic
of we don't really care.
They are still so good at it, most of them.
So when you get up there as an amateur,
it looks automatically a little bit awkward,
but maybe that's just because you're used to seeing the band as a whole
and then they don't fit in or whatever.
There was one guy that Dave Grohl pulled out of the crowd
and he was in full kiss makeup.
That's amazing.
And he was very good and he really went for it because, I mean,
for crying out loud, he's walking around with kiss makeup.
So well done that man.
But you do see it every now and again.
There was that lovely picture that was going around Twitter of,
oh God, was it a member of, it wasn't a member of the Sex Pistols.
It was a member of like an older band, maybe Prog.
And basically it was Guy in a Leather Jacket chatting to a member of Slipknot.
And then there was a little kid dressed as one of the members of Slipknot.
And it looked like the kid was really bored
because his dad was talking to a member of Slipknot. And it looked like the kid was really bored because his dad was talking to a member of Slipknot.
And then it turned out the backstory behind it
was that the kid who was the son of the bloke
who was in the prog band talking to a member of Slipknot
actually now drums horses.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, that's funny.
So the backstory behind...
The meme was incredible.
It looked amazing.
What an image. And then the backstory is even the meme was incredible. It looked amazing. What an image.
And then the backstory is even somehow more incredible than that.
And I'm sure people will have lots of emails ready to go right now about it.
But I'm hoping.
Pete, how has lockdown been for memes?
They've got danker.
Yeah, more dank.
Obviously, a lot of people at home preparing memes
just off the production line quicker than anything really.
And I found like this, I didn't find it,
Murray James of Logo Peach Show fame,
he sent me an automatic kind of AI meme generator.
And my God, it's good.
Like it genuinely pulls at the stark contrast how shit memes are because
this you just press a button and it creates automatic memes and it's just have you ever
created a meme that's become famous and gone and gone viral or whatever or done well
i've asked you before i know i know your friend alex is terrified of you making him a meme
but is that the closest you've come yeah no i've never i've never yeah that you what making an ai
meme no there's no there's just no um i think the closest i've been to going i think you do that
thing where you type in your name and then news story uh like you type in your at pete donaldson
twitter name and then you go to the news page on google and it shows like the most popular thing you've done effectively in the news area and
mine was that dressed as uh the Travago lady oh yeah that was very good that made that made the
front page of the Hartlepool News I didn't it yeah and it was in the evening standard that's
the only reason why they knew about it but we are uh but we are Luke of course speaking in the week
that uh Kanye West is now a billionaire he's actually made he was very angry with Forbes
uh Forbes would never um say that he was a billionaire. He was very angry with Forbes.
Forbes would never say that he was a billionaire.
Now he's actually made it thanks to his Adidas work.
He's now actually a billionaire.
He reckons he's a 3.1 billionaire, but Forbes have got it. I shortlisted this story to talk about as well a week or so ago
and I forgot to do it.
And it's funny to me because Kanye West is a character.
Let's make that absolutely clear.
And I enjoy a lot of his work.
I think he's probably a bit of a, I don't know if he could be a bit of a genius,
but he certainly sees the world differently.
As my friend Jimmy would say, deals in a different currency.
And that is a key part of being a genius.
And some of the stuff he's done has been amazing.
But the funny thing to me is Kanye West's need to be seen and recognized and acknowledged as a billionaire might well be more
important to him than actually being a billionaire and the reason I say that is because he's obviously
so wealthy anyway it doesn't really make any difference so if someone says to you Pete you're
going to have 999 million pounds and then all of a sudden, you found out you had £1.1 billion.
You probably wouldn't even notice.
So to Kanye, it's important for him to have been seen and acknowledged
in this kind of social strata that is to be a billionaire.
And it's classic because when Forbes magazine finally acknowledged him
as a billionaire, he texted the editor of the magazine
and said apparently the following,
it's not a billion, it's 3.3 billion,
but no one at Forbes knows how to count.
He then went public and said it was a disrespectful article
that was purposely snubbing him.
You know what you're doing, West said.
You're toying with me and I'm not going to lie down
and take it anymore in Jesus' name.
It's what Jesus would have wanted. That's what i like about that that's wonderful yeah roll away that stone i've got three billion dollars
the thing that gets me is like that he's if you were going to talk about like bling rappers like
he doesn't strike me as being he's obviously a very well-off man and he came up a time where
like bling and and and showing off your money was like a big thing.
But he became like a rapper that was a bit more cerebral
and money wasn't really a big part of his image.
Would that be fair to say?
I wouldn't be an expert on his output at all.
I like a lot of his stuff, but I wouldn't sort of post myself
as someone who knew an awful lot about him.
I'm just thinking about his videos and stuff, not a lot yachts and you know it was a bit more playful i think i just i just read an
article about 50 cent and the guy that's really interesting and it's clear that um 50 cent is so
well um motivated towards money over and above anything he's ever done musically to the point
of where you know he's not that bothered about putting music out now and he's more of a businessman
and that but he says that's always been his kind of MO.
He started out, his mom was a drug dealer.
She was tragically killed.
He became a drug dealer.
And he was all about getting money.
Obviously, his first record, Get Rich or Die Trying, et cetera.
So I don't think he would put Kanye West in that bracket.
But it's clearly a huge part of that type of music
that is about success and about flaunting success.
And I imagine lyrically,
he probably does talk a lot about it,
but then his most recent record
was one of the worst pieces of music I've ever heard.
So I wouldn't take my word on it.
I'm not an expert on him at all.
Oh, you didn't get invited to his little Sunday gospel?
He is funny though, Kanye.
There's just something inherently quite funny about him.
He lends himself, speaking of memes, he lends himself to a meme and a g though, Kanye. There's just something inherently quite funny about him. He lends himself, speaking of memes,
he lends himself to a meme and a gif, Kanye.
There's like brilliant gifs of him pretending to laugh
and then just being really upset straight afterwards.
I like him.
I think he's one of those people you'd like to hang out with for a bit
because he'd just be too challenging.
You know, like really funny people who are always on.
I think he would just be too challenging to sort of deal with.
Yeah, people will think that of you,
but you're not always really funny.
No, I do tend, well, yeah, I'm not funny at all,
but I just do tend to kind of hide in the background
when people are really having a big old guffaw
and I sort of think there's something wrong with me.
I'm not enjoying this question.
I think it's...
Speaking of rappers...
I was just going to say
that you're insane
and sometimes it manifests itself
as funny.
Yeah, fair do, it's fair do.
Carry on.
Speaking of rappers,
I was watching,
I don't know why,
I quite like Post Malone
and he's done a couple
of good songs,
but he did a big tribute
to Nirvana
with the drummer from Blink-182 and a couple of other songs. But he did a big tribute to Nirvana with the drummer from Blink-182
and a couple of other people.
And he did it, I think, in his, I'd say, like,
sort of man cave slash rumpus room.
I saw the still that you sent me, the image, yeah.
I mean, the boo selection in his little kind of Rodden,
sorry, Del Boy kind of mini bar he's got.
Home bar.
Home bar is awful. Now, I've been told since bar he's got. Home bar. Home bar is awful.
Now, I've been told since that he's obsessed with Bud Light,
and that's his...
Is it Bud Light?
Yeah, Bud Light.
That's his favourite drink.
But his actual selection of spirits is like two bottles of Hendrix gin,
maybe a bottle of champagne, nothing else.
It was terrible.
You wouldn't find 50 Cent doing that.
No, he'd have bloody henny henny coming
out of his nostrils i'll tell you what i don't even i don't even think that i wouldn't if you
if you played like a 10 songs to me one after the other and said which ones of those are post
my own song i don't know but i'm gonna tell you a single one of them well i think he's a bit of a
i think he's a bit of a punk rocker slash
he liked his guitar music and then saw
which way the prevailing winds were blowing
and kind of switched a little bit
Oh did he? Did one of those things?
Well he's a hell of a guitarist
and he's just that
bloke with drawings on his face who sounds
a bit sleepy when he raps
Yeah okay
He knows his way around a melody.
He can sing a little bit.
Do you remember that?
He's only 24.
Bloody hell, he looks about 40.
Do you remember that band Brother,
who then had to become Viva Brother,
who were like... Oh, that rings a bell, yeah.
They were kind of sort of heralded,
or they were heralding themselves, I suppose,
it's probably more accurate,
of bringing back Britpop,
and they were all dressed like 90s stuff.
And their songs were kind of,
it's not almost like Oasis rip-offs,
but very embedded in the 90s aesthetic.
And it was perfectly fine.
It was derivative.
And it was just, it was no,
it wasn't meaningfully worse
than any other kind of land for indie stuff.
But anyway, they chucked it out.
They're saying they're the next big thing.
And they might got a lot of headlines for just showing off and so
showing how great they were.
And then someone found out that they just like a year before that,
they were like an emo band called kill the arcade.
They just completely changed their aesthetic overnight.
And that's to be fair to them.
They actually got a little bit of quite minimal success just by doing
that.
So there's a precedent for that isn't
and the thing is that um music the music industry is is obsessed with um with authenticity and in
quotes realness when actually the the the entire history of recorded pop music is littered with
completely inauthentic artists who have been basically really successful.
For example, Keith Richards, Peter Green,
Jon Bon Jovi, for those of you who don't know,
isn't actually a cowboy and never has been.
You know, those kind of things.
And it doesn't actually really matter,
but for some reason, some people get obsessed
with the idea that it's authentic.
What was that?
That was the Jon Bon Jovi alarm.
Shall I go and see where it is at the door?
Yeah, go on, do it.
I'll fill in while you're doing it.
So as I was saying, Jon Bon Jovi, despite thinking he was a,
or trying to tell everyone he was a cowboy and then living his dream
by being in Young Guns 2, he's obviously from New Jersey
and not a cowboy at all.
I don't know who could be at Pete's door other than a delivery guy because
I don't know if he has any
visitors. Are you back?
I'm back, yeah. It was a package
for flat three.
I live at another flat.
That was
kind of a cliffhanger
that didn't really deliver.
What did we expect this day?
It literally delivered.
I sort of feel bad that I don't take enough packages in
because I think a few times I've been recording podcasts with you guys
and someone's clearly tried to get hold of me by doing that,
like ringing the doorbell.
Someone else has picked up the package, walked up the stairs,
put the package outside my door,
and all they can hear is me doing a podcast, having a lovely old time, and just ignoring the fact that the package, walked up the stairs, put the package outside my door, and all I can hear is me doing a podcast,
having a lovely old time,
and just ignoring the fact that the package is at the door.
So I thought, for this time, I'll let the guy in.
He can put his package down on the stairs.
That's fair enough.
Pete, we were just talking about authenticity in music.
So there's a singer-songwriter I like called C.W. Stoneking.
I've told you about him before.
He's this weird throwback.
He's like half Australian, half American.
He dresses in 1920s clothes
and has created this persona
where he's like a traveling singer-songwriter.
He also calls himself a part-time
hoodoo doctor's assistant.
And he sings songs like he's in that era.
So it's like a whole theatre piece.
So when you go and watch him live,
he completely lives that kind of performance.
So he'll start telling stories in between songs
about things that have happened to him,
like he had the last dojo in existence
and that he lives on a farm in the deep south
in the 20s and stuff.
All this kind of weird stuff.
He sounds like he's approaching outsider artists for me.
He's really interesting.
He's really odd.
But it's obviously completely inauthentic
because none of it can be true.
But it is a really good performance.
It's amazing.
And his records sound brilliant.
He records them in that way
so they sound like they're 100 years old.
Anyway.
Does he put it on wax cylinder, though?
Does he request it?
He probably does.
He's definitely a bit of a weird guy.
But anyway, I was just going to say that the biggest mistake I ever made
was starting following him on Twitter.
Because despite all this, he's got a Twitter account, right?
Turns out he's one of these Alex Alex Jones, proper conspiracy theory, weird, weird guys.
And a high percentage of his tweets are just tweeting
the vomiting emoji in a reply to Hillary Clinton
whenever she tweets.
But I mean, presumably that would be his opinion.
I mean, a lot of-
No, because in the 1920s he didn't have Twitter, mate.
So he shouldn't even be on it.
He's broken his own illusion there.
Yeah, but he's probably working with the science
they had at the time.
You know, gas lamps and fucking...
I don't know.
Maybe.
Everyone's taking lithium.
So how does he explain the very existence
of Twitter to himself?
He probably thinks it's some kind of like
travelling voodoo kind of...
I don't know.
What would that be?
Like a magic typewriter?
Yeah, he's a magic typewriter.
Anyway, his music's great.
I love it, but he's just mad.
Who would have thought a guy who lives his life like it's the 1920s
and carries on in every facet of his life turned out to be a bit weird?
I didn't see it coming.
There we go.
I bet he didn't either.
I'm just reading.
Actually, one thing that did get delivered to me was the,
it's really weird.
One of the weirdest things about living in the middle of a town
is like you get weird stuff shoved through your door.
And it's not just like cleaning service and stuff like that.
There is a couple of like free newspapers
and you rarely see free newspapers nowadays,
but the West End Extra.
And it's all about like theatre and, you you know what people are up to and stuff but like obviously um we're under lockdown and people are just helping out each other and stuff and you don't
sort of see this sense of community but there is a guy who i see around town quite a lot around
dem so certainly my street anyway um he's this guy called shahin shahablu and he um he was just a he's just a photographer in iran
who obviously had to leave because he was gay uh and found found a home in um well or compton
street and you know around soho and stuff and um he died he died from covid last week and it's
really weird seeing someone you saw on the street quite a lot on the front of a newspaper and i
must have seen him like only a few weeks ago
yeah uh you know just sadly passed away but it was uh but as a newspaper it's a really it's one
of the weirdest ones it's like a it's like a showbiz free newspaper that comes through your
door and i remember seeing them i remember seeing like a bbc documentary series or one-off maybe
about people who live in mayfair like because obviously there
are people who live there and yeah they had like a local community newspaper but it was basically
just a load of um i think bored rich people just doing it as a hobby kind of thing i don't know
if there's any good i've never read it but it was i was surprised one to see people living in mayfair
and two and they live there full time by the way they're not just turning up and they're not kind
of just rich people who um use that place to um to stay there for a few weeks a year when they want to visit london
and they all live there full time and they had this local community newspaper it's just really
weird to think of a community in somewhere like mayford yeah there was um there was a woman who
she was like a madam back in the day uh who i think she was a girlfriend of jimmy hendrix for a bit but my mate
used to live uh just off region street um in like in the same building as her like below her basically
which was this really inspirational kind of character and stuff and one time um some burglars
broke in and she managed to i don't know how she did it, but she managed to coax them into going onto the roof
by which, like, she'd only broken her ankle
trying to fend them off. And she managed
to sort of say, look, go through that door,
that's where I keep all my jewellery and stuff,
and just lock them on the roof
and waited until the police came.
It's a really inspirational woman who
knew Jimi Hendrix back in the
60s and 70s and stuff. And it's like,
there's so many stories
and they're all kind of, you know,
getting to the end of their lives now.
And it would be, it'd be a real shame to sort of lose them all.
I bet there'd be a real, I bet there's so many characters.
Speaking of characters,
and we should go for a break in a minute,
but before we do, I really want to share,
I really want to share this story with you.
Do you see that?
Obviously it's happened in Florida for obvious reasons
that we've gone into before.
There's a bit of disney disney world in florida has been um closed obviously because of covid for for many weeks now and they're not sure they're going to be able to reopen it again but florida
man richard mcguire right was found man he was found living on the walt disney world's discovery
island it's just because it's so massive it's absolutely huge obviously walt disney world He was found living on Walt Disney World's Discovery Island.
It's just hanging because it's so massive.
It's absolutely huge, obviously, Walt Disney World.
And he was just been living there.
It's referred to in the article I read as a tropical paradise.
And he planned to live there for another week, but he was spotted.
And so a load of deputies searched the whole thing and found him sleeping in one of the abandoned buildings.
And he was arrested and charged with trespassing.
Isn't that an amazing thing?
Is he like a drama, is he like a kind of like YouTuber that does stunts and stuff like that?
Is he kind of, or is he just a man
who's a 42 year old single man
who might well...
I'm not discounting it, I'm not discounting he's not a YouTuber.
I just think it's a really
amazing kind of subversion
of the idea that, do you remember all those soldiers who were still fighting
the Second World War in the jungle and stuff.
This guy's still living his best life in Disney World
with no one else around.
But I do sort of see every now and again these little videos
where they'll sort of, like the guys in the North,
they'll take you around Disneyland.
I've never eaten any of the Disney products really,
but walking around they'll sort of go,
see that little door there?
If you go up, that is where there is a secret $10,000 a night
like restaurant sort of thing where you can have like 20.
And it's just, it's so massive and so well put together.
Like it's actually quite inspirational.
I see why people really get into Disneyland and Disney World,
but for me, I'm just not that into Disney.
One of the things they do it's not that into disney one of the things they do which is amazing pete is that um they they design certainly what disney world in florida they design it so from no part of the park can you see
any of the real world so it was the point where they've bought all the land around it to stop
anyone building like tower blocks within a certain radius of it.
And my sister used to work at Disneyland Paris.
She was a dancer in the parade.
She was some of the cues there.
Oh, that's right, yeah.
What character was she?
She was Goofy and Maleficent and Buzz Lightyear.
A good mix.
Yeah, not all at the same time that'll be confusing um but yeah so so
she told me quite a few different uh stories about it but um it's a fascinating place i mean the one
thing i would say about it is that who am i to to to judge because clearly they know what they're
doing but it does i don't think it needs to be quite as expensive as it is let's just put it
that way so the idea that you can't really get any kind of meal
in the park for a family of four for under like $60, $70, $80
is pretty full on.
I don't think it needs to be that expensive,
but it is amazing.
It's a gold standard, isn't it, for what it does?
But it's more just like Disney stories are all about
like rags to riches kind of stories
and how everyone's supposed to be the same and everyone's supposed to love each other
and that but like there's a real kind of like moneyed hierarchy it's it's a very sort of like
it's a great example of capitalism isn't it like disney because like different hotels different
rates and stuff different hotels different rates but also like different like like q jumping passes
you know vip experiences i don't understand why they do it because you don't be stood in the line Different hotels, different rates, but also different queue jumping passes, VIP experiences.
I don't understand why they do it because you don't want to be
standing in line for ages, but also it's supposed to be everyone's the same.
But isn't that the same in any entertainment industry?
Football's the same, isn't it?
Yeah.
Restaurants have chef's tables and plane flights have different cabins.
It's just the way of the world, I think.
Yeah.
I know what you mean, though, because it's supposed to be seen as being there for everyone
and being very friendly and lovely.
Makes me a bit sad.
Yeah.
Listen, while you're a bit sad,
shall we have a little break?
You can have a little cry.
Then when we come back, we can do some emails,
and that'll cheer you up.
It might.
We could call it Pete and Mark's Colossal Tussle.
But we didn't.
We called it Wrestle Me.
Wrestle Me, Mark.
Wrestle Me, Pete.
A celebration of all things WrestleMania and beyond.
And you may be thinking, I'm not really into wrestling.
Well, don't worry.
There's something for everyone.
To be honest, it's mainly about stuff like this.
So hang on, Easy Lover was the original theme on WrestleMania.
It was.
Someone heard it on the radio and went,
that sums up everything about WrestleMania to me.
And this.
You can really see the old back acne on test.
Yes.
And this.
Is it worth reminding people of what Earthquake John Tenter
looked like at 23 years old?
Yeah, I think so.
And this.
For the record, Marty has made it very clear,
and I agree and believe him,
that he has never, A, had sex with his daughter,
or B, wanted to have sex with his daughter.
And the people behind the face paint
doing the most unique job in the entire world.
Get it wherever you get your podcasts.
That's Wrestle Me.
Wrestle Me, Mark.
Wrestle Me, Pete.
And we're back with the Luke and Pete Show
Monday edition
We're just fresh out the shrink wrap
And we smell like a factory
It's great
Pete, I've done a little check over of the Twitter
At Luke and Pete Show
And I've just got a couple of things to bring to your attention
Patrick says
Can we get an It's Been on the next show?
I feel like it's been too long It has been a while Maybe we need get an It's Been on the next show? I feel like it's been too long.
It has been a while.
Maybe we need our first It's Been lockdown.
It's been.
Ah, too throaty.
Out of breath.
It's been.
Go on, do another one.
It's been.
That wasn't too bad.
Let me put the flap down on my ISOVOX so I'm more isolated.
This is actually what this ISOVOX booth is supposed to be for.
It's been. I can't be for. It's been...
I can't do it.
It's been...
Not good enough.
Not good enough.
I'm sorry, guys.
Look, what I'm going to do now is I'm going to get it up on Spotify,
okay, and I'm going to play it,
and then I'm going to give you the key, okay?
All right, cool.
So it's this. It it's this it's been it's been that's the that's the key all right it's it's been oh i can't do it that's it's been it's been it's getting really it's
getting like a horror movie now yeah go away work on it hearing that in your head go away and work on it. I didn't hear that in your head. Go away and work on it. All right, James Barry's been in touch as well saying,
Pete, the cubes you're talking about in maths class
are called multi-link cubes.
They're quite useful for children up to about the age of 13
to show the rate at which volume increases with the scale factor.
For example, you need a million to build a solid one-metre cube.
Yes, I did see that, and I was fascinated by how big that would be.
Now, if there was a YouTuber who did those stunts,
I'd actually quite like to see them buy loads of those cubes
and actually make a billions cubes worth of block.
But for me, though, there was never enough of them to create anything.
It was just either a gun or a stick that you would hit someone with
and it would just explode everywhere.
Well, one thing that's really good at illustrating,
that's probably more like what we used to get up to at school, you and I,
but what's really interesting about that is the example of showing kids
how sort of dramatic scale can be in mass and the one that
always if you get something wrong it's if you get like a a number wrong you can build a ridiculously
sized building rather than a normal size building yeah i mean that's quite a inarticulate way of
putting it but i understand what you mean but what i was going to say was the example that always
sticks in my mind and i think i read it in um i I read it in one of Dr. Michael Brooks' books or something,
but is that you can only fold a piece of paper in half seven times, right?
Yeah.
But because of the exponential nature of the maths involved,
if you were to fold a piece of paper in half, in theory, 42 times,
it would reach the moon.
Oh.
Because it's exponential.
The factor is just the scale is just gigantic, basically.
I think if you do it 100 times, it's like the size of the universe
or something.
So it's kind of interesting.
Didn't they sort of...
So how many times can you fold it?
Was it four?
Seven, I think.
Seven, sorry.
So I'm fairly certain quite recently
they've figured out a way of doing one more
just by choosing obviously a membrane-thin piece of paper
and also just an industrial squishy machine.
I don't know, but I'm fairly certain
they went for one more than was mathematically...
Or maybe I'm talking absolute shit. Maybe they got to seven, but it was one more than anyone mathematically, or maybe I'm talking absolute shit.
Maybe they got to seven,
but it was one more than anyone else had done.
There was a big furore about it.
Yeah, but this is what the show's all about, man.
We stick it out there.
We say our own version of the story
and loads of people email in
and tell us what the actual fact is.
And sometimes we forget to read the email out.
Yes, that's exactly right.
Helloatthewcompeteshow.com is the email out yes that's exactly right hello at the compete show.com is the email address luke
my namesake has followed up on the tar barrel chat from last week saying oh my god yeah i know
saying hi chaps i attended the university of exeter so did our colleague charlie by the way
and he messaged me about it saying oh yeah it's crazy ottery st mary is not far from exeter and
as the tar barrels are a bonfire night event, there were
buses put on to take us to see it when we were at university. It is as mad and dangerous as it
sounds. The barrels are filled with flaming tar and then run around the square, passed from person
to person. My understanding is that it's sort of a coming of age ceremony for young men who train
to be able to carry the barrels for a certain amount of time there are no barriers and it's up to you and your wits to get out the way as the sweaty young men
charging circles around the town very dangerous but surprisingly good fun to watch um thanks luke
so it's kind of weird because i know that half the things that people say who read the daily mail
the sun or whatever sell health and safety gone mad blah blah blah i mean this does sound like genuinely quite dangerous i'm surprised it still
carries on the pictures that um were sent along with the email and also the ones i researched
it just looks ridiculous the amount of health and safety that goes into i think i said last week
the amount of health and safety just goes into i don't know a door a town center you know i mean
like they've got to have so many different kinds of seals
to not let kids trap their fingers and stuff.
Yet the tradition allows people to just run around the streets
with this boiling tar fire thing.
It's so weird.
Yeah.
I wonder why they get away with it.
Maybe they just go, look, disclaimer,
if you turn up at the town centre at this time of day, at this date, you're going to get covered in flaming tar get away with it. Maybe they just go, look, disclaimer, if you turn up at the town centre at this time of day,
at this date, you're going to get covered in flaming tar.
Deal with it.
Doesn't seem that kind of watertight, though.
No, it really doesn't.
And tar, but tar is a great sealant, you would say.
We've got an email from James Heading.
We're heading for an email.
Hello to us.
I've been listening
from the start,
but this is the first subject
I felt I could weigh in on
with any useful comment.
It delighted me
to hear you talk
about your love
for the Nike tennis sock, Luke,
because it means
I've finally found someone
who shares my enthusiasm.
Like you say,
the Ferrari of house socks.
I've even taken it
one step further
and I keep a stock
of the black versions
to wear to work.
I might have a solution to the lack of V-shaped tightening of the sock bands that
Nike have dropped on recent models.
Last time I ordered new socks, I took a risk
and ordered the Nike dry cushion crew
training sock and boy did it pay off.
They essentially have the comfort of a football
sock but in tennis sock form.
The horizontal tightening band is still there to a degree
but there is a mishmash of
tightening bands to achieve snugness to any foot and he's appended at a link uh i don't think he's got one
of those like amazon deals where he gets a couple of penny kickback if you buy some tennis socks but
uh i hope this helps uh yet this year's order if not apologies for wasting your time thanks
and keep up the great work i'm looking at the head so we all know i'm looking at the link now
pete actually it looks like an interesting um
an interesting version i might give him a bash see if i can get um a three pack give him a run
if i like him maybe i'll go down the route of buying a whole load of them for my yearly supply
but i'll i will keep james uh appraised of my uh progress on that front but thank you very much for
getting in touch you posted a picture of your foot on Instagram
because, I don't know,
I think you think your fans are into that stuff.
Because I'm basic.
The back of your foot had one of those big,
old Timmy Mallet Wackaday plasters on it.
Yeah, the story behind that is I've got a new pair
of running shoes.
Shout out to On Running.
And what it is,
I made the mistake of going for a walk in them
to break them in.
I shouldn't have done that
because they gave me blisters on my heels.
When I run with them, they're fine.
But when I walk, they give me blisters.
So I had to put big bits of plaster over the back
to go on my 10K run the other day.
Right.
Because I came,
I was sort of coming back from Houston
a little while ago.
And I had, I'd done the same thing because I'd been running around playing football.
I did the same thing and I had a big hole in the back of my foot
and I put my shoe on and it was so painful.
I had to sign up for the Boris Bike Scheme
and get a Boris bike and ride it all the way home
because it was so painful.
And you don't need me on the roads.
It can be.
It can be very, very very painful that kind of stuff like i've i've had um i've had blisters that'll make that'll bend
your bones taking to doing a lot of walking i did i've been doing like every couple of days i'll do
like about a good uh around like seven eight miles walk walk there and back around town.
Apparently, I didn't realize if you walk that distance,
it's pretty much the same as running that distance,
give or take a couple of calories.
I don't know if I agree with that, but I mean,
walking is a really, really good form of exercise.
The problem is I don't think you're going to burn the same amount of calories. So it depends what you're looking for out of it, I guess.
Apparently, though, it does roughly burn the same amount of calories. Who told depends what you're looking for out of it, I guess. Apparently, though, it does roughly burn the same amount of calories.
Who told you that? CW Stone King?
I think it was a professional emailing into another podcast that I enjoy.
So it did seem to be a professional person who was saying it.
You've hurt me today with that.
I mentioned another podcast.
I'm mugging off your running.
Well, listen, if people want to get in touch on that
and chime in on that debate, hello at lukeandpetecher.com,
let us know.
I find it very tough to believe that that could be the case
because your calorie burning is certainly done
by the amount of energy you're using.
And if you're going faster, you're using more energy.
Surely that's just some basic rule of physics.
But I don't know.
Yeah, but it's just taking longer though, isn't it? You're doing it for longer if you're walking., you're using more energy. Surely that's just some basic rule of physics. But I don't know. Yeah, it's just taking longer though, isn't it?
You're doing it for longer if you're walking.
Oh yeah, fair point.
Maybe it's, yeah, maybe it is exactly the same.
We'll find that, won't we?
We'll put this to bed one way or another, Pete.
And next time you do it, I'll tell you what,
the loser of this debate and this argument
has to do that same walk or run
with a flaming tar barrel on their back.
Yeah, I've got to do a run.
You've got to do a walk.
You've got to walk a mile in my shoes
with your blisters.
Yeah, your shoes will be too small for me
as well, probably.
So you'll get even worse blisters.
Right, that's about it for us.
Actually, you usually wrap up the show,
so why don't you do it, Luke?
Oh, thanks, Pete.
Yeah, that's about all we've got time for
this time around.
It's been quite a long try by our standards.
We've enjoyed it, though.
We hope you have too.
Get in touch.
Hello at LukeandPeteShow.com.
We will be back, of course, on Thursday, as
has become the custom.
We look forward to talking to you again then.
Stay safe. Stay at home. Protect
the NHS. Save lives. All that
good stuff. It will all be over by Christmas.
We'll still be here
to hopefully entertain you and
give you a little bit of a diversion while
you're isolating.
Say goodbye, Peter.
Goodbye, Peter.
And it's goodbye from me as well.
We'll see you on Thursday.
Laters.
Laters.
This was a Stakhanov production.