The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 1 (Greg Davies Part 1)
Episode Date: September 13, 2020"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 1 (Greg Davies Part 1)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 86 of 128....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Cause it's not help
Peacock and it's not play Gamble, but it is rape Peacock and it is help Gamble Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble. Because it's not Ed Peacock and it's not Ray Gamble, but it is Ray Peacock and it is Ed Gamble.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, here they are.
Hello and welcome to the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast.
Edinburgh podcast, that's very, very important. I'm Ray Peacock.
Hello, I'm Ed Gamble.
And this is a return for us to podcasting.
Yeah.
But it's a new series.
New series, brand new, episode one, Peacock and Gamble, Edinburgh podcast.
If you want to hear our old podcast, that's still available on the iTunes, all free, you
can have that.
Yeah.
But this is a very different beast.
Well, it's our voices.
It is, yeah, similar voices.
So what we're going to be doing, we are reporting live, we are alive now.
We are alive, yeah.
From the Edinburgh Fringe.
Well, actually, people could be listening to it when we're dead.
That's the beauty of podcasting.
This could be on the internet and we could be dead.
But the raw material, the source file, is still live.
Yeah.
So, like, when you see all the old comedians on the telly now,
who've all sadly passed away, they're still live.
Oh, yeah.
But they're not alive.
But they are an end of thing.
I feel like we're getting sidetracked.
Now, our normal podcast would be just us chatting,
just generally being great.
What is a live?
What is a live?
Now, we'll still be great here,
like with all that
alive stuff we were just doing,
but we will also be having
special guests
from the world of comedy
to chat about
the Edinburgh Fringe
and generally
have a great muck about.
Now, we say that.
We say that we'll chat
about the Edinburgh Fringe,
but we've done a few
before we got to Edinburgh.
Yeah.
And we sort of forgot
a bit about Edinburgh.
We mention Edinburgh in all of them, I think. On and off. So we've got, the ones we've done a few before we got to Edinburgh and we sort of forgot a bit about we mention Edinburgh
in all of them I think
on and off
so we've got
the ones we've recorded
so far
like today we have
the first part of
Greg Davis
yeah
which is still
a really big part
it's still enormous
it's just the first part
of him
so Greg Davis today
second part of Greg Davis
tomorrow
so we start off with
extended interviews
extended
special extended two parter
yeah
and it's a nice one
it's very
funny.
Yeah.
Tomorrow you'll
find Greg, he goes
a bit mad.
He does go a little
bit mad.
In tomorrow's one.
So today he's
relatively placid.
Yeah.
Perfectly nice
gentleman.
Listen to today and
then make sure you
get tomorrow's as
well because tomorrow
off his head.
Yeah.
It goes weird.
What happened was
we were in his
house.
Yeah.
And it was very
warm.
Yeah.
And unfortunately
when we record we've
got to shut all the windows because of the yeah and he wasn't bearing up well he
sweated out all his sensible yeah i'm a big lad but he's like big lad but stretched out tall yeah
so he still had all the sweat coming off his hair yeah so that's coming up later yeah but why are
we here in edinburgh good question thanks well we're here at the moment doing our our second
peacock and gamble friend friend show. Yep.
Between us we've done like loads of friend shows
over the years. Yep. But last year we did our first
Peacock and Gamble show together. Yeah that was
called Emergency Broadcast. Forget about that.
That's in the past. Yeah come on. Just put that
to one side. Put that in it's bed.
Forget about it. We're here
this year doing Peacock and Gamble don't even want to be on
telly anyway. Which is 9.40
at the Pleasant's Dome Dome.
It's called the Pleasance Dome, but Reyes and Ciceron call it the Pleasance Dome Dome
to confuse people and drive away the four people that actually want to buy tickets.
How will that drive people away?
If people don't know where it is, mate.
No, but they will go to the box office and they'll go,
oh, can I please have one ticket for Peacock and Gamble at the Pleasance Dome Dome at 9.40?
No, and then they'll go, no, Pleasance Dome Dome's not a place to buy.
But it's funny. No, it's not funny that they get sent no, Pleasant Dome Dome's not a place to buy. But it's funny.
No, it's not funny that they get sent away.
All right, okay, yeah, we're doing a show.
It's called Peacock and Wizards
at 11.90 at the Dog's Mind.
I'm definitely doing that.
Next year, you do a solo show, mate.
I'm coming doing Peacock and Wizards.
Peacock and Wizards, 11.90 at the Dog's Mind.
Oh, it's going to be amazing.
It's going to be empty because no one will know where to go because there's no such venue as the Dog's Mind. It won't be empty. There'll be me and and Wizards. Peacock and Wizards, 11.90 at the Dog's Mind. Oh, it's going to be amazing. It's going to be empty because no one will know where to go
because there's no such venue as the Dog's Mind.
It won't be empty.
There'll be me and three wizards.
So don't be saying that it'll be empty
because we will be there.
We'll be having the best time.
We're at Peacock and Gamble.
Don't even want to be on telly anyway.
Pleasance Dome, 9.40pm every night
from the 1st of August to the 26th of August.
Nobody wants to hear about that.
No, but that's why we're doing this, mate.
They're all tuning in for the celebrities, mate.
Yeah, we do have a lot of celebrity guests coming up, in fact.
Yeah, we have actually.
We've got Russell Howard's coming up.
Yeah, Russell Howard.
Lee Mack.
Lee Mack's going to be on in a bit.
Richard Herring.
Is Richard Herring a celebrity, though?
Sort of.
I think if you're sort of 29 to 32 and you didn't have any friends growing up,
Richard Herring is very much a celebrity.
If you stayed in at university. Yeah growing up. Yeah. Richard Herring is very much a celebrity.
If you stayed in at university. Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So Richard, that's another two-parter, Richard Herring's one.
Yeah.
Because he banged on.
Oh, talks for England that bloke.
So much.
Yeah.
And we're interviewing other guests as we're out of the fringe as well.
Yeah, got loads coming up.
Tim Vine's going to be doing one.
Yeah.
Mick Miller, Jimmy Cricket.
Yeah.
That's going to be very exciting, isn't it?
All the people.
All the ones.
Nish Kumar.
Nish Kumar.
Who is Nish Kumar? That's the name of his show. It's going to be our first question when he gets it. Yeah. Joe Lys That's going to be very exciting, isn't it? All the people. All the ones. Nish Kumar. Nish Kumar. Who is Nish Kumar?
That's the name of his show.
It's going to be our
first question when he
gets it.
Yeah.
Joe Lysa is going to
be doing one.
Loads of people.
Tom Tutt, Gareth Richards.
All the ones.
All the ones.
And we're booking
more guests as we go
along, so there's lots
to look forward to.
All your French favourites.
Just no women.
No women as of yet.
We can't.
We try and steer
clear of them, to be honest.
No, don't say that we're...
No, well, you know
what we're like.
We steer clear of the women.
We try and keep away from them.
Right listen as comedians right.
Odious little people.
Right as we are doing the podcast right we're thinking do you know what we should try and
get like women on it as well.
But we're really struggling.
We are struggling to find them.
I texted Natalette Seamer about it.
Yeah.
And I saw her last night and I said oh you haven't answered my text.
Bitch.
Right.
Yeah nice. And she went my phone's broken. So that shows you you haven't answered my text. Bitch, right? Yeah, nice.
And she went, my phone's broken.
So that shows you never trust a woman.
Yeah, so that's why she's not on.
Yeah.
Just bumped into Hattie Hairidge.
Yeah.
And I was about to ask her,
do you want to be on the podcast?
She can't do it.
She can't do it because she's got a broken ankle.
Yeah.
And we're recording the podcast
in our flat in Edinburgh,
where we are now.
We arrived today.
Yeah.
After being on a very dangerous flight.
No, it wasn't dangerous.
I'll just, before we get to the steps...
There was one bit, right, where the plane was going...
And then I dropped, like, 200 foot.
No, it didn't.
It was doing a normal plane thing of going in the air and down a little bit.
Horrible.
Ray was sweating more than I've ever seen a man sweat from his palms.
From my palms?
I thought he was going to do a loop-de-loop.
He wasn't going to do a loop-de-loop.
He was flying a plane.
It was normal stuff.
If we're told at the airport, at some point, there will be a loop-de-loop, then
I can be ready for it then.
And then I will enjoy that.
But there wasn't going to be a loop-de-loop.
He wasn't doing a loop-de-loop, he was flying the plane in a straight line.
Right, he landed it, normal, just normal.
That was a normal landing.
Right, before you even say this, it wasn't normal, because he flew over Edinburgh,
and we were going, hang on, I can see Forth Bridge.
Yeah, he can't just drop us off where we live, mate.
We couldn't be going, oh, stop it here, mate.
No, but then we were like, we're going
the wrong direction here.
Sometimes you need to go over and taxi
back in. Taxi? That wasn't a taxi.
I'm sorry, I should know not to say
other words. It was a stunt turn.
It wasn't a stunt turn. He did an handbrake, right.
Essentially, that EasyJet flight we were
on from Luton to Edinburgh yesterday did an handbrake turn at Edinburgh. It didn't do a handbrake, right. Essentially, that EasyJet flight we were on from Luton to Edinburgh yesterday
did a handbrake turn at Edinburgh.
It didn't do a handbrake turn.
Essentially, it did that.
He landed it well.
It was normal.
It's difficult being a pilot.
It was like a 16-year-old in his mum's car in Asda car park.
It wasn't, mate.
It's difficult being a pilot.
He landed it properly.
Everyone was fine.
And at no point did...
He probably heard this.
We landed.
There was silence on the plane.
You said, bring that fucker out here.
I'm going to smack him.
He was just landing it normal.
Yeah, because he landed it, and then he's giving it,
oh, we've got in early.
And we're like, oh, brilliant, we're here early.
And then he goes, yeah, so you can't get off.
Yeah, that's true, there wasn't any ground stuff.
Can't get off, there's no ladder.
Yeah.
There's no ladder.
We waited 20 minutes, got off it, finally, just one blunt, just stood there.
With gravy down his chin.
Yeah, well, you've made that bit up. Just been dragged away from his dinner. Couldn't off it, finally. Just one blunt, just stood there with gravy down his chin. Yeah, well you've made that bit up.
Just been dragged away from his dinner.
Couldn't believe it, could we? But we made it here.
We got here. We thought, oh, everything's positive.
Have we made it here? Yeah. Right.
Then we opened the door. Yeah. Whining again,
weren't you? Why? I'll tell you why I was whining.
Why? Because we were told, right, first off,
we're living in Glasgow, essentially.
No, Edinburgh. Well, it feels like Glasgow.
We're living in a nice bit just on the outskirts of Edinburgh.
Yeah, just on the outskirts of Edinburgh, Glasgow.
Right?
So that's a long walk straight away.
Yeah.
And I have to carry a Mac about with me.
I don't mean Rain Mac.
I mean a Mac computer.
You should be carrying a Rain Mac with you as well.
Oh, well, I've got a new leather jacket and I look like Grease Lightning.
You do have a new leather jacket.
You look very, very cool in it.
Thank you.
But what I'm saying is
with your beanie
and your Ray-Bans on
you do look like a henchman
from a 1980s film.
It was a good way
to get on a plane.
Yeah, it was.
Yeah, it scared everyone, didn't it?
Yeah.
I also got checked, didn't I,
by a man at the airport
and I put my arms up
and my pants fell down.
Yeah.
Ray, it's a tradition now
that when we get on the plane
to come to Edinburgh
he always forgets
to take something metal off
or it always beeps for some reason.
I think you've got a metal bollock and you've not told me yet.
I think I have.
No, do you know what?
I wonder what it is because I do set off them alarms.
Yeah.
But with no metal.
Yeah.
Maybe it's your spirit, your steel spirit.
Yeah, could be that.
Yeah.
So the man, lovely, sort of beautiful, beautiful big black man.
He came over to me.
He walked over, right,
and he said,
hey, let me have
a feel of you.
Yeah.
And that gave me an idea
for my new character.
He's an airport security man
called Pat Down.
Nice, what does he do?
Just does his job.
Oh.
I don't see why
comedy characters
have to do their job badly.
I don't know why
we can't have somebody
who works in the service industry
who just does everything right.
Right, I have got
a new character as well.
What?
Right, here it is now.
Right.
Oh, how? Oh, Donald Trump in a teepee. Oh, no. Oh, no. Smelly teepee. Oh, no. Oh, no. Right. service industry who just does everything right right I have got a new couch as well what right here it is now right oh how
oh oh
Donald Trump in a teepee
right
oh no oh no
smelly teepee
oh no oh no
right
yeah
red windian
red windian
yeah you were doing
that earlier
yeah
so the man
he strode over
majestic
it was majestic
he was like a giraffe
lovely
and he came over
to pat you down
see what he had on you
see what
see what metal
you had about your person
no
and you immediately saw him you looked in his eyes you had on you, see what metal you had about your person. No. And you immediately saw him.
You looked in his eyes.
Dropped your trousers.
Yeah, but not deliberately.
Mate, you looked in his eyes.
You looked in his eyes.
You got lost in his eyes, his sparklers.
And then, oh, down come the trousers.
I wasn't.
I don't know what you were expecting to happen with him.
He was just going to go, oh, get in the back now.
If anything, I was actually terrified
of the other man
who was being checked
because there was
another bloke, right?
Yeah.
He had like long white hair.
Yeah, I saw him.
All muscly and that.
Yeah.
And he had like
a thousand yard stare.
Yeah, he looked like,
if you remember X-Factor
from three years ago,
he looked like a sort of
thin version of Wagner.
He did.
He really did though.
Yeah.
But he was terrifying
because he showed
no emotion at all.
Yeah.
It was like he'd been trained.
It was like he could
put a cigarette out
on his eyeball
and he wouldn't have flinched.
And he was there, right? And he was genuinely terrifying. Yeah. They stopped like he'd been trained. It was like he could put a cigarette out on his eyeball and he wouldn't have flinched. And he was there, right?
And he was genuinely terrifying.
Yeah.
They stopped him.
He had like loads of silver on his wrists and that.
Yeah.
And then a bloke came over when I was being checked.
Yeah.
And said to the man doing me, this bloke, full check, yeah?
And the man turned to him and went, yes.
Clearly.
Look at that bloke.
Clearly, yes.
It was.
He was terrifying.
Yeah, I know.
If he'd have been on our flight, I wouldn't have stayed on it.
You did say that.
You said, if he is on there, I'm getting off this plane.
Yeah.
You look like a Die Hard buddy.
You did.
You look like the main buddy from Die Hard.
Yeah, you did.
Right, so we got here.
That's fine.
All done.
What happened when we opened the door?
What did you discover?
Right.
I knew already we were four flights of stairs up.
Four floors, they said.
We're not.
We are.
Fourth floor. We're eight stories up. We're not. We are, fourth floor.
We're eight stories up.
We're fourth floor, mate.
And that's why Hattie Hayridge can't come on it, because she won't make the stairs.
No, she won't.
Simple as that.
Yeah.
I'm a bit worried about Mick Miller and Jimmy Cricket.
Yeah, that's true.
Because they're not, you know, they're older gentlemen, aren't they?
They are older gentlemen, yeah.
And, you know, Jimmy Cricket.
That's a really good point.
Jimmy Cricket spent the last 40 years with his wellies on the wrong feet.
He's probably got bad knees
yeah
mate
I'm going to go down
there and meet him
and say
Jimmy just before we go up
do you want to check
them wellies
because I'm not taking
you all the way
out with them
I'm genuinely
worried about it
so yeah
so we're top floor
8 stories on
92 steps
yeah
Ed counted them
yeah
so that's what we're doing
so we're coming up here to bring you
this podcast. Yeah, so if you notice that some of
our guests are sort of slightly out of breath,
that's because of the stairs.
Yeah, we've started recording as soon as they've walked through the door.
Unless we find a woman
guest, and if she's out of breath, we've just probably been
kissing her. Yeah, we've probably had a nice kiss of her and then
done a wriggle on the bed.
And we've both got to look at a fairy.
Anyway, we're going to have look at a fairy. Anyway,
we're going to have
a lot of fun.
It's every single day
for the entirety of
the Edinburgh Fringe.
We'll be bringing
our podcast to you.
Hope you enjoy it.
It's going to be a laugh,
it's going to be some
interesting conversations,
some serious conversations,
some funny conversations.
And I think there's
a good example of that
coming up now
with our first guest today
which is Greg Davis.
Greg Davis.
And Greg Davis will be
on your ears
in like about
a few seconds
just straight after this.
Exciting.
Be cooking gamble,
be cooking gamble. Shall we take our tops off? You're a bit warm, you're a bit warm. I'm really, on your ears in like about a few seconds just straight after this exciting Peacock and Gamble Peacock and Gamble
shall we take our tops off
are you a bit warm
are you a bit warm
I'm really
I'm unbearably hot
you've brought us
so I think that'll
bring something to it
that's because
we're in your flat
and your flat is like
a bigger version of
ITV's The Cube
which gets very warm
it is basically
and I don't want to
give too much away
about where you live Greg
because I don't want
people to come and
bother you and things
you know all your fans and that.
But Greg basically lives in a greenhouse on the top of London.
So you wouldn't even be able to get up to it anyway.
It's a port cabin really, isn't it?
Well, it's a nice one.
It's a lovely port cabin, yeah.
It's a luxury port cabin.
You've got all your vitamins over there. We came in and it's clear
that just before we came in
they're like,
oh, the lads are coming over.
I better make sure they know
that I take my full regime
of vitamins.
Well, you think that
that's a vanity exercise
putting my vitamins out?
Yeah, you've clearly,
look, all your cupboards
are open.
You've gone,
get all my vitamins out.
That is true.
All your cupboards
are wide open.
So you're going,
oh, look,
I've got Yorkshire tea.
Oh, look at me everybody
all my vitamins
this is what happens
when you are famous
absolute vodka
what do you think
I'm hoping to achieve
by showing you
that I take vitamins
just that we know
that you've got
all your vitamins
in what way
would you find that impressive
well that you'd have
strong bones
maybe that's how
it happened
I don't take calcium
is it just taking
all them vitamins
yeah I was really,
I was exactly your height
until I started taking
those vitamins.
When you're older,
you want to be the tallest
thing in London,
don't you?
That's why I'm taking
all them vitamins.
you're a fucking weirdo.
Do you know if you take
vitamin B,
it makes your ego
really orange.
Like a broca?
Really,
like a dark orange.
Are you sure. Are you sure
that's not?
What, the
collapse of my
immune system?
Are you sure
that's the
vitamin B?
Yeah, because
if I don't
take it, my
wee's normal.
What is
normal wee?
Sort of
purple, isn't
it?
Sort of
off purple?
Off purple,
yeah.
Sort of
dull purple.
Mine's quite
a light purple.
You know
when you see
someone cutting
a deer open
and all they're
in it's flop out, that colour? I've never seen someone cut a deer open. You know when you see someone cutting a deer open and all their innards flop out, that
colour.
I've never seen
someone cut a deer
open.
You've not seen
to the end of his
film he sent you,
that happens right
at the end.
I love you,
do you ever
tell me?
The floppy deer
bit's the best
part though.
So I cut it open
and all its innards
fall in and I get
inside the cavity
and I recreate
Star Wars.
That's the best
bit of the video.
You try and recreate the whole of Star Wars in there's the best bit of the video. But it's not,
you try and recreate
the whole of Star Wars in there.
Yeah, yeah.
That doesn't quite work.
Oh no,
it wasn't that,
it wasn't Empire Strikes Back
when he gets inside that thing.
He lifts his Star Wars.
I get inside and I do Star Wars.
Oh,
you act out Star Wars
dressed as a deer.
Yeah.
You are a member
of the Rebel Alliance.
I'm inside a deer.
That's an amazing idea though,
isn't it?
Yeah.
I've got loads of ideas like that.
What other ideas have you had today? I'm just throwing them got loads of ideas like that. What ideas have you had today?
I'm just throwing them out left, right and centre.
What ideas have you had today?
About cabbage dancing.
Yeah, what happens in that?
You get a really little man and put him inside these two big leaves
and he does his dance.
He does his dance.
Right.
So he is a cabbage, not a...
I haven't fully thought it through, mate.
You'll have to develop some of these yourself.
Right, OK.
The starting point. You're starting these yourself right okay well the starting point
you have started
us off cabbage
dancing
the starting point
in the past you
suggested sketches
for me and Ray
to do haven't you
yeah and really
good ones none of
which you two have
used
you've never told me
you've not told me
once
you fucking arsehole
there were a lot
there were a lot of
them I'd certainly
say there was
quantity was high
yeah
I'm not one
I made about
20
basically they all ended with one of us, either one, alternated,
pulling our trousers and pants down and doing a shit on the floor.
That's a lot of the things we do anyway.
Yeah, no, metaphorically, but he wanted us actually to do a shit on the floor.
It's the little one, though.
Doing a little brown fish on the floor.
You'd have eaten all whole wheat bread and stuff like that,
so it'd be nice little rounded pellets.
I'm not...
Ed will have to do the poos at the moment,
because my poos aren't proper at the moment.
What's wrong with him?
He's on a special drink for it.
I've had a terrible problem with my back passage, as the doctor calls it.
What's wrong with it, though?
I don't know, it's all broke.
What's wrong with your poos?
Well, one day, right, the other day...
How old are you?
Pardon?
How old are you?
Mid-thirties.
Mid-thirties, right, the other day. How old are you? Pardon? How old are you? Mid-thirties. Mid-thirties, right, I was saying.
You know, so I imagine you probably had your prostate checked at some point.
I haven't had it checked, but they did suggest it might be slightly swollen the other day.
Oh, really?
But it's quite weird, actually, because the doctor I went to is my mum's local GPU.
I went to when I was a kid.
I told him I was a bit worried about my prostate or something in my ass.
Yeah. And he went, well, you you're you're the age you are now and so you might be having a few problems like that yeah I went well do you think we should check maybe and he went
and this is a direct quote he went you want me to put my finger up you don't you
and I said no no not at all I don't want at all. If you don't think it's medically valid,
it just seems to me that if we need to test for something,
that's the test, isn't it?
He said, I'll do it if you want me to.
I said, I don't want you to.
It's really strange.
So you didn't know it done?
I didn't know it done.
I've had a camera up my bum,
and I've had a camera up my willy as well.
Oh, that's a good question.
How big is your tinkle?
Is it so big that you wouldn't refer to it as a tinkle? No, what I mean is a good question. How big is your tinkle? Is it so big
that you wouldn't
refer to it as a tinkle?
No, what I mean is
because you're a giant man,
a big man.
I get asked that a lot.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I don't think it is.
I think it's just,
I think it just serves its purpose.
Right.
If I put your fingers
We're not saying it's fine.
We're not saying it's so big
it doesn't work anymore.
No, I just think it's fine.
Yeah.
I think it's really nice.
I took a photo of you, right?
It's really nice though yeah
no i believe you there's a lot of them can be well ugly can't they yes if you saw mine you'd
go oh that's a really nice one that's a lovely one mine is a pretty little thing yeah um if i
took a photo of you no clothes on right and then on a you know one of the programs get a computer
if i made it go all small so you look like a normal quite a normal size yeah what did somebody
go that penis is out of proportion or they just think
it was a flashy tripod
because it's exactly
the same as my legs
look at that
it's a flashy tripod
with a head on it
that's big that
I think it's all
about the balls anyway
do you really
I do actually
but what sort of
condition they're in
it's very much like
framing a picture
if I took one of my
nice pictures from my flat
and I just framed it
in bacon or something
it wouldn't be as nice
some balls below it
wouldn't be as nice wouldn't be nice so balls frame flat and I just framed it in bacon or something it wouldn't be as nice and some balls below it it wouldn't be as nice
would it
it wouldn't be nice
so balls frame a penis
balls are the art gallery
of the penis
you can quote me on that
yeah
does your penis
does your penis start
half way down your balls
yeah
comes out of one of them
like
I'm not sure
that's your penis
like that Arnold Schwarzenegger
film with that woman
with a man going
out of her throat
this is accurate
yeah
yeah
yeah
I have a mate
I've still got him
mate I won't name him
oh wait
his name's David
that's fine
he's got
a perfectly cylindrical penis
oh there's no tapering
there's no tapering
at any end
it's just
a perfect
fleshy cylinder
it's horrible wow i hate it i hate it and i saw it you know you always have a little glance with
the annex system having a way well if he's got a pringles dick definitely well you do anyway don't
you and i had a little glance and normally if you'd see someone's dick and you wouldn't go i've
just seen your dick and this is what i think of it but with him i had no choice but to go your
dick's a perfect tube and he said you know it's a normal no choice but to go, your dick's a perfect tube. And he said,
no, it's just a normal dick.
I said, it isn't, mate.
It's a perfect tube.
And we went out to the pub
and his wife was there
and I said,
Dave's dick is like a perfect tube.
Yeah, it's all wrong.
And she went,
yeah, it is a bit cylindrical.
And he went,
what?
We've been married for 12 years
and you're telling me
that I've got a perfect cylinder dick.
Now, Greg,
this podcast we're in at the moment, this is our Edinburgh podcast. We're in Edinburgh right dick. Now, Greg, this podcast is a bit of a moment.
This is our Edinburgh podcast.
We're in Edinburgh right now.
Oh, right.
Am I in Edinburgh?
Yes, you are here in Edinburgh now.
Hey!
I've been there.
Sorry about that.
You're in Edinburgh, not a Jewish wedding.
It's a Scottish song.
I riffed it.
I riffed it.
It's not a traditional one.
I made it up.
Hey, speaking of riffing,
do you know what one of my favourite memories in comedy has been?
One of my very, very favourite moments.
Is that when you're in a hot air balloon in Melanie Henry?
I liked that one.
The other one that I really enjoyed is,
quite genuinely,
one of the moments that I think in the last few years
where I've felt the most calm and the most relaxed
and just quite happy
was me and you were backstage once
and you were tuning your guitar up.
Yeah.
And I got my harmonica out
and I played harmonica for a bit while you were
playing guitar and just jammed for a little bit and it was
just really lovely. That's nice. It is nice
when two lads just do stuff together backstage
sometimes. And you went, that was really
lovely. I went, yes, well it did sound really good.
I do remember this. Yeah, it was in Andover.
And then you had to go and do the gig.
We had a really nice moment together.
That's lovely. I don't think you and me have ever
had a nice moment backstage. We've had loads of nice moments backstage.
Not when there's something emotional happening like that.
We should explain really quickly.
Yeah, sorry, I support Greg on tour when he goes on tour and that.
We would have nice moments backstage,
but before every gig, if there's a sofa, you'll lie on the sofa.
Yeah.
You'll noisily try and go to sleep.
Or just go, oh, I'm in trouble here, mate.
I don't say I'm in trouble here mate I can't do this mate I'm full, I'm too full
because sometimes they'll leave a little rider out
and Greg will just eat all of it
and then just lie there and go
I can't go on, I can't go on
it's totally true
the self control
of a fucking cow
I know
you've got enough
material now
to not need a support act
really
do you have a support act
because
that's digesting time
I'm a vet
so I need someone
to go and
just fill some time
on the stage
20-30 minutes
Ed's like a second stomach
yeah
yeah absolutely
yeah so we would share
like sort of nice moments,
but you're...
I don't know how it's going to work
on tour this time
because...
Are you firing me?
That was the horrible but brilliant.
No, I don't know how it's going to work
because last time
you had a very defined role
and that was
to make me feel better
about my diet.
Because obviously
I'm a heart attack waiting to happen. And you always made me feel better about my diet. Because obviously I'm a heart attack waiting to happen.
And
you always made me feel better because
and I know that I'm about to say this
and you're going to deny it, but I'll say now
absolutely categorically, I swear on my life it's true
that nearly every night
Ed will eat a full family sized pizza at about
midnight. That's absolutely true.
No, not every night at all.
Honestly, the fun has gone.
Yeah.
The fun has gone completely.
Because you won't have it no more, will you?
That wasn't fun.
You're watching me
wheezing on a step
going,
oh, bedtime in a minute
of another song.
On two occasions,
I went to bed
because we had a skin
full of beer
and we'd had 18 full meals
during the day.
And as I was going to bed,
you would say,
oh, I'm just going
to the local pizza thing
for a full time.
And a kebab. And a kebab,. Well, no, and a kebab.
And a kebab a bit.
Yeah, and a kebab.
You fat get.
Is weight an issue to you?
Yeah, look, of course it is.
Look at me, I'm disgusting.
No, no, but is it an issue to you?
No, is it?
I've got a bit of a hang up about it.
I talk about it.
I keep going on about it all the time.
Yeah, because I'm...
I don't know.
I don't know what's...
I've just got no self-control right in life.
If I see something, I think that would be nice in my mouth.
I just put it in.
And if it is nice in my mouth
I just keep putting it in
all the time.
But what if it's like
just somebody walking
past you's breast?
I suppose I adhere
to social conventions
to some extent.
There has to be consent
if that thing is alive.
If a Malteser was going
no don't do that
you wouldn't put
the Malteser in your mouth.
No but I'm not.
I mean if we cover
every potential surreal situation
it's going to take ages.
So if I went past a policeman and he had a talking parrot instead of a dick
and I put that in my mouth, that would be awful.
Yeah, but we're only going off the premise that you set up in the first place,
which was that you have no self-control.
I don't.
And if you see something and want to put it in your mouth, then you will.
All right.
Let me call a faux-ice.
Right, thank you.
If I see something that is socially acceptable to put in one's mouth
and I pop it in and it is nice
then I keep popping it in
and I cannot
I literally cannot
stop myself
I can't stop smoking
I can't stop eating
bad stuff
I can't stop drinking
it's really bad
and I know this perhaps
isn't the funniest
no it's not
this is what we want really
yeah
this is the sort of thing
that could lead to it
being in a newspaper
but because you're a tall man
I get away with it no you don't it's not getting away with it oh is in a newspaper. But because you're a tall man...
I get away with it.
No, you don't.
It's not getting away with it, though, is it?
I do.
People go, oh, you're a lovely tall man, though.
It's fine.
No, but that's like saying that I don't get away with it, because I'm short.
That's right.
It's only...
But you do.
You both get away with it because you're both broad.
It's nothing to do with that.
It's to do with how you feel in your own skin.
It's nothing to do with...
No, I'm literally talking about...
Are you troubled by your weight?
Not in the slightest.
You're really happy to be
carrying a couple of pounds
the only thing that would
concern me about my weight
is from a health point of view
every now and again
that's the only reason
it concerns me
and only when I'm ill
and only when I'm ill as well
it's only if I actually feel ill
that's the only time
it'll actually bother me
I'll go oh I should lose
some weight because
it might be that
or I'm getting chest pains
for 10 hours again
I've been hospitalised
and that's our surgery
I've tried everything I've been doing yoga you've been doing yoga yeah I've been hospitalised and that's our surgery. I've tried
everything.
I've been
doing yoga.
You've been
doing yoga?
Yeah, I've
been doing yoga.
When did you
do yoga?
I bought a
DVD.
I talked about
this on a
telly thing
the other day
but I'm
going to tell
you again
anyway because
I think it's
worthy of
telling.
When does
the telly
thing go out?
It's been
out.
I bought a
yoga video
because I
thought everyone
says that's
quite a nice
way of getting
fitter.
I bought this DVD by this woman and I really went at it
properly applied myself to it for two weeks and I was thinking this woman's like this amazing guru
spent her whole life studying yoga and then my mate came in when it was on um the day went that
woman's from Emmerdale I've been doing an Emmerdale an Emmerdale yoga lady from Emmerdale
yeah
I actually physically
can't do it
what do you mean
I'm the wrong proportions
my legs are too short
so I can't get into
certain positions
no
it doesn't matter
how short your legs are
you can do it
I can't do it
I've said that now
and I'm not doing it
you are in proportion
I'm not
my legs are far too short
no they're not
yeah they are
your legs can't be too short
for anything yes they can sometimes you can do anything are your legs can't be too short for anything
yes they can
sometimes
you can do anything
with your legs
now you're going to look stupid
because sometimes
when I'm walking
I look down
and I realise
I've not even been
touching the ground
for half an hour
and I'm just still
stood in the same place
just trapping my legs
like why lick it out
what's been moving you along
have you
no don't move
I just stand dead still
my legs are going like that
we'll be going somewhere.
I'll go, let's go down to the shops.
And then I'll get to the shops.
I'll be paying up.
And I'll turn around and say something to him.
And he's not there.
I get back.
He's just in midair, just flapping his legs about.
Because he's short to reach the ground.
I've learnt something here.
Do you know what I've often thought would be really good?
Is if you could just boop on your penis and testicles.
And they were suddenly absolutely giant.
And you could sit on your own penis and testicles
like a horse
elephantitis
yeah
like them lads
but then you could
manipulate your balls
so that you gallop along
and you could have
like a range
around your dick
and just ride it
yeah but you'd have
that for a week
like a big sort of worm
like a big dick horse
put that down
dick horse
that's a good idea
can we have that
yeah you can put that
in there
it can be a sketch
dick horse
now one idea
which I've always
suggested to you in the past,
which I think we could do,
is you as James Bond,
which you were never that positive about,
and I suggested that to you.
Yeah, but it was an interesting spin on me.
It wasn't me as James Bond because I'm really handsome.
It was...
You're a good-looking lad, though.
We thought...
Thanks, mate.
I think it was £5 million per year to do...
To be James Bond.
To play the new James Bond.
Yeah, this was like a scenario if someone did this.
He was sort of reinventing himself as Cubby Broccoli
and it was a very exciting time for me initially
and then he started adding caveats which ruined it.
He wasn't sure if he'd do this.
He told me if he'd do this for £5 million.
You have to be completely naked for the whole film.
Have cross your eyes for the whole film. Have cross-eyed,
cross your eyes for the whole thing.
And this is a reinvention of James Bond.
And have your dick sellotaped to your stomach.
Yeah.
And that is the new James Bond.
What was the expression
for how cross-eyed I have to be?
Oh, to the point of disability.
I will genuinely never tire of watching it.
Yeah, exactly. It'd be brilliant. It would be funny. And I have to have my penis out all the time. What do you do? I would genuinely never tire of watching it yeah exactly
it'd be brilliant
it would be funny
and I have to have
my penis out all the time
and it has to be
salotaped to my stomach
yeah
I wouldn't do it though
would you do nudity
would you do nudity
yeah yeah of course
yeah yeah
of course
well that's it
that's part of the role
isn't it
but
yeah exactly
but I would forever
be known as the person
who ruined James Bond
by taping my dick
to my
not really
cross-eyed
walking into a room and falling over
I think a lot of people would have a lot of respect for you
because you'd ruin it so much that it would
come all the way back round again. Yeah, and also
you're wrong, you wouldn't be forever now, is it?
Because then eventually Mike Myers or Rowan Atkinson
would do a sort of a joke version of it
where they are just normal. Yeah.
They're just the normal James Bond. That would be the parody.
They're just James Bond.
Every time you kill someone you have to do a little wee
and it just goes all over
your stomach and cascades down.
This is a new thing, isn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
But you've got to have
loads of vitamin B before it.
So there'd be orange wee
cascaded down
onto the sellotape
that's holding my dick
to my stomach.
Yeah, all running off
the sellotape.
And I would be cross-eyed
bashing into pillars.
Do I ever get the girl?
Do I ever kill villains?
You don't like girls, do you?
Oh, what am I?
I'm gay?
No.
I'm gay strappy dick.
No, no, no.
I'm a gay boy.
No, you're just a bit odd.
You're a bit asexual.
So I don't like...
I'm asexual.
Asexual.
Yeah.
I'm the first asexual James Bond
to cross-eyed in his dick
so I take his shoes.
You're asexual.
And that's the waste of it as well
because the dick is so...
You've got a pet mouse.
Well, I'm not being James.
You've got a pet mouse.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
I thought you said a pet man. You've got a little pet mouse. Yeah. And you've got a pet man. You've got a pet mouse. Well, I'm not being James. You've got a pet mouse. Oh, right. I thought you said a pet man.
You've got a little pet mouse. Yeah, and you've got a pet man.
You've got a little pet mouse.
What do I use the pet man for?
No, to just stroke it at night when you're watching telly.
You stroke it.
Is that one of the scenes?
Yeah.
In James Bond.
He's got a pet mouse.
Oh, look.
That's the opening.
Look, it's the cubes on.
Let me give you a little stroke of your little head.
We watched the cube together.
You know know at the
beginning of James
Bond now he walks
across the screen
and shoots the gun.
Yeah.
Now it's like down
that lens still but
it's you watching
telly stroking a
little pet man's
head and then you
do one of your
orange pisses.
No no the orange
piss comes down
like the blood
duct.
Oh yes orange
piss rose down
that way.
Oh it's really
good I'll definitely
do it I don't even
want any money.
That was great.
Peacock and Gamble Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Right, so Edinburgh.
Right.
The Edinburgh Fringe.
Yes, festival.
The world's biggest art festival.
Yeah.
Oh, we all enjoy going there, don't we?
I have strange feelings about it.
I think it's really wonderful.
I think it's a really wonderful, exciting...
Some of my most vivid and wonderful memories
were created during the Edinburgh Festival,
and it's great,
but I'm quite a stress head so I find it really stressful yeah I think I think I've only ever enjoyed Edinburgh in retrospect so yeah what's the stress so what would the stress actually be
well I suppose we all love what we're doing don't we and we want to be able to carry on doing it
and keep developing what we're doing and going to whatever you perceive to be the next level I
suppose yeah and so you can't help or some people to whatever you perceive to be the next level, I suppose.
And so you can't help, or some people can.
Some people go to the Edinburgh Festival just because they love performing at the Edinburgh Festival.
That's amazing.
But I've never once been there
and I haven't thought this might lead me
to be able to do a thing that I want to do.
And that's a shame, really,
because that's you sort of sabotaging your own time in Edinburgh, in a way.
Sometimes that stress about something that you can't necessarily control.
Yeah.
You can have everything that's within your control.
You can have a really good show and do it to the best of your ability,
but then there's a certain portion that's just luck.
But you are, to some extent, one of many variables.
That's the truth of it.
And when I went there in 2010 and did my only solo show that I've done there,
on the second night, my door staff decided it would be a good idea
as well as the three broadsheet reviewers
to come in, that it would be a good idea
to let a ten person stag do it.
And the stag was dressed as a bear.
Fully dressed as a bear.
And sat on the front row.
So it doesn't matter how convinced you are
your show's good.
If you're performing to ten drunk men
one of whom is dressed as a bear
and then behind them
there's people
writing notes
about how good
your show is
yeah
you know
it's
that's
and how did the
reviews come out
well
you couldn't see it
for a bear
I had to put fires
out for the whole
fucking gig basically
and deal with a
fucking pissed bear
and his mates
so it was a pyro bear
yeah
so I spent the whole time managing the situation basically and sweating and
then I came off and had a breakdown and started swearing at everybody and then my PR
got a hold of the reviewers and went come on you know let's be fair here he
did have to deal with ten drunken pricks and they went oh look we'll take that into account
don't worry three stars all three stars really wow
one of my best
other reviews
one of my best other
reviews was a night
that went
I think you were
actually in the game
the night it happened
yeah I think I was
when I chucked
the woman's handbag
out of the review
yeah with the mooing
yes
a lady came to
my solo show
years ago
she had one of those
cow moo things
oh yeah
and she was loving it
she was loving doing it and she genuinely thought that it was moo things. Oh yeah. And she was loving it. She was loving doing it
and she genuinely thought that it was helping.
She'd go,
all the way through it.
And eventually I took it off her
and then she grabbed it.
I had a lightsaber at the time.
She grabbed that as well.
And then I grabbed her handbag.
It was like a real weird standoff.
And then I thought,
do you know what?
I've got another lightsaber.
I can sacrifice that one.
That's good.
It was in the hut,
in the peasant's hut.
And I flung her handbag
as far as I could throw it out of the hut.
And then it went on and on.
It was like,
the others were really with me
and then there was one bloke
and I went,
this is all right.
And he went,
yeah,
you're on your own,
aren't you?
And I went,
yeah,
you're reviewing,
aren't you?
Yeah.
And I had a chat with him on stage.
I went,
just tell me the review so far.
So tell me what it is so far
and what do I need to do?
What do I need to do what do I need
to do now
to help
to help this
situation
and he wrote
he didn't write
a review
he wrote a
really nice
article about it
very very
complimentary
about me
and that
and said he
felt he
couldn't review
it
because he
hadn't seen
my show
oh well that's
nicely balanced
yeah it is
and that's when
that's you know
that's when you
would say that
probably your
audience went
away going
oh I've just
seen something
unique
it's very typical
of the Edinburgh Festival
you come and see
a live experience
it's amazing
I absolutely loved it
but I bet you
were having an art attack
on stage
not an art attack
were you not
no pissed off really
yeah furious
in fairness
because normally
I'm alright with
messing about with audiences
and stuff
and that comes from
a lot of comparing
so you're used to
that sort of playing about
but then you go
hang on if I break this down,
me doing this show,
like just this one tonight,
I mean, you're hemorrhaging money as it's happening.
And you're like, I've written a show
and I want to do that show, really.
And I think I did do the show.
In 20 minutes, you did the whole show in 20 minutes.
Super fast.
Because I think at some point during that,
a man got up to go to the toilet as well.
So as he went, Ray went,
that's fine, you can go to the toilet.
And as he walked out, Ray went after him out the door
and went, and stay out like that.
And slammed the door.
And we only found out afterwards
that when he shouted that,
the security and the pleasants had thought it was genuine
and jumped on the man and tackled him to the floor.
And then he was going to go to the toilet
and they wouldn't let him back in.
Was that allowed
back in the toilet?
But I remember seeing you
in Ray Peacock and Son
when I was doing
that little part
at the end in 2005
and there were some people
genuinely causing trouble
who then shouted something
and this bloke left.
He was wearing
this big straw hat.
He left and there was
about a two second beep
and Ray ran out after him.
We were just sat there looking at an empty stage for about a minute and then Ray just, the
door slammed open and Ray came in with like this tattered straw hat on, just holding it
like really high up on his head.
Did I tell you about that Lee Francis incident?
No.
You know Lee Francis, obviously.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Or, or, or. Yeah, yeah. Or Keith Lemon.
When we were doing one of our clang shows,
I think 2007,
and his main character was Avid Merriam at the time
with the neck brace on.
We were halfway through the show,
full tilt going for it,
and I was suddenly aware that someone was walking out
really noisily
because he had to move all the people in the venue.
And it got to the stage where I had to reference it because everybody was going to lose this bloke who's shuffling past us
taking ages and it was him it was it was lee francis or as i thought his real name was at the
time avid merriam and i went is that is that avid merriam and they're all right it is it is it's like
a witch hunter it is him it is him so i thought he was walking out of our show really rudely.
So I got everyone to chant the rudest swear word of them all.
Shouting, Avid Merian is that bad word.
It is a swear word.
And everyone joined in and was clapping like this.
Not using his real name, the poor man.
And saying he was a cunt for walking out of our show
then we carried on
the show
and five minutes later
he came back in
because he'd just
been to the toilet
it was awful
and I've subsequently
met Lee
and he's such a
lovely man
and he said to me
I remember that time
you weren't going
for a drink
call me a cunt
I felt terrible
it'd just been
for a week
and that was the Peacock and Gamble
Edinburgh podcast for today
what a brilliant time
we've all had
Greg Davies will be back
for the second part
of that interview tomorrow
don't forget
he does go absolutely insane
yeah
it's genuinely worth listening to
in fact if you've not even
listened to this one
yeah
and you're just hearing
this bit by accident
don't even bother
listening to this one
listen to it tomorrow
because he goes
absolutely insane
absolutely power crazed
but you'll find out
more about that
later on
yeah so in Edinburgh
if you're in Edinburgh
or you're coming up
to Edinburgh
our show is
Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to
be on telly anyway
9.40 Pleasant Stone
Dome
no Pleasant Stone
not an extra stone
Pleasant Stone
we'll all enjoy that
Pleasant Stone
so 9.40
that was Peacock and Gamble
Edinburgh podcast
it was a ready production
hosted by
chortle.co.uk
our show is
what we've just told you
we are Peacock and Gamble
thank you very much indeed
all music was by
Thomas Fenderay
and we shall see you again
tomorrow
see you tomorrow
goodnight