The Luke and Pete Show - Low hanging asteroids
Episode Date: October 2, 2023Science doesn't get the respect it deserves, apparently. Luke starts the show by telling us about the James Webb Telescope. Pete is suspicious that Luke is actually just somehow making a knob gag.Spea...king of knob gags, Pete gives us an update on his mission to learn small talk...Want to get in touch with the show? Email: hello@lukeandpeteshow.com or you can get in touch on Twitter or Instagram: @lukeandpeteshow.We're also now on Tiktok! Follow us @thelukeandpeteshow. Subscribe to our YouTube HERE. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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All right, then.
Let's do this again.
Salute, Pete Shaw.
Yo!
I wonder what number episode we're on.
Four million.
I noticed that Clash of the Titles made 400 episodes,
and they've got to watch a film for everyone.
Good on them.
They've got to watch two films.
They've got to watch two films for everyone.
Well, for every two, I think.
I love listening to Clash when it's a film I like.
Yeah.
Because I like getting... I like it a film I watch,
but a film I don't like
is even better, I think.
Sweeter.
So sometimes I go into that show
thinking,
yeah, I know about movies.
I know what I like.
I'm good at this.
And then I'll come out of it going,
I thought that film was good.
Now I'm not sure if it is
and I have to watch it again.
Yeah. Sometimes. and they also do
what I love about
having them in my feed
as well as it reminds
me to watch films
that I want to watch
and never get around
to watching
but the most recent
one of those
they covered with
Megan
oh the one where
Vicky was doing
the dance for the
social media
they made it so
interesting
is it good
I haven't seen it
I haven't watched it
maybe I'll listen to that Clash episode first
and then watch the film.
I mean, 400 episodes is child play for us though, isn't it?
Child's play?
Great film.
Have they done child's play?
I think they have actually.
They did child's play versus Megan, I think.
Oh, yeah.
It was Chucky versus Megan, wasn't it?
I think it was.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you do 400 episodes a week.
All films. All films.
All films I've created in my mind.
You do a lot of podcasts every week, Peter.
Too many, too many.
I figured out last week that Sartorius printers
are mainly used in laboratories.
So they're battery brands that came out on Thursday.
Right.
Mainly like things that sort of print out
like little labels for medicine and stuff.
Huh.
Which is quite good.
Interesting call to that market.
How'd you get into that?
How'd I get into what?
In the printer game?
Yeah.
When I hear a brand
I've not heard before,
Sartorius,
it just sounds very fancy.
I meant,
how did they get into that,
do you reckon?
Oh,
how'd you get into a printer?
I don't know,
they probably,
it's probably a massive
conglomerate
that joined together.
An arm of a big pharma company or something.
Yeah, started making printers.
Did you get around to watching any of One Piece?
I didn't, no, no.
What's wrong with you?
Out of all of the things I need to watch,
I've still watched that space thing you sent us.
Oh, that's good as well.
The James Webb telescope.
Yeah.
That was, I'll tell you what,
that was incredible.
And the reason I thought you'd like it,
I know you don't really give a shit about space.
You think you've got too much going on down here to worry about that.
Too many worries down here.
Yeah, but.
Worries are heavy.
They don't float.
What I thought you'd like about it is the engineering.
Yeah, of getting it all up there.
My God.
My God.
It's incredible how they do it.
I'm impressed by, like like anything bigger than a car.
Making anything big.
Because I could probably
make a metal and brick construction.
It wouldn't be very good.
I could make it the size of a car.
But then it's not worrying about its own weight.
It's not going to collapse under its own weight
with decent enough cement
and having to think about things.
I don't think anyone listening to you regularly would have any confidence
at all in what you're saying. I could do a planter.
What do you mean? I could make a little planter, I reckon.
What's that? I could put your
flowers in. Oh, you mean like a...
Like a raised planter. Yeah, like a flower bed
but a raised one. Okay. I could do one of them.
And you're putting that on the same conversation as the James
Webb Space Telescope. You could do a planter. It wouldn't be
very good, but you could do it in your garden.
You could put a couple of CDs and the top of it
would look a little bit
like the telescope.
So the fascinating thing
about the James Webb Telescope
is that not that its mass
is, say,
anything impressive
compared to Hubble,
which it isn't.
I think it's only about
half the size of Hubble.
I can't ever think
this is a set up
for a big joke
about the size of my winky.
We're back to small talk chat
again, aren't we?
Exactly.
How are you getting on with that?
We'll do that in a minute
no it's not that
it's just that
because I think
I think
and I know people think
I'm googling when I say this
I'm not
I watched the episode
and I'm just trying to remember
what I learnt from it
I think
the James Webb Space Telescope
is smaller than Hubble
but they're putting it
like a million miles away
right
so it's got less
pollution so you can see more, right?
And what they've basically done,
and I think because scientists a lot of the time
can be awkward, socially awkward, kind of nerdy types,
they're never going to win the PR war.
So you put any scientist, could be an absolute genius,
on the telly opposite someone who's really good at telly but stupid.
Piers Morgan, who's a fucking thicko, right,
but is brilliant at playing the game.
They're never going to win any kind of argument
because it's about the presentation.
So what tends to happen is science and scientists' achievements
never get the respect they deserve.
And what essentially is happening with James Webb
is they're taking a seven metric ton telescope,
putting it in space,
unfurling it from Earth.
Yeah.
And it's going to be a million miles away
in some kind of orbit they've worked out
between all these different celestial bodies.
And it's going to send crystal clear pictures
and photographs of...
My penis? No photographs of the universe like 13 billion years ago.
But essentially it's a time traveling thing, right?
Because the light takes so long to get to us.
When we're seeing those pictures, we're seeing a galaxy as it was that time ago.
Yesterday's news.
It's an instant replay.
That's what people don't know enough, I don't think.
That if, say for for example there was a planet
which is exactly like earth and it was 70 million light years away yeah i.e it's going to take 70
million years for the light to reach yeah them and we can see it we're like i will go over well
but what are they saying yeah what they say in the dinosaur yeah yeah because our light's not
got there yet yeah the light we get from the sun has taken eight minutes to get here. So if the sun blows up now,
it'll be eight minutes before we find out.
Yeah.
So that's why it's so interesting, I think.
It's basically a time machine
in terms of what you can see.
You can't actually participate in it,
but you can see into the past.
Yeah.
Do you understand that?
I understand all that,
but then I was thinking what if the telescope
looks back at us
what do you mean
what's that seeing then
if it's
if it's millions
if they just keep on going
yeah
and they somehow
imagine by the time
the signal gets back
that's going to be
pretty much the same
we are going to be
seeing the same
it's not about the signal
it's about the light
the signal is kind of instant
it's clearly not though
is it
no but
my point is it's not taking us another 13 clearly not though is it the signal isn't instant
my point is
it's not taking us
another 13 billion years
but if it travelled
the same amount of distance away
the telescope
and took a picture of us
right
the thing that's
taking pictures of now
how many million miles
well you'd never know
because it would take you
13 billion years to travel there
even at the speed of light
well that's what I mean yeah
that's the big problem
about space travel isn't it
you can't get to the speed
it's impossible
it's impossible to get to the speed it's impossible it's impossible to get to the speed
it's frightening
the whole thing's frightening
I understand why you're not interested in it
because you'd rather check out of it
it's the biggest
the problem's too big
you know what I mean
imagine if we sent you
as the ambassador
to an alien life form
for the first time
you'd go through
all your small talk
all your small talk
yeah
do you like
do you vape
do you vape on your planet
do you talk about vapes with strangers, Dan?
Yeah, but that's actually, I mean, it's too much, like, it's too,
I had a joke that really worked with passers-by, male passers-by,
less so with women.
This is already making me feel nervous.
I don't think it, because my default position will be,
I don't think it did work.
Walking home with Sammy
and Sammy's a big hit
you know
little
dog's a great icebreaker
massive icebreaker
good god
yeah
great icebreaker
walking around with Sammy
I was like
and he's walking around
with his little
I think it's pre-operation
I said
he's having his
operation
this week
yeah
getting the old
yeah getting the old testicles taken out.
And I would follow that up with,
I might get mine done too.
Creepy.
You can't,
that can't be going down well.
I might get mine done too,
I'm not using them.
It's too much.
And I would say this to blokes,
and honestly, 100% hit this to blokes and honestly
100% hit rate
with blokes
never try it
with women
now the more
I'm thinking about it
the more problematic
it sounds
yeah
but yeah
but 100% hit rate
and it went from
small talk
to me getting
my balls chopped off
within three sentences
100% hit rate
we don't want to be our own critic.
To get a full picture of this,
we need to speak to the people
you spoke to.
I'm the Stuart Lee of small talk.
We need to speak to the people
I've just taken everything
and just gone...
What's an example of the kind of person
you would say that to?
He really laughed.
One in particular,
an old man really laughed.
So I might get mine lopped off.
Eyeballed him for ages.
You don't get them out,
do you?
You don't touch them or anything like that do you
I was going to grab them
by the arm and go
because they ache so
imagine if you
they burn for you
by flopping them out
and it was just two
really big boulders
yeah
actually looked like boulders
yeah
I might pull them off now
and they just pull them out
and go ahhh
blood everywhere
get a fake pair
say what is wrong with you get a fake nut sack yeah and just rip pretend to rip they just pull them out and go, ah, blood everywhere. Get a fake pair. Say, what is wrong with you?
Get a fake nutsack.
Yeah.
And just rip,
pretend to rip it off.
Rip it off and go,
you did this.
You did this.
Ah,
it's crying.
Um,
and just keep calling the other person doctor.
Doctor,
doctor,
doctor.
I can imagine if you were working
on the James Webb Space Telescope,
you could.
Where's James Webb in all this?
Why can't he be rushed out?
I don't know who he is, actually.
I imagine he's like a man who haunted a telescope in the 1800s or something.
Or was a celebrated physicist from the 20s.
It's named after the NASA's second administrator from 1961 to 1968, James E. Webb.
Get him out then!
Who led the agency during the Apollo program.
Is he still alive? No, he's dead.
Died in 1992.
Would you be interested
in training the telescope onto your nuts?
To
wee law-hanging
asteroids.
Land a little probe on them.
That was amazing, wasn't it? That's another great
example of how science doesn't get the credit.
Landing a craft on a moving comet.
Yeah.
It's fucking mad.
But surely you get pulled in to the whole gravity of the comet, no?
That's easy then.
Easy?
Yeah.
Well, if you've got that far, surely.
There's a list of things.
Smash into it.
There's a list of things that happen in society that normal people go,
okay, how would you even start doing that?
Yeah.
Like making a build,
making a building,
right?
Building a building.
Presumably,
you start with a foundation.
So you dig the foundations,
you do,
I mean,
you could get there.
I'm not saying you'd be good at it,
but you can get there.
Combustion engines,
completely.
No chance.
absolute magic.
Anything in the space,
impossible.
Yeah.
I just think that if I was in charge of cavemen,
we wouldn't have got anywhere
we would have
we'd have some nice
little huts I reckon
we talked about this years ago didn't we
if you went back to medieval times you'd be a genius
but on one level you wouldn't because you don't know
anything about it, you take it all for granted
yeah
the building blocks, you're talking about
the building blocks are already there
you know what I mean, like someone's already done all this stuff the only thing I'd be able to do is just that The building blocks, you're talking about the building blocks are already there.
You know what I mean?
Like someone's already done all this stuff.
The only thing I'd be able to do is just that.
The little thumb separation thing. The removal thumb separation thing.
Yeah, yeah.
I'd probably get burnt for that.
You blocked my vision with your microphone, so you fucked that up as well.
You know the trick, though.
I do know the trick, yeah.
Why don't you do that to people rather than talk about your nuts?
I think being a genius in medieval times, don't eat that.
Don't drink that.
Yeah.
What are you doing?
So you would know.
It's not what you're doing, man.
So you'd know about.
You'd basically be a glorified
health and safety officer,
wouldn't you?
You would.
Don't eat that.
Boil that.
People would be impressed
to know that you knew
that you have to boil water.
Yeah.
Or that there's things
such as microbiology and stuff.
Yeah.
You could kind of get across some pretty basic ideas.
You could probably maybe even build a bike.
But you would have to instruct a blacksmith
to do the things that needed to be done, wouldn't you?
A blacksmith?
Well, yeah, who else would forge you some metal and stuff
to make the cogs and shimano gears
and the
you know
the little tassels
on the
they didn't have metal then
what
what era are we talking about
I thought we were talking about
medieval times
oh so medieval
I thought we were talking about cavemen
oh right
well they would have had metal
wouldn't they
no because you've got
you've got to mine it haven't you
it's not that deep is it
dig in
what are we led to say
all my
all my
all my knowledge about that
is Minecraft.
You just dig down a few blocks
and you've got yourself...
Would you take your PlayStation
with you?
No, no electricity.
They'd be like,
what is this smooth plastic?
Well, they wouldn't know
what plastic is.
No, they wouldn't know anything.
You wouldn't be able
to communicate with them,
would you?
On that level,
have you seen a programme
on Channel 4
called Alone? No no so so weirdly enough
about 15 years ago it was like a desert island thing well about 15 years ago there was a program
called alone where a wildlife cameraman went into the canadian wilderness with just a satellite
telephone gps thing for emergencies yeah and nothing else they said i'm a seller i could
survive and it's an interesting show.
You can watch it.
I won't spoil it for people.
But they've re-upped it
with people who,
members of the public
who think they can do it.
And they get,
I think,
10 survival items.
So they've chosen things
like axes
and a bow and arrow,
a tarpaulin,
whatever, right?
But they're in the middle
of the Canadian rainforest,
not rainforest,
whatever it be,
just a forest,
I guess.
And I've only watched the first episode, not rainforest, whatever it be, just a forest, I guess. And,
and they,
and I've only watched the first episode,
but what's actually quite,
quite funny.
It's obviously there's bears and wolves and everything.
And they've all had encounters with bears already,
right?
Which is kind of frightening.
And I guess they've given them some kind of basic training about how to fight off a bear or chase it off or scare it,
which is obviously understandable.
This one guy, obviously for all the contestants, it, which is obviously understandable. This one guy,
obviously for all the
contestants,
they do an intro
about them.
This one guy
is a carpenter,
right?
And the idea is
there's 15 people
of different backgrounds.
This guy's a carpenter.
The one who lasts
the longest wins.
They don't know
about each other,
what they're doing.
They don't meet up.
They don't know anything.
They just got to stay
as long as they can.
The carpenter,
I think within in three hours
cut himself
so badly
with his axe
that he had to be
airlifted out
three hours
three hours
and he chopped himself
he had a mini axe
he was trying to chop
some wood for fire
cut his leg
so badly
he needed a lot of stitches
he had to fucking
call the medieval
he was in the helicopter going I'm gutted I've worked with tools all my life cut his leg so badly and he needed a lot of stitches. He had to fucking call the medieval. Call it, you're right.
He was in the helicopter going,
I'm gutted.
I've worked with tools all my life.
Not that one.
So bad.
How did he manage to do that then?
I think he was doing this one
where you're like,
it's between your legs.
Right.
He just lost it.
Good God.
Well.
I don't think even I would do that.
No, I don't think I would do that either.
Chiefly because I'd be crying.
So I wouldn't be able to use that.
Just please someone else.
What would you do?
So what they did, what they did quite well in the program. So I wouldn't be able to use that. Just please someone else. What would you do? So what they did,
what they did quite well in the program.
Chose roles for, right.
They're all on their own.
They're not as a team.
Oh.
No, they're all on their own.
By yourself.
Right, okay.
And a lot of them,
so what they did is
they kind of profiled which ones,
because they were saying like,
fire, water, shelter, food.
Yeah.
They're the four things you basically did.
And what people did first.
And I think the people who did the best so far
did the fire first.
Okay.
Right.
They're like,
right,
I need to stay warm.
Yeah.
They're all by the side of a river anyway.
So they're like,
I need to boil that water.
So do that,
I need a fire.
Yeah.
And I've got to do that before I get started.
Can you not just drink running water?
There,
I'm dead.
I've only made the bad decision.
I think,
I think, it's not ideal. I think because in that part of the world, you've got maybe do that before I get started. Can you not just drink running water? There, I'm dead. I've only made the bad decision. I think... It's not ideal.
I think because in that part of the world
you've got maybe dead animals in it,
it could be bacteria in it,
you need to boil it, basically.
Right.
It's not like a pristine
picture postcard stream
and you're not in an Enid Blyton book.
Right.
You have to boil it.
So you need fire.
So the ones who did the best so far
did fire first,
then they did the water,
got themselves hydrated,
then they did their shelter
before it got dark.
Okay. Yeah, nice.
Is that what you would do?
No, I would just eat
the first mushroom
and just see where it took me.
See what happened.
See what happened.
So, either beautifully nutritious,
amazingly psychedelic,
or death.
Exactly, or death, yeah.
Either way, I'm having a nice time.
Either way, I'm getting water,
I'm getting food and sustenance,
and as you...
You're providing food
for other people by being dead.
As you start to trip, you will warm up, I imagine.
Yeah.
But the bears have come pretty quick.
The bears.
So one guy did this thing where he starts to build this shelter
and he spends a lot of time finding an area.
So I think I'm right in saying that animals have walkthroughs, right?
Patterns of behaviour.
Yeah.
And the way that you see those
is you can probably see evidence
that a bear's been rubbing itself up against a tree, right?
Yes, yeah.
So that's a bear's kind of thoroughfare.
You don't want to go near there.
No.
So this guy kind of knew that.
He was talking about,
he was only 19, this guy,
and he was talking about how much
he's interested in bushcraft and stuff
and how he wanted to do this
because he's always been interested in it.
So he knew all that stuff.
So he takes the time to go to a different place and he starts knocking some trees down to make his shelter. and stuff and now he wants to do this because he's always been interested in it so he knew all that stuff and then so he
he takes the time to go to a different place
and he starts knocking some trees down
to make his shelter
and as he starts hacking them down
they obviously collapse
he starts chopping them up
to try and build his shelter
he just turns one of the trunks over
and it's got a load of bear claws in it
and he's like
oh fuck
but it's like getting dark now
and so I can't really change
so I'm going to
have to just get on
with it
and then the next
clip is just like
two eyes in the dark
and then you go
fucking hell
yeah
and it cuts to the
next episode
what?
is this an IRL
real life?
yeah
what?
serious baby
they're all filming
themselves as well
so they're not even
good god
is this like new?
Sunshine of Thought
came out
maybe a week or so ago
that looks really
interesting
but also I'm never going to watch it yeah you never watch a programme I recommend what's wrong with you? because's on Channel 4. It came out maybe a week or so ago. That looks really interesting, but also I'm never going to watch it.
Yeah, you never watch a programme I recommend.
What's wrong with you? Because I've got to wait
until I'm at least 10 and I'd fall into it
naturally. And you're never watching things that I
watch. That's just the way people are, isn't it?
What's the most recent thing you've watched on telly?
What's that
documentary about?
It's not called Medicine. It's
about the issues with drugs in America.
Doogie Howser, what's his name?
Doogie Howser?
He's a doctor.
You mean the thing that's based on that Patrick Redding Keith book,
Empire of Pain?
Yes.
About the OxyContin crisis.
OxyContin.
Yeah.
And my takeaway from that is I want to try OxyContin.
Yeah, I thought it might be. That's a really sad situation in the US. It is, yeah. Of course it is. Oxycontin yeah and my takeaway from that is I want to try Oxycontin yeah
I thought it might be
that's a really sad
situation in the US
it is yeah
of course it is
because people can't afford
healthcare
horrific
so they're basically
self-medicating
pen pulling it
and then getting addicted
but you still get Oxycontin though
but in the US
yeah
yeah yeah
right
you can't
it just sounds like
if they're making films like that
it just sounds like
how is that still allowed
but don't they all
start off on prescription and then they end up yeah then they end up just turning off it is that still allowed but don't they all start off on prescription
and then they end up
yeah
then they end up
just turning off
it's either a doctor
who doesn't give a shit
who just prescribes it
on their plan
or they end up
buying it from
people who have been
prescribed on their plan
or just getting it
off the black market
or whatever
yeah it's kind of wild
because the regulation
of drugs in this country
is much stricter
yeah
like you can
a lot of stuff
you've got to go on the dark web and buy it from Pakistan.
Is that what you do?
That's what I have done in the past,
to buy Valium for sleepies in going to Japan.
Is Valium legal in this country?
It's legal.
It was prescribed.
You can't buy it.
And you can just go and get a prescription from the doctor?
You could, yeah.
But they wouldn't give you much,
because it's quite...
I think it's quite...
You can slide into just using it quite a lot.
And for the record, Pete is not recommending this. No, I'm not. it's quite I think it's quite you can slide into just using it quite a lot. And for the record
Peter's not recommending
this.
No I'm not.
He's absolutely not
recommending it.
Let's take a quick
break Peter while you
can get a hit.
Yeah get a bang one out.
And then when we come
back we'll do a couple
of email shows to
finish off.
Alright then.
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It's the Luke and Pete show.
I am Pete Donaldson.
And, you know, we're doing what we're doing. We're doing it. I'm Pete Donaldson. It sounded like the start of a confession. I am Pete Donaldson. And, you know, we're doing what we're doing.
We're doing it.
I'm Pete Donaldson.
That sounded like the start of a confession.
I'm Pete Donaldson.
And I brought some valium back in the day.
On the dark web.
It's not on the dark web.
It's just on the normal web.
You said dark web.
It's all grey fucking shit anyway.
What does that mean?
I don't know.
It's not like no one's got a prison for it.
But you started off by saying it's on the dark web
well
you tried to sound cool
I was trying to sound cool
I'm so sorry
that's alright
Mark's been in touch
by emailing
hello at lukeandpeatshow.com
and he says
Kiora from Wellington, New Zealand
yes
Kiora is the
Maori word for hello I think
hello
which is where the old
cordial drink comes from
Kiora it is remember that I remember it had a racist advert it did have a racist advert yeah I think Hello Which is where the old Cordial drink comes from Keora
It is
Do you remember that
I remember
It had a racist advert
It did have a racist advert
Yeah
Yeah it did
I'm thinking about
And I literally can't
Say half of the stuff
In the advert
And
Do you know what
We'll get to Mark's email
But this just reminded me
There was a load of comics
That I liked reading as a kid
Yeah
And obviously I'm a dad now
And when my son's a
bit older i'd like him to enjoy those comics as well and so um the one thing i loved more than
anything else was calvin and hobbes did you like calvin and hobbes uh big um tiger yeah it's like a
guy's imaginary friend who's a good stuffed tiger yes okay it's amazing it's much bigger and better
than just the general story about a kid it's like it's one of those things that speaks to the wider human condition.
It's brilliant.
Bill Watson's a really interesting guy.
He's never agreed to any merch being made.
He's never agreed to any IP being converted.
He retired it when he was ready in like 1995 and he was done.
Very much not the Dilbert end of life.
Definitely not.
I loved Dilbert back in the day.
Can't.
Ha, ha, ha.
Ha, ha, ha.
I imagine that's exactly what it's like working in corporate America.
Ha ha ha ha.
Yeah.
Yes, ITR.
He spoke to you,
didn't he?
Ha ha ha.
Very, very funny.
Oh, he's a dick.
So anyway,
Calvin and Hobbes
is very safe,
fertile ground
for your son
to run a comic stream.
Nice.
I thought,
you know what?
When I was a kid,
I used to wait
until Christmas
every year
to get a compendium
or what's it called?
An annual.
Bean or wisdoming Chips
yeah all that kind of stuff
and I was a
Calvin and Hobbes guy
but you can buy
a kind of
celebratory
leather bound
hardback
collection
yes
of all of
the Calvin and Hobbes
comic strips ever done
and I thought
you know what
I'm going to push the boat out
I'm going to get that for him
when he comes of age
you'll love that
guaranteed he won't like it
I'll read it that's always the way though guaranteed he won't like it I'll read it
that's always the way though
that's coming back to me
I'll read all of them again
I'll read all of them again
it's a win win for me
I'm not going to force it on him
because of course
he will reject that
and I thought
do you know what else I liked
when I was a kid
asterix
lead toys
asterix
right yeah
and Tintin
yes okay
Tintin let's talk
ask me if he can read Tintin now
oh probably not no he definitely cannot the one where he goes to the moon no the one where is that one alright the one where Tintin. Yes, okay. Tintin, let's go. Ask me if he can read Tintin now. Oh, probably not.
No, he fucking cannot.
The one where he goes to the moon?
No, the one where Tintin...
Is that one alright?
The one where Tintin goes to the
Belgium-occupied Congo?
No, he cannot.
No, he cannot read that.
So that's a no.
Oh my god, yeah.
We're not doing that one.
We'll stick with Coward and Hobbes for now.
Asterix, I haven't really investigated.
No, I think you're alright.
Any kind of problematic,
it's against the Gauls or something, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's against some very lost civilizations.
Yeah.
Where I presume the racism's okay.
I don't know.
If you're a parent out there
and you listen to this
and you're thinking about,
wouldn't it be great for your child
to revisit all those Tintins?
Yeah.
But it isn't.
Don't do that.
One of my favourite cartoons
was Boy with a Magic
Transistor Radio
Danny Stranny
was it?
back in
Dandy I think it was
I'm thinking of Jamie
and the Magic Torch
that's different
do you remember Jamie
and the Magic Torch?
he'd shine it
and he could jump
into the world
yeah yeah yeah
I just start thinking
with that
they can't rebrand him
so what do they do
they can't rebrand him
because that's admitting
because it's not actually
about the thing.
It's short for Transistor Radio, right?
Exactly.
People would say that, yeah.
So it's,
so it's,
yeah, so it's difficult.
Yeah.
What are you going to do about it?
What are you going to do about it?
I'm going to sit on my keister
and do fuck all Luke.
Keister.
Good to hear it.
Keister.
The only time you ever hear
the word keister these days
is in that bit in Home Alone.
Get your ugly,
yellow,
no good keister
off my property
before I pump your guts full of lead. Anyway, back to Mark. Pump your guts, yellow, no good keister off my property before I pump your guts
full of lead.
Anyway,
back to Mark.
Pump your guts.
Mark,
Tommy going in there.
Mark says,
your recent chat
about the fellow
escaping from prison
and how it's kind of
the prison's responsibility
to keep you locked up
reminded me of something
I read a while ago.
It's worth pointing out,
by the way,
that that guy's just
pleaded not guilty to that.
Which is an incredible
flex by him.
Anyway, Mark says,
it turns out there are several countries
where it is actually legal
to try and escape from prison.
According to Wikipedia,
in Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands,
Sweden, Austria, and several other countries,
the philosophy of the law holds
that it is human nature to want to escape.
In those countries,
escapees who do not break any other laws
are not charged
and no extra time is added to their sentence.
That's quite interesting for the software, isn't it?
So basically what they're saying is, this is a punishment.
We know it's your human nature to want to escape from this punishment.
So it's our responsibility to keep you there.
If you get out, good on you.
But does that not encourage prisons to be more and more restrictive when they don't need to be?
Because it's probably,
presumably cheaper to keep a prisoner in a box
than keep him in a prison.
Well, it's famously,
isn't it here,
more expensive
to keep a prisoner
in prison for a year
than it is
to send a kid to Eton.
Nice, I like that.
So the prison service
in this country
is in a right old state
for millions of different reasons.
Wasn't there one that,
what was that,
is it Foucault
came up with that
special prison?
Is it the Panopticon?
Where like,
you could see the prisoners
but the prisoners
couldn't see you
from this special vantage point.
Right.
And I think about,
Sounds quite dystopian.
Yeah,
I think it wasn't,
I don't think it was ever built.
Or maybe it was built
a few times.
But yeah,
an interesting little,
maybe,
maybe just,
maybe we should just put prisons
in stuff we're not using now.
Like shopping centres.
Nobody uses shopping centres anymore.
Put the prisoners in there.
You can be in Fine Fair.
You can be in Rumbler's.
Would the people start to work there?
You are?
No, no, no, no.
You can be in the Sue Ryder.
You can be in the Cash Converters.
Yeah, you've updated that.
Rumbler's hasn't been around for ages.
Fine Fair hasn't either.
I've never been in the cash converters.
What?
Never.
You never want to buy
some hooky Dims?
Hooky RAM?
I'll never buy anything
from them.
Hooky hard drives?
I've never been in there.
I've never been in the Greggs either.
Do you not want to pick up
the best rowdy-roddy paper
on DVD?
I do,
but I just buy off the internet.
Care packs?
Do you want to buy
a copy of care packs?
Anyway,
Mark finishes the email
by saying,
it's surprising more people
don't try it.
It sounds quite fun.
Doesn't appear to have any downsides
and prison is probably quite boring.
Maybe prisons really are like holiday camps
as the Daily Mail claims
and the prisoners are already having a lovely time in there.
Anyway, love the show.
Keep up the good work, Mark.
I think sometimes on dark days,
people can sort of look at a prisoner's life
and sort of go,
when they've got lots of responsibilities
and people they could let down at any moment,
they probably would quite like the clean slate
and the quiet and the peace.
And if the only thing you've got to worry about
is a man throwing hot sugar from a kettle in your mouth,
what else?
That's quite a big worry, though, isn't it?
That is a big worry.
It's a spectacular worry, but, you know.
I just think, the thing about prisons is that
everyone over a certain age, and it's mostly men over 50.
That's probably what you drink your tea anyway.
That is true.
No, I don't have sugar in my tea, actually.
No, you don't have sugar.
But it's that people who've, let's just say men over 50, right?
They've all got an opinion on prisons.
They're so
not likely to be in there. The level of knowledge
of a prison is so low.
It's hard to think of another subject where people have got
such low knowledge
and such strong opinions.
You know,
one of the things is the big
battle between punishment
and rehabilitation, right? When you sit
down with anyone,
even not the most right-wing person,
and say, what do you want prison to do?
When you actually talk about it,
they kind of don't want the prisoner to re-offend.
So they do, in which case,
then they want rehabilitation.
But if you give a prisoner rehabilitation,
i.e. if you learn this,
or if you learn that skill,
or if you earn this reward,
it makes society
work for you better
they go
I don't want that
they've got TV
what do you actually
want from them
do you want
this is a genuine question
do you want them to sit
in like a concrete room
with a hole in the ground
and not learn anything
yeah
because I do think
obviously for serious crimes
there is a punishment aspect
people need to understand
that if they do
something fucking horrific
there's a punishment but if there's an ability to rehabilitate them they
should take that take that opportunity what i what i like about it is that there couldn't have
been a better time for me to voice uh a voiceover for the lucan pete show uh because i believe either
this week or next week the show is sponsored by his majesty's prison appropriations is it really
is it really it is. They're trying to advertise
for people to work there, are they?
I think they've got jobs available.
And I think,
and we do,
this sounds like a sponsored segment.
It's completely,
Luke didn't know
that I did a voiceover
for the prison and probation service.
It may have already gone.
I don't know,
because I don't know
how they're really scheduled.
But it just really made me laugh
that we're talking about
prisons and rehabilitation.
Yeah, that's a really weird question. And we happen to be sponsored uh by yeah um i think they're sort of trying to get across that
i think we have we do again we don't know so much about prisons as people on the outside
and so we uh so we imagine like certain things and we think that the sort of people who work
inside the prison are um you know, these superheroes.
You have to be physically imposing.
You have to be this, you have to be that.
But it's not actually the case.
Like people, do you know anybody who works inside a prison?
One of our former colleagues who I gave a reference to now.
Called this place a prison.
No, works for the Prison Radio Association.
Yes, okay, yeah.
So you get like vital
vital stuff
part of teaching them
skills and
kind of tapping into
people's interests
is that
it's like a radio
there was actually
a really well
really well done
podcast series
in the US
called Ear Hustle
where a journalist
fucking NPR type
journalist went into
might have been
San Quentin even
right
and did a series with a prisoner.
And obviously because it's America, and they selected the person carefully, but the most
charismatic, entertaining bloke, and they talked a bit about prison culture and what
it means, but obviously America's a bit different kettle of fish really.
But I just think that, you know, yes, we have to understand that people should be punished
for crimes.
I think that's fair.
But I think that, fair but I think that
you know
the more you just focus
on punishment
and the less you focus
on rehabilitation
you're just ensuring
that people are going
to go back to prison again
like what's the point
and it costs everyone money
it costs the taxpayer
but that's not a headline
though is it
you know what I mean
that's not going to get
you selling papers
that's not going to get
the parties back
but it's like the
Rishi Sunak thing
last week
where he said,
we're not going to do this
to hit our climate targets.
We're not going to do this,
we're not going to do that.
But then he sort of said,
we're not going to put a tax
on eating meat
and all this stuff.
And none of those things
actually happened
or were in the works
for happening.
They've just invented
a boogeyman
and they've just
strawmanned the argument
and just kind of like
knocked it down
and so it's just
like that sells
newspapers doesn't
it
but they're in
damage control
though aren't
they
yeah
massive damage
control
it's like a
death cycle
they're like
yeah they
don't know
what they're
doing
nah
it's crazy
how far
I think it's
crazy how far
this country's
fallen but luckily
it's people like
you and me
Peter
to entertain
the masses
we'd like to be
entertaining more masses
give the prisoners
mp3 players
what would you give them
a zune
creative zen
creative zen
do you remember
the creative zen
I remember the creative zen
yeah I remember
I used to have like
a little mini cd player
that had
like mp3s on it
so it was like
a mini cd
so it held half
how did that work then
it held like a third of what a cd would. How did that work then? It held like a third
of what a CD would hold,
and it would spin around,
but the MP3 files were small.
Because on a CD,
one song is like,
probably like 50 megabytes.
What did you get on the CD?
You only get 76 on the CD, don't you?
You get something like 700 megabytes.
Or 760 megabytes.
So you get like 700, 800 megabytes.
And so each song is like
about 70 megabytes, I think. On an MP3, that's like three megabytes. So you get like 700, 800 megabytes. And so each song is like about 770 megabytes, I think.
On an MP3, that's like three megabytes.
So you could fit loads on a little mini CD,
so they would play like...
And also, you can load them into memory very quickly,
so you wouldn't have any skipping.
It was perfect.
It was a perfect solution to a really big problem.
And, you know, fantastic.
People who are younger listening to this
have no idea what you're talking about.
No, they don't even know what a CD is,
never mind a mini CD. So I've got about i think nearly a thousand cds
in my attic right yeah good that my the wi-fi of access to was like well they're going in the attic
if you haven't that's fair if you haven't all your records out you're not having all your
things out as well there's no room what have you got against the laser they're going to get laser
rot up there will they a lot of the c CDs are dying because of laser rot. What does that mean?
The, I think fungus grows in between the layers of the CD and they start to sort of blister and break.
Oh, that's annoying.
Digital media, man.
I'll never listen to them anyway.
It's good to have them there as a little collection.
But I guess like where, but records are way more flimsy.
Yeah, but my records are stacked properly in the living room,
so they're not going to get damper in like that.
Yeah.
So it's fine.
Anyway, let's get out of here, Peter.
Why don't you take us home?
Do we do an ad break?
I can't remember.
I can't fucking remember.
Doesn't matter.
At some point,
there'll be an advert
for the probation service.
Which is a weird coincidence.
Such a weird coincidence.
Yeah, we'll be back
if you want to get
just for the show.
Hello at LukeandPeteShow.com
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All of the major food groups there. Luke's yawning.
Let's get over here. I'm tired now. You're a new
dad. A lot of content. I'm surprised you're able to
perform at this level, quite frankly.
Some people will say I can't. The Luke and Pete Show is a Stack production
and part of the Acast Creator Network.
Stack Production and part of the Acast Creator Network.