The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 17 (Toby Hadoke)
Episode Date: January 3, 2021"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 17 (Toby Hadoke)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 102 of 128....
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Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Pickle and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble. Because it's on air, Peacock and it's not Ray Gamble, but it is Ray Peacock and it is our Gamble.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, here they are.
Hello and welcome to the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh Fringe podcast.
Hooray!
Here I am, Ray Peacock.
Hello, I am here as well, Ed Gamble.
Lovely to see you.
We don't see them, don't we?
Hey, episode whatever it is at the moment. Seventeen. Nearly finished, haven't we? No, not really. Nearly to see you. We don't see them, do we? Episode whatever it is at the moment.
17. Nearly finished, haven't we?
No, not really. Nearly finished this podcast.
How many will there be? 27? 26
or 27. 26 or 27.
So we're more than halfway through these podcasts.
We're more than halfway through, that's true. And halfway through
the Edinburgh Fringe. And then it'll be finished.
Edinburgh Fringe will be finished and the podcast
will be finished. That's true. And then we've got
another year of people going, when are you doing the podcast again? When are you and the podcast will be finished. That's true. And then we've got another year of people going,
when are you doing the podcast again?
When are you doing the podcast again?
Never.
You're too much fuss.
Well, you said that last time and now we're doing it now.
What you do is you go, we're never doing it again.
And then you go, all right, we'll do 26 in a row.
No, but this has been different, hasn't it?
We're not doing like the old one again.
But anyway, I have prepared something today.
Because it's been so much work,
I have prepared some stuff
for the beginning.
That's a good idea.
I've got it here
written in my book.
So I'll do some notes.
Okay.
I'll do some of my notes.
Okay.
The Peacock and Gamble
Edinburgh podcast
is a ready production
hosted by
Chorlton.co.uk.
No, that's not.
Today's guest was
Ray Peacock.
And my show is
Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to be
on telly anyway.
9.40 at the Pleasant's Dome.
Yeah, that's true. but that's not a note
That's the credits that we give for the guests to read
That's not something you can just read out
Got this book
That's not a book that you can read out
Did you know that
Al Murray's phone number
No no no
No no no
This is a book that our management give us
It's an artist handbook.
It's not for the public consumption.
You can't just read out Al Murray's phone number.
We'll just give him a bit of a clue to some numbers.
No, you can't.
No, 07, that's as much of a clue as you can give to some numbers.
All right, Ian Sterling.
No, don't give out Ian Sterling's number.
It's just a clue, right?
Don't give out Ian Sterling's number,
because if one of his fans has had some sort of growth spurt
and they can reach the phone, they could call him.
It ends in 6-2
that's all I'm saying
mate
you can't do that
no one can work that out
from that
I could
alright I'll give him
more clues about it
no don't give him more clues
give it next time
my first is 0
my second is 7
no that's it
and that's it
and that's all
you've given out
4 digits
of Ian Stirling's
phone number
right ok
and that's
luckily we've recorded
this interview already
well what have you prepared?
Well, not as much as you have.
You've read out the credits to the show
and then read out a bit of Ian Sterling's phone number.
And I'll worry as well.
And I'll worry as well.
From television.
That's not preparation, mate.
Never let it be said we don't get all the good guests.
That's not preparation, is it?
Right.
That's panicking that you've not prepared anything.
Usually we just riff something off the top.
I've got a pen.
You've got... Right, okay, is this you riffing something? Yeah, I've got a pen here. Right. That's panicking that you've not prepared anything. Usually we just riff something off the top. I've got a pen. You've got a pen.
Right, okay, so this is you riffing something.
Yeah, I've got a pen here.
Right.
Oh.
Go on, let's have a table.
Don't bash the table.
Hmm.
Oh, I'll tell you what I like to do this type of day.
What?
Have a bit of a drink of water.
Riffing.
That is not content.
Right.
That is not content.
Right, fine then.
You drink a bit of water.
Fine then, I'll do what you're doing. I'll just sit there. No, you do some stuff. No, sorry. I'm not content. Right. That is not content. Right, fine then. You drink a bit of water. Fine then, I'll do what you're doing and just sit there.
No, you do some stuff. No, sorry, but I'm not
just sitting there. I'm stopping you doing things like
drinking water on the podcast. You just
sat there and watched me have a drink of water.
Yeah, I did, because I couldn't believe that you
decided that was part of the podcast. That is alright.
That just shows that I'm a human. That shows
that I'm just an ordinary bloke, just like some
of the people who listen to it. Only
some of them. Well, some of them will be women, some of them will be weird boys.
Well, yeah, a lot, I think the majority of them are weird boys.
Not like that.
I mean, no one's listening to this anyway because they're crying over their A-level results.
Oh, yeah, A-level results today.
Yeah, bad luck.
Bad luck.
Bad luck.
Bad luck, mate.
Are you assuming all of the people who listen to this podcast have done badly in their A-levels?
There's no way any of our fans have done well in their A-levels.
Not a cat in hell's chance.
And that's why when we were saying to you, when you were saying,
I'm listening to your podcast in the library I'm meant to be revising.
Isn't that why you were meant to be revising?
Knuckle down. Get on with your revisions.
Because then you will be Superman if you do well in your A-Levels.
Yeah, or it will literally have no effect either way on your life.
I did well in my A-Levels and look where I am.
I did awful in my A-Levels and look where I am.
Exactly, so it makes no difference. We're both doing the same thing. Both good cooks. and your life. I did well in my A-Levels and look where I am. I did awful in my A-Levels and look where I am. Exactly.
So it makes no difference.
We're both doing the same thing.
Both good cooks.
Yeah, both good cooks.
Although I say I did awful.
Yeah.
I did awful the first year
because I was too busy
kissing the girls.
Yeah.
But then I re-took some of them
and did very well.
Right, okay.
I did another year all on my own.
Oh, well done.
And I revised it all by myself as well.
Well done.
I didn't even go to the lessons.
Oh.
I passed A-Level Sociology
without going to a lesson.
That's Peacock.
He marches to a beat of a different drama. Yeah, that's me.
And then I went to university and that didn't make
a blind bit of difference to my career. Could have been
three years ahead in my career.
Makes no difference to me. But then again
three years would have made no difference either.
Oh, come and see me in three years time. Same old shit.
Same old shit. Yeah, but I would
have got there quicker. Exactly, we would have
done this fringe three years ago.
Yeah, so don't worry about your A-level results, is what we're saying.
Because even if you've done well, I mean, give yourself a pat on the back.
But promise you, it won't make a blind bit of difference or anything.
I mean, I got an A in politics.
I couldn't even tell you the name of the Prime Minister now.
Exactly, exactly.
I got a B in English literature.
And I've never even read a book.
Yeah, there you go.
Never read a book. Interesting fact about Mr read a book. Yeah, there you go. Never read a book.
Interesting fact about
Mr Peacock.
Not one book.
Yeah, can't even
open it properly.
Can't read.
Can't read.
Can't read.
Can't read.
Doesn't even know
how to open a book.
Yeah.
Can't read.
Can't even dress
himself in the morning.
Can't write.
Can't write.
Just, his hands are
just like little claws.
Can't tell the time.
Can't tell the time.
God knows how I got
to the exam.
He needs me to take
him to the toilet every single time Wiker's bum for him. Yeah, pop my hands up in the air't tell the time. God knows how I got to the exam. He needs me to take him to the toilet
every single time
Wiker's bum for him.
Yeah,
pop me hands up in the air
when he does it.
And he did alright
in his A-levels eventually.
I did fine at my A-levels eventually.
So it makes no difference.
Even if you get three A's
you might still shit yourself
on the bus
going in the wrong direction
because you've not read
the destination properly.
And then eat it.
And then eat the poop.
Just like me.
So,
who's on the show today?
I can't remember.
Toby Haydoke.
Toby Haydoke is on the show today.
The brilliant and lovely Toby Haydoke.
The new, the Doctor Who, Doctor Who, isn't he?
He plays Doctor Who.
No, he doesn't.
No, he likes Doctor Who.
He likes Doctor Who.
He's a brilliant comedian, brilliant compere, lovely man.
Actor as well, good actor.
Actor as well.
He was a vicar in the thing.
What was he a vicar in?
Coronation Street.
Coronation Street.
So we'll be having a chat to Toby Haydoke.
Oddly enough for us, usually we've pre-recorded the interviews before we do this intro.
We're about to do it.
We're about to do the interview now, so I'm saying it's gone well, but if it's gone badly, don't think me a liar.
Yeah, we waiting for that black mofo to get up the stairs.
Sorry, what?
We waiting for him to get up the stairs, aren't we?
No, we waiting for who?
That mofo.
That what mofo? That what mofo?
That black mofo.
Right.
Firstly,
even if Toby was black,
that wouldn't be acceptable.
But the fact that he is white
is utterly confusing.
Why?
The bizarre nature of that
outranks the possible racist connotation.
That was street talk.
Street talk for what?
Come on in, you black mofo.
Come and do a podcast.
Right, you better not start this interview by calling him a black mofo.
Why are you saying mofo?
It's insulting.
Because he's one of my beaches, isn't it?
No, he's one of your beaches.
One of my beaches.
Right, do you know what mofo is short for?
Yeah.
Do you?
Yeah.
What?
Mother and father.
No.
No, it's not short
for Mother and Father.
Why were you calling
Toby Haydock your
Mother and Father?
Because he's my mofo.
When you go round
to your parents,
do you go through
the door and go,
alright, mofo?
Yeah, he's one of
my beaches.
It's bitches, you mean.
No, beaches.
Mofo is short
for motherfucker.
Beg your pardon.
Exactly.
So do not call
Toby Hayduck
a mofo
well that's us
getting banned
off iTunes
it's a good job
we're slipping
down the charts
hopefully we'll
slip right to the
bottom of the charts
you say slipping
crashing
have we really
what we are
crashing down the charts
I looked today
and in the overall
charts we were
40
35
40
down from 6
thanks for your
support so foe you all yeah foe you all you foes 40. Whoa. 35, 40, something like that. Down from six. Yeah, so. Thanks for your support.
So, foe you all.
Yeah, foe you all.
You foes.
Wow.
Isn't it weird, eh?
Yeah.
Well.
You have a couple of people on
they've never heard of
and they all fuck off.
Foe off.
Yeah, foe off.
All right, we're going to get Toby on now.
But first of all, where's our show?
What's it called?
What time is it?
Our show is sadly still on
at the Pleasant's Dome Dome.
Yeah.
At 9.40pm.
Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to be on telly anyway.
So come now.
If you're going to come,
don't come last night
because everyone was wet.
And it's been on.
What?
So you can't come last night.
Yeah, you can't come last night.
Don't come last night.
It's impossible.
Because everyone was wet
from outside
and I think they were in there
at the beginning a bit too long.
Yeah.
Letting in too early.
It's also, mate,
it's just to stop you there. This is all true what you too early. It's also, mate, it's just stopped you there.
This is all true, what you're saying,
but it's also logically impossible for them to come last night.
Me and Ned worked very hard, but, you know,
it didn't quite get going.
But there's been some big laughs,
and we had a bit of fun in that.
So don't come last night.
But don't come last night,
because it wasn't a good show, really.
Yeah.
If you try to work it into your schedule now.
Yeah, but you won't be able to,
because, of course, by the laws of time,
you won't be able to come.
So here's Toby Haydoe, talking of laws of time and time travel.
Oh, give me your cock wire socket.
Here comes Toby Haydoke.
Brilliant link. That was an amazing link.
Here comes Toby Haydoke, Doctor Who fan, comedian, nice man.
Geek.
Geek.
Spod.
Right, let's not be horrible about it.
Weirdo. Here's weirdo Toby Haydoke.
Pick up and gamble, pick up and gamble. And here we are with Toby Haydoke. Hooray. Right. It does not be horrible. Weirdo. Here's Weirdo Toby Adoke. Be cooking gamble.
Be cooking gamble.
And here we are with Toby Haydoke.
Hooray.
Hello.
Haddock.
Haydoke.
Haydoke.
Haydoke.
Is that a real name?
It's a real name.
Yes.
Like from your mum and dad and that.
Yeah, from both of them.
Yeah.
You're the only Haydoke that I know.
I think I'm one of the few Haydokes in the world because it's not a real name.
Oh, okay.
In the sense that...
Is it a combination of things?
No.
I used to make a joke that my forebears were fisher folk
and then my uncle researched our family tree
and he's fortunately free of the haydoke thing
because he's from my mum's side.
He's got a normal name.
He's called Mister.
Mister?
Mister, Mister, yes.
Oh, nice, like the band.
Yeah, exactly.
And my mum became a ward sister,
married my dad three months before she became a ward sister,
otherwise she'd have been Sister Mister. Sister Mister. But no, and a mum became a ward sister, married my dad three months before she became a ward sister, otherwise she'd have been sister-mister.
But no, and a Mr Haddock married the 18th century version of Hyacinth Bouquet,
and on their wedding day, Haddock dropped a couple of letters, added an E,
and became a word that nobody can pronounce.
I can.
Haddock.
Haddock.
That's a good one.
So you're a posh Haddock.
Yes, well, not even posh, social climbing. Yeah. And a Haddock with ideas above its station. With a little sprig of parsley on the side. Hey, Doke. That's a good one. So you're a posh haddock? Yes, I'm a... Well, not even posh. Social climbing.
Yeah.
And a haddock with ideas above its station.
And a little sprig of parsley on the side.
Yeah, exactly.
Nice.
So it's worth 19 quid rather than a five.
Now, speaking of your dad.
Yeah.
You're doing a sequel this year to the show you did a few years back,
which was Moths Ate My Doctor Who Scarf.
Yes.
Which I, again, listened to last week again.
Loved it.
And I do really like it. to who's got yes which i uh again listened to i listened to last week again loved and i did i do
really like it from that i think your your dad your dad's actions had a major influence in how
that started off yes because he he vanished when i was well he didn't vanish he left when i was four
yes so yes i i to give because if i'm doing a show about doctor who it can't just be about doctor who
no definitely have a narrative shouldn't have doctor who in it really yeah well quite a lot
of doctor who out of it uh yeah yeah cut quite a lot of Doctor Who out of it
have you
yeah there was a whole thing
about the Talons of Weng Chihang
it's gone
and it breaks your heart
so it has to
it has to hinge on
something real
otherwise
and it's not a show
for Doctor Who fans
you know my ideal audience
to enjoy it
are not Doctor Who fans
they'll like it anyway
because you're talking
about Doctor Who
but they do come don't they
they do come
and occasionally go
I think they'll find
that happened and I'll go I think you're fine, that happened.
I'll go, I think you're fine, that actually happened.
They'll go, oh, all right then.
You can't be beaten.
It must be horrific.
Well, yeah, this has got all sorts of things in it, this show,
some of which are quite, you know, hopefully heartfelt and moving
and they'll go, you know, well, you know,
if something happens eight times, I've got a joke about psoriasis
and saying that your skin regenerates at eight times the rate
that you should
and I ad-libbed
that's like William
Hartnell regenerating
into Paul McGann
which is nice because
it gives another
mention of Paul
McGann who becomes
a bit of a running
theme in the show
and somebody came
out and tweeted
immediately well
no my maths brain
says actually if it's
eight times the rate
it should be William
Hartnell and
Christopher Eccleston
brilliant
I've just done a
show an hour
sweating and you go actually I think I needed to mention Paul McGann again and it doesn't matter it's a joke Christopher Eccleston. Brilliant. I've just done a show, an hour, sweating.
Actually, I think,
I needed to mention Paul McGann again.
And it doesn't matter.
It's a joke.
I mean, all that
Michael Gray had to do
was get a load of these people
and say,
look.
Look what it's made.
You can't have a go at me
for asking this programme.
Look what it's produced here.
Look at the clown
that it's created.
Yeah, I mean,
there are perfectly affable
Doctor Who fans like yourself,
but you are a proper
stupid Doctor Who
fan eh
yeah yeah
it's not an
affectation
it's not a
because you get
quite a few
I sometimes sit
next to people
on a train
and I'll go
yeah I'm a
big Doctor Who
fan
and they'll go
oh yeah me too
and you go
oh what do you
think of the new
series
I haven't watched
that yet
you're not a fan
you quite like it
that's the difference
between knowing
the name of the
person who designed
the first episode
yeah
hasn't the new series generated people who designed the first episode. Yeah.
Hasn't the new series generated people who say they're fans of it?
But these are people who are just going, yeah, I love Doctor Who.
It's really, really great. Who are the people that kicked me when I was, you know, in 1989.
Yeah, exactly.
I was going, I like Doctor Who.
And they'd have gone, ah, ha, ha, ha.
So are you waiting for it to go not trendy again so you can be at the forefront of the fandom
and it doesn't annoy you as much with these sort of fake fans?
Well, there is some attraction to being downtrodden.
I have to say I'm not averse to being a loser.
I think I carry it off.
So there is something,
and I think there are certain sections of Doctor Who fandom
that are livid that it's popular.
It stops them getting angry. So now they fandom that are livid that it's popular. Yeah. Because it stops them getting angry.
So now they're angry about the fact that it's popular.
Yeah.
But I'm like that over stuff though.
I've said that on the podcast before.
I'm like that over stuff.
When I like something, then everyone likes it.
Like when the Muppets came back last year.
And it was like, I mean I didn't really like it anyway.
But it was like a thing of going, everyone's suddenly, oh the Muppets, I love the Muppets.
Oh I've got an animal pencil case.
Oh it's like, come in my living room. Yeah. And I'll show you oh, the Muppets, I love the Muppets. Oh, I've got an animal pencil case. Oh, it's like,
come in my living room
and I'll show you
what loving the Muppets is.
What terrifying Muppet love is.
Yeah, yeah, exactly, exactly.
I think there are
Manchester City fans
that it's probably
not as much fun now
as it was when they were
doing really bad.
Exactly, yeah, exactly.
Because you feel like
you're the proper,
but when they're in
the second division
and then when you get promoted,
that's all the sweeter
when I see a good
episode of Doctor Who
I taste it more
because I watch
Time and the Rani
so you might go
I like the one
with the statues
I'll go
it hasn't got
Kate O'Mara
pretending to be
Bonnie Langford
that's how good it is
I mean you say that though
but the one with the statues
oh yes
when you think about it
the one with the statues
is brilliant
right
a really good ensemble piece
an ensemble piece
yeah
right down to the
bottom of the cast
it's nearly the bottom
it's a really
every cog in that machine
is important
very very important
part of it
although a bad example
for children
because Banto's DVDs
are as an apostrophe
on DVDs
on the store sign outside
which is always
rankled with me
hey look
let's not get say that slightly as if Hey, look, let's not get...
You say that slightly as if it's his fault.
Let's not get...
Well, whose shop was it?
Well, we should explain this,
because, Toby, you're a massive Doctor Who fan,
you have been for many, many years.
Yeah.
But you've never been in Doctor Who.
No.
Whereas I'm not really bothered about Doctor Who,
and I've been in it.
Yeah.
Not only have I been in it,
I was in one of the best episodes of all time.
Yeah, possibly one of the most... Yeah, yeah. Certainly one of the top three. But you wouldn't know, would you, right?, I was in it. One of the best episodes of all time. Yeah, possibly one of the most,
yeah,
yeah,
certainly one of the top three.
But you wouldn't know,
would you,
right,
because you have no idea
what any of the other
episodes are like.
I have no idea
about it at all.
I mean,
I was that embarrassed
being in Doctor Who
that I used my real name
to be in it.
I didn't even use
my performance name.
You should have seen
the colour I turned
when I read that
in Doctor Who magazine.
No,
I know,
I know.
Guest cast include,
what?
You like Star Wars?
You're even more embarrassed.
You asked them in the encyclopedia to misspell your real name.
Yeah, I was so embarrassed that I rang up the Doctor encyclopedia
and I went, look, could you misspell my real name, please?
Because I'm so embarrassed.
Please spell it Ian Baldsworth.
Yeah, and I'm very grateful that they did do that at my request.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and my request yeah so when I chatted to you
when I got the gig
because I genuinely
felt bad about it
that's right
we chatted
and I think I gave you
my call sheet
you gave me your dailies
yeah yeah yeah
which I didn't read
sides
didn't read spoilers
did I give them to you
before the episode
yeah
did I
yeah
sorry about that
no no
and you said it's alright you said I don't know if I should give you so I said it's? Yeah. Did I? Yeah. Sorry about that. No, no.
And you said, I don't know if I should give it to you.
So I said, it's all right, I won't read it.
I won't spoil it for myself.
Thank you very much.
I'm very, very grateful.
Yeah, yeah, of course.
It's a very kind thing to do.
I still have them.
I just printed them out on my computer.
They're not real.
But yeah, because I genuinely had a feeling of guilt with it. Because as a fan of things, so I'm a big fan of the Muppets,
and I'm a fan of Star Wars and that sort of thing. And as a fan of things, I'm a big fan of the Muppets and I'm a fan of Star Wars
and that sort of thing
and as a fan of things
I totally get it
I get it from your perspective
that someone
I shared a cab home last night
with Danny Boy
yeah
right we went to separate houses
but we got a cab home together
and we were talking about Montreal
because he just did a gig
with the Muppets in Montreal
and we were talking about all that
and it was like
he was like yeah so you know
it's great I did a gig with the Muppets
and I'm like
you've got no idea what that means you've got no idea how much that means know it's great I did a gig with the Muppets and I'm like you've got no idea
what that means
you've got no idea
how much that means
but you've just said
you don't like the Muppets now
you like the new Muppets
so you're not so keen really
but you know
still to be there
with some of the performers
who were performer
Henson and Tom
it's still
it's still a thing
it's a thing isn't it
because you could say
that with Doctor Who
couldn't you
were you Tom Baker
you were on Doctor Who
yes I was born
with Tom Baker
yeah so but then Toby being in Doctor Who now he wouldn't be going well I wish it was Tom Baker I wish was you Tom Baker you were a doctor yes I was born with Tom Baker yeah so but then
Toby being a doctor
now he wouldn't be
going well
I wish it was Tom Baker
I wish it was Tom Baker
he'd be going
it's Doctor Who
yeah it's the institution
absolutely
so I get it completely
but are you over it
no
no
no
I compared you
the other day
didn't I
and I introduced you
by going
this is bloke
doesn't even like doctors
get him on the
welcome on the stage
is your headliner
yeah
I'm sorry man
no it's alright
it's fine
but what you need
to do now Toby
is get a part in
Star Wars
yeah that's it
yeah
I'll voice Emperor
Palpatine in the
Clone Wars
because Ian Amber
Crumb has just
died
has he died
not Ian McDermid
who plays
the English
yes
we've been telling
I told him Sid Waddell
Died on the podcast
The other day
What?
These are breaking
Celebrity myths
On the podcast
I had to do that
On a commentary
Which was a Crotons
Where one of the actors
Went oh there's Madeline
I was hoping
She'd join us today
And I had to go
I'm afraid she's died
Oh
So you do commentaries
On the DVDs?
I do
That counts
It's lovely
And I'm flattered to do it counts it's lovely and I'm flattered
to do it
and it's brilliant
and I watch
Doctor Who
with my heroes
but it's not the
same as being
in Doctor Who
it counts
for example
I'm a Doctor Who
fan
big Doctor Who
fan
and I wouldn't
want my
autograph
if I'd been
in Doctor Who
I would want
my autograph
I don't believe
you
are you a
proper completist
when it comes
to autographs
and things
you are you are and I haven't been. Are you a proper completist when it comes to autographs and things?
Yeah.
You are, yeah.
And you wouldn't want yours at all?
No.
I've not been a Doctor Who.
I do not count.
I am not canon.
That is a horrible thing to be able to say about yourself,
that you do not count.
I don't count.
I am redundant.
Ray's doing his autograph for Toby here.
I'm on the Doctor Who celebrities list.
I am probably below a man who once played a monster.
Right.
And just slightly above somebody who knitted a Tom Baker scarf that was used in an exhibition, but not a series.
I once...
Oh, I've just got Banto's autograph.
You did actually sign my script for me.
I know, but that's a proper one and a nice moleskin painter.
Thank you, yeah.
I did one... Actually, you do the DVDs for moleskin painter. Thank you, yeah. I did one.
Actually, you do the DVDs for Doctor Who, don't you?
Yeah.
Oh, can I get your autograph?
Sorry.
How lovely is he talking about getting all of these?
I just said it was you.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
I've got a weird thing with the Doctor Who thing,
because I do occasionally get asked to do conventions.
Not very much, but I occasionally get asked.
And the first one that ever called me and asked me to do it
was it 10th Planet?
Oh yeah, 10th Planet.
I think it was there.
And they called
and I was like
look, I think
I find it a bit embarrassing
because they only said
a couple of lines in it
and I just think
it's a bit weird
and people just won't
want me there
and it'll just be like
an odd add-on to it.
Yeah, yeah.
And the bloke
who was chatting to me
I don't know his name
I forget his name
but he said
he went
mate, the guests that are already booked
that are considered a big deal
are the people that are in the statues.
And I went, but they don't even move in the episode.
He went, I know.
Because they didn't have moving statues,
but it was filmed as such,
so it was all snapshots.
So yeah, but I didn't do it.
I've not been and done any of them.
I don't think it'd be really my thing.
But also the other
slightly shitty thing
that I wanted to do was
is I answered the first sack of fan mail
from all your lot.
Yeah.
And it was fine and pleasant.
And I read all the letters
which upset me more and more.
Weird thing.
They send you like pictures
of their kids and stuff.
Really?
I got, I'm number one.
You see I don't get any of this
because I'm not canon.
You can maybe,
mate, you can have them. You can have pictures of their kids and stuff. Really? I can't, I'm number one. You see I don't get any of this because I'm not canon. See, I don't care.
Mate,
you can have them.
You can have pictures of these people's kids.
I showed you that one
that was a little girl
and there was like
about ten pictures
of this little girl.
Maybe about five.
Dressed up as him
in the episode.
Full beard,
drawn on.
That's not true.
But there was like
a picture of her
making a cake
and a picture of her
in the garden
and a picture of her
meeting Billy Piper
and it really was,
she's a very interesting
doctor here.
This is our daughter so and so and she loves doctors here was she's a very interesting doctor here this is our daughter
so and so
and she loves doctor here
she's also very keen
on baking
picture
more and more
she's getting into
gardening
picture
yeah
recently I can imagine
she met Billy Piper
picture
really bizarre
but that's bizarre
please will you sign
this photo
and send it back
they took a picture
of her with Billy Piper
to send to you
she's going
oh Boltswath
is going to love this
I bet Billy Piper's
gone the opposite
she's going to go she's met oh Bold Swath is going to love this Betty Piper's gone the opposite she's going to go
she's met Bold Swath
well the downside
of that is though
as well
I've got a sack
of pictures of kids
in my house
like really bizarre
how do you explain
that away
Pete Townsend
can't wait to get
a part in Doctor Who
how do you explain
that away
you just make up
a story about
them being sent
to you by a Doctor Who fan
yeah
and then you pre-empt it
by saying it on a podcast
yeah
so then you've validated it
before the police come round
yeah
is there any sign
of you being in Doctor Who
no
I'm not
I'm sure they must
you must be known
well I've done two
one man shows now
where I
profess my love for Doctor Who
and underline within those shows that I'm a professional actor.
Which you are, because you were a Vicar-Incarnation.
Yeah, and I was an ill person in Holby City.
Really?
I was in the Holby City Christmas episode.
Were you?
Doing what?
Playing science fiction obsessed.
That was a stretch.
But with The Matrix.
I had to pretend I'd watched The Matrix. In the script
it said 18 times and I said
that's not a geek. I said he would have seen it
118 times at least if he's a geek.
And they let me change the line.
So that's what happens when you cast the genuine article.
I've actually only seen The Matrix once.
You're also a writer for...
I'm also a writer for Holby City.
It says that on my CV, yes.
I've seen The Matrix three quarters of the time.
Really?
Yeah.
I had a little doze in it.
I didn't like it.
I liked the first one.
Oh, it did me a din.
I can't watch Keanu Reeves.
Oh, really?
I actually can't watch him.
And so, yes, that was a Christmas episode, which was rather good.
And so, yeah, I've done lots of acting, just not in Doctor Who.
Right.
Imagine if, because you know that I've been in, you know that I was in Doctor Who.
Yes, I'm aware.
So I know all the lot.
Yeah.
Moffat and all that lot.
Yeah.
Imagine if I brought you on this podcast today.
Yeah.
Right, just so I could reveal to you.
Don't even do this.
He knows it's a joke.
We all know it's a joke.
But even then, this seems cruel.
But just imagine if.
Yeah, no, but even just saying imagine if.
Imagine if.
They'd be front page
at all wouldn't they
and everything
yeah
imagine if I brought you on
yeah
here to go
tell you to behave
right
you are the new Doctor Who
Doctor
you're the new Doctor
actually that's a good question
would that
would you be happier
with that
or just getting a part
with the pressure
of being told
that you're the new Doctor Who
go I'll get over the pressure
but would it be
if you did a part say you did a part like my part yeah right if you did a you're the new Doctor Who. Go, I'll get over the pressure. Or would it be, if you did a part,
say you did a part like my part.
Yeah.
Right, if you did a part like that
in Doctor Who,
then you're done, it's done.
Right, I mean,
you could get another part another day.
I know that people have doubled up.
Sure, sure, yeah.
But chances are,
it'd be that one part
and that'll be you.
Would that, for you,
negate you then?
Would it be like,
oh, well, that means
I can never be the Doctor?
No, because Colin Baker
was in a Pete Davidson story
and he got cast as Doctor.
I forgot I was talking to him. I forgot I was talking to him.
Completely forgot
I was talking to him.
Alright, well you
know our friend
Raji James?
Yeah.
Who got his brain
sucked out by Daleks?
He did, yeah.
Right.
He couldn't go back
in Doctor Who now.
He could.
No he couldn't,
he was awful.
They couldn't have
him in Doctor Who
again.
They could.
He couldn't,
he had his brain
sucked out.
No but not as the
same character.
John Aveneri got
absorbed by the weed creature
in Fury from the Deep.
A couple of years later
he played General Carrington
in The Ambassadors of Death
and he got arrested
for trying to set up
a world war
between mankind and Mars.
Then not long after that,
a couple of years later
he was in Death to the Daleks
and got shot in the back
by an arrow.
It's just three years later
he comes back in the power of Kroll
and he's a green swampy creature.
He's obsessed with John Abernary.
I am, yeah.
I remember the mentions
of John Abernary.
Ridiculously obsessed with him. Yeah.
Has that come on in the new show? No, it's not.
No, it's not. There was a bit that I had to
get rid of, which was about the fact that
I don't know if I can... Yeah, I can.
Screw it. A friend
of mine wrote a sitcom that
is being aired at the end of the year,
that had a character in it called Dr. Abernathy,
which was written for me, and the name
is an in-joke, so it would have been an anecdote on a
DVD commentary.
This is, you know, never mind about
getting a part in Doctor Who, this was a part
that was written for me by a very close friend
of mine and when the script was reviewed
by the BBC diversity department
Dr. Abernary, no it was not cut
it was changed into a black lady
so he sent me a text
saying I'm so sorry but Dr. Abernary your part is now you can't play because she's now a black lady. So he sent me a text saying, I'm so sorry, but Dr. Abernary,
your part is now you can't play
because she's now a black lady.
But I think you're a very good actor.
I said, well, I thought,
and this stops me from doing it for a while.
It should have been.
Hello, Toby.
This is your friend who wrote the script.
Yeah.
Right, that's been a bit of a change.
I just need to check at the moment
how bad is your psoriasis?
Because we need...
Could you set fire to it?
Yeah, because we...
So it's gone.
You've gone out of it.
So, well,
I sent him the text back
saying that's the story
of my life, mate,
in which I will be played
by Gina Yashere.
Have you worked out in your head
exactly how you'd
play the doctor
and what you'd wear
what your signature
costume would be
yes I've also
I also know
how I would
fall off the back
of a sofa
when zapped
by a son
I've done it all
right because I know
for a fact
I've not
because I don't ever
anticipate
either wanting to
or actually being
the doctor in Doctor Who right but the other day which is lucky I don't ever anticipate either wanting to or actually being the Doctor in Doctor Who.
Right, but the other day...
Which is lucky.
I don't mean to offend Toby, but you said to Tim Vine you think he'd be a very good Doctor.
I do think he would be a very good Doctor.
I think he would be in the more traditional mould of the Doctor.
Toby looks angry.
No, but then Tim...
Because Tim was saying it was because I look like Peter Davidson, and it's not.
Yes.
I think he just has a nice manner about him.
Yes, he has a charming
and slightly gutsy
and kind English.
I'm not putting him
above you in this.
I'm just saying.
I'm allowed to let
other people of my friends
have a go at being the Doctor.
That's fine.
And you can do the commentary
on the DVD.
Now, I know that
my other close friend
over here,
Ed Gamble,
my best friend,
I hope he doesn't mind
me saying that.
No, of course not, mate. I think that Ed, well, I know that Ed other close friend over here, Ed Gamble, my best friend, I hope he doesn't mind me saying that. No, of course not, mate.
I think that Ed, well, I know that Ed has long been planning
what he would wear if he was the Doctor.
So it'd be interesting to see how they would correlate.
Yeah, so starting off with the shoes, what sort of shoes are you wearing?
Oh, boots, leathery boots.
Leathery boots.
Same here, but specifically cowboy boots.
Yeah, but no, I think cowboy is slightly too,
I think you wouldn't be able to distinguish what
type of
boot,
but just
long enough
sort of
floppy leather
to pull on
slightly below
the knee,
but boots,
boots.
I think we're
coming at this
from different
levels of
seriousness.
He's not
even got the
gig yet and
you're already
being a fan
about it and
going,
no,
they're the
wrong boots.
This is what
you've got to look forward to.
There'll be a snatched Polaroid from you on the internet,
on somebody's Facebook page,
and Outpost Gallifrey will explode.
Outpost Gallifrey?
Was that the one we read Raj's interview from?
No, that was Doctor Who Online, I think.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Go on, Ed.
So what sort of socks?
I know we won't see the socks,
but obviously specific details count,
and this will be a fan thing to know about what socks.
Oh, well, I have to say I'm a bit, I'm a Marks and Spencer's sock wearer, but I don't pair my socks.
So they would be odd socks.
Odd socks.
Me, no socks in Doctor Who. Right.
Legs.
I think that was a typo in your sentence there. There's no socks in Doctor Who.
No, no. For me.
When he's the doctor, no socks.
No socks. When I'm the Doctor
legs, what's on the legs?
I just think some quite
I'd really like leather trousers
but that would be too sexy
and you can't have a sexy
obviously how leather trousers
look on me is very different to how
leather trousers would feel when I'm wearing
I would probably think I was
striding around like Russell Brand,
whereas actually I'd look like a slightly perverted Bill Oddie.
Okay, but that might be a nice character point though, mightn't it?
You're striding around thinking you're all sexy, but it's just...
But actually, yeah, I look like a bank manager who's on a swingers weekend.
Inside the boots or inside the boots?
Inside the boots.
Inside the boots, okay. Ed?
Denim, very high cut shorts
almost hot pants
and sort of just cut-offs
like frayed around the edges.
He's not making this up
by the way.
This is genuinely
what he is.
If I ever got an audition
for it I'd go in
wearing this.
For how long have you
been thinking this now?
Many years.
Since I've known you
so long.
Yeah, yeah.
I think we might have
just found the moment
I might stop watching
Doctor Who.
Right, what's on what tops What are we doing for tops?
A puffy white shirt and a waistcoat
and a long brown coat.
Interesting.
Me, Hawaiian shirt.
The gaudier the better.
Full on Hawaiian shirt.
Shark's tooth necklace.
Basically, top of a surfer, bottom of a stripper, feet of a cowboy.
Okay, now the cowboy boots.
Hat, of course.
What sort of hat?
You've got to say hat.
My hat.
What's your hat?
Put my hat on.
It's kind of a grandad hat.
Yeah, kind of a grandad hat.
Yeah, it's nice.
But my youthful sparkle will be juxtaposed with it and therefore give me a timeless quality.
Well, then we'll wear that in the photo at the end so that the listener can see it.
Ed, on your head.
Judge's wig.
Ah, well, he did wear
a judge's wig
in episodes three and four
of The Stones of Blood.
I know, that's a reference to that.
What else happened, Ed,
in The Stones of Blood?
Oh, I should have seen
them stones.
They're bleeding,
but they're bleeding.
Those blood-sucking stones.
Bleeding everywhere.
Lovely.
Peacock and Gamble lovely Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
4Xtra
we work on 4Xtra
we often proceed you on 4Xtra
you do the
what's it called again
the 7th dimension
you should know that
shouldn't I really
as a presenter
we do the comedy club
and then you
I do the 7th dimension
because it was BBC 7
it's not BBC 7
but the 4Xtra dimension
wouldn't sound as good
is that why it's called
7th dimension
I believe so
oh ok nice
you know what I fancy doing some of them but they won't have me well I want to be in Doctor Who and they haven't had me Extra Dimension wouldn't sound as good. Is that why it's called Seven Dimensions? I believe so. Oh, okay, nice.
You know what?
I fancy doing some of them,
but they won't have me.
Well, I want to be in Doctor Who,
and they haven't had me, so... At least I am trying to get here in it.
I'm ringing people up every day,
Bonnie Langford,
Christopher Eccleston,
other people that I won't mention
because they might have died since,
I can't remember or not.
There's been a spate of Doctor Who deaths,
hasn't there?
Yes, there has.
Yeah, very sad. Very sad indeed. Let's have a spate of Doctor Who deaths hasn't there? Yes there has.
Yes. Very sad indeed.
It's another minute.
Not a whole minute.
Not like this much.
There you go.
That's quite respectful.
Yeah.
Because it's a comedy podcast
isn't it?
Yeah.
But we've been respectful.
Yeah.
So Seven Dimension
is a sci-fi show
on the extra.
Yeah.
I always catch
the beginning of it
with the intention
of turning it off
because I listen to
our stuff sometimes and then I go I catch the beginning of the next the intention of turning it off because I listen to our stuff sometimes.
And then I go,
I catch the beginning of the next program
and go,
I can't bother this.
And whenever you're on there,
I always have a bit of a listen.
Oh, nice.
Because I think you're good on it.
That's very kind.
Yeah, and I tape a bit of it
and I send it to Steve Moffat.
And I go,
why don't you give me this?
And I get nothing.
Nothing back at all.
That's a shame.
One day he wrote back,
hmm.
Just that. I don't know if that's good or bad. Yeah. One day he wrote back, hmm. Just that.
I don't know if that's good or bad.
Yeah.
I've no idea if that's good or bad.
Do you like being presenting?
Yeah, I do.
Because it's the subject.
What always annoys me
when I'm seeing comedians doing stuff
is when somebody who is of the moment
has been shoehorned into a vehicle
and you see somebody who's sort of
suited and booted
doing the top ten sci-fi hats or something
and you can tell they've never seen it.
And it's so much better
if you've got somebody
who really loves the stuff
because they can be informative
and it carries.
And that's why you get specialist presenters.
So I think therefore,
I've never done a talking head telly show
about anything that I don't know about.
I've only actually done one and that was because it was about Doctor Who.
And so I went, well alright, because I know Battlestar Galactica, Blake 7.
But I knew what I was talking about, as it were.
But I'm not just going to go on and go, oh I'll talk about cabbages because they've showed me a clip of a cabbage that I could say.
Was there a cabbage once that fell off a shelf? That was funny.
Yeah, yeah.
I did one last Christmas about Les Dawson, where i spoke at length about les dawson yeah and actually we
do know lots about britain's most annoying people yeah we do know a lot about britain's most annoying
people 2010 yeah if you must we just don't know anything about any of the ones since
but no i did one on les dawson and i was a big Les Dawson fan and I'm pretty well versed in Les Dawson stuff.
But Russ Kane was also on that programme
and I felt like he'd watched a video in the afternoon.
I'm not saying he wasn't a fan,
but he certainly wasn't.
He tripped himself up a couple of times in it
if you know about Les Dawson.
He'd be like, well, I'm gone, really?
I also don't see the point.
It's so difficult to make a television programme
that you may as well do it properly.
But them ones aren't difficult. No no but to get a program on television
no right they contact you right they contact you on facebook right they saw this all that
basically they contact you no they contact you via chortle right because you've written an article
on chortle right and they go right you know i'll give you 250 pounds right it's come to this really
weird room one day in may right and you go and do it and then your friend dad has to wait outside
yeah they do that right they film you for an hour and do it and then they go and your friend Ed has to wait outside while you do it
yeah they do that
they film you for an hour or so
right
and then they go
yeah we don't know when
we think it's going to be on in July
right
and then you just
don't hear anything about it
and then it becomes a major part
of the BBC's Christmas programme
like it's on Christmas day
then it's on again on Boxing Day
then they repeat it
several times throughout the year
but you get £250
for all that
prime time
BBC coverage
so it's not
difficult Toby
if you know
how to make telly
but to do it
properly
it's just lazy
to ring up
you know
Paul Ross or whatever
it can take long
so
it does
it's got a very long
number
there's loads of
ways of contacting him
but they all take
an equally long
amount of time
did you not hear
about Paul Ross on
I think he said it
on Herring's podcast
when Jonathan Ross
on Herring's podcast
John Ross said
at one point
that Paul Ross
for a while
had an answer machine
message that said
Paul isn't here
at the moment
can't come to the phone
if it's about work
then yes
it was a genuine thing
really funny
but I know you mean
I know you mean
so presenting something
I feel I am conversant with
and enjoy is great fun.
Are you happy chewing through this?
I'm regretting it now.
Are you happy
filling your mouth with chewing?
Say it again.
I mean, there might be,
Stephen Moffat probably now
might be listening to this
right now
and going,
oh, do you know what would be good?
Is if we get Toby Hayden
out to play the doctor
and then we'll have
what is now known
in the business
as Bain speech problems. and then we'll have what is now known in the business as Bane
speech problems.
You never have a clue
what you're saying for
the majority of what
you're doing.
Who are we going to
get to do the ADR?
Bolzwoff.
Yeah.
Get Bolzwoff out and
say it'll be your
body with my voice.
Oh yeah.
And then we'll do
like this.
Oh hello.
Oh I am Doctor
Roo and that is the
right name for me.
Oh I hope there's no Daleks in here I'll shit myself. I am Doctor Who and that is the right name for me. All the way up
there's no Daleks in here
I'll shit meself.
I'd like that
for your Doctor Who voice.
I'd cope.
If Moffat got you down
and said
we want you to play Doctor Who
then you've got to play it
with a very very thick
North African accent
and also you've got to do it
with your top
your top just completely off
and with just racist things written all over your phone got to do it with your top your top just completely off and with just racist things
written all over your phone
would you do it?
and also your
knob and bollocks
taped around your bum
oh well definitely now
it was in the balance
till then
see some interviewers
would say to you
would you cut your little finger off
to be a doctor
well we make it very specific
would you do these
very specific things to be the doctor so make it very specific we do these very specific
things to be the doctor
so you would do that
because you consider
that part of the role
but as a fan
would you be able
to justify that
as part of the role
would you go home
or would you work out
how you could justify
that the doctor
would have his top
pulled over his head
and all the bollocks
taped underneath his bum
and racist tattoos
all over his front
would you be able
to justify that
but the beauty of Doctor Who
is that I wouldn't need to
because a fan on the internet
already would have done.
They would do it for you.
And the racist stuff
could be ancient
High Gallifreyan
for we should all
love each other.
Yeah, of course.
The TARDIS translation device
has malfunctioned
and it's come across
as racist.
Yeah, but do you know what?
Do you want me to say
what it says?
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble So how's the show
been going
very well
as a revisit
because it's a revisit
to
have you done shows
in between
yes I did a show
about the BBC
you did didn't you
so then
you've now
revisited
a mood
of time gone past
yes
I did
I mean it's a sequel
of sorts
but I deliberately
wrote it so that
you didn't have to
have seen the first one
and I deliberately wrote it so you didn't't have to have seen the first one.
And I deliberately wrote it so you didn't have to have even seen Doctor Who to like it.
But it was a worry of going, well, the first one went so well, you know, to then do a disappointing second album would be a bit of a shame.
It's the first one on iTunes, by the way.
Yeah.
It is.
Yeah.
Right.
Genuinely, I know I say this sometimes, genuinely get it.
Yeah.
I mean, really, man, it's fantastic. And I enjoyed the live show
anyway. I really liked the live show. I saw it loads.
But then when I... Have you heard the radio recording,
though? Yeah, I have. Yeah, I've got the CD.
It's just like, it's like you've took it
and just wrapped it in gold and then
chucked diamonds in it. I think it's a really,
really brilliant transfer of that show to radio.
Because it isn't just you doing that show.
No, no. That was
the producers' idea, too. And I really like it. I think it really, really works. And I no. That was the producer's idea too, yeah.
And I really like it.
I think it really, really works.
And I hope that happens with the new one as well.
But you also told me that I was going to be in your show
and it's not happened.
No, I'm afraid you got cut after the last preview.
Why?
BBC diversity.
It was, yeah.
Yeah, I've now got some material about Whoopi Goldberg.
Why then?
Because, funnily enough, unlike this podcast.
You told me that I was going to be,
you were going to speak about me,
weren't you?
Unlike this podcast,
the director of my show,
Mark Atwood.
Sounds like a prick.
Said that he felt
that I was getting a little bit,
it was sending out the wrong signal
if I kept banging on about
the fact that I hadn't been in Doctor Who.
And that I should be more cheerful
and it's a heartwarming show and I shouldn't be angry with you. And that I should be more cheerful and it's a heartwarming show
and I shouldn't be angry with you.
Yeah, but would it have been a better show with me in it?
Yeah, it would have been.
I really liked the bit with you in it.
Right, well do all them bits now.
I was basically abusing you and saying...
Was it really? What did you say?
You looked like a hobgoblin who'd spent the night in a hedge
and how come you got to be in Doctor Who?
You can't say that you can't
I'm going to say
if you say that
so you made me
take a picture of myself
I'm going to like that
yeah and I did a poster
I did a poster
of a show called
Everyone Loves Rey
and then the punchline
to that was
I click again
because I've got
a sort of PowerPoint thing
and then my son
Miraculous appears next to you
because I was going I talked about the fact that my son has a Star Wars book.
How old's your son?
Twelve.
Right.
Why do you keep getting sent photos?
What's this obsession?
With Doctor Who fans?
And you with...
What's this obsession?
Doctor Who fans putting me with children all the time.
Okay, go on.
And it was...
So I alluded in this show to the fact that the last show, in case people And it was, and so I alluded
in this show to
the fact that the
last show,
in case people
missed it,
involved me bonding
with my son.
I was watching
Doc 2.
Towards the end
of this show,
I did find my son
had a Star Wars
paperback under
his pillow.
Wow, wow.
And I said,
oh, I bet Ray
Peacock's at the
Edinburgh Fringe
doing a show all
about how he
bonds with my
son.
And then it
clicked the thing
and Louis appears
going like that
next to you.
And it was
called Everybody Loves Ray, Especially Louis like that next to you and it was called
Everybody Loves Ray
Especially Louis
brilliant
will you sell it to me
the picture
yeah I'll sell it to you
no I'm not selling it
I'm not buying it
I'm not going
buying a picture
of me and the church
I'll sell it to
10th Planet
and you can buy it
off them
I'll autograph it
and sell it
to them
oh well that's a shame
I would have liked
to be on your show
but now that I've
heard a bit of it
I'm glad I'm not
because I thought
you said it would be just a very affectionate praising of my portrayal oh you really thought that didn't you that's a shame. I would have liked to have been in your show, but now that I've heard a bit of it, I'm glad I'm not. Because I thought you just said it would be just a very affectionate praising of my portrayal.
Oh, you really thought that, didn't you?
That's what he implied in his text.
I'm not sure he did, did he?
I don't know. But your show's still successful, nevertheless.
It is, yes.
Oh, Toby Haydoke there.
Killing everything.
There's Toby Haydoke. We've not done the interview yet, so we can only just imagine what went on. I think he will come in and kill everything. There's Toby Hayden. We've not done the interview yet so we can only just imagine
what went on.
I think he will come
in and kill everything.
Right, okay.
Oh, Toby, you
shouldn't have killed
everything but it was
an interesting chat.
Speaking of killing
everything, I came in
the other night and
you killed all my
daddy long legs in
the kitchen.
Yeah, that's true.
I have been in this
kitchen editing.
Yeah.
You go to bed at
like half nine or
something.
It's weird, isn't it?
Ten minutes before
our show starts.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right, you do that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Leave me all on my own
editing the podcast
in the kitchen.
I managed to make some friends.
I made friends
with about 40 Daddy Longlegs
and they come on one night
and they're all dead in a pile.
Yeah, well I think,
I don't think they should be in here, mate.
They are my friends
editing friends.
Well, I'm getting jealous.
Right.
That's why I've killed them.
Why do you think
I put them four in your bed?
Because I knew
you would get jealous.
I've put you four
daddy long legs in your bed.
Yeah, well I've
I've slept on top of them
haven't I?
I know.
That's what I was hoping
would happen.
I've crushed them.
Yeah, crushed them
with your sex.
Yeah, and I've
fucked one of them
to death.
Ed Gamble has been
fucking daddy long legs
and I don't want that
to be a fringe rumour.
I don't want it to be
I certainly wouldn't want
that to be a one-liner news story on Chortle that Ed Gamble has fucked a daddy long legs to death don't want that to be a fringe rumour I don't want it to be I certainly wouldn't want that to be a
one liner news story
on Chortle
that Ed Gamble
has fucked a daddy
long legs to death
right please
and Steve Bennett
now come on
I know we have enough
but please don't
put that
as a one liner
please don't put that
please don't put
Ed Gamble
co-star of Peacock
and Gamble
don't even want to
be on telly anyway
9.40 at the
Pleasant's Dome
has caused fringe
controversy this week
by fucking a daddy
long legs to death
that was one of
Ray's friends
yeah fucking a daddy
long legs to death
that was friends with
his other co-star
Ray Peacock
yeah don't do that
Steve that'll be about
as much use publicity
wise as a four star
review for a five star
show
anyway we'll see you
again tomorrow
all that remains for
us to do is leave
Toby here
Toby is still sat here now.
Still sat here, yeah.
It's just been quiet.
Toby will do the credits for you now.
Thank you, Toby.
Right, so are you happy to read the credits?
I'm happy to read the credits.
Right, you think you're going to nail it?
I would like to think so.
I've been practising all my life.
Okay, good.
You've put your chewing gum in your mouth.
Yeah.
Perfect with the credits, that is.
Here's Toby Haydoke with the credits
the Peacock and Gamble
Edinburgh podcast
is a ready production
hosted by
chortle.co.uk
today's guests
was Toby Haydoke
and my show is
My Stepson Stole
My Sonic Screwdriver
at the Gilded Balloon
at 10 past 3
all music by
Thomas Fun
The Ray
see you tomorrow
you said guests
yeah
I did not yeah I did
not guests
I did
but I think we can call that
a nailing
I think you nailed it
nearly nailed
Deacon did it right
nearly nailed
Toby Haydoke
unfortunately
we'll have to tell
4X you did that
we'll have to tell
me myself
but thank you for joining us
thank you you