The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 12 (Thom Tuck)
Episode Date: November 29, 2020"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 12 (Thom Tuck)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 97 of 128....
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🎵 Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble. Because it's not Ed Peacock and it's not Ray Peacock and it is Ed Gamble.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Here they are.
It's the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast.
Oh yes, please.
Here we are.
Oh, quick intro today.
Very quick intro.
Quick intro today because a little boy here, Ray Peacock, that's me.
Very tired boy.
Very tired boy.
And Ed Gamble over there.
Hello, Ed Gamble over here.
Hello, Ed Gamble.
Slightly less tired, but still a little bit tired.
Yeah, I was so tired this morning, right, that Ed had to put me in the shower.
Had to put you in the shower, didn't I?
Yeah.
Well, I had to lead you from my bed, which you climbed on top of and started cuddling my legs.
Was that not nice?
Yeah, that was lovely, in a way, but I started to get a little bit worried then
because it looked like you were just going to live there.
Yeah.
So I had to lead you from there.
But I had a nice cuddle of your big long legs.
Yeah, you did. It was nice.
Lead you from there like a nice little boy, right?
Take you to the front of the bathroom.
Make you put your arms up, take your T-shirt off,
take your tracksuit bottoms off,
put you in the bathroom to have a shower.
Yeah, I went in and had a shower.
Yeah.
And I washed all my bits, but I didn't do it very well.
Oh.
Because what I did, I eventually did it fine.
Yeah.
But I was so tired that I put shampoo in my hair.
Yeah.
And then, I don't know what my mind was thinking, but I put shower gel in my hair as well.
Yeah, well, let's just get your hair nice and clean.
It looked very clean.
Thank you.
It's extra clean today because it's been shower gelled and shampooed as well.
Well done, mate.
Thank you very much indeed.
Very good.
I had a late gig last night.
Yeah.
Kicked off.
You did or the
gig?
No the gig kicked
off in the room.
There was a man
there was a drunken
man in the room.
Yeah.
And do you know
what he wasn't even
doing anything wrong
really.
He was just a bit
too drunk.
Right.
So Wittank were on
first the sketch
bit of Wittank.
Yeah.
And they did this
bit it was a sketch
about Hardy dying
that kiss me Hardy
and they were saying, oh what were his
last words? And then they do a thing where
he says something different and then
the other one said, what was his last words? And he said, Kiss Me Hardy
and the man who was drunk went,
he didn't say that!
He said something else!
So he was just joining in, I think he just thought
it was real.
And then the bouncer went in, like really heavy handed
and twatted him. It was really quite disturbing. Was it a bouncer or was it someone doing a play? No, it was a. Yeah. And then the bouncer went in like really heavy handed and twatted him. Oh.
It was really quite disturbing.
Was it a bouncer
or was it someone doing a play?
No, it was a bouncer.
Was it someone from the play
bouncing?
Well, I actually had to say
because at the point
where it kicked off
Piff the Magic Dragon was on
doing his act
and it was during that
and the bouncer just
body slammed him
into the floor
this bloke.
Not Piff.
Not Piff, no.
Because there's nothing
more horrible than seeing
a man dressed as a dragon with a tiny dog getting body slammed.
Yeah, getting body slammed. Although, you know, it's art, isn't it? It's art. Fringe,
isn't it? Yeah, fringe, isn't it? So I had to go and compare it after that, and I said,
and we like to bring you a selection of things in this show. So you have the magic on the
stage, and in the back over there, you're probably a bit worried about what that shouting
was in the back, and that was a student group.
That was a student group doing their play, Heavy Handed Bouncer.
But yeah, it wasn't very nice.
It doesn't sound very nice. Yeah, the first thing at the Fringe this year that's been a little bit sort of sickening.
I did that gig the night before.
It was a lovely one, I did it.
Yeah?
Yeah, all nice and gentle.
No, I've done a few of them where they've been lovely.
No, every night when you've done it, someone's been hit.
So do you think it's me?
I think it's you. You're just a very aggressive persona.
I'm not aggressive, actually. I am a nice boy.
And I bring all the niceness.
Ed has just done his stupid laugh again.
Sorry.
Which hurts everyone's ears.
Sorry.
So today on the show we've got Tom Tuck.
Thumb Tuck.
Thumb Thuck.
Thumb Thuck.
Yeah, that's a good one.
I call him as a joke.
Yeah, Tom Tuck.
But not to his face.
Of the Penny Dreadfuls and good solo act and brilliant guy.
And have a nice clap and he's an actor as well.
Yeah.
And do you know what?
This show today, this interview today, brings you lots of different art.
It does.
It brings some music, which we couldn't stop him doing.
Yeah.
It brings you some brilliant improvisation.
Yeah.
And some marvellous acting.
Yes.
Particularly, I think, from a young lad over here called Ray Beacon. An up-and- improvisation. Yeah. And some marvellous acting. Yes. Particularly, I think, from a young lad over here called Ray Peacock.
An up-and-coming actor.
Yeah, and I've done some of my brilliant acting,
and you'll hear that in the interview coming up.
And if you want to see me do some more acting, a bit,
then why not come to our show?
Peacock and Gamble don't even want to be on telly anyway.
9.40pm at the Pleasant Dome.
Dome, dome, dome, dome, dome, dome.
Dome, dome, dome, dome, dome.
Dome, dome, dome, dome, dome, dome, dome, dome, dome, dome. Lovely, what was that one? Just a load of domes. Dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dum dumوم very nice I've been enjoying them just having a genuinely nice time
doing the show
do you know what
if you want to come and see a show
which isn't just a stand up showing off
or isn't someone getting all upset
about their dad dying or something
or any of the fringe shows that happen these days
then why not come and watch too lads
just enjoying spending time
in both each other's company
and the company of the audience
we're very grateful that you're there
and thank you so much for coming.
You won't get picked on.
No, none of that, is there?
Just a couple of lovely guys.
Well, last year's show
there was quite a bit
of audience interaction
and this year's show...
Not this year,
we've written it this year.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Hardly any at all.
Yeah, I know.
In fact, none at all.
Sort of,
but nothing that requires
the audience to do anything.
No, no one has to get on stage
or anything like that.
No, no, no.
Which is, I think,
a nice way of doing
the show, really.
Unless, of course,
you pipe up in the show
and then I will send
my mate the bouncer
in to body slam you.
Yeah, from the student group.
Yeah, just get the bouncer
from the student group
and he'll twat you.
Yeah, definitely.
No problem at all.
We actually do genuinely
appreciate the support
this year.
There's been more support
this year than there was
last year.
Yeah, definitely.
Certainly fans of the podcast
are coming to see the show
and enjoying it.
Meeting people afterwards as we said the other day.
Yeah.
Always have a nice time.
We're usually outside the Dome Dome.
Yeah.
I am saying it now.
I'm fully on board with this Dome Dome.
It's brilliant.
I said the other night on stage, I said, we're at the President's Dome Dome.
I think there's a good chance, you know, that next year...
They'll change the name.
It will be called the Dome Dome.
Yeah.
Because it's been known as that for too long.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So if we all start doing it then that can be
our unique gift
to the fringe
yeah
apart from our show
oh our show
is a sort of a gift
it's not unique
it's like me and Aaron
it's not really a gift
either is it
because people
have paid for it
have you done any
reading while you've
been up here
reading no
I've done no reading
I've not played
on the PS3
I've not watched
any of the films
that I've brought up
with me
the PS3 is bothering
me because the PS3
is set up in the living room yeah and. And I've not played it once yet.
We should have a little go on it one day. We should have a go on it. What game should
we play? House of the Dead. Rugby League. Brilliant. Great idea. What's House of the
Dead? Like shooting. Shooting what then? Zombies. Don't agree with that. You don't agree with
shooting zombies? I think it's racist and I don't know why. They're not a race zombies.
I don't know why there's been this new thing that it's alright to kill zombies. Well because
they're already dead. So that's even worse. No it't know why there's been this new thing that it's alright to kill zombies. Well, because they're already dead.
So that's even worse.
No, it's not.
That's just for the sake of it then, isn't it?
So you're not killing anything.
If they're already dead, then you're killing them for the sake...
No, but they're trying to kill...
No, you're trying...
You kill them because they're trying to kill you.
How do you know?
A zombie's never caught up with someone.
It has.
It might just want to give it a cuddle.
Of course it's caught up with someone.
That's why they're a zombie.
Because they...
A zombie has caught up with them.
And what do they do?
Eat the brain.
Well, that's alright. That's not alright, mate. But then what happens? You become a zombie. Because a zombie has caught up with them. And what do they do? Eat the brain. Well, that's alright.
That's not alright, mate.
But then what happens?
You become a zombie, so it doesn't kill you.
It does.
You die and then you're a zombie.
They're just letting you in on their group.
No, they're not, mate.
They're saying, come on, come and join our gang.
Alright, well, that's fine.
If there's a zombie outbreak in Edinburgh and you see Ray,
everyone else locking themselves in shopping centres and in their house,
you just see Ray in the middle of the street going,
hello, nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you.
Oh, that tickles.
Oh, is that a flyer for your show?
Yeah, the zombie show.
Yeah.
Is there a zombie show this year?
I'm sure there is.
Zombie Macbeth or something.
Zombie Macbeth.
Yeah.
Zombie Bouncers.
Yeah.
The John Goodbar update.
Yeah.
Zombie Dracula on a bouncy castle.
I think zombies get an hard time.
And I just think it's come to a point now in the world, there's so much fighting.
Yeah.
There's so much war and disharmony.
Right.
But come on, everyone.
Yeah.
Let's all be friends.
Okay.
Let's all get along with each other.
Yeah.
Make friends with the zombies.
Yeah.
All right.
And then we can all be a big zombie race.
Okay.
No one's bothered about eating anyone's brain anymore because we've already eaten all the
brains already.
Yeah.
Probably a three-for-all sexually I would imagine
with a zombie.
Yeah.
Well I'd imagine
they probably don't
do that sort of thing.
You don't see many
zombie marriages do you?
No.
They tend to just
all hang around
in a big group.
Yeah well they're
you know it's sort of
free society isn't it?
It's liberating then
isn't it?
Yeah it is yeah.
Yeah it's kind of
bohemian.
Like the 60s.
Yeah it's just like
that and then
and probably don't
have any sort of
sexually transmitted
diseases because
you're already a tip.
Yeah.
You're already rotten. Yeah. So let's all be zombies for a bit. Okay well good luck because you're already a tip. Yeah. You're already rotten.
Yeah.
So let's all be zombies for a bit.
Okay, well good luck to you with that.
In the meantime...
No, it can't be just to me.
Mate, good luck with you.
Good luck with you for that.
Thank you.
Again, you're just separating us as a group.
So we all need to agree with you now?
Well, look, what's wrong with this lovely, harmonious idea that I've had?
That we are all zombies?
Because people need their brains eaten and they get killed.
But then they are still walking around.
Mate, I...
So, hey, right.
Here's good bits of being a zombie.
Right.
One, loads of exercise.
Right.
Because you are walking about all the time.
But very slowly.
And holding your arms up as well.
I suppose that's good for the upper arms, isn't it?
And the upper body as well.
It's a lovely way of being.
Yeah, yeah.
Just hold your arms out.
Hold your arms out.
As you're doing your exercise walking around.
Two,
there's no unfaithfulness
or marriage breakdown
because there's no marriage.
It's a sexual free-for-all.
Right.
I don't think zombies
have sex, mate.
So all they think about
is brains.
All the zombies
have sex with the brain.
All the zombies...
No, no.
They eat the brain.
They don't have sex with it.
Oh, and what happens
after you eat something?
It goes through your body
and out of your penis.
No, it doesn't. That's what food is.
Where do you shit from? What do you mean? What? What? You eat your food and then you shit out of your penis. Shit out of a bit of the water that comes out of it. Yeah, but
where does the food come out? That's the water. No, it's not. Where does the poo come from?
The what? We're going to have to talk about you, mate. If you're not doing poos, I'm seriously
worried. If I'm not doing poos? Right, we're going to have to talk about you, mate. If you're not doing poos, I'm seriously worried. If I'm not doing poos?
Right, we're going to have a chat about this.
Firstly, your weird zombie impression.
You think zombies are walking around all day for exercise and then fucking brains.
And then the fact that you're eating dinners and not excreting them.
What's excreting?
A brown lump of shit comes out the back of you when you've finished eating.
Comes out of my back?
Right, ignore this.
This is weird.
Ignore this.
This is an interview with Tom Tuck.
I apologise.
This has been one of the worst introductions we've ever done for someone.
Where Ray acts like he doesn't know what poo is.
How's that for a dynamic?
How's that for a set-up of a joke?
We've decided that a brilliant concept for today's podcast
would be that
Ray doesn't understand
the notion
of doing a shit
and that's just
a small portion
of our humour
just a taste
of what you might get
if you come and see us
9.40pm
every night
in Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to be
on telly anyway
at the Pleasant's Dome Dome
with a zombie band
from now onwards
with a zombie band
and that was a genuine idea
we had at a telly meeting once
we do want to be on the telly they just won't let us on because we say,
zombie band, it's in a lighthouse, and what's the shit?
Here's Tom Tuck.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Right, I'm telling you now, Tom Tuck, you can't be playing that.
Why?
Because we edit it.
Right, so then they'll have that, and it'll all be cut up like Björk.
No, but you could do an individual song, maybe.
All right.
Do you want to start your interview with a song?
Yeah.
Oh, no, I'll do the one I used to do as my warm-up last year.
Now, is it going to be rights protected?
Are we going to get in trouble for having the song?
Oh, yeah.
Shall we just explain?
Tom Tuck, who is our special guest today,
has a flying V, like a flying V ukulele.
Would that be the right way of describing it?
Precisely that, yes, sir.
All right, let's try it.
Go on, let's try it.
Be still for a second while I try and try to pin your flowers on
La la la la
And this has got you in the mood for comedy, didn't it?
This got you up for doing your comedy show.
Alright, carry on, carry on.
Can you hold my drink?
I have everything else
I can tie my tie
By myself I'm getting tired
And I'm forgetting why
Shall we crack on to our interview with Neil Hammond?
We're so disoriented
In everything we do
Believe
It's diving, diving, diving
Diving off the balcony
Tired and wild
And ruined too easy Ed Don't ruin it What's happening? Shut up Ed.
Don't ruin it.
What's happening?
Shut up.
You told me you were booking comedians.
I didn't know we were going to have musicians on it as well.
It's nice.
It's a nice change.
Lie around together with our arms around the stereo For hours
Right, this is rude. Sorry, Tom.
Stop playing, he doesn't appreciate it.
That's genuinely made me angry.
It was really lovely, I was enjoying it so much, but I'm a bit tired and it's lulled me off.
Welcome to the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast.
Thank you very much for having me.
That's alright.
Well, you were right.
You've come straight in.
You've bowled straight in, all flustered.
Yeah.
Bowled in with a big pork pie
and you've sat down with a knife
and just eaten a pork pie.
I did offer you the pork pie.
I did.
I would have bought myself an individual pork pie
had I not been able to offer it.
I had a little bit of it
and you've also got all mini Twixes.
Yeah, a mini Twix.
I've got a little pork in front of Ed
even though he's diabetic.
Baby bells.
We'll have that another day.
I'll save that. That's in front of Ed, even though he's diabetic. Baby bells. We'll have that another day. I'll save that.
That's the sound of a baby bell wrapper.
Baby bell for the nice cheese.
That's a lovely advert.
Thank you.
You're a busy lad, eh?
I've been whining, not whining as such,
but I've been a bit moany about the amount of work I've had to do this fringe.
Even though I was ready to do it, and yeah, it'd be a lot of work,
but you're a proper busy lad as well.
Yeah.
How many shows?
Four today, usually three.
But that's every day?
Yeah, pretty much.
So you have like three or four and five, but then it's not every day?
Not every day, no.
How would you do it?
I don't know, really.
It's just Dr. Theatre gets your throat.
Does it really, though?
Are you a fit man?
No, God no.
No?
Does any lack of fitness affect how you feel?
I'm a very sweaty performer.
Yeah, same.
Same.
I'm a bit of a bit of a hammer as well.
But that shows that you're pouring your heart into it, doesn't it?
I think so.
So what are the shows...
Do you sweat out a lot of the sort of tiredness?
You mean the vodka?
No.
Do you sweat out all the vodka?
Yeah.
The first show is at two.
And that's very energetic.
And that's Coalition, isn't it?
That's the play that's on.
That's the play.
What I'm doing in.
Yeah, by the end of it,
I'm really awake.
Right.
I used to stop up a couple of times.
Are you the main one in it?
Are you the main one in the play?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I've only got two scenes off
in an hour and a half.
Wow, wow.
So it's bombarding, you're right.
But you do wake up.
Yeah.
We had our best one today.
It was really nice.
Hey, busy?
Paul.
It's comediansians isn't it
in the play
a couple of actors
as well
okay
John Dorney and
Jess Regan
not comedians
but then there's
Simon Evans
Phil Dubtis
Alistair Behar
Joe Caulfield
nice
and are you a comedian
and Phil Mulroney
are you a comedian
yeah how would you
describe yourself
yeah I'd like to do
more real acting work
but I don't get
any of it
right okay
we'll give you some of it now.
We'll do some acting in a little bit. We'll do a play.
Yeah, we're going to make up a play.
We'll do a play about politics.
Right, later on in this interview, exclusive, we're going to do a play about politics.
You're doing the SNP?
Because it's called Coalition. What is it about?
It's about the demise of the Coalition in Mountainton a couple of years' time.
Okay.
And I play definitely not Nick Clegg
for legal reasons
okay
right right
I play Rick Degg
don't I
yeah
right
Matt Cooper
our play is called
oh the end of the Tories
and the Liberals
oh good title
right
not a snappy
oh what a lovely end
of the Tories
and the Liberals
yeah that's what it's called
that's what it's called
oh what a lovely end
of the Tories
and the Liberals
right
right
and I am playing a working class miner.
Right.
Are you going to be in mining gear for the whole thing?
Yeah, and I'm still upset about the horrific way
in which the Conservative Party destroyed an industry.
And so that you've not got changed since the mines shut down.
No, I'm still upset.
Right, okay.
I'm still picketing outside, as some of them still are.
You can get anyone who uses coal.
Yeah, I'd always beeped him as you go past the miners.
Right.
Get out of the way.
You're playing the liberal part of it.
Yes.
Right, well in this one, you're the conservative part of it.
Okay, right.
Right?
And your name is...
Jonathan the Swank Rich.
Mm.
Right.
Yeah, I think that's...
Kiss my ring.
Yeah, yeah.
Porper.
Kiss my ring, porper.
So we've got a catchphrase.
I think every player still has a catchphrase.
And Ed is a bear.
Oh.
Right, here we go now.
Why am I a bear?
Yes, I think it's because
of a bit of excitement in it.
Right, okay.
Right, okay.
Here we go now.
You can be the right honourable bear.
No, no, no, no, no.
You're a bear.
Just a bear.
Just a bear in a water.
No.
Right, right.
Here we go now
for the opening scene,
which will be the opening scene
of our play,
which is called, what was it called again?
Oh, What a Lovely End of the Tories and the Liberals.
Right, which will be premiering at the Edinburgh Fringe 2013.
Yeah.
Right, here's just the opening scene.
Eee, I'm right fed up, me, about all this.
They're just not bringing all the mines back.
And my family have all left me.
I'm all on my own. I've got no money.
Hang on a minute. Who's this coming down the road?
Excuse me. Could you get out of the way?
It's that darned Tory.
The one that is from our constituency.
He's the one that was backing Thatcher, the old cow,
when she was doing all the pit closures.
You've got some nerve showing your face round here.
Kiss my ring, you pauper, before I kiss your face with it.
I'll have a bloody fight with you.
I tell you now, you come down here, you stuffed suit,
giving it the big I am, after you destroyed industry
and you destroyed families and entire villages and all the rest of it,
we're still living in little houses now because of all you lot, why you lured it up in London. And if you think you can
fight me, you've got another thing coming because look what I've got in my garden. A
bear. I love a cat. I know. No, you can't talk. You're a real bear. Go on, fight me
now. Attack me now and watch what happens. I shall get my peacock to do it. Go on, sling
your hook. Scene. Peacock and Gamble, Peacock to do it. Go on! Sling your rock!
Scene. Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
That's your first bit of the day, doing Coalition.
Yep.
Or next year it'll be,
I want a lovely end to the Tories and Liberals.
It's a six hour play as well, I'm envisaging it as.
Right, okay.
You perhaps won't be able to fit anything else in.
Could it be an opera?
Go on.
Yeah, alright, go on then.
Yeah, go on then.
But this year, back to this year,
once you've finished Coalition at 3.30. 3.30. 3.30, what do you do then? I collapse into a chair. Okay. Yeah, go on then. But this year, back to this year, once you finish Coalition at 3.30.
3.30.
3.30, what do you do then?
I collapse into a chair.
Okay.
Have a glass of water, cigarette, and try and recharge before 10 past 8, which is Tom
Tuck Flips Out.
10 past 8, which is Tom Tuck Flips Out, which is your one-man stand-up comedy show.
Now, last year you did, what was the Disney show?
Tom Tuck Goes Straight to DVD.
Nice.
And that was nominated?
As Best New Comic in my 10th consecutive
year at the
Fringe
fantastic
that's just
how it works
or the
Mickey Flanagan
we were at
the same venue
as you last
year
so we saw
quite a lot
of you
we saw the
muck that
you left in
the back
room
all your
flyers were
all over the
place
spilt wine
Disney toys
strewn around the floor.
Yeah.
Simba's with me now.
I saw you walking around a bar with Simba last night
at about two, three in the morning
just sort of tottering around holding a cuddly Simba.
Yeah.
What's happened, mate?
Are you all right?
Well, Liam Malone had his raccoon out,
which isn't a euphemism.
So I thought I'd get Simba out and they could say hi.
Is it a genuine comfort thing for you?
Not especially, no. The other one just lives in the venue. But it's part of the straight-to-DVD show. so I thought I'd get Simba out and they could say hi is it a genuine comfort thing for you not especially
no
the other one
just lives in the venue
but it's part of
the straight to DVD show
which you're doing
again
at 10 o'clock
at Canberra
at 10 o'clock
and you're doing that
every night
yep
but 3 for instance
start for the first few nights
so I could get the other ones
going
why
why mate
come on
it's been really fun
I know but you can spread this
over 5 years.
Why are you shooting all of it in the beginning?
Leave a bit in your balls, mate.
Why are you shooting it all over the fringe face?
Poor balls.
You've be-karkied all the fringe up you have there.
Your poor little tiny dry balls.
Slow fly post it.
You'll be here next year with your little shrivelled up knots.
With nothing to talk about.
Well, just doing our brilliant play,
which is going to be amazing.
Oh, our brilliant play,
which is six hours a night.
Yeah, you can do that.
You can do that with small balls
because you are a Tory in it
and we like the feeling of that.
So, Tom,
so that's three shows a day.
Why are you doing four today?
What's going on?
We're doing an improv show.
Now, you're quite,
are you a seasoned improviser?
Yeah, all the time.
Obviously, we were able to tell
from our little play there
that you just made up.
Just did it.
A lot of people would have thought
that was a script,
but that was completely made up.
No, I'm doing it, yeah.
You're a seasoned improviser.
Well, I mean,
I did improvising as well, so.
Yeah, but no,
yours was rubbish.
Oh.
So, when did you,
you started doing improv,
you were an alumni
of Edinburgh University, correct?
Yes, and an alumnus of the Improverts as well.
Of the Improverts, yeah.
I suppose life's a big improv, isn't it?
So you're practising all of the time.
I've invented a new improv game.
Do you want to try that?
Yeah, definitely.
It's like Keith Johnson, isn't it?
It's like Keith Johnson.
Alan Bennett Improv.
Nice.
Brilliant.
It's a one-pitch player game.
Okay.
Ed, you can't have a twitch.
You're diabetic.
Oh, come on.
It's a fringe, isn't it? Do you-punch play game. Okay. Ed, you can't have a Twix. You're diabetic. Oh, come on. It's for friends, isn't it?
Do you want to play?
Yeah.
This whole podcast is people eating.
He's got a mouthful of Twix.
You've got a mouthful of pork pie.
People are listening to this.
Well, they might think
there's an advert for food in general.
Yeah.
I think food is pretty much covered.
Food's doing all right.
Yeah, it's not doing bad with food.
Why do they advertise milk? It's the one thing, then when you go, oh, I better get some pretty much covered. Food's doing alright. Yeah, it's not bad food. Why do they advertise milk?
It's the one thing that when you go,
oh, I better get some milk.
Yeah, yeah.
Milk's an advert for milk.
Yeah.
Empty milk cartons.
Isn't milk advertised because,
for health reasons,
don't they have a,
isn't it a subsidiary of health?
Oh, I agree.
Make sure you have your calcium.
Got milk?
I thought that was a good new bit.
All right, come on,
let's do this improvisation game.
Right, so Alan Bennett improv.
You say, who's got the best Alan Bennett impression?
Probably Ed.
You do an Alan Bennett, I'll do an Alan Bennett.
We'll have a Bennett off and then the winner of that is the winner.
And I'll be Steve Bennett.
Right, what do I have to do for this?
I'm Alan Bennett, I'm just eating a Twix.
Oh, a Twix.
I remember when Twixes weren't even a real thing.
I used to go and visit an old lady down the road.
And she used to say,
Bring us one of them Twaxes.
And I used to say,
You might have to do it.
That's not what they're called, Deidre.
And she'd say,
Oh, I can't keep up with modern life.
And then she had a stroke.
And it fell over.
And nobody found her
for three weeks
and when they did find her
she was still there
she was delirious
and saying
twacks
twacks
and it's the one time
I said
I'll get you a twacks
well that was lovely
thank you
I don't think I'll be able
to compete with that
in all honesty
I think he's got the job
right thank you
alright
well done right thank you you'd be someone else from Beyond the Fringe think I'll be able to compete with that in all honesty. I think he's got the job. Right, thank you. Right, thank you.
You'd be someone else from Beyond the Fringe.
No, I'll be...
What's mine be?
No, no.
Am I not involved in that?
No.
Now I've lost my part in this.
Right, I'll just sit here
eating my fucking swacks.
You say one word,
then I say one word,
and you've got to start with one of them
and get to the other.
That's Alan Bennett.
Oh, nice, nice, nice, okay, okay.
You do the word first word.
Horseradish.
Statue.
Horseradish came over to Yorkshire in around 1960.
We'd never seen anything like it before.
We looked at it and thought, it's so creamy, it's so nice, I can't wait to have a taste of that.
Of course, Deidre down the road thought it was sweet.
She had it all over her apple pie that she used to make with suet.
You'd soft pay extra for suet if you were staying at a B&B.
But it were worth it for taste.
But it were worth it.
For taste.
Anyway, it was a bit of a joke about Deidre.
She always puts it on sweet stuff she doesn't know.
We were having it on beef.
We'd heard about it from the forces.
And one day, everyone in the village, we were all having a laugh and a crack about Deidre.
Going, oh, it's funny that she does that.
And Deidre died.
It was terrible.
We all thought, we've not helped.
She had dreadful heartburn and it must have been getting worse.
Having all that horseradish on a suet apple pie.
There was a town meeting.
We all sat down and we thought, we've got to keep this in board. We've got to keep this inside and not tell anyone about it. Roedd ymgyrch y dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r dyn a'r tu ôl hi, byddwn ni'n rhoi'r ddiddordeb i gofio Deidre
yn y ffordd y mae'n y ffordd. Wel, rydym ni wedi cynyddu £15,000, sef £5 miliwn.
Beth y byddwn ni'n ei wneud gyda'r cyfnod? Rydym ni'n cefnogi Deidre yn y ffordd y byddai hi'n ei eisiau,
yn y cyfan o'r stwm y ffordd. Nawr mae' square. Now it stands there, Deirdre, a lovely statue.
Thank you.
That was genuine.
Thank you very much.
Thank you very much indeed.
I feel like I'm the guest today.
That was good though.
Tom has come in and he has inspired us to put ourselves forward.
Thank you, Tom.
Thank you, Tom.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Your show last year, Tom Tuck,
Go Straight to DVD,
obviously very themed,
like a tight idea.
You went through all the
straight to DVD Disney films,
told people what happened in them.
It was the Disney sequels, wasn't it?
So the ones when they,
Disney traditionally,
after a big film like Aladdin or whatever,
or The Lion King,
they'll capitalise on that
by bringing out
a sequel
that'll just be a bit
substandard
not necessarily substandard
generally substandard
I thought Return of Jafar
was brilliant
it's alright
I loved it
they really miss
Robin Williams
but it's got
Homer on it
and it's got
Don Castellaneta
doing
Emma Simpson
instead doing the genie
yeah
he's not as funny
he's alright though
because that's the thing
about Aladdin
is it goes off
on such wild things
because the genie
can actually do anything
so they do
whatever Robin Williams
has said
yeah
but also
what's the
parrot
Iago
Gilbert Gottfried
yeah
so he plays it
in both doesn't he
yeah
and I think
he's my favourite
character in Aladdin
yeah
the second one is about him yeah yeah of he yeah and that I think he's my favourite character in Aladdin yeah the second one
is about him
yeah
yeah of course
yeah
and Gilbert Gottfried
is like
rules it
he's fantastic
yeah
very very
very funny man
what's your best one
of the sequels
probably
Cinderella 3
yeah
because it really
is better than it has
any right to be
right
it's a it's a requel
Right, okay
What does that mean?
Well, they change the events of the first one
To like sliding doors
Oh, like Shrek Forever After
I haven't seen that
They do that in Shrek Forever After
Do you know what?
I hated the sequels to Shrek
Yeah
And then one night
I bought a 3D telly, right?
Not on the night
I'd already bought it
Fuck it, I'm just going to buy a 3D telly
Yeah, and I was just looking for 3D films to watch Because I'd bought a 3D telly Yeah And Shrek Forever a night. I'd already bought it. Fuck it, I'm just going to buy a 3D telly. And I was just looking for 3D films to watch
because I'd bought
a 3D telly.
And Shrek Forever After
was on, I was like,
oh, I'll watch this then.
And I watched it,
loved it.
Absolutely loved it.
I thought it was fantastic.
And I did go back
and just changed
all the events
of the first one.
Right, it's very interesting.
So, the other three
does a similar thing.
Yeah, the sisters
get the wand
and then they turn
the fairy godmother
into a statue
of a fairy godmother. And they're horse-rabbish. You've got a the fairy godmother into a statue of a fairy godmother
and they're
horse rubbish
you've got a statue
you've got a statue
you've got a statue
but like
they've got
they're using magic
they could turn it
into a statue
of anything
wouldn't they do
that is the crime
we've done
leave it there
in rock
it's like what
should they have gone
do you know what
we could probably
kill her with it
but then so then
at the end
they learn a lesson
obviously
and turn it back
and then
the very government
says to Cinderella
shall I return you
if you're far alive
what
because nobody's
filled the bin
and what's going on
and she goes
never mind
nice
did you have trouble
because Disney
are sort of
traditionally quite
litigious aren't they
but I'm not showing any clips
no
you had to talk about it
didn't you
I don't know
I've got no idea
I guess you're allowed
to talk about
what happens in a film
aren't you
do you use any of their music
nope
well my arrangement
of part of your world
nice
nice
I don't think that
I don't remember
I didn't ask them
but some Disney employees have seen it and didn't...
Oh, okay.
I just remembered I saw Donald Duck and he said it was fine.
Yeah, that's true.
Sweet.
Just remembered that.
You've seen him, didn't you, walking around?
Yeah, I was feeding him.
I'm going to chuck him bread.
Yep.
Just once a day.
Yeah.
It's nice.
He eats like a normal duck, weirdly.
He walks around like a bloke, but he just eats like a normal duck.
He eats it.
And then, do you know what he said to me?
I've been doing it about seven months.
And he came round with it. He went, you know I can just go and buy bread. Yeah. And I went, oh, I thought it just looks like a normal duck. He eats it and then do you know what he said to me? I've been there about seven months and he came round and he
went, you know I can
just go and buy bread.
Yeah.
And I went, oh I
thought I'd come and
feed the duck.
He went, no I've got
like money and that.
It's fine.
It's fine.
Like clothes and
a little hat.
Yeah.
Do you know any
Norwegians?
Do I know any
Norwegians?
Daniel Simonson?
Yeah, I know him as
well.
He's Norwegian.
Well next time you
meet a Norwegian,
he's a comedian so
like a normal Norwegian.
Yeah, like a normal
person.
Which is, ask them if they read Donald Duck comics.
Right.
And they'll say yes.
Really fucking...
They all read Donald Duck comics?
They all read Donald Duck comics.
That's like the Beano for them.
Right.
But then they keep reading it.
Really?
15, 16.
Wow.
Wow.
That's weird.
That's bizarre.
I've started reading Smurfs again recently.
Yeah?
I've got all the old Smurfs comics, and I find them very, very settling. I do. I genuinely do. I find them really settling to read. A really nice, sort of relaxing thing to recently. Yeah? I've got all the old Smurfs comics and I find them very, very settling.
I do, I genuinely do.
I find them really settling
to read,
a really nice,
sort of relaxing thing to read.
Yeah.
I read comics all the time
but Smurfs isn't like
the sort of comics I read.
You like blue,
just any one blue.
Anything blue,
apart from Avatar.
I just don't like Avatar.
That's why you started
strangling those women,
wasn't it?
Because you see the blue
at the end.
You see the blue at the end, yeah.
I know, but then I do
give them a nice kiss
and I dress them up nice.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble. So the blue at the end. I know, but then I do give him a nice kiss and I dress him up nice. Peacock and Gamble,
Peacock and Gamble.
So the show,
the show this year,
is it as tightly themed
as this year?
No, no, not at all.
I think that would have
been a stupid thing to do.
Unless you had...
Well, to do something
as weird
as the last one.
It's a lot more
straight sound.
Okay.
I mean, there is a,
you know is a theme
and an ending
yeah
it's about
roughly I think
it's about
what it is to be human
yeah
small topic
yeah
nice nice
as opposed to being
an animal basically
but you're right though
I guess if you did
come back with another
specifically themed show
it would be like
oh but he's been away
and tried to think
of something
that would equate
to what he did last year
yeah definitely I mean I think you get that not equate to what he did last year yeah definitely
I mean I think
you get that
but not anymore
because I think
like with Dave Gorman
for example
who we're big fans of
and we like very much
but Dave
after you know
sort of hitting
with the big things
you know
with the Google WAC
and that sort of thing
after that it was like
well are you just
looking for things to do
and that
well that's a part
of what Google WAC
is about isn't it
well Google
yeah absolutely
and Google WAC
is incredible
it's amazing yeah it really really is I mean you can it? Well, Google, yeah, absolutely. And Google app is incredible. It's amazing.
Yeah, it really, really is.
I mean, you can get the DVD of Google app still,
and it's just utterly inspiring and utterly like,
wow, he's genuinely bearing something.
I'm not going to say I like it because he bullies me on the internet.
He does bully Ed.
Gorman started bullying Ed on Twitter.
And then when Ed tried to fight back, he's gone quiet, Gorman.
Ed, right?
Right.
It wasn't Ed's fault.
Right.
You know, the GoCompare adverts, right? Mm-hmm. You know... Geocompare, yeah? Ed, right? It wasn't Ed's fault. You know the Go Compare adverts,
right?
Do you compare it? Yeah, right. You know they've done
new ones now. Apparently
this is one of the adverts. The big billboards.
Big billboards and they put
he's back or whatever and then graffiti
over it as if someone's graffitied
over it. Like, oh, we hate this or whatever.
And I saw one and I thought it was real graffiti.
So I tweeted a picture of it
and everyone had a go at me
and said I was an idiot.
Dave Gorman was the only one
who kept doing it for at least a month
after this. Kept going, I don't know
if you remember this, Ed, but you were
wrong about that. You see, the graffiti was put on
as part of the advert. And then I joined
in and sent him a picture of his poster
which I had graffitied and called his
PowerPoint presentation
Dave Idiot Penis Presentation.
Yeah, which is a little catchphrase.
That's a very good joke.
Yeah, and then he went quiet.
He went quiet.
He's not quiet at all.
So he can dish it out.
He can dish it out.
Oh, he can dish it out
but he can't take it, can he not?
Absolutely not.
He can't take it, Dave,
can you not?
You have a goat, Dave, as well.
Yeah.
Yeah. See, Tom Tuck's laid the smack a goat, Dave, as well. Yeah. Yeah.
See, Tom Tuck's laid the smack down on the nail.
Like that.
Just like that.
Pick up and gamble, pick up and gamble.
So, Tom.
Yeah.
You were very famously the horrible Penny.
The horrible, no.
What is it?
Penny Dreadful.
I'll translate.
You were in the sketch group, the Penny Dreadful.
Which is right as I was.
Which, of course, was three boys and two girls.
Like steps, but the other way around. Four boys, then
three boys. Right. Which is
seven boys. Seven boys.
And you'd done all your sketches,
didn't you? And made everyone laugh.
With your musical numbers, variety
bits, and of course your
clever Oxbridge shit. We all went
to Edinburgh. So all of that was wrong.
Some of it was clever.
You were in a sketch group
like Trainspotting.
What?
So you just heard Edinburgh
and said Trainspotting.
Trainspotting's in Leith.
There we go.
So that's the Penny Dreadful section
done.
How many years did you do
with the Penny Dreadfuls up here?
Five.
Five?
Yeah.
And it started as
Victoriana...
Victorian sketch comedy for two years.
Victorian sketch comedy.
And then we did a Victorian play,
which was very definitely a play,
because then someone said it was a play,
and then we weren't allowed to be congratulated on our play.
Oh, right.
Do you remember what happened?
No, what happened?
Are we allowed to talk about that?
Yeah, yeah.
The day the nominations came out in 2008,
there was conspicuously one less nomination on the main awards than there normally is.
There was only four rather than five.
And it's because they were going to nominate Penny Dreadfuls and then decided it was a play.
Really?
Yeah, as if we'd deliberately written a play rather than a delivery method for these jokes.
Yeah, and it was full of jokes.
How could, like, you know, the argument is like,
could anyone else do it?
Could you hand the script to someone else?
Really?
Yeah.
It's specifically for you lot.
And it was sketches and characters
woven together in a story,
which you could call a play, but it's comedy.
Well, then really, in a way, our show this year,
Peacock and Gamble don't even want to be on telly anyway, could be a play. Don't say that Well then really in a way our show this year Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to be
on telly anyway
could be a play.
Don't say that mate.
It could be couldn't it
because it's me and you
in our lighthouse.
Yeah.
And alright
we break it up
in little bits
but there is a through line.
Yeah.
So there was that
whole thing that went on
and after
so that was Victoria.
So do you know that
for a fact?
Is that just a fact?
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
Nika Rangas.
Oh really?
Yeah. And then she put us on the
in the West End
as part of the nominees show
yeah yeah
but we hadn't been nominated
we did double bill
with Russell Kane
we hadn't been nominated
right
that's
yeah
it's annoying
it is annoying
it is annoying
but the most retweets
I've ever got
was last year
when Humphrey won Newcomer
well that was clearly a play and Humphrey when Humphrey won Newcomer well that was clearly a play
and Humphrey
was also
the Penny Dreadfuls
yeah
yeah yeah
okay okay
he's a big lad
isn't he
yeah
6'7
yeah big lad
how big's Greg
6'8
whoa
we know someone
bigger than him
and Steve Merchant
I think he's 6'7 as well.
6'7, yeah.
You know, he might be taller than Graham.
They should do a sketch group.
They definitely should, shouldn't they?
Yeah, definitely.
What's it like down there?
Yeah, and they should do it.
With Sandy Totsvig.
Yeah.
But in a tiny room.
Yeah.
In the attic.
And call it Vent Double.
So after that, in the Penny Dreadfuls, And call it Ben and Double. Peacock and Gamble Peacock and Gamble
So after that
in the Penny Dreadfuls
you just thought
oh fuck this Victorian thing.
Well we thought
we couldn't really top it
so we did Leatherman
which was a
spoofy 60s
spy thing.
Yeah.
Set in a theme park
called Beef Island.
Nice.
Everything was beef themed.
Nice.
There was the beef coaster.
We had a tannoy that kept going,
don't let the beef bugs beef.
Why is that an R on Jeanette, by the way?
It stands for relevant.
I saw it in a tannoy shop.
It was the only letter I had there.
It made me really laugh.
Are you done with the...
Is it finished, Penny Dreadfuls?
No.
No?
It's all sorry for yesterday
We've got a radio play to write
Lovely
We'll get back
And we might put
Forever on again
For a week
Yeah
Christmas or something like that
Oh that'd be good
It'd be fun
You know you should do
A radio comedy show
Rather than a radio play
Yeah that'd be good
Well and
You're killing yourself
In a photo
The comedy department
Don't seem to commission us anymore
So we get commissioned
Through the drama department
Oh okay
Right right right
Because you're so famously
good at doing plays
of course
yes
mate we've got passes
at BBC
how do we get you in
I've got a pass
no but we've got
special passes
no but we've got
a proper one
can you use the photocopier
with your pass
I don't think so
we can with our one
if we wanted to
we don't use it
have you got your pass
with you
I don't think so
it's on my desk
oh yeah I bet it is
because I haven't had
to use it up here mine's on my desk. Oh, yeah, I bet it is. I haven't had to use it up here.
Mine's on my desk, but my desk is higher.
I've got a higher desk.
That's where my pass is and my gold pass.
Well, I might have left it in my bed and it's still off the bed.
Yeah.
Well, I don't...
I've got an hammock.
I've got an hammock between the World Trade Centre.
You can't say that.
Why?
I don't.
No, it's an hammock.
It's lovely.
No, mate.
It was right between the World Trade Centre.
Mate, World Trade Centre.
When was the last time you went to your hammock?
Ages ago.
Right, yeah, it's gone now, your hammock.
Someone's took my hammock?
Someone's took your hammock, mate.
That was it.
I hate to break it to you,
but your hammock was the target of a major world terrorism.
Only in New York can a man leave his hammock
hanging between two buildings
and it can't be trusted to go back and it's fine.
Yeah.
Ooh, Nixon, Amok.
Well, I think we could all agree
that is one of the major tragedies
of the 20th century.
21st.
Ah, 20th.
If I go,
tell you what,
if I go back New York now, right,
and I go in a bloody bakery
or something
and some beardy bloke
has got it
as his beard protector,
I will be absolutely furious and I'll know it's mine because it's tartan and it's got it as his beard protector. I will be absolutely furious.
And I'll know it's mine because it's tartan.
And it's got my initials on it.
So I will find you, whoever you are,
who's stolen my hammock from New York World Trade Centre.
Right, I think we've all gone slightly mad.
It's very warm in here, isn't it?
It's a very hot day and we have to shut the windows
and the door to record properly.
And the argers on.
And the argers on.
So we've genuinely turned this into a sauna.
Tom Duck looks like he's about to record properly. And the Argers on. And the Argers on. So we've genuinely turned this into a sauna. Tom Tuck looks like
he's about to pass out
and Ray's talking about
a hammock between
the World Trade Centre.
So I genuinely think,
Tom, plug all your shows.
Coalition, which is
the, should we call it
a play?
It won't get nominated.
The sketch show.
The sketch show.
Coalition.
Political satire sketch show
at 2pm at the Pleasant Stone.
Yes.
Then Tom Tuck flips out
at 10 past 8
at the Dome as well
Dome Dome
and Tom Tuck
goes straight to DVD
at 10
at Cabaret Voltaire
and that is free
that's free
lovely
who to
can I come in
get in
we can't mate
it's on at the same time
oh sorry
hard luck
there'll be no one there
Tom
it's been a genuine treat speaking with you.
Thank you, sir.
I need, like, a lot of water, I think.
Yeah, I think so as well.
I think we'll call that a day.
Thank you.
Water!
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Oh, Tom Tuck.
And me displaying my talent.
Very talented voice.
Yeah.
I'm going to start doing that more, you know.
Yeah.
In the interviews that we do.
Yeah.
Because I'm sick of giving promotions to other people.
Yeah.
We should be promoting ourselves
shouldn't we
we should be
telling them
every day
our show is at
9.40 at Pleasant's
Dome Dome
and get them
to come down
to that instead
yeah
do that
it was very good
I think we could
edit together
some of those
things and make
a little show
reel
of me doing
acting
yeah
well
I've often thought
I would be a good
actor on the radio
as well as on the
telly and I think today I would be a good actor on the radio as well as on the telly.
Yeah.
And I think today I was barely recognisable in the characters that I come up with.
Yeah.
Particularly my Alan Bennett.
That was a very good Alan Bennett.
Thank you very much.
And not only was I concentrating on the voice, I was also coming up with the storyline as well.
It was absolutely brilliant, mate.
Yeah.
Rock solid.
And the play for next year.
Yeah.
Get rid of all the Tories or get rid of them finally.
Yeah.
Whatever it was.
Which I played a minor in.
And also,
I'm not arrogant or egotistical,
you were a very good bear.
Thank you very much, mate.
So all that remains for us to do
is say goodbye to you now,
the listener.
Thank you.
Tom Tuck is here now with the credits.
And we shall see you again tomorrow.
We won't see you,
but we'll know that you're there.
We shall,
that is a matter now.
And we shall see you,
fair listener,
on the morrow.
Good eve. Mmm. you there. We shall, that is a maxi now. We shall see you, fair listener, on the morrow.
Good eve.
The Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast
is a ready production
for Hop Hop Step.
Posted.
Ah.
You're the first person
to get that bit wrong.
Yeah.
Well,
that doesn't look like an S.
Hosted.
Hosted.
Does it look like an S?
Hosted.
Everyone else has read it.
It's like a backwoods C.
Alright, everyone else has read it.
I like you try to pronounce a backwoods C.
Yeah. In many ways
it's adorable.
The Bigger and Gamble Edward Podcast
is a ready production, hosted by Chalkwood,
but go to UK. Today's guest was
Blank Blank, and my show is Blank.
All music by Thomas
von der Rehe. See you tomorrow. Lovely, well done Blank. And my show is All music by Thomas Von Der Reh
See you tomorrow
Lovely, well done Blank