The Luke and Pete Show - School of Boss
Episode Date: January 30, 2023Luke's redecorating his house. Should he make wallpaper out of screenshots of his best tweets? The answer is obviously yes.Elsewhere, Pete reveals he's never seen School of Rock and we hear about a Ma...fia boss that survived 30 years on the run. We'll let you decide which piece of news is more shocking...Want to get in touch with the show? Email: hello@lukeandpeteshow.com or you can get in touch on Twitter or Instagram: @lukeandpeteshow Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Happy Monday all
It's the 30th of January
I'm Pete Donaldson
and this is the Luke and Pete Show
But where's the Luke compliment
of that particular situation?
Here he is
He's in his room
Hello Luke in your room
Here I am
How do you do?
Oh what was that now?
That was the little finger song wasn it, when you were a kid?
Oh, yes.
I thought he was singing Hello...
Remember the Hello Johnny song?
Do you remember Hello Johnny?
Well, it was like a man with a moustache.
Hello Johnny song.
And it was like...
That's not help.
I don't think it was Hello Johnny,
no,
because I think Wien wrote a song
called Hello Johnny,
and the cover is.
This is an absolutely brilliant example
of someone who's coming to this show
for the first time,
what to expect.
What's the Hello Son song?
It was like,
Hello,
and he had a little moustache.
It was a song for kids,
and the dad had a little moustache,
and he was from Central CGI casting and he went
and he was talking about
telling his kid not to eat so much food
don't eat so much
food he was saying
too much sugar free licorice today
hello son
food song
no that's not it either.
Someone will find it.
Anyway, doesn't matter.
While Pete slowly unravels,
the song I was doing was,
it's like you did the different fingers on the hand.
So Tommy Thumb.
Yeah.
Peter Pointer.
Right.
Policeman Tall was the middle one.
Yeah.
Ruby Ring was the third finger.
And then Baby Small was the little finger.
Baby what?
Small.
Baby small.
And you sing it to a baby or whatever
to let them know what their finger is.
That's very cute.
I don't know where it came from.
I just thought of it, and I just sang it.
I don't know why.
Hello, Johnny.
It was.
He had quite a thick kind of South Asian accent.
I can't figure it out.
It's just getting weirder and weirder. It's just getting weirder and weirder. It sounds like a Pete Donaldson soundboard. It's just getting weirder and weirder.
It sounds like a Pete Donaldson soundboard.
It's just getting weirder and weirder.
Hey, Luke, did you see that
little forwarding
of a estate agent's
listing in
the WhatsApp group?
I haven't clicked on it.
Let me look at it now. You intro it.
Basically,
I don't know who owned this house, they basically i think they were trying to sell it as like um a house that's dedicated to crypto and nfts and stuff like that
and uh they put it on the they put it on the the market for like over like 1.2 million, I think. It's in North Hollywood, California.
And built in 1952,
just a normal kind of like wooden,
fucking big old Californian house.
And they put it on for like 100,
sorry, 1.2 million.
And they keep on having to sort of cut it
because they've just created
this absolutely monstrous bloody house. They've called it a crypto house. And they've just created this absolutely monstrous bloody house.
They've called it the Crypto House
and they've got like big signs up saying
Crypto House.
And all of like the hearths
around the fireplaces.
One of the rooms is decorated
with Twitter screenshots.
Yeah, it's just kind of like
they've sort of decorated it with like,
they've just made it look absolutely
horrific but they've got like loads of um uh you know the crypto punks they're like really
shit nfts with uh you've got the apes you've got the crypto punks yeah and they're kind of nfts
that have literally no artistic flair to them at all they're just these modular pixelated
monstrosities i mean out of out of the shower of
shit which is the nft um space even for them i mean it's absolutely atrocious they've put um bitcoin
uh uh signs on the wall uh they've put like um green fake um grass inside the house in the
bedrooms and stuff which i'm not massively against but it does make it look like an influencer house.
Why are you not against that?
I think it would feel really nice on the old, I've just seen the Twitter, I think it would feel really nice on the old feet.
Yeah, I've just noticed they've decorated one of the rooms with tweets.
I wonder what those tweets are.
I bet it's all about crypto and NFTs and stuff like that and going to the moon.
I've just clicked a box saying, no, I would not like a tour of this property.
teas and stuff like that and going to the moon i've just clicked a box saying no i would not like a tour of this property it's just astonishing but i just said because you're obviously someone
who's who's uh spent a bit dropped a bit of coin on uh on a recent refurbishment do you think you've
missed out on doing something like this well the way i see it is like if it was like a complete
car crush of a house and they were selling it super cheap because of that. It's not the worst idea
in the world to get it because
essentially if you're paying... Just a bit of wallpaper, isn't it?
Yeah, if you're paying way under the odds for bricks and
mortar, then you do a refurb.
I mean, you're going to spend a fraction of the money
you've saved refurbing it and it's
a bit of upheaval. It's a pain in the arse
and I'm living through that right now.
But long term, I think
it's a pretty good idea.
I've got no beef with it, mate.
You've got no beef with it.
But no, but the actual design itself,
do you think you should put some of your best tweets?
You could put that on the wall behind you.
You could cover the wall that you're in,
the room that you're in now with your best tweets.
More successful drops on Twitter.
Probably be the smallest wall.
The thing is, this is a shame
about this whole thing i i've been on twitter for ages and i don't think i've i can't think
of a single tweet i've done where i've gone that's a fucking really good tweet whereas you've done
loads right what do you mean as in what you've never pressed what you've never pressed send and
you thought that's gonna bang no i have loads of times but
i hate it i think it's a hateful place and i'm i'm every time i i put a little thing out it never
bangs and i go i'm just a bit it just sort of fortifies that i'm a bit of a fucking dickhead
no but i think every time i've got a theory about your output and i think i've shared it before maybe not on this show though so i'll share it again now so you are really good right you're
really creative your stuff's really good and i personally really like it which i guess is probably
what's brought part of the reason it's brought us together but the problem is and it pissed me off
when i realized this because obviously it's affected my bottom line to quite a great extent
you're not mainstream right so your shit never goes over it never crosses over you're almost you're almost like
i don't know you're like talking heads like you do enough to to be able to get by and you'll make
some money and you'll sell some records and you'll do some crossover bits here and there
but you're never going to be accepted by the mainstream i just think that i think that um
it upsets me every time I post something on social media
and it's kind of like I've not explained that.
Every time I click send and nobody likes it,
I always go, you've not explained that.
You've gone to that thinking that people have a lot of knowledge
that they don't have and you've not explained yourself.
It's arrogance, if anything.
It's arrogance. You probably think the same way as me. You don't need and you've not explained yourself it's arrogance if anything it's arrogance
this video you probably think the same way as me you don't need this piece of information
i think i think that you're that's that's not just twitter though yeah yeah that's just my life
generally but at least here i can ask i mean me tweeting what was that song about hello johnny
stop eating all the food uh i would get a response but it's not it's not like it's not social media
is it you're not you're not adding anything to the conversation your response you'll get will
just be from hot and horny singles in your area you do whenever like you do you're involved or
cc'd in on a tweet that's from like a popular account like a broad in japan or football ramble
or whatever like about a month later, you will get just weird sex bots
kind of retweeting or replying
or something. I think it's got much worse since
Musk's... Yeah, probably.
There's probably something to be said for that.
They've turned all the third-party API access off, haven't they?
But, yeah, you just sort of think
these women that they've used the photographs
for, they're out there.
They're there. Like, you know, that's somebody's
life that, you know, obviously they've presumably put those pictures out there on the internet, but, like, they're out there. They're there. That's somebody's life. Obviously,
they presumably put those pictures out there
on the internet, but they're not
tracking their picture getting used all
over the gaff. It's mad. Absolutely mad.
I assume that the photos would just be
from stock images
that you agreed to get paid to pose for
and then you just sold your rights away.
Nah, just steal them, don't they? Just go,
woman, tiny waist, big boobs.
But that does happen though, right?
People do do that, right?
Well, like stock images.
Yeah, people use stock images.
Yeah, definitely.
But I don't think a bot farm
really gives a shit about intellectual property.
Well, that's probably fair, yeah.
Speaking of nothing like this at all,
but you mentioned earlier this this
is how ridiculous my brain is earlier on you mentioned the word mustache and um i watched
the first season of white lotus oh yeah yeah okay have you seen it i've not seen the first season
i've seen the second season oh because i didn't realize it was standalone so i think i might have
had a bit of a pop at you last time when you said that but they're standalone scenes
like the first season's really really good and um right the guy who runs the hotel
has got an amazing mustache he's a brilliant character it's a really good series by the way
yeah i should go back and watch it um i'm trying to think who's in it i can't remember well the
season season one's got alexandra daddario in it it's got um sydney Daddario in it it's got um Sydney Sweeney in it
it's got um
oh one or two others
um
right
oh Jennifer Coolidge is in it
and she's in season two as well
yes
with um
Christopher Moltisanti
which is always great to see
I sort of only
I only sort of
with
with Coolidge
um
I've only just
recently
figured out the joke what do you mean because I well like in every role I've only just recently figured out the joke.
What do you mean?
Well, like, in every role I've ever seen her,
she kind of plays similar characters
where she's, like, a bit broken
and she does disappointed very well and stuff like that.
She's a character actor, isn't she?
Yeah, but it's one character,
and I just thought that she was just a bit of, like,
you know, an older kind, glamorous woman kind of vibe.
And I didn't realise she did ten years in the fucking footlings.
Is it footlings? No. Groundlings.
She's a proper, studied...
I just thought she was playing the same character every time.
But she's in on the fucking joke,
and she's found a bit of a niche,
and she does that pretty much every time.
But she's got proper fucking chops and I didn't give her the time of day really.
I didn't realise that she was so well kind of respected in the industry.
Why do you think you didn't respect her?
I don't know.
I just thought it was just kind of like,
because I think the first time I saw her she was doing Stifler's Mum
and Stifler's Mum is kind of the same character as White Lotus
and probably I haven't seen her in many versatile
roles. But yeah,
maybe just haven't sort of run into her a lot.
But I didn't realize she was
a real comedy actor
that knew what was going on.
I just thought she was like just playing the same character
every time. When people act
to the level where they're in that kind of thing,
they do tend to know what's happening though.
Yeah, you'd hope so, wouldn't you?
Yeah.
I mean, it's not just like you and me.
I've just got no respect for actors.
We're just fucking making shit up as we go along.
They are actually doing it, I think.
I thought the first season was really good.
I kind of felt like it was...
I don't know if I'm explaining myself well,
but it felt, obviously,
it's got a bit of the Wes Anderson about it.
Yeah, okay.
I also felt a bit like it was going to turn really sinister, but it felt obviously it's got a bit of the wes anderson about it yeah okay i also felt a bit like it was gonna turn really sinister but it never actually did and i also i kind of is sinister
in its own way it's kind of like white supremacist kind of wealthy people kind of way i get i get the
obvious kind of overtones but i also didn't realize that it's written directed created by the guy who plays ned schneebly in school of rock i didn't see that one coming either do you know the guy who plays
the kind of henpecked boyfriend of sarah silverman in school of rock who jack black's character
impersonates luke i've never seen school of what it's a classic is it it's a real classic mate it's
a real classic honestly there will be listeners all over the country,
and indeed the world, recoiling at that news.
Come on.
It's a great movie.
Really good.
I bloody enjoyed season one.
I shall definitely indulge in season two,
although I haven't yet.
But I realise that it's like the same type of thing,
but just set in a different place with different characters, which uh interesting um pete i was gonna say to you did you um
see this um story about that um one of it one of italy's top mafia bosses caught after 30 years on
the run oh no what did he look like i want to see this where's this well this is the thing it's
disappointing because normally they get a lot of plastic surgery done don't they yes and uh so he he's um he was arrested at a private health clinic in i think palermo in
sicily uh he's been on the run since i think 1992 uh matteo messina denaro his name is um and he
was wanted for for obviously a load of a load of different crimes but when he was arrested he had
like a hat like yours on, actually.
And then sunglasses and a jacket up high,
so you couldn't really tell what he looked like.
That's a shame.
But I just thought to myself, he's basically...
What they do, these guys, is they live almost in the community,
and everyone in the community knows who they are,
but no one will say.
No one will kind of...
You know what I mean?
No one will kind of rat them out basically.
Yeah.
Um,
and I just thought to myself,
it's quite,
at what point does it become,
I know,
I know for them,
it's a game to be won and all the rest of it,
but at what point,
30 years looking over your shoulder,
it's quite a tough thing to do,
right?
Maybe it's just like a big relief when it actually happens,
like pulling off that plaster,
the thing that you've thought about all of your life.
And then you're in a situation where someone fingers you
collar,
so to speak,
and you're done really.
Yeah.
There'd definitely be an element of relief to it,
I think.
But you got something,
are you still,
once you were kind of compromised and the police are
looking out for you,
like,
can you still run your network?
Can you still kind of like,
apparently you still have a,
right.
Okay.
So you can still make a bit of cash.
Apparently they seized assets related...
This is a while ago now.
They seized assets that essentially are linked to him
of about $1.4 billion a while back.
Right, okay.
And the quirkiest part of the story
is that obviously Italian authorities
have been trying to get hold of this
guy for such a long time one of the most white men in the world um like a couple of his family
members have been arrested back in the day uh one of his associates was arrested i think 10 or so
years ago um but there was few there weren't hardly any photos of him they were going on like
digital composites to to try and reconstruct what he actually looked like. And then apparently in September of 2021,
a man was arrested in the Netherlands at gunpoint by Italian police
and the operation with Dutch authorities,
who just turned out to be a Formula One fan from Liverpool on holiday.
What looked like the composite.
They just thought he looked like him, yeah.
Imagine that
for an experience
on your holiday.
That would really,
you'd get a book
out of it, wouldn't you?
Messina Di Naro
nicknamed Diabolique.
Yeah, named after
an Italian comic book
character, apparently.
Well, presumably
Diabolique is,
oh, I've just realised,
so diabolical.
Would that be something
connected to Diablo?
The devil, yeah, I guess so,. So Diabolical. Would that be something connected to Diablo? The Devil, yeah.
I guess so, yeah.
Oh.
I think that name's out and about now
because he's under lock and key.
So I think I'm going to be...
I don't have a middle name.
Pete Diabolique Donaldson.
Diggory.
You've got Diggory.
Diggory.
All right.
Pete Diggory Diabolic Donaldson.
I like it.
The thing is about that... obviously, he's been suspected of
and no doubt involved in all sorts of horrific crimes.
I mean, some of the stuff I read that he'd been sort of linked with
is truly horrific, like the worst stuff you can think of.
So I'm not defending it, but being that disciplined
about being on the run for that amount of time,
I don't reckon there's many people that could do that.
No.
If you watch that Channel 4 show,
just look at the whole,
look at the performance.
He's the only one who's managed it,
I think,
surely.
I think there are other people.
There's a list on Wikipedia,
I was looking at it earlier,
of criminals that have never been caught.
And there are some that have been around. But then i guess i suppose maybe they could have died and no one
talked about it or whatever but like my point being that if you to be genuinely in hiding of
course you need a network of people loyal to you which you obviously would have had yeah but i mean
you have to essentially think about every single move all the time on the flip side on the flip
side of that the guy who wrote gamora the book the book Roberto Saviano, he basically lives a life now, I think even now, years on, where he has to move every three nights or something.
He's got a full security detail around the clock.
He can't go to certain events because he thinks the Gamora are still trying to kill him.
The levels to this are crazy.
And I think if you're on the run for that
amount of time you can't you've got to be flawless basically you can't you've got to be so disciplined
i just don't think you or i could anywhere near do that i'm looking at all the uh i'm looking at
all like a list of criminals who've never been caught and you know this is a funny little show
we dick about it oh you know the jack the Ripper. Charlie Chopoff, that's an interesting...
Oh, God, yeah, that's horrific.
And that's why I never understood how true crime podcasts can do...
Like, can have those kind of, like, ha-ha,
like, kind of funny podcasts about some fucking horrific crimes.
Yeah.
And then, you know, kind of having their cake and eat it a little bit.
It's quite difficult difficult isn't it
it's good
yeah I think
I find that
some of them
are very unsavoury
which is why I was
pretty happy
when we did the
interruption
because that's like
it is essentially
a crime
once died
being committed
but it's not
it's not
there's even like
quite a successful
podcast isn't there
called My Favourite Murder
where they basically
just talk about
their favourite murders
that have happened.
It's a bit like,
I'm not sure,
it's not something
I would like to do,
put it that way.
I watched a bit of,
I watched that little documentary
about,
you know that,
do you remember that,
do you remember that,
Hitchhiker,
from like,
something like 10 years ago.
He was a hitchhiker
and he was like,
interviewed on the news
after this bloke had gone a bit
wacky oh and he went mental with his impression and and he and and he went mad and started trying
to kill these people and um this hitchhiker bashed him in the head with a with a with a mallet or an
axe like a little mini mini axe or something um and he uh and soon afterwards he was um arrested for the murder of a man like
because but he was this really charismatic kind of um homeless kid who was just like oh i do
remember that he was like a surfer dude type guy he's like a surfer dude he like you know he used
to run the ride the rails and stuff and do you know just just hang out and go surfing and drink
and stuff and he uh he was like the darling of america for about a couple of weeks and then he was arrested for
the murder of some bloke it's like wow that was a that was a really quick turnaround is he called
um is he known online as kai the hatchet wielding hitchhiker kai the hatchet wielding yeah that guy
hitchhiker yeah and he was like and and. Yeah, that guy. Hitchhiker, yeah. And he was like,
and the whole documentary is about him,
about this one lucky then sports reporter
for a local, I think, Fox affiliate
or NBC or something.
And he manages to get this kid
to get the first interview
and the only interview.
And he's the only person
to get hold of this kid
who's obviously transient in his movements.
And obviously he's the darling, he's this kind of like
charismatic kind of like, you know, Californian kid.
And so all the TV stations want him, you know,
reality TV show want a bit of Kai, the hatchet wielding.
He was on Jimmy Kimmel.
Yeah, and so part of the story is them just getting
him in to do jimmy kimmel and uh it was just just sounds like it's just an absolute like maniac
absolutely you know clearly got massive issues but uh but because he's got a quite sunny disposition
and it's quite good for a little um a little tv interview uh he he everyone was just looking for
him to to for him to make a load of money and be the next big thing
but he didn't fancy that
and it turns out he killed a bloke
he's doing 57
years in prison for murdering a
73 year old man
yeah and I mean
I will say for anybody who's seen that documentary
I would
it was an
interesting dynamic about how Kai the Hitchhiker
managed to find his way into some
old boys house
I'm just saying
I can understand why he's behind bars
I'm just not exactly sure
73 years
is
commensurate with what
seems to have gone on
57 years he's doing
it just seemed like an interesting dynamic commensurate with what seems to have gone on. 57 years he's doing.
It just seemed like an interesting dynamic.
Ex-judge taking a young man off the streets when there's
so many homeless people in
California. Takes him off the streets,
takes him round his house.
It just seemed
a bit odd.
You can't kill a man.
You don't know what happened
or was accused of what Kai said happened.
I'm going to watch the documentary, though,
because that sounds right up my street.
It's interesting.
It sounds bloody interesting.
But these guys and gals who have their five minutes of fame,
within, you know, it seems like...
The time frame seems to get shorter and shorter.
You ultimately find out something about
them that's way less palatable than what you would put on jimmy kimmel let's say yeah i mean it's
kind of a i can't really think of another story like that obviously when you first started telling
the story i thought you were talking about there's a guy who i can't remember the detail of this but
there was a guy who did or a woman, who did an impression of what happened to,
apparently happened to her husband, say,
in this random murder in a car in a lay-by in England somewhere.
Right.
And there was something about the way she did the impression,
I believe, which meant the detective was like,
hang on a fucking minute.
And they started investigating her.
It turned out she was convicted and she was guilty of the crime.
All right, okay.
That's what I thought you were talking about at the to start but obviously i do remember this guy now he
and the thing is you can almost understand why they wanted to get a piece of him all these
entertainment people because he's so charismatic yeah oh yeah he's an absolute dream i remember
seeing him and going like he was up there with that guy you know that surfer who was gone
remember he did that interview and he's like going yeah and i was up there with that guy, you know that surfer who was going, pow, pow, pow. Remember, he did that interview
and he's like going,
and I was up there,
and he was like,
pow, pow, pow.
The pow, pow, pow guy, you know.
But I've often said this on this show,
like in the US,
it's very clear that they know,
like you go to the US
and you want to do a Vox Pop or something,
you won't have to wait long
before you find someone
who is absolutely brilliant on camera
or on mic like it's catch but everything feels like it's an extension of the entertainment
industry in the u.s whether it's politics or law or sport or whatever it's almost like growing up
in an environment where entertainment is so prevalent breeds these characters i've done so
many vox pops as a young kind of student or whatever around um england and in the town i grew up and stuff like
that it's impossible to find anyone who even wants to talk to you let alone anyone who's got any
charisma to actually pull something off but in america they seem to be everywhere yeah would
you ever sort of like would you ever kind of get a um would you ever sort of get get involved in a
vox pop would you kind of like would you ever kind of be in a situation where someone's in in the street and ask you a question no i mean no i i happily just walk past and go no thanks yeah so
it happened the most recent time it happened to me is when i told you i was on that plane going
that flight to boston and a woman tried to open the door on the flight oh yeah so she got detained
and then because it like a week after some terrorist incident they wondered if it was
linked so all the northeast new england press were at the arrivals when i landed So she got detained and then because it was like a week after some terrorist incident, they wondered if it was linked.
So all the North East New England press were at the arrivals when I landed.
There was loads of those.
It's almost like a cliche thing, but there was loads of people with a microphone
with loads of makeup on their face and a camera person with them.
And they were interviewing people about it and they tried to interview me.
But I had just seen my now wife for the first time in a long time.
And I was like, I'm not fucking interested in this.
I want to go and find my wife.
So, oh, my girlfriend was at the time.
I would have dubbed her in.
That's it, it was her.
Yeah.
She was absolutely out of her train there.
She wasn't on the flight though, so it would have been the perfect crime.
Do it, anyway.
Anyway, let's have a quick break.
When we come back, we've got an email or two to do.
And we should do them because they're backing up in the inbox.
So, we'll see you on the other side of this all right then we're back with the logo peach show and we've
got emails i'm gonna say hello to dulta hello dulta uh a man who paints houses is the title of
this uh email hi lads long time first time from dublin just listening to your most recent podcast
suggesting that getting professionals in is the best for painting the house. Well, let me tell you,
I thought I hired a painter to paint the house,
but what I got was a man who paints houses.
A mafia reference there, apparently.
We were getting ready to sell our home
and figured that we should repaint the interior
and all the exterior.
Front exterior is an anthracite grey,
steady, sidewall had never been painted.
The specific RAL colour was
7004. So I hired this guy
through a popular handyman site.
He came out and we handed him the previous paint tins that were half
full, paint names fully visible
and said, if you need more paint lad, there's
the names, all good.
So we get a call to say, all done, come and have
a check and then you can send over the rest of the
cash. So we rock up to the house and immediately see there's a massive colour difference
between the side of the house and the front.
So we go inside and that is all good, no problems there.
So I text the guy and said, listen, that's all great,
but it looks like you've got the wrong colour for the side.
In fact, here's a picture of the paint tin that you used.
It's called Jack Black.
I'll send you the money for the interior,
but can you just come and sort the side out, please?
This is where things go more man who paints houses what follows are a series of increasingly threatening texts
ranging from the bizarre well this is what the accountant is for to insisting i come down to the
house to show him the different color and also general questions about my manhood and manliness
at one stage he simply texted me back my mother's home address we were staying what eventually we
agreed to meet at the house which
i wasn't really enthusiastic about to show him the different paint cans he insisted it was still
the same can so myself and my wife arrived earlier than planned and have a look lo and behold the two
paint cans old and new have matching names but that can't be right i've got a photo right here
of the label on the old can uh which we'd sent him before handing over i look close at the old
can of paint and notice
there's a faint hint that it's a sticker over a sticker.
My wife begins to slowly peel off the outer layer
and the old RAL 7004 sticker is revealed.
I'm elated. This is it. We have him.
He tried to purposefully deceive us.
Then it dawned on both of us,
this lunatic tried to purposefully deceive us.
Get the fuck out out the house right now
so we scarper not wanting to meet meet our maker uh we bump into a friend outside who offers to
hang around with us uh we do and we eventually meet the guy who still blindly desires it all
then goes into a spin sting we stuck the second sticker over eventually still not wanting to get
murdered i agreed to pay him a portion of the remainder so he'll simply fuck off. Thanks to the podcast, lads. Keeps things interesting in work.
Dulta.
Now, they
attached a picture of the house
and, yeah, I mean, the side of the house does look
like a very different shade
to the front of the house. Is that fair to say, Lukey Moore?
I don't really know what I'm supposed to be looking
at. I think, so the front
of the house is kind of like a grey. Yeah.
And the side of the house is your old Jack a gray yeah the side of the house is your
old jack black but that's just a shadow isn't it could be but it sounds i mean it sounds like the
preceding email is detailed uh that they're not happy with the i fully understand that daughter
isn't happy with the work yeah i also think i don't think the painter showered himself in glory
either no i i think i think if you're... Why did he do it?
I mean, could he have just
thought,
I can't find that pin?
Don't just fucking stop.
You've done all the work.
You've done the hard work.
Why be a weirdo about it?
It's not like you're
going to cover it up
with something else, is it?
It's the side of a...
outside of a house.
So they're going to check it
properly, aren't they?
Yeah.
But I will say
that you've got a lovely
front of your house.
You've got these big kind of like... What do you call those kind of like big stable doors or a big
kind of like you park your car in there i can't really tell to be honest but yeah it's a lovely
it's a nice color i actually think it's a very nice color for the outside of a house
i'm talking about the front of it i'm not trying to wind up daughter who i understand is not very
happy with the side of the house it's got a lovely um light pink door um i think it looks nice um but listen ultimately
if you're not happy with the work and he's not followed the instructions then you know i understand
the desire to not want to be murdered so whatever the negotiation was i'm sure they're perfectly
content with but you know you have got to really check the person's references before they do it like the guy who's doing my um the decorator my house inside he's also decorated a friend of
mine's house and it looks amazing so that's the reference i went for yeah indeed but listen you
live and learn daughter i'm sure you won't make the same mistake again there's lots of dads
listening to this show right now who are going just paint it yourself just do it yourself and it
goes wrong you've got no issues you've saved yourself a bit of money you've got no one to
blame but yourself would you paint the outside of a house peter um i mean i find painting very
very boring but as long as i had the right tools like a little like a little frame or something
like the right ladder as long as you've got the right ladder i think you're pretty sorted in one
of those really long rollers um but i don't know how high the ladder would have to go for me to mask out
the uh the awnings and then it's also the public nature of the work if you're doing that and it's
say a few days work you're out there every day every single neighbor's going to see you i'm
going to know that you did it yeah exactly if it's an absolute shit job i did some plastering uh
last week and uh do you think?
How do you think?
They are absolutely,
the proper good plasterers
are artisans, aren't they?
Yeah, they really are.
Have you seen them?
They work so fast
and so brilliantly.
They look so good at the end.
Yeah, it's great stuff.
Great stuff.
Yeah, my advice would be
to get it looking
like a proper wall.
Yeah.
I'm terrible at that kind of stuff
so I feel your pain.
All right, let's get out of there.
We'll be back on Thursday
with some more of this.
We've got some more batteries
to get through as well.
We've got some excellent emails
and some stories for you,
so we'll look forward to that.
Thank you very much for listening today.
Peter, anything to add from you?
No, I want to go.
Okay, let's go.
See you later.
See you. See you.
The Luke and Pete Show is a Stack production and part of the acast creator network