The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 11 (Nish Kumar)
Episode Date: November 22, 2020"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 11 (Nish Kumar)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 96 of 128....
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Here they are!
Hello and welcome to the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast
The official Chortle podcast
On the website chortle.co.uk
So we work for Chortle
And we'd like to make a statement today
Which is, we think that we've not given things enough stars.
We think we have basically made a mistake here on Chortle.
So we're speaking on behalf of Chortle.
Here on Chortle, and this is the official Chortle...
Mate, if you keep saying that, then people are going to say
they only got four stars because they work for Chortle.
No, we only got four stars because Steve Bennett has had a mental breakdown.
No, mate, it's going to sound like if we say we're associated
with Chortle that that's why we got it, that it's
biased. Right. Steve Bennett came...
I'm Ray Peacock, by the way. Hello. Hello, I'm
Ed Gamble. Welcome to the Edinburgh Podcast. If you're a new
listener, go back to the first one. Yeah.
Steve Bennett, right, came to our show and
watched a show which, quite frankly, was the greatest
comedy event that there has ever been.
That is true.
I'm normally the one who says, no, come on.
But that is true.
Right.
And by the way, Steve Bennett, we've got it on video.
We've got it on video.
So we might release that as a DVD.
And then people can make their own minds up
about whether it was a stupid four-star review
or an actual five-star review, which it should have been.
And don't think, by the way, Steve Bennett, if you're-star review, which it should have been. And don't
think, by the way, Steve Bennett, if you're listening to this, which you're probably not
because you don't care about us, right? Don't think that I've not spotted that you called
me Elmo in that review. And you know fine well that I don't like Elmo. I think Elmo's
a stupid idiot and you have affiliated myself with Elmo.
I think you're being a very, very, listen, very ungrateful boy.
And we're not even reading our reviews, but we can't avoid that one.
And you know we can't avoid it because we've got to look at your stupid site every day
because we've got to send a podcast to it.
We're driving people to your site and getting you all a business
and you didn't even give us a five-star review.
And in the middle of the review, you said, oh, quite a lot of work has gone into it.
Mate, you're being very ungrateful.
Quite, quite a lot of work.
Four stars is very good from Steve Bennett.
I've given myself Emmy.
You've not given yourself Emmy.
Doing this show.
I am so tired.
You're not.
I am so tired every day.
Right.
From doing this show and pouring my heart into it.
And then he comes along.
Right.
Ladies and gentlemen.
With his poison pen.
We're on episode 11 of 26.
Not even halfway through.
Working really. Ray is about to have a full breakdown.
Working really hard on this,
and I've even had to get an helper in.
Laura Barron has been doing loads of editing for me
because I am so ill.
I'm so ill with my ME.
Steve, I'd like to thank you for our review,
and any reviewers who come and give us a nice review
say the show's good and give us a good star rating.
Right.
Just chill out, mate, all right? Yeah, give us a star rating worthy of the show's good and give us a good star rating. Right. Just chill out, mate, alright?
Yeah, give us a star rating worthy of the show.
Not four stars like all the other acts.
That's not true.
All the other acts aren't getting four.
Everyone gets four stars.
It's the new three stars, mate.
It's not.
It's rubbish.
It's not rubbish.
I'm going home.
I'm going home, mate.
Fine, you go home.
What are you going to do?
You better not do our show on your own.
I mean it, not on your own.
I can do it by myself.
I'll just do all my straight man bits.
You just say, stop it, stop misbehaving, stop misbehaving for an hour.
Yeah, stop it, stop running around.
Right.
Alright, alright.
It'll be interesting.
It'll probably get five because it is post-modern.
Fine.
Well, alright.
I will be gracious then.
Oh, thanks a lot, Steve.
Rubbish acting.
For your four-star review of our five-star show.
It's that awful acting that meant we lost a star.
Because of my acting?
Yes.
Like that.
It's hammy.
That's real crying.
It's not real crying.
It's poor acting.
It is.
Look at me tears.
Three stars now.
Oh God.
Steve,
I'd like you to go
on your website
and remove
two of our stars
from that four star review
as a punishment
for raping
an ungrateful boy.
Right,
and do you know what
if you say that
he'll go and do it
he'll do it just for a day
as a
don't do that
even as a joke
no we would be
genuinely upset about that
yeah genuinely upset
but I mean
but I am gonna
I've decided
what
that this is gonna be the year
what
this is the year
when I punch Steve Bennett
in the face
no mate no
this is gonna be the year now
we've had that four star review
should have been a five
even our publicist said it should have been a five should have been a five. Even our publicist said it,
should have been a five,
should have been a five.
Yeah.
Our stage manager said it,
everyone said it,
everyone in that room.
Our publicist said our show
should have been a five.
She did.
A woman who definitely
isn't paid to be a yes person.
Right, listen,
and then,
oh, by the way, Steve,
after you'd gone,
we had a vote with our audience
because you missed
the big finale sketch
at the end
because you went home to review something else.
And we have a little hidden bit right at the end of our show.
And that's the bit where we all come out and we do the best sketches ever been.
We do that.
And then we say to the audience, hey, let's have a vote.
Who thinks that was five stars?
And that was the first night that everybody has put their hands up for five stars.
Yeah, definitely.
Ed's bored with his podcast now.
He's only got a little yawn in the corner.
I'm sorry.
It's very warm in here. It's just making me a little bit warm.
Right. But, mate, what I'm saying is we've got to be grateful for what we've got, it's
a good review, it's a nice review, so let's just move on with the fringe. Called me Elmo
innit? Yeah, you are a bit like Elmo. I'm not like Elmo, isn't it? Shut up, Elmo. Shut
up, Elmo. So, our show, our four star show is on at the Pleasance Dome at 9.40 every night. It's called Peacock and Gamble, don't even want to be on telly show, is on at the Pleasance Dome at 9.40 every night.
It's called Peacock and Gamble.
Don't even want to be on telly.
It's on at the Pleasance Dome.
Dome.
Dome.
And it's brilliant.
You know, it's four stars.
Raised like Elmo.
We've got five stars as well.
I saw them on our poster.
Yeah, we've got five stars from someone else, but from Steve Bennett.
Four stars.
Raised like Elmo.
If you're a fan of Elmo, you'll be a fan of our show.
Come along.
Bring a Tickle Me Elmo.
Don't bring a Tickle Me Elmo. Don't bring a Tickle Me Elmo
when you're in Edinburgh.
Wear an Elmo t-shirt.
If you see Ray around Edinburgh,
exclusively refer to him as Elmo.
Run up, tickle him, go,
Hello Elmo, how are you?
Hello Elmo, hello Elmo.
Especially if it's really late at night
and he looks really tired.
Run up to him and go,
Hello Elmo, give him a big tickle.
Yeah, do that.
And then you will experience
one of the special
Steve Bennett punches
in the face as well.
And a kick in the shin.
And a lovely review
from Steve Bennett.
We thought,
have we got any quotes in that?
Stupid old Steve Bennett
accidentally left a quote
in there for us.
Make sure you bring
someone special to this show.
Yeah, that's a weird thing
to send to our show, Steve.
The full quote was obviously,
make sure you bring
someone special to this show, your inner child. But if you cut the full quote was obviously make sure you bring someone special to this show
your inner child
but if you cut the
inner child
make sure you bring
someone special to the
show
four stars
yeah thanks a lot
for that Steve
thank you Steve
you've made that
worthwhile we're
going to make you
look a right fool
now on our posters
so guest today
special guest today
who is it today
well who is Nish Kumar
oh it's Nish isn't it
of course it's Nish
yeah yeah
Nish Kumar
one of our friends
one of our dearest comedian friends yeah Yeah. Good guy, brilliant comic. All round good
guy. All round sort of whipping boy, lovely little chap. He's having a very good year
as well. Yeah, he is. He's excellent. Doing very well. Really good chap. Although, do
you know what? I think we will chat later on with Nish about Chalk and their reviewing
policy. Yeah, we do. Have a little chat with him about that. Steve, I don't want you to
feel that this is all against you today, mate,
but it kind of is.
It kind of is today
and it's on your site as well.
It's weird, isn't it?
Yeah, and we just interviewed
Nick Muhammad for a future interview
and you come in
for a little bit of bashing.
He was having a pop at you as well.
No, he wasn't actually.
He wasn't.
That's the downside, isn't it, Steve?
Of course, if you live by the sword,
you die by the sword.
If you're going to let us run loose
on your site,
then you're going to have to expect us
to start reviewing you. I'm going to review Steve Bennett. All right, go on then. Ah, I saw Steve Bennett die by the sword. If you're going to let us run loose on your site, then you're going to have to expect us to start reviewing you.
I'm going to review Steve Bennett.
All right, go on then.
I saw Steve Bennett walking down the street the other day.
He looked like he had calipers on.
One star.
Oh dear.
I'm going to review Steve Bennett's clothes.
Right.
They are rubbish.
One star.
He can't.
You know, it's just a simple thing.
He can go on that website and take our review down.
He runs the website.
He's in charge of it.
No, but then the podcast will tell everyone that...
No, mate.
He can take the podcast down.
Why?
He could go back and edit this.
He could bleep out all these references if he wanted.
What, even if I call him a...
Yeah.
What, he could have bleeped that then?
He could have done.
I think he might do.
Steve Bennett could have just gone and interfered with our...
Right, so now he's interfering with us creatively as well.
Yeah.
What about if I tell people at the time...
What?
Well, I'm not sure that's public knowledge.
Right.
You know.
Yeah, but I've just told everyone.
Comics know about it, but I'm not sure...
Right.
Well, look.
Thank you, Steve.
That was a nice review.
Thank you, Steve, yeah.
And we should make it clear as well
that even though we have a bit of a laugh and a joke with Steve in that,
we don't get any favours
no it's completely our choice
completely our choice
that's the catchphrase
of the podcast
isn't it
so we do have a thing
where we do
whenever Steve's in
reviewing us
we do have this horrible thing
because we come out
of the show afterwards
going like luckily
that show the other night
it was a really nice show
and we were relatively confident
that it would get a good review
but if we did a stinker show and Bennett was there, we would know he'd have to say
it was rubbish. Yeah. Yeah, of course. So we kind of, we just have to agree with that.
I mean, for all reviewers as well, we know quite a few reviewers and you know, there's
not much you can do about it. And then unfortunately, you know, that's why you can never be best
friends. Yeah. That's why we can never be best friends. Sorry, Steve. Sure, Steve. We'll
do what we did the other night, of course.
We'll take you out for a big slap-up meal after the show.
We'll give you all that money again,
which apparently is the normal thing to do for a review.
And a big gold chain with Blenit on it.
Of course, we gave you that big gold chain
that you said that we had to give you,
but I'm sure that that's not influenced your review in any way.
That's just the way that networking works, isn't it?
Yeah, and then we all got really drunk, didn't we?
And then you ended up in the toilet.
Yeah, yeah.
I hope he doesn't bleep that bit out.
I mean, it makes him seem more rock and roll.
That was just a bit of Edinburgh fun, wasn't it?
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
Yeah, it was.
Anyway, come on.
Let's have a bit more Edinburgh fun now.
Never mind all these review things.
You can get bogged down with it, can't you?
Yeah.
And we're not even reading our fucking reviews.
Right, here's a lovely interview with Nish Kumar.
Pea-cooking gamble, pea-cooking gamble. So we're here with Nish Kumar. Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
So we're here with Nish Kumar.
Hello, Nish.
Hello.
I will flag up now, during today's interview,
there will be lots of replacing the most important word in a sentence with Nish.
Yeah.
Nish.
Because Nish has a habit of doing that, don't you, Nish?
Nish, yeah.
So this is the sort of thing that Nish does.
Everyone else at the Fringe, they'll get flyers, they'll get posters, they'll get PR. What Nish does is he stands near people and replaces words with Nish does. This is, everyone else at the Fringe, they'll get flyers, they'll get posters, they'll get, you know, PR.
What Nish does
is he stands near people
and replaces words with Nish.
Yeah, just stand there
and go, Nish is it.
Yeah, Nish is it.
And then someone will go,
do you want to see a show tonight?
I think we should go
and see a show tonight.
And their wife will go,
Nish.
And they'll go, what?
And they'll go,
Nish for some reason.
And they'll go and see you,
won't they?
And that's how it Nish.
That's exactly the sort of thing.
And you'll find it gets very wearing.
And very great in the news.
Or it gets very wearing over 50 minutes.
Or it gets wearing over 50 minutes.
Over approximately 50 minutes it gets wearing.
Imagine how it feels being friends with him for seven years.
And then they should have history together.
Yeah, we've got history.
We're bringing out a lot of history on the podcast, aren't we?
Either me or you have got a beef with someone.
That's really a beef, is it?
Well, not with Nish, because it's Hindu, of course.
And now, I think, what are we at?
Two minutes?
You've got to bear in mind,
Nish, it's a long time since we've had a lot to bully.
It feels
bad that we've got you here under the pretense of
helping you promote your show.
I'm a surrogate for you, aren't I?
You are.
You've locked the doors.
That did explain why you drew glasses on me as I was coming in and asked me to look more failed.
Also, our management suggested it would be a good idea to have one on because we insulted them the other day.
Nish is very... I'll just explain the relationship, certainly, that I have with Nish and Ray has with Nish as well.
All best Nishes.
There you go again.
He deserves it, see?
Tiring already.
Now, in a lot of friendship groups, there'll often be one like Nish.
A man of Ind.
A man of Ind.
It basically is a very modern thing to have a friend from an ethnic minority who it's fine to bully.
Many consider it that all white people are inherently racist,
and it's just nice to have a little bit of a valve where it's all friendly.
Where it's your friend and they can't really do anything about it.
And sure, when they go home, they say to their family that it's getting a bit much now with them too, you know.
And I know that they're joking, but it is a bit funny.
It's just when they open the door to bring me in
it's all the time
you know
I might say something
I might say something
so this is your opportunity
bringing it out all here
if you feel the need
to our private
pretend jokes
that we all do
together
between us
have a good fun
if they're getting too much
this is your opportunity
now to lay it on the line
yeah
in your kitchen
with all the doors locked
when it's just me
and you two in our kitchen where we keep our knives when it's just me and you two
in our kitchen
where we keep our knives
by all means
yeah
I'm so close to the oven
as we have this conversation
but you're also
the thing is
it's not just us three
is it
it's all the thousands
of listeners as well
so if
they'll hear it happen
yeah
there's a lot of ways
to remonstrate with them
as well for all the racism
they've done to me
I really
it's been a long time
have you
no
in a genuine thing,
question what you have.
Question, yes.
It's all gone a bit Parkinson.
No, genuinely though,
do you get, do you experience racism
nowadays in your life?
Yeah.
Do you really?
Yeah, yeah.
In what respects?
It's people just yelling it,
yelling stuff at you.
I don't know.
Yeah, they do.
Every year in Edinburgh.
Stop walking in the middle of the road
is not racist.
Can you wear pants?
It's not.
It's against the culture, mate.
It's against the culture
to wear pants in the street.
Generally, what happens?
They just shout stuff.
Whenever I've been with you,
I'm actually not doubting it.
But whenever I've been,
I've never had it
when I've been with you.
Because it is you.
People will pass and go,
yeah, covered.
Covered that.
There's no point you shouting it if you just stood next to me.
You work much better from behind a bush.
Yeah, that's right.
Your little bush races.
Thank you.
What happens?
What do you get?
I don't even say the words.
They just tend to yell.
The P word comes up a lot.
Really?
Yeah.
I'm living in Croydon at the moment, which is an incredibly diverse area.
That's a long way to come from.
Yeah, it is.
A long way to come from.
It's a big community.
You should get a flat in Edinburgh.
I should have done.
Can you have this conversation with my management?
Because they said,
we think it's more cost effective for you to hitchhike.
Well, it probably is.
Probably right, yeah.
So go on, you're going to Croydon at the moment.
So it's very diverse
you wouldn't expect
I grew up there
so I never really
experienced it that much
in Croydon
it tended to be
when I went out
when we were at university
that was where it happened
quite a lot
I was at university
with Nick
that's Henderson
Durham
College of Further Education
Durham Prison of Education
that's a lovely place
but for some
I don't know what's going on
in Croydon
but there's been
a bit of an upswing
in the old
Captain Johnny racism.
Because I was,
two things happened
in quick succession.
One of them,
which I'll talk about
in the show,
but the other one
was I was on a bus
and I could hear
downstairs this woman
just,
and I'm sorry
towards the listeners
for the offensive language
that I'm about to use,
but she was going,
fucking packies,
fucking packies, give us a wave, fucking packies. Oh, no. Fucking packies.
Give us a wave.
Fucking packies.
Give us a wave.
And obviously,
the three guys were just,
they all sounded really safe.
They just go,
can you just,
can you deceive us here?
No, mate.
Give us a wave,
you fucking packies.
Oh, cool.
And when they,
when they went,
eventually,
one of them finally snapped.
I want to say snapped
in the most English way possible.
He went,
can you please be quiet, my dumber? And she just went, oh, come on. I want to say snapped in the most English way possible. He went, can you please be quiet, madam?
And she just went, oh, come on!
I've just got out of prison!
So she's been...
This poor woman has been incarcerated
for all those years,
and all she wanted...
All she wanted was a wave from a brown man.
A wave from a brown man.
And all she did was...
She's been in prison for years.
She doesn't know about the language that you can use.
She might have been in business in 1960 for all you know.
She doesn't know it's changed.
There's always another way of looking at it, isn't there?
It's like Rashomon.
It is, yeah, very much.
We're in Croydon, you say about it, it's a very diverse area.
Part of that diversity is cunts.
Yeah.
So it's not everyone, it's not just a melting pot of racists.
It's also like,
well, it's all sorts of people as well.
Yeah.
So the dicks are there too, aren't they?
Browns, cunts, the Chinese.
Oh my God.
Do you know what?
If you'd have asked me before Edinburgh,
which would be the most offensive party?
I definitely wouldn't have said Nish.
They don't call me Jim Jefferies
because my name's Pitch.
Brilliant.
These are all good quotes.
Brilliant quotes. So this all good quotes. Brilliant quotes.
So, this is your first year ever as a solo performer, correct?
Correct.
Last year you were in The Gentleman of Leisure.
Yeah, last two years.
Last two years, I apologise.
You'll be very much admired.
Yeah.
Myself and Ed Gamble.
Best show last year that we saw.
Best show that I saw, definitely.
Do you want to tell them how many shows you saw?
Well, two.
But how many times have you seen The Gentleman of Leisure?
The Gentleman of Leisure, did I see it once or twice?
I think I went twice.
Because the second time, I seem to remember,
for the whole of the last sketch,
you were trying to surreptitiously give me the middle finger.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Well, I've seen it all before.
I saw it about four or five times.
Ed managed to go without giving me the finger
through all four of them
no you just didn't
no you didn't
yeah
okay
you're actually
you and Tom Neenan
the erstwhile
Tom Neenan
the erstwhile
the man who like
even though he's not in Edinburgh
I've spoken to him
every day since I've been over here
oh that's nice
do you miss him?
yeah
I miss him you know
I really do
and the worst thing is
that every
I have two conversations
with people in Edinburgh.
Right.
And neither of them relates to me.
Firstly, they go, oh, Miss Tom.
I really wish Tom was here.
Like, when you're part of a double act and everyone goes, oh, I've missed the other one.
Tom was the one.
And the other one is, doesn't Ed look good?
Yeah.
Those are the two conversations that people want to have.
I get that a lot when it's just the event.
And it feels horrible
during the show.
You know what I think
people think?
Because some people
have gone to you,
hey, doesn't Ed look nice?
I think what they expect
is because we're friends
that you'll go,
yeah, you know what?
He does, well done, Ed.
But instead you go,
you're basically
calling me fat.
It's true.
That's how I feel.
Or as you did
to Simon Streeting, the man who is in charge of quite a lot of the puzzles
you knocked his glasses off his face and then because you knew you didn't realize you don't
you slapped him so his glasses flew off as soon as you saw his glasses fly off and towards the
ground what did you do rather than apologizing you rolled yourself up into a feet of crotch
as if you were going to hide or the glasses were going to explode.
I saw the glasses in the air and I thought, oh, when they were smashed.
And then I just hid myself. I made myself as small as a cabbage.
And then no harm can come to me.
So that's...
He's had the blessings.
Oh.
He's had the blessings for years and years. It was amazing. I slapped him really hard around the face.
His glasses blew off. And you just saw loads of pleasant stuff going, oh my. And since then we've been in for years and years. It was amazing. I slapped him really hard around the face. His glasses blew off. And you just saw loads of Pleasant staff going,
oh, my.
And since then, we've been sold out.
Genuinely, they're terrified of me.
And rightly so as well.
Let's move the kick of the dog next.
The Pleasant's dog.
We'll cut that out.
We certainly won't.
Oh, we will not.
I think you'll find that is your interview.
The dog?
I am aware that people don't mean any harm.
But first off, it's boring.
I don't know.
I'm not inside your body because I wouldn't fit.
But I imagine it's boring for you to be a constant thing.
And every time we put up a new thing about the podcast on Facebook,
it's only on Facebook.
On Facebook, it's just a constant stream of it.
When did I get fit?
And it's also insulting because it's like ages ago.
And it's not like anyone's going, you look nice.
Some people do.
My mum said you look very nice.
Mainly, it's have you been ill?
Which I don't understand is a question. If they go, all, it's, have you been ill? Which I don't understand is a question.
If they go, all right, mate, have you been ill?
I say, yeah, I've had a really bad bout of AIDS.
Then that's just going to be awkward for everyone, isn't it?
Yeah, exactly.
They're done with us. Just leave it.
Exactly.
If somebody drops weight that quick,
then there's a very good chance that it is an illness.
It's not, by the way.
No, but I mean, they don't know that.
So it's a very good chance.
So don't go straight in with, have you got cancer?
Yeah. Anything like that. So it's a very good chance. So don't go straight in with... Have you got a cancer? Yeah.
Anything like that.
Yeah.
Because I'm now having to fly the flag for the larger fat channel.
Right?
So I've got work.
Before, we were both doing it together.
We were both a team of fat.
Yeah, yeah.
Doing it, flying the flag.
And now it's garbage as me.
So also, I will still maintain that it's also saying, oh, Ed, you look good now.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, no, I get that as well.
And you looked ace anyway. I know I did.
Always been a handsome lad. Yeah. Purely health things.
I think people also assume
that people lose weight because
they have self-esteem issues or they wanted to look
different, whereas that wasn't the case with me in the slightest.
Yes, the old boss of Ace Blood.
You can both agree
that I had no problems with self-esteem
at all.
If anybody obsesses now that you can't have a big cake.
Anyway, Nish, about your stupid show.
Pickle can gamble, pickle can gamble.
It's good that we're having discussions about race and stuff.
There's serious discussions.
It is good that we're having good discussions. It's good that we can get it all out in the open.
Yeah.
Because it features in your show.
I've not seen your show yet. It's very, very good. I saw it in preview all out in the open. Yeah. Because it features in your show. I've not seen your show yet.
It's very, very good.
I saw it in preview maybe three or four times.
Yeah.
I've seen it a few times.
It's very, very, very good.
Very interesting.
You're an excellent stand-up.
And also what I'm quite enjoying hearing about your show around the place is people are like,
there's no tricks.
There's no tricks for Kim.
Oh, there is no tricks.
There's no tricks.
There's no gimmicks. It's just
one man and a mic.
Is that why he's starting wearing
all black clothes? Yeah.
He fancies himself
as a heady brown mix
between Louis C.K. and Johnny Cash.
To speak
the truth. Why do you wear black, Nish?
Oh, it's to remind myself of the poor man.
It's because it's never a white day in the world of the poor man.
Next year's show title is sorted.
Nish Kumar presents Hedy Brown Mix.
Speaking of titles, you had lots of titles, didn't you?
Yeah.
Didn't happen.
I got a bit obsessed with making titles based, or puns based around my own name. Yeah, I know.
And it's just got some belters as well. And you picked the worst one. and I got a bit obsessed with making titles based or puns based around my own name. Yeah, no, and there's some belt
as well,
and you picked the worst one.
What you decided on
who is Nish Kumar.
Although,
since I've been here,
I kind of get it
because people are saying
like,
genuinely,
who is Nish Kumar?
I've known that a lot, yeah.
And it's all over the poster,
so people see the poster
and go,
who is Nish Kumar?
Actually,
who is Nish Kumar?
And it does start
a little discussion,
so it does work as a thing.
And they go to the poster
and go, who is Nish Kumar? Well, I don't care. discussion so it does work as a thing. And then he goes to the place and they go,
who is Nishikawa?
And I don't care.
Yeah, obviously.
Not hard.
I don't want them.
But if you think about it,
they're Nish racists.
I don't want those people.
They're racists.
They're Nish racists.
But if you think about it,
whatever title you picked,
the reaction's always
going to be,
I'm not bothered.
Yeah.
So at least he creates
that little discussion before.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Whereas just the problem
was that the general consensus,
because I put it on Twitter,
and I got all 12 of my followers involved in a discussion.
Nice, nice.
But the general consensus was that the best one was
Kumar, Kumar, Kumar, Kumar, Kumar, comedian.
Yeah.
But the problem with that is that it doesn't work when you say it like that.
You have to have to sing it.
Yeah.
And so I thought when you write that down on the poster,
I have this vision of people going Kumar, Kumar, Kumar, Kumar
and then in brackets
me going
sing it
the boy George.
And then them going
Kumar.
But you could have
dressed as boy George
on the poster.
Wouldn't it be nice?
That would have been
lovely.
I'd look lovely
with dreadlocks
with red and yellow
streaks.
You say that like
you've not got them now.
It's also
the other problem
you have as well
with a long title
is what we found out this year.
Because our show's called
Be Good and Go on the Day
and you want to be on telly anyway.
Yeah.
And I thought you'd bless us down.
I've seen it.
You have seen it, haven't you?
It's brilliant, mate.
Oh, bless you.
You're the best, you.
Well, it's when you,
if you have kuma, kuma, kuma,
kuma, kuma, kuma,
then it's loads of words.
Yeah.
And so many things
with the Edinburgh Fringe
are based on word counts.
Yeah.
And you're like,
yeah, right,
you've got 40 words.
It's like, right,
but I've already talked 12 hours on the title. And also And you're like, yeah, right, you've got 40 words. It's like, right, but I've already talked
12 hours on the title.
And also updating things
on Twitter and websites.
Really?
I'm just bored of time.
It's good to say.
Whenever I see a tweet
with you guys
trying to advertise
a show,
they're operating
at the limit
of those 140 characters.
And all of a sudden
you can't say
anything about it.
We'd use an acronym,
but we're already
accused of ripping off
Richard Harris.
Of course, yeah.
But if you're going to use an acronym, at least make it use an acronym, we could at least make one that made a word.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So if you ever do another show, right?
Yeah.
We'd do another show.
With prizes.
That's just one of the jokes of this year.
Then we'd need to make it make a word, like spam.
Yeah, spam.
What show we're doing?
Spam.
Speak up and pamble.
We tried this the other day. He's making up an're doing is spam. It's Peacock and Pamble. We tried this the
other day.
He's making up
an acronym on the
spot.
Silly Paki at
Maison.
Mate, are you
going to say Paki
on this podcast
every other day?
Is this every
other day?
Is this why I'm
here?
Am I here to
contextualise your
racism?
Did you call Joe Lysett a Paki? No, I thought they were queer. Yeah, okay. Is this every other day? Is this why I'm here? Am I here to contextualise your racism? So just if I...
Did you call Joe Lysett a packie?
No, I thought it was queer.
Ladies and gentlemen, it's nice to have Nishran here
for our official apology for the last podcast.
We have a healthy relationship where...
Sex.
Yeah, where...
Do you have sex?
Sometimes.
Where I'll, you know,
we'll have a bit of fun with your roots.
Yes.
Do you mind that?
No.
No, exactly.
I think that's an interesting point
about the modern world
where there's this entirely new thing sprung up
which is an acceptable form of racism
within a close group of friends, don't you?
Yeah.
But there's not a counter to that, though, is there?
So within the group of friends and that,
there's not a bit where Nish turns around and says,
well, you were, you know, do you know what I mean?
There's no equivalent of that the other way around.
Well, yeah, but when you're friends with people,
you make fun of them constantly about various different things.
And when you know somebody well enough
and there's a kind of trust element there,
race just becomes one of the things
that gets dropped into the sort of general
badinage between friends.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's only when...
But it's kind of a trump card, though, isn't it?
In banter?
I don't think so, because...
I always feel like I've won when I bring it up.
Yeah, I know.
That's why...
The reason you feel it's a trump card
is because you walk off celebrating.
You never get to actually get off.
I don't think it is a trump card
because I think it's just one
in a series of topics that we use to
emotionally hurt each other
over the course of our friendship.
Isn't it indescribable, though, of an underlying
genuine, like,
not intentional, but an underlying genuine
racism, do you think? No. I think there's
no point in not acknowledging
that I am an Indian. And I think if you're friends with somebody and you're comfortable
enough to talk about that subject in a serious way, then the likelihood is you're also comfortable
enough talking about it in a more jokey way and in a more relaxed fashion. And I think,
you know, I did, there were certain elements of my upbringing that were, you know, different
in some way. Yeah. And so there's no point in not
acknowledging that at all. I mean, you know, somebody like our friend Nick Mohamed, Nick
probably doesn't consider himself, because he sort of considers himself to be very much
British, and I've had conversations with him where he doesn't want to be kind of judged
in those terms, and that's just the way that he does it. Whereas I do talk about it quite
a lot. It's like in reviews, somebody once asked me if I was annoyed at being referred to
as a British Ocean stand-up
and it would be
pretty churlish of me
to do that
given that the opening
line of my show
is hello British Ocean.
If I'm comfortable enough
talking about it
joking about it
and making it a thing
then I have to be prepared
for my friends
and for people
who write about me
in my comedy.
So you're dead
and you're alright
with Whitey joining in? Yeah, I'm alright
with the crackers. I've got no
problem with honkies jumping on the van.
I love a bit of it.
But who's your favourite off the
Coon Marsh?
You know, I make fun of
all that, like, are you going to discuss me?
I was a huge fan. Don't discuss me.
It's like a massive deal in my house
like my parents
were like
there's Indians
on the television
and because
up to that point
Indians on TV
were all like
basically shop owners
who were the victims
of racism
in worthy dramas
like that was the extent
of Indians on television
and
this is going to sound
really weird
but honestly
if my parents
were watching television
and we weren't all
in the same room and there was an Indian on TV they'd'd go, oh my God, there's an Indian on TV.
Really?
Bloody hell, when George Aligarh presented the news, we dropped everything.
It was a real novelty in the sort of, I think it's difficult to remember, but even in the sort of early 90s, it was a real novelty to see Asians on television.
So then when you had a group of Indians who had written a sketch show that was mocking the kind of culture clash,
I think now, when you talk to people now,
people look at it and go,
oh, it's a bit dated,
and possibly it is,
but at the time, it was quite cutting edge.
And it genuinely felt like something new and different.
And it was really exciting to see the jokes
that I would make with my cousins
or Asian friends in the privacy of our own home go over and be part of this television program and then be
Laughed at in the right way because it wasn't I don't know how to phrase this without sounding like a character in a blaxploitation movie
But it wasn't Uncle Tom shit. It wasn't you know, hey, are we stupid?
Because we're a small curry and we're timbers!
Love us, Whitey, love us.
That's what he looked like.
But it was genuinely, it was a big deal.
Do you remember the week when I sent you a picture of Mirasayal's legs?
Yep.
That must have been a big moment for you.
That was a big moment. I said, Mum, Dad, come in quick, there's an Indian on the phone.
If you want the backstory to that, I'll explain it.
It's nothing more than that sentence involved.
Ray saw Mira Sayal take a picture of her legs, said, it's a myth.
There's no wider context.
We can make this sound better, right? I was outside Broadcasting House, BNC.
About to go in to record our radio show, I don't know if you were up to it, let me know.
We saw lots of people around there, off then Rob's telling off the radio now, and then Mira's house was there, and then after several times of checking it was definitely
a... I got my phone out, I thought I can get a picture of her, but then it became very
obvious I wouldn't be taking a picture of her, so you had to just get the lens. And
then the cinema made up, weren't you? Yeah, she liked it. I was a little fazed a little
bit when he saw that. How are you enjoying the Fr Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
How are you enjoying the fringe so far, Nish?
I'm having a good time, actually.
Been having a really good time.
Been having lots of fun and laughs and jokes.
Miss Tom, Miss Tom, Miss Tom Day.
Yeah, I know you miss Tom, mate.
Miss Tom leaning off your double lap.
It was just a mirror over the skin.
Oh, thanks, mate.
Yeah.
But there is a mannequin in the window of one of the vintage clothes shop.
Tom has a very distinctive
look. He wears very nice suits and black
glasses. And there's a mannequin and it looks
like I've dressed it as Tom.
So I just often just
am stood near it looking sad.
Do you have to walk past it every day?
Yeah.
That's a habit.
Just being pressed up against the glass going,
gentlemen of leisure. It was a gentleman of leisure. Is that an Just put a little letter on the window. Just me, pressed up against the glass going, Gentlemen of Leisure!
It was a Gentlemen of Leisure, is that an ongoing project with you?
Yeah, earlier this year we did a show in the British Museum
where we wrote a site-specific tour.
And so Nish and Tom, the characters in the Gentlemen of Leisure,
who I really wish we'd named something different just to avoid confusion,
the two characters in the Gentlemen of Leasure did a tour of the British Museum.
We wrote sketches based on a lot of the exhibits and we took people round.
It was really, really exciting. It was one of the funnest things I've done
because we were in with loads of actual tours and that gave the whole thing a really exciting atmosphere
because it felt like all the people were in on a kind of private journey.
You were ruining it for other people.
We were ruining it.
Well, only because a couple of people joined in
and one of them joined in about 10 minutes in
to a half hour tour.
And at 27 minutes, he turned to our friend Amy,
who was producing the show and went,
tell me what these two don't know what they're talking about.
15 minutes!
There is not one,
there's about four facts
in that entire show
and the rest of it
is total nonsense.
We really wanted
to come to it
because we had a preview,
didn't we?
We had a gig somewhere,
yeah.
We sent other people
to watch it
so it was absolutely amazing.
It was one of the
funnest things
we've ever done.
Are you doing more of them?
Yeah, fingers crossed.
I remember you being
quite worried about it
because before it
was released to the comedy press, it went up on the British Museum website and sold
out straight away from people who subscribed to the British Museum website. Yeah. So there
was that worry that people who do that are not necessarily going to enjoy your humour.
That's exactly right. We thought people would have thought, look at these young boys, they're
probably going to give us an interesting tour. Yeah. Let's book tickets now. So we were worried.
But then what happened was that it rained heavily. And so because there were free tickets,
a lot of people just didn't turn up. And so what we'd done in the interim was get it publicised
in the comedy press. And so the comedy press, some of them had failed to acknowledge that
it was sold out. So they made it look like it had come. So what happened was a load of
people turned up who had come to see a sketch comedy show and they were able to get in because a lot
of people just thought I'll sack it off because it's poor and great. And I think that did
help us. And what also helped us is my friend, I told my friend exactly that and she said
I'm a member of the British Museum mailing list and I like your comedy and this is exactly
the sort of event that I would go to. So I
think there were just loads of people who...
It was a nice crossover.
Yeah, it was a nice, it was a really nice crossover.
But they would have messed up as well, all them boffins and that, because, you know,
you have got a, you know, I'm talking about a silly humour, but it is also a clever humour.
It's a lovely description, that, definitely.
I think it's really coming back. I've not heard the word boffin
used in about
15 years
or the boffins
or the boffins
I use it in my
affluence
you can have that
for your places
for the next
British Museum tour
not just the
silly humour
but clever humour
good for the boffins
yeah I hope the
boffins don't miss out
you can have that
definitely
you're welcome
that was brilliant
what's your social
life like at the
Fringe?
You're looking at
it mate.
I see it all the
time.
I see it sometimes.
No that's right
but you're fine
with it sometimes.
Just me hanging
around outside your
show.
But you know what
actually I'm not
because I'm not
really a social
butterfly at Edinburgh
at all.
No.
But this year I'm
finding it actually
quite restrictive not
being allowed to be.
But you were last year. Yeah. we stayed out and had drinks and stuff.
Yeah, I was out boozing and all.
No, no, no.
No, but you were out.
But being social, I think, in fact, I think that is more sociable than boozing.
Yeah, yeah.
Just having a chat.
I've not even had one for bambuca this year.
Oh, really?
Not this year?
Because the consumption of bambouka shots,
which, for the benefit of the listeners, is sambouka,
was one of my highlights at the Fringe.
Watching you get roundy after a sip of bambouka.
Not the whole shot.
A sip of bambouka.
He sips them like a bambouka.
Sips them like a cat.
So, Mish, what I'm saying is, can we go for a bambouka tonight?
Yeah.
I can't. I've got another gig.
So, Mish, what I'm saying is, can we go for a bum bicker tonight?
Yeah.
I can't, I've got another gig.
Mish, I want to talk to you about reviews and stuff, because we're not reading reviews.
Yeah.
And the other day, you got a review, which you read.
Yeah.
And then, you shouldn't have read it, because for the rest of the week, it's like someone's let a little bit of air out of you.
Really?
Yeah.
You're a little bit deflated, aren't you?
Yeah, I just think that I don't have the discipline that you two have.
Because I did say initially, I'm not going to read any reviews.
I'm not going to know who's coming into my show.
I'm not even going to check the numbers every day.
I'm just going to go out and do it as best as I can.
Literally, five minutes into the tech rehearsal, I was like,
oh, I'm going to be top of it.
I don't know.
I Google my own name obsessively.
It's the worst thing that I could do
because it doesn't,
no good comes of it.
No, but you can get,
by all means do it
when the fringe is finished,
do it then,
find out all the things
that happened.
But while it's happening,
all you've got to do,
and this is coming from
a long years of experience,
all you've got to do
is just go show.
And I think even,
probably this year
is the first time I've truly done it.
Last year we didn't. We read all the reviews last year.
We saw, but they got to us. People send them to you. Whereas this year we've been far more
ruthless about it. What you can't avoid is if you have a good review and it's on your
post. We went down last night and there was a good review and a new review on our post
which we can't avoid that because it's just there. We went down last night and there was a good review and a new review on our poster. Yeah. Which we can't avoid that
because it's just there,
you know,
we pay people to do that anyway.
It's got to be there.
However,
there's a little quote
and the star's on there
on our poster
but we didn't then,
or I didn't anyway,
go home and read the rest of it.
No, no, I didn't either.
You see,
the thing is that I've got,
because,
particularly for the last two years,
so the two years that
Ed and I were doing shows together,
we were doing free-for-in shows
and actually, in a way, those were the kind of funnest shows we did.
Because even when we did student review, we still felt a certain pressure because it was a paid show.
But with those two free-fringes, we were just doing material, just working on the show and having a really good time with it.
But then for the last two years, Tom and I have been producing shows.
No one's brought us up.
We've done finance to ourselves. So you've got to. We're on our own PR, so you've got to. You've got to, absolutely. You've got producing shows. We've not, no one's brought us up. We've done finance to ourselves.
So you've got to, yeah. Run our own PR.
So you've got to.
You've got to, yeah, absolutely.
You've got it constantly.
And so we, Googling my own name is, may sound like one of the most egotistical things you
could do, but it's slightly a habit that was the result of us having to do our own marketing.
So last year we would have to Google to see, has the review come out?
We need to get it on there.
We need to kind of put it up.
So unfortunately, I now have
you know people
who are looking after
that side of it for me
but what I'm struggling
with is letting go
of that element
of control
and I am being told
by everyone
including the people
who are in charge of it
that I need to ease up
a little bit
because I'm going to
draw myself up the wall
your show will be better
man
if it's
simple as that
your show will be better
and you'll be far more focused
on what you're
doing
I'm not saying
your show's
rubbish and
you'll make it
better
what I mean is
like you said
at the beginning
of this
it can only
have a negative
effect
it can either
make you complacent
or it can make
you depressed
they're the only
two things that
can happen
as a result of it
this is the first
year I've properly
done that as well
I've tried to not
read reviews
and I know that
I'm going to enjoy
the show tonight
I'm going to go out there really excited
because we had a good one last night.
Yeah, yeah.
But if we'd had that good one last night
and then I read a rubbish review of another night today,
I wouldn't enjoy it as much tonight.
And then the show suffers as a result.
But also, if you read a brilliant review of last night,
that would also be like,
yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, cocky, cocky, yeah.
As far as I'm concerned, this is going well.
Yeah.
And I don't need anyone to tell me that it's not.
Because I will take that fully into account.
That's exactly the way...
We're enjoying our shows, and I am really having fun with it.
But, you know, it does...
Did you have a bad review?
Was it a bad review?
No, it wasn't a bad review at all.
It was a really lovely review.
Oh, is this the Chortle one?
Yeah.
You're on Chortle now, mate.
You haven't got a voice.
You haven't got a voice. You haven't got a voice.
Mate, just say four stars
and then you can put
four stars Chortle technically.
Technically.
Chortle sort of.
Okay, I'll help with this.
So, this is another
sub-part of it.
Not only should you not
read your own reviews,
you shouldn't read
anyone's reviews.
Yeah.
But nothing at all.
Yeah.
Keep away from it.
Although Chortle
is a lovely website.
I'd do a website of choice by the comedy connoisse from it. Although, sure, it's a lovely website. I had the website of choice
by the comedy connoisseur,
I would imagine.
So, it was a really good review
and you got,
was it three stars?
Yeah, it was just,
because it's really frustrating
because it's a really lovely review.
Yeah.
But it's just,
I can't put it on the poster.
Everyone who's said it to me
from back home and there,
I've always been
slightly baffled by it.
Well, the thing is...
They've all said it's not a
three-star review.
It's that classic
thing.
The greatest
cliche for an
energy debut
is I've got a
three-star review
for Reads Like
a Four.
It's the one
thing that I
wanted.
The weirdest
thing is I keep
trying to say
that without
using the
phrase Reads
Like a Four,
but I am
saying Reads
Like a Four
just in
different,
oh,
it's consumed in the manner
a review that has less than five but more than three so I keep trying to spin that round but
then the flip side is that I read two really nice reviews yesterday and then I don't know what's
shown around so far so I think it's you're you're absolutely right. It does you no good to read anything
that anyone's read.
I haven't tried
to steer clear of like,
like before,
when I came to Edinburgh
as a comedy fan
as well as performing it,
I would be like,
oh,
who's supposed to be
really good this year?
I'm going to see
all the shows that I've got.
I've been trying to avoid
all of that as well.
Yeah.
People going,
oh,
you heard about,
they're very good this year.
Yeah,
okay,
that's fine.
Because the thing is,
because the thing is,
you're one of those,
you're one of the people
so you're one of the
performers now
the real performers
so it's like
I think I said to you
last year
I'm sure you came back
you came back
to something you'd seen
one day
and you were like
it's absolutely
it's so good
this is just so good
and I was like
just don't tell me
then you go
well is ours not as good
or is ours not
all it can do
is really distract you
and also we should
emphasise as well
that to a comedian,
three stars is horrible.
You know, to a comedian, it's not.
One star is better than three stars to a comedian.
And five stars is better than three stars to a comedian.
Three stars is very, no.
Yeah.
That's fine.
One star, you can go, well, they obviously didn't get a lot of love.
Obviously a little bit too edgy for Billy Review.
And five stars you go, yes, you're completely correct.
But three stars you go, oh, come on.
That doesn't mean anything.
So I get it.
It's not even just that as well.
There's also the practicality
of me going,
I need to figure out
what way to sell tickets
because I've got no audience.
Okay.
So it's with your debut hours,
like those reviews
are as much a marketing tool
as anything else.
Yeah.
So what you're hoping for
is of course,
so you can stick that on the fly
because, you know,
if you look at my poster
and you go,
oh, from the Gentleman of Pleasure.
Yeah.
A show I've got.
Outstanding. And oh, he seems to have done some other. Yeah. A show I've not heard of. Outstanding.
And, oh, he seems to have done some other things.
But, Nish, I have to say, for us, the show is truly the best show we have ever seen.
And, you can use all this.
And what wonderful funny jokes in it, but also clever.
Very intelligent.
One of the best comedy I've ever seen.
Three stars.
Some funny bit. Three stars. Some funny bit.
Three stars,
some funny bit.
How was that?
How was that
for a little quote for you?
Lovely.
Peacock and Gamble,
Peacock and Gamble.
Well look,
well this is your
opportunity now.
People who listen to this,
I would imagine
that they've enjoyed
your company,
buffered by us.
I would imagine
they've enjoyed
listening to you.
That's the thing about
this,
you're very entertaining in a
group.
Yeah, you're
considered and
you're well
spoken, you're a
nice young man
and you're a
funny little boy,
we've found that
on the podcast
so far.
So, people are
now going, well
where can I see
Nish Kumar?
This is an ideal
opportunity now to
speak to the
thousands of
people in the
world and say,
go on.
My show is
called Who
is Nish Kumar
by Nish Kumar
and it is on at
8.20
at the Daisy Room
which is the
underbelly venue
in Bristol Square
in Edinburgh
Scotland
England
the world
that wasn't a bad one
that was alright
three stars
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three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars three stars, three stars, and Gamble. Nish Kumar there, friend to me, friend to you, friend to all the world.
But we would have had him on anyway.
Yeah, we would have done, yeah.
Even if we weren't friends with him.
Because he's good.
Yeah, but we have decided, you might notice with these podcasts, because there's some, you know, big famous bods,
and there's some people that aren't particularly well known, you know, some that are known well on the circuit,
and we try and mix it all with the podcast so you can hear about new people,
and you can have the experience of listening to the famous people get befuddled by having
to speak to us.
But the rule we've
had on this podcast
is we won't interview
anyone that we don't
like.
So that's why these
interviews are so
brilliant and five
stars from Chortle.
But we like more
people than we've
had on.
If you're a comic
listening to this and
we've not asked you
for an interview,
it's not that we
don't like you,
that might not be
why.
There's also comics
we've asked for an
interview who haven't got back to us. So that's your be why yeah there's also comics we've asked for an interview
who haven't got back to us
yeah
so that's your fault
they'll be whining later on
when we're picking up
the Sony award
yeah
and going well I would have
actually been on that
but anyway
our show is Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to be
on telly anyway
at the Pleasant's Dome Dome
at 9.40pm
every night
and it's selling very very well
so do get tickets
if you can
yeah
and come and see us
have a laugh
down at our lighthouse
yeah
we'll have a great time
and then you'll be as baffled as we
were over that review.
Right mate.
What?
You're going to have
to let this go.
I'm being an
ungrateful little
shit.
See you tomorrow.
Bye.
Horrible little shit.
The Peacock and
Gamble Edinburgh
podcast is a ready
production hosted by
Chalkpool.co.uk.
Today's guest was
Nish Kumar and my
show is called
Who is Nish Kumarumar all music by
thomas fun the ray that poor boy his name is always a question thomas fun the ray it's written
phonetically it's fun the ray oh fun the ray no it's not dirt it's fun the ray thomas fun the ray
yeah but no where's the question mark that's someone's name
you just went
oh he's by Thomas Fondare
he's from another country mate
I thought you would understand
that that's a difficult thing
you great big racist
no thanks very much
for coming in
nice coomer
yeah imagine that
if we'd done that
nice coomer
right finish it off
with the last bit
see you tomorrow.