The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 20 (Mick Miller and Jimmy Cricket)
Episode Date: January 24, 2021"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 20 (Mick Miller and Jimmy Cricket)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 105 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 Peacock and Gamble, but it is 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.
Yes, please.
My name is Ray Peacock.
Oh, hello, my name is Ed Gamble, the Gamble bit of Peacock and Gamble podcast, Edinburgh podcast.
Where are you from originally?
Er, Russia.
No, where are you from originally? London.
London. Born and raised in London.
And a playground is where I spent most of my days.
Yep. And I was born in
Warrington General Hospital. Yeah.
But went to school, senior school
in St Helens. So, make up
your own mind about that. Anyway, what's this
all about? It's a blooming podcast.
That's right. What's wrong with you, mate? Just doing it like
welcoming new
new listeners in
we've established
if there's any new listeners
just go back to the first one
because you're not going to
understand any of this
yeah
and if you do understand it
you go well they're being idiots
and it's probably going to
get on your nerves
yeah you won't like it
so go back
learn to love us
throughout the episodes
and then this one
will be fine
okay and
and stop and
welcome back
welcome back
you've listened to all
those first ones
we gave them a chance
didn't we
yeah we gave them a chance
so Ray is spooning
cold lemon water
and honey into his mouth
because he's ill
it's got a bit of whiskey
in there I'll tell you the truth
it's got a bit of whiskey
in there and I said
well you should have
a hot lemon and whiskey
drink
hot lemon and whiskey
and honey
hot toddy
no he's had it cold
which negates
most of the medicinal qualities
why does it
because it's supposed to be
warm for your throat
it's supposed to just
keep your throat nice
but I often have just lemon juice
straight from the lemon
yeah
and how often are you ill
me loads
yeah exactly
yeah very sickly
yeah very sickly
very poorly
I'm not
because I'm always
quite robustly ill
what do you mean
well I'm not really one
for just hanging about
going
you are a bit mate no I'm not you are mate when I'm going to go you are a bit mate
no I'm not
you are mate
when I get ill mate
I'm like oh shit
I've got to do the show
but I feel like I'm going to collapse
I'm ill
I'm really ill
come on do the show
do the show
no there's no do the show
it's oh okay
I'll come and do the show
I did
let's do the show
I did the show very well last night
even though I was ill
you did it in a buckless gown
that is part of just letting the audience know
that you're poorly
and how well you are working.
You did do very well last night.
You were very poorly, but you did the show very well.
Clap, clap, nice boy.
You said you could tell I was ill.
I could tell, but no one else could.
No.
I could tell because some of the bits that you usually do giddy and energetic and shouty,
you did a little bit quieter.
Oh, really?
Was I really subdued?
Was I?
I'm sorry.
No, but it was still really funny.
You did them in a funny way, but you actually just did them a little bit differently in
that you probably took them down a couple of shouting levels.
Just couldn't shout, that's all right.
Yeah, that's fine.
That's allowed.
Listen to this.
Oh, God.
Right, that's half of the people have turned off now.
Half of that was cocaine.
Yeah, I know, mate.
Terrible, really.
About 30 quid down there.
I'm your own worst enemy, if you like it, Edinburgh.
Yeah.
So, we're in the home straight.
Yeah, home straight.
Seven more shows left for us. Podcast-wise, we're looking at... We've got Al Murray coming up. Yeah. So we're in the home straight. Yeah home straight seven more shows left for us.
Podcast wise we're
looking at we've got
Al Murray coming up.
Yeah Al Murray.
Well I mean and
we're going out on a
limb saying this
because.
Yeah he should be
coming.
Al Murray we're
interviewing tomorrow.
Yeah.
But you never know
do you not.
Nick Helm we're
interviewing tonight.
Something might
happen in the pub.
Yeah exactly.
Yeah the pub where
he runs.
Yeah by the fire or
something.
Nick Helm we're
interviewing mate.
Yeah.
Waiting to hear back from Les mate yeah waiting to hear back
from Les Dennis
waiting to hear back
from Les Dennis
amazingly
it's a bit weird isn't it
yeah
so if that doesn't happen
that'll be disappointing
now we've said that
oh yeah
we've put it in now as well
yeah
oh well
it's Les Dennis
that's let you down
not us
yeah
so you're not
emailing him anymore
yeah
speaking of email
Iman
Iman
he's the number one
not David Bowie's wife
no
a comedian man
he's a little bloke He's a little bloke.
He is a little bloke, isn't he?
Yeah.
How big is he?
Thumb.
I mean, that's not a ridiculous exaggeration.
No.
No.
Well, yeah.
It's that big.
Yeah.
It's that big.
The thumb on one of those novelty foam things that you get at Gladiators.
How big is that, do you reckon?
Probably a beer barrel.
If you've ever worked in a pub, that's probably a beer barrel.
It's not as big as a beer barrel.
Do you think
I know that for a fact
because I was speaking
to him the other night
and I was leaning
on one of those
beer barrels
in the Gilded Garden
and he certainly
wasn't
oh no I don't
mind the modern
metal ones
the little
squire ones
that you have
in the cellar
yeah
lager barrel
but why are we
judging the man
by his size
he's got plenty
of story to tell
and he'll be coming
up on the podcast
in a bit
yeah if he texts
me back
but today
we have Mick Miller
and Jimmy Cricket
now if that means
nothing to you
then you may as well
switch off now
because I'm not interested
no no
if that means nothing to you
that probably means
you're below the age of 38
right that's fair
Mick Miller and Jimmy Cricket
so Jimmy Cricket
both been big stars
really
Jimmy Cricket had his own
Saturday night show
for many years
I think it was ITV
or BBC what I don't BBC it was one of the channels
one of the big channels
because there weren't any of us at that point
yeah
he was fantastic
and he
an Irish gentleman
who had a catchphrase
and there's more
is he Irish or Northern Irish?
Northern Irish is he?
I don't know
Irish
they're all Irish
so he's Northern Irish to me mate
they're all Irish
oh well let's not make that call
on the podcast
why?
because I don't know if you know
people have got themselves into a right old tizzy about that in the past.
Have they?
Yeah, they have, mate.
Have they?
Yeah.
Well, it's not like you're from the island of Ireland.
You're Irish.
Oh, right.
Let's leave that.
Why?
Mate, what do you...
Right, leave it.
No!
Do you think Northern Irish people...
Do you think there might be some who consider themselves Irish...
There are.
...and then some who consider themselves British?
Right.
And they've...
I'll be honest
it's come to
fisticuffs in the past
has it
well who are we
blaming
who's right
who's wrong
well we're not
we're not falling
on either side
we could sort this
out right now
no we couldn't
who's right
are they British
or are they Irish
I know this is all
funny funny funny
but there will be
people getting
even people who
really like us
getting genuinely
pissed off
well that's
I think that's silly
so Jimmy Cricket
is on today
as well as Mick Miller
now Mick Miller
you would probably
know him if you saw him
very distinctly
looking gentleman
probably know him
if you saw him
yeah
you would
you'd recognise him
he's got a tattoo
saying Mick Miller
right on his head
right across his forehead
yeah
bawling at the front
long hair down the back
yeah
I would argue
his most famous routine
is the noddy routine
where he
look that up on
YouTube if you'd like
it's amazing
just do that
in fact turn this
off now and go
and watch it
and then come back
to it
he basically does
the story of Noddy
as the presenter
is drunk on the
radio
it's really funny
I do like it an
awful lot
so we spent a bit
of time with
Mick and Jimmy
and then a bit
of time later on
as well
we should tell you
a little addendum
there's a guy
called Chapson Bear who's a comic who does his entire yeah as well yeah we should tell you a little addendum there's a guy called Chapson Bear
who's a comic
yeah
who does his entire act
as a bear
right
I think he's my favourite
act of the Fringe
this year
like I've genuinely
I'm not even in an ironic way
I genuinely enjoy it
yeah
and he just goes
I went to France yesterday
everyone went crazy
because I'm a bear
wagga wagga wagga wagga wagga
so anyway
that's a bit of his material
that I shouldn't really do
but there you go
and I introduced Mick Miller
to him
and we said
this is
Laurie the guy
who does his act
as a bear
and we carried on
talking for a bit
and then Ed said
Mick hasn't spoken
for five minutes
well Mick's face
was just the perfect
picture of confusion
when we were explaining
the act
because I mean
it was two
opposite ends
of the scale
Laurie Lowe
does his
the Baron does his act
this is Mick
he's pretty much
as straightforward
a sort of
pure northern comic
as you can be
inventive though
yeah
and Ed said
you've not spoken
for five minutes
and Mick went
I'm thinking
and Laurie had finished
his run in Edinburgh
and said he was going home
and Mick went
I've been at him
that was nice
I wish you could have been there
but you couldn't
I'm just going to put
the interview on
I think we should put it on
because it was a really nice interview
I'm not feeling well
I really enjoyed myself
Ray's not feeling well
I for some reason
hang on mate
just talking a bit
of me cold toddy
okay
personally
I am sweating
my nuts off right now.
In here?
Yeah.
It's absolutely boiling.
It is, yeah.
A proper sauna.
God knows what's going to
happen when Les Dennis
is in here.
He won't come, will he?
He won't come.
Right.
Apparently he's not
going to come.
Mick introduced me to him.
He's a nice bloke,
Les Dennis.
Yeah.
See this now.
I doubt I'll meet him again.
This has just turned
into sort of gentle
anecdotes that sound
like they're from 1982.
Doesn't it?
Yeah.
I was in Performers Bar
and then Mick Miller introduced me
to Les Dennis.
Les Dennis.
A young comic, Les Dennis.
Right, so this is the interview.
I'm going to go and have a shower
just because I've sat in here for two minutes.
Ray's going to go and have a little sleep.
I don't think I am going to sleep.
I think I'm going to...
I might stay in this room.
Okay.
And just sweat it all out.
I'll sweat it out
that's quite a good plan actually
yeah cheers man
okay here's the interview
here's Mick and Jimmy
Mick and Jimmy
so we're here with
Jimmy Cricket
and Mick Miller
hooray
which is
really weird
yes
like really
really weird
yes
you're still alive
yeah
do you know what Jimmy
what
we've got a weird thing going on here
because I'm old enough,
but Ed's not old enough.
So it's that generational thing.
What's going to happen?
To be properly familiar.
Yeah.
I'm very familiar with you both.
Right.
And Ed's only 14,
so he's...
The short pants give it away, I think.
But you still know who they are.
Yeah, absolutely.
You're aware of their work.
Wow, you're tripping over posters, really, aren't you?
You have had amazing poster coverage, by the way.
Yeah.
Have you only just arrived?
You've only just arrived in Edinburgh, is that right?
Last night.
I've been here since Thursday.
Oh, have you?
Okay, good.
Thursday, yeah.
Right.
And any gig in the days in between?
No, no, I just caught up with a few friends
Terry Alderton
and Steve Shanansky
and
you've seen Maxwell yet
oh yeah
saw Maxwell the other night
he's not growing
no he's not
in fact
his poster's bigger than him
he genuinely is
yeah
it was amazing
yeah
it was weird
that was one of the
most beautiful things
on television I think
that ever happened
and it wasn't
sort of a massive show because of where the show was and where it's programmed and that.
But looking back at Kings of Comedy now, which you were on with Andrew.
Yeah, yeah.
And of course, like, Jamie Godley and Scott Capreo was in there for a while.
Steve Booth was in there.
Your friendship, Mick, with Andrew Maxwell was one of the loveliest things I've ever watched unfold.
Because that show was set up in a really cynical way.
Yeah.
It was set up to... It was trying to kill the old guys off, basically. Do up in a really cynical way yeah it was set up
he was trying to kill
the old guys off basically
do you think it was?
I think it was
but we sorted it
because we were going on
and I mean
Stan Baldwin
Stan's a bit of a
you know
dinosaur
he can't get on with it
he doesn't get it at all
no
Stan doesn't get it
he'll admit it
but that was a funny thing
there's no idea
what's happening
we did a gig
about three months ago
in New Brighton
it was
it was the old comedians
but we had
questions and answers
and Johnny Vegas
come
Johnny Vegas
said I'd play his dad
in Ideal
he said I've got a question
which comedian
stroke actor
from the St. Helens area
is the best
right
did you say me
because I am from
the St. Helens area
oh yeah
I said there's that many of them yeah nice nice I think I'm Did you say me? Because I am from the St. Alex area. Oh, yeah.
I said there's that many of them.
Yeah, nice, nice, nice.
I think I'm rapidly clawing up Johnny's back.
I think I'm, like, pushing it.
I'm just beginning to push him down now.
Yeah, no, I think you're there.
You're nearly there.
You're going to be in one of these teabag adverts, you see.
Oh, do you know what?
I really won't.
Think of the money.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, totally, totally.
But there was that weird thing.
So Kings of Comedy,
basically,
it was a Big Brother style show.
Yeah, we lived in this house.
Yeah.
I think there was five alternatives,
only three,
what do you call it,
mainstream.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Two of them pulled out and we were never told
who they were.
Okay.
And then of course,
we had to do a challenge
every day.
You know, one day we had to do a twin up with somebody
I did an acting thing with Jamie
man and wife
I'm coming in pissed every night
that's not acting is it
every night she was saying
why did you come home and talk about
nodding every night
so yeah we did that
one day Maxwell and I
we had to swap acts
that's right
so we had to
obviously put the
cod bald head on
and he had to wear
my jacket
yeah
you know the size of it
yeah
he looked as if
it was on castors
but me and Jimmy
go back many many years
because I was a guest
on Jimmy's show
were you really
on the Saturday show
yeah
there's more yeah
yeah wow wow, wow.
Yeah, you know,
I was very sort of lucky there
because the people I loved,
I had an understanding producer
who let me put them on.
Yeah, yeah.
Who produced it?
Tony Wolfe.
Okay.
And Billy Dent,
he was this great
eccentric dancer like Maxwell
when I used to see him
as a kid in Belfast,
so that's why I do
a bit of a funny walk.
Yeah.
He let me come on
and do this thing.
Yeah.
And so it was just,
you know, and of course Rory Bregner.
And the marvellous thing, because then we were innovative,
because Rory was from a different university,
a very working class, and it fitted.
And when I look at some of the sketches,
it was the money they put in these sketches to make them.
Like, you know, you wouldn't, this is the thing.
Yeah.
But it's quite you know it was enough
because i remember when you first came jimmy particularly when you first came to a prominent
role on tv yeah when i read the news yeah yeah you had a run this is nine o'clock here was a
ten o'clock news we all you know you did the weather for three days
non-stop this man is too good for the weather.
But it did seem like, it's that horrible thing when people say overnight success,
and we all know that there's no such thing, it never happens.
You know, people are genuinely working for a long time and stuff.
And I know that both of you, you're both Pontins, is that right?
Yes.
Yes.
Buntax Blues, aren't we?
Yeah.
That was it.
And how is it pro football?
Do you want to say that?
I was fascinated by Mick's background.
Because when I got a free transfer
at Port Vale
which means
crap
so
there was me
and Ray Kennedy
and Ray Kennedy
went on to play
for England
we left Port Vale
Ray went to Arsenal
and he got like
50 grand
right
you know
and a nice car
yeah
and I went to Pontins
and I got
a blue coat
a shelly
and a very
nasty rash.
I was luckier.
A waitress spilt soup on me
and had a lilting Belfast accent.
So I fell in love and married her.
That's a romantic moment there.
Is that true?
I've just met your son outside.
Yes, Sir Frankie.
Now your son is a vicar because he's not a vicar.
You're pretty close, yeah. What is he? Well, Sir Frankie. Now your son is, I don't want to say he's a vicar because he's not a vicar. You're pretty close, yeah.
What is he?
Well, he's a deacon
which means he's served
six years
and then in a year's time
he'll be ordained
a Roman Catholic priest.
Right, I want to pay him
a compliment,
genuinely,
now on the podcast
because I'm not
a religious man
in any way at all.
At least you're honest.
No, that's fine.
However,
we were just outside
just now
talking with Tim andines out there,
and Frankie was there.
And a gentleman came past.
He was clearly in some distress.
He was very, very ill.
He looked very, very ill.
And he was off like a shot.
Frankie was over there like a shot.
And me and Tim were just there going,
and I think he got in a cab
and sorted him out and all that sort of thing.
And me and Tim were...
He had his wallet away, though.
Yeah, I'm glad you said that
I was getting emotional though
I was getting emotional
I was getting emotional
I was getting emotional
He put one straight in the collection
He gave me £20 and said
Will you mention this on the podcast
And make me sound like I'm good
I said of course I will
But I was genuinely
A touching thing And Tim said I actually feel guilty now and make me sound like I'm good. I said, of course not. No, but I was, I was genuinely, obviously,
it was genuinely a touching thing.
And Tim said,
Tim said,
I actually feel guilty now.
And then he wrote a joke about it,
didn't he?
Yes.
Straight in with a one-liner.
How many vickers does it take?
Yeah.
What was the one Tim did outside?
He did a cracker for us.
Oh, he said,
he's working in a restaurant here.
Yeah.
He's the London bastard.
No, he's not.
But there was also an amazing thing
when I met Frankie.
It was luckily,
I remembered last minute
that Jimmy's son
was in the church
because I was literally
going to go,
what are you in?
What show are you in?
Well, he doesn't seem
out of place in Edinburgh,
you see.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, nuns
and roller skates
and things.
Plus, he was in the game.
He was actually.
He did an act of comedy
under Frankie Doodle.
What? And your daughter is also a comedian, is that right? Kayleigh, yeah. He was actually. He did an act comedy under Frankie Doodle. What?
And your daughter
is also a comedian,
is that right?
Katie, yes.
She's actually here
at this moment
in the stand number four
in the marketplace
doing a double ever
called Telltales.
Oh, so it's Katie...
Mulgrew.
Yeah, Katie Mulgrew.
Is Katie Mulgrew
your daughter?
Yeah.
I didn't know that.
Oh, I know her really well.
Ah, bless.
Jimmy Mulgrew
was my name as a pontons.
But she's kept her real. That's her name. I, bless. Jimmy Mulgrew was my name as a pontons. But she's kept her real.
That's her name.
I didn't know Katie Mulgrew was Jimmy Cricket's daughter.
It's official.
We've had the blood test.
I remember that episode of Jeremy Coyle.
So we got as pontons.
You had your rush, Mick.
Yeah.
At that point.
So then how did you...
I know you did New Faces.
Yeah, I got a New Faces in 1976.
And I won that one.
But I didn't go any further.
I didn't get anywhere in the final.
Okay.
But lots of people...
Like, Les Dawson was the same.
He won his heat and then...
Up Knox, yeah.
Yeah, up Knox.
And then didn't win.
But I think a lot of people who were...
Tom O'Connor was on the original Comedians.
Right, yeah.
And then he went on Up Knox after that.
Yeah.
After that?
He won it. He won it about six times. Times, yeah. And then he went on Up Knox after that. Was it afterwards? He won it about six times.
Six times, yeah.
It was like a bizarre thing to do.
You know, you're on like
the number one show
and I'll go and do Up Knox.
Yeah.
Frowns, Frowns,
Huey Green used to do that.
Frowns.
For a Leverpudden comedian,
I want you to get those votes.
I don't know.
It's very hard.
You go out in a prayer
because I know people
that belong.
They can document.
So maybe he took a
chalke to the gamble.
Isn't that bizarre now?
What he used to say.
Yeah.
Put your name on a postcard
and send it in.
Yeah.
How bizarre is that
when you look at technology
these days?
Of course it is.
Because everybody's ringing in
and everybody's, yeah.
Yeah.
But he was larger than life.
He was up this Canadian.
I used to be fascinated by him
because there was a bread strike once
when I was a kid in Belfast.
Right.
And he came out at this Opportunity Knoxist program every week with a loaf under his arm.
Yes, yes.
I said, friends, friends, look at this.
I'm the envy of the nation.
Look.
And then all of a sudden he turned straight, looked straight at the camera.
But I sincerely hope the nation get more bread next week.
But have you ever seen stuff of Huey Green now?
Do you know who Huey Green is?
Absolutely not.
Right, okay.
So Huey Green was the host of, Huey Green is absolutely not right okay so Huey Green was the host of
Huey Green
it transpired
many years later
was Paul Yates' dad
oh really
yeah
but he had a real
if you watch him now
like it makes me cringe
a little bit
because it's so
over the top
yeah
so sincere
and he needs to say it
I mean that most sincerely
but it's so like
come on
stop it stop it
stop it
but yeah
a massive character
he was one of the ones
they did
when they did
they did Steptoe and Son
and they did Frankie Howard
but when they did
There's No Biomics
and the third one
was Huey Green
and they were all
but the Steptoe and Son one
has since been
legally
there's been a big
an injunction on the Steptoe one
I think it was
part of the family of
was it Wilfred's family
it was one of their families
said, look, this isn't how it was.
And they weren't, they didn't get up famously
well, but they weren't bitter
enemies. And I have read recently
in the last few weeks that Alan
said to them, when they went, when they were
researching, they told them, no, the boys got on.
This is a lie.
But it's the old thing, never let the truth
get in the way.
But I think they deserve, the family then deserve to get recovered. Because you've got to this is a lie but it's the old thing never let the truth get in the way of a good story yeah
but I think they deserve
the family then
deserve to get recorded
because you've got to
take in the people's feelings
absolutely
and you're going to
tell birthless lies
you know
yeah
I mean it's the sort of thing
that like many many years
down the line
you could do
someone's take on it
or whatever
when there are still people
who
when it's still
that Genghis Khan
got a lot of bad press
oh yeah
he did
he did
I think he was
much maligned
imagine if it
was that
just someone
did a biopic
very quick
afterwards
they'd be like
that's not true
it's out now
it's out now
that's it
that's it
I'm going to do
it all again
but this time
no more
Mr Nice Guy
so you're at the Frim they're doing the show together before your tour That's it. That's it. I'm going to do it all again, but this time, no more Mr. Nice Guy. Yeah, yeah, no. Pre-cooking gamble,
pre-cooking gamble.
So you're at the Frim,
they're doing the show together
before your tour.
You are touring with the show.
Yeah.
We started that.
We did Darlington.
Oh, you started already?
I love it.
Darlington was lovely, yeah.
And how is that?
Oh, it's great.
Well, it's great.
We work well together
because we're totally different.
Yeah, of course.
That's the trick.
Yeah, yeah.
That's the trick.
Yeah.
And is there any between you
who goes first,
I think, or second, or are you mixing it up? Jimmy likes to go on first. Yeah. Yeah. That's the trick. Yeah. And is there any between you, who goes first, I think, or second,
or are you mixing it up?
Jimmy likes to go on first.
Yeah.
I don't mind going on second.
We find common ground.
We go on top of the bill.
No, that's it.
That's it.
Yeah.
And is it just you two
or do you have a compa?
No, no,
we just do it ourselves.
Just straight off the bat,
you're in there.
It's the same wage.
It does say the same wage,
doesn't it?
Yeah, it certainly does.
So how long does that tour go on for?
Oh, we've got each other.
Yeah, we do, actually.
Yeah.
Marvelous.
We're just trying it out.
We're trying out for doesn't.
Absolutely.
That's it, really.
We'll do it again.
We're tipping our toes.
So I read, I don't know if it's still on your publicity material now,
but I know it's certainly on some of the ones I saw,
where it was something along the lines of,
they show these young comic...
No, I didn't want that.
No, no, no.
I probably nicked it.
I don't think that's nice.
I wasn't challenging it.
That's more important, yeah.
Yeah.
To be honest, it did make me cringe.
Did it?
Yeah, yeah.
But you have to go with the flow.
And the marketing people think that's...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The fella that wrote that
has now got a very bad limb.
Has he?
I think I know who it was. But I think it's meant more in the kidology. Yeah. I think I know who it was.
But I think it's meant more in the kidology, I think.
Because I certainly know, because a lot of the people I've met,
even for the first time, and all the younger comics,
Mick and I get on like a house on fire, and that's why we straddle both camps.
Well, you've produced one anyway.
Exactly.
And that's in a nutshell.
But there is that really weird thing,
and it's a very, very odd thing.
Like you said about Kings of Comedy as well.
They want us to not be friends.
They want the younger generation
or what would be considered the alternative comedy,
which doesn't even exist anymore.
They want that,
and then the old school of comedy,
for want of a better phrase,
they want there to be loggerheads with it.
And I don't even think
with the exception of
maybe the sort of
very hardcore
Ben Ellison stuff
early on
I don't even think
that was ever even
the issue
to begin with
I can't define much
difference between
acts or styles
or like that
there's not
apart from
like you say
very early on
with sort of
deliberately alternative comedy
which is a deliberate
reaction
Lexi said he was
he didn't want
he didn't like
our style
but I don't think
there was ever a thing
that was only ever
a thing of being
a quote unquote
character
I know that's what
Alexei feels as well
but it wasn't about
saying so you can't
exist anymore
and so you can't
work anymore
they were totally
different venues
absolutely
of course
in them days
we wouldn't work
their venues
and they would
never come near ours of course there was nothing, we wouldn't work their venues and they would never come near ours.
There was nothing to it.
It's a non-existent
vendetta.
And that came through to me when I was chatting to Jason
Manford, because sometimes you need people. We met at a
wedding of Alfie Joe a couple of years
back and he said, the early guys, like
you said, had to really, in a way,
have a go at us because they were making themselves different.
That was their platform and that was fine
he says but we're the next
and we grew up watching you
so we don't have that
animosity
it's a warmth there
and that really
came through to me
you know
yeah but we've had a thing
with our double acts
loads and loads
of people saying to us
oh you like Liam Herring
Liam Herring
if you don't know
who they were
they were sort of
a 90s double act
Richard Herring
and Stuart Lee
and they were double acts and people say to us oh you just like Liam Herring you just like Richard Herring and Stuart Lee and they were double acts
and people say to us
oh you just like
Liam Herring
and we're like
we're not
we're like Cannon and Ball
you know
you come in far too late
on that
they're going to say
little and large
they're going to pick
one of them
absolutely
but we spoke to
Richard about it
to Richard Herring
about it
where I called Richard
on it and said
were you a fan of Cannon and Ball
he went oh yeah
I love Cannon and Ball
I love Cannon and Ball
I went well there you go.
So both of us
are just perfectly Cannonball.
Yeah,
they don't think we've copied them
but we wrote an article recently
saying we've not copied them,
they've not copied,
we've both copied Cannonball.
But you know,
and again,
Tom and Bob,
I can't speak higher of,
I absolutely love them,
I really,
really adore what they do.
Very special.
They really are,
yeah,
special is a good word
it's particularly for Bobby
but I've been working
with Bobby a little bit
because I work on
Not Going Out
I do the warm up
on Not Going Out
oh right
so I've got to know
Bobby a little bit
right
then again
not dissimilar to now
but I'm hiding it very well
just utterly in awe of him
like genuinely
so that's why
it really raises my hackles
when there is
like Kings of Comedy
when there's a
deliberate attempt
to go right
four hours in
yeah
it was supposed to be
a different audience
you know
we didn't want students
every show
five days a week
yeah
so I went in
and said
you've moved the goalposts
to here
you know
one afternoon
let's have some
well Boothby went
you bastard
yeah and then we had
kids one afternoon
that's right
I remember that
I can get away with it
I just did a bit
of wrestling routine
but Maxwell
was absolutely
tremendous
he ripped them
apart these kids
they loved him
lovely
he has a lovely
manner with him
doesn't he
he's a very good
regardless of what
you think of him
as a comic
he's a very good
talker
he's a very
accessible human,
I think, as well.
So, you know,
he can find anyone on a level,
which I think is what makes him a good comic,
you know, Andrew, as well,
because he does,
just wanders about,
and then sees things,
and then just goes and talks about it.
I remember seeing him do, like,
half an hour ones,
and we were knocking about a fair bit together as well,
but on that fringe,
whenever it was,
2000 or something,
and I remember seeing him do half an hour
on a kid that he'd watched,
this sounds really dodgy
when I say it,
but he'd watched all day
at Edinburgh Swimming Baths.
Yeah.
Right, so Maxwell watched
It does sound quite...
It does, doesn't it?
But Maxwell watched this one kid
all day at Edinburgh Swimming Baths
and then had spoke to him
with his friends about it
and he was called the Bomber.
I can still remember what it was.
He was called the Bomber.
Right.
Because he was the one,
they'd all be playing at the pool
and then suddenly
there'd be a hush silence
where this one
kid just go up
to the second
board and then
he'd walk up
to the third
and everyone
would be like
whoa
what is that
and then eventually
and Maxwell
just said it all
as a long story
and then suddenly
he'd just jump
off it and bomb
in which you're
not allowed to do
but he'd just do it
and now everyone
would cheer in the
back but he did
half an hour
and he'd seen it
that morning
yeah no that was
very very clever
he's very very good
although he did
fall out with me
last night
Maxwell did
yes
I asked him
how Silverhammer was
and
he had a
Speedle song
yeah
you got it
you got it
so have you
performed at the
Fringe before
I did a little
thing for Jenny
Godley
yeah okay
about three years ago were you in her show always yeah just like it I did a little thing for Jenny Godley. Yeah, okay. About three years ago. Were you in her show? Yeah, just like a little chat thing. Nice,
nice. So I'd just come up and I'd look around and that's where I met Johnny. Yeah, okay.
Yeah, well he's normally knocking around somewhere, hasn't he, up here? Is it as a, from the old
club circuit, do you think there's a fair comparison that it's a microcosm of that?
It wasn't a wasn't paying your dues
around the clubs
and doing all that.
And I've always
looked at Edinburgh
as almost a
shortcut,
even though it's
not a shortcut,
but almost that,
that working men's
club,
again,
wrong about
phrase,
condensed and
rammed into
Edinburgh for a
month.
When we started,
you sign a contract
and there'll be
a year's work.
You can go from the talk of the West in Cornwall to the talk of the East and then Batley When we started, I mean, like, you sign a contract. And there'd be a year's work. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You'd go from, like, Talk of the West in Cornwall to the Talk of the East,
and then Batley Variety Club, then.
So they're all weeks.
Yeah, all weeks.
The Bailey Circuit.
I used to see Mick's name on the Bailey Circuit.
But we'd usually support the Nolans, the Dooley family,
there'd be Pop Roots or Jimmy Ruffin.
It would be, and we'd be the early sort of spot.
You'd be the comics on the...
On the comics, that's it.
That's it, supporting. Yeah.
I think it's a really interesting thing, because I'd
say that you two, particularly,
because you've sort of come on,
gently come on to what would be considered
the circuit now.
Yeah. If you'd both gig,
on the spot. Yeah, I mean, I can't believe
that this week, Tuesday and Wednesday,
I was on Eastbourne in Hippodrome
playing to quite a mature
audience. You're here now
to quite a...
But that's the thing, it feels the same.
It's all relevant, you know,
and it's all great for us.
It's the same stuff, but with our older crowd,
you're just leaving.
Yeah, you're going to eat.
I'm trying to work this sort of gag in.
That one, probably I'm going to go for it,
see how it goes.
It's an impression of the Olympic bronze medalist,
Tom Daley, going into a dive.
Kind of a late night drink.
But when I did it least four, just nothing.
Nothing at all.
Right.
But you know the way, you love them anyway because they're doing well.
So I looked and I said, does it have potential?
And this little woman shouted, no.
Not as Simon Cowell.
I mean, no, here's the interesting thing.
Have you noticed?
Now, I think that we've said, you know.
We've talked about this before, yeah. About audiences. Since the advent of the, I mean, I know there's a interesting thing. Have you noticed, now, I think that we've certainly noticed... We've talked about this before, yeah.
About audiences, since the advent of the...
I mean, I know there's always been talent shows,
but since the advent of them being so enormous,
like the Britain's Got Talent and X Factor...
And harsh as well.
And so harsh.
Yeah, that's the word.
What I've noticed, certainly, is an increase in chatting during shows,
an increase in people complaining after shows.
Yeah.
And an increase of people just after shows and I think people
just literally
given it a few minutes ago
don't like this
this is rubbish
yeah it's also people
not coming
ready to have a good time
it's people
wanting to be
pulled out of them
by someone
like a nod
element of being
judgmental
I have to confess
boys
that I haven't
but Katie has
my daughter has
yeah yeah it's just us yeah I have to confess, boys, that I haven't, but Katie has. My daughter has.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's just us.
Yeah.
Not that she's the right of new jokes.
Maybe the younger generation does feel a little bit.
Am I maybe saying that they're a bit more mature?
They are more respectful?
They may not still like it, but they're not going to show it as much.
Yeah, yeah.
Actually, but there is a, like you said about being Eastbourne if it's an
older audience
then they're an
audience who
have learnt
and I guess
it's been passed
down to them
that you shut up
when the lights
go out
and all that
sort of thing
yeah very much
so
I think there is
an angle
not what it
sounds like
learning about
men
but there is
that element
of just a
lack of
basic human
manners
and that's
what we want
we just want civility and courtesy, really, don't you?
It happens in the cinema too, though.
Is that the same thing?
People in the cinema nowadays...
We've got him off on a rant now.
Yeah, I'm going, here we go, here we go.
No, I just wondered whether or not that was a thing that...
It's an interesting phenomenon.
She did say that to me.
We don't get many hecklers because we're too fast.
Yeah.
But, Mick, so you said you don't get heckling hardly
at all
I don't get
many hecklers
if we do
dinners
I do corporate
dinners
and sportsman's
dinners
if you're on
too late
you know
because like
you basically
I'd be on
say with
Barry McGuigan
he's the speaker
so he goes on
straight after the
dinner
so it's a great
time to be on
then they'll do
raffles and auctions and if it's too late they're gone you know so it's a great time to be on yeah then they'll do raffles and auctions
and if
if it's too late
they're gone
yeah
you know
the first
been out
they've had a bag
with the mates
and they come back
and then they come back
in dribs and drabs
and you're halfway through
and they come and sit
at the front you know
right
you know
who told you
you were funny
you agree
just before he told you
to get a loaf of bread
yeah
I would have thought
that an audience
coming to one of your shows
the two of you
would have been
I think
maybe your
reputation
would precede you
so there would be
an element of
I know
I'd use my dad
as an example
my dad would be
a good example
where he'd be like
don't mess with these don't mess with these he'd be like, don't mess with these.
Don't mess with these lot.
I know what they're doing with these lot.
Don't mess with these lot.
I've got you lot.
These lot will have your knees.
Definitely.
You certainly would.
There would be a real element of that.
Where maybe you would overwhelm them slightly.
Well, what I would do, because Ray was his channel, Squeaky Clean,
I probably would want them to be mixed.
Yeah, of course.
If you're doing character comedy.
I have, and to be honest, I waved the flag
that there was one time last year
when I actually did get a load of guys laughed,
but it's more the exception.
They have kept me awake at night.
Really?
Yes.
Really?
Yeah.
With your onstage persona,
I would argue again then that anybody heckling you
would be tantamount to bullying.
Yeah.
Because it's such a sweet character.
We feel this about our show as well.
Anyone coming in and sitting there
with a horrible face on them,
not enjoying it,
you think, at least, come on,
we've put an effort in.
It's like, what a sweet thing.
Yeah.
There's no nastiness to us on stage
yeah exactly
if you start
trying to shout nasty things
I think it says more
about you as a person
we had a thing
that we dealt with
because we were
at a very late spot
last year
we've not had walkouts
this year
but last year
we had a spate
about three or four days
where we'd lose
two members of the audience
every night
and we get it
because people
sometimes just buy
tickets or whatever
it's boiling
and they've had a
drug
you pretty much know
within 10 minutes
of our show
what you're going
to get
you know what it is
but when people
would leave
the first time they
did it
we got very angry
about it
we were swearing
at them
and then they went
and then we had a
chat about it
that night
going that's totally
out of character
for us
so even though
we're angry
I started crying
so people would leave and I'd have a real just start crying
so i was on a cruise with a magician and he's called chris go right very funny similar tommy
cooperish but be very funny and he used to walk on ironing board on the stage and you know the
trick where they do it where the lady's flat yeah he did it with an ironing board on the stage and you know the trick where they do it where the lady's flat?
Yeah.
He did it with an ironing board.
Right.
And I was setting it up
and he's got the mic there
like that
and there was four people
sat on the front row
and they stood up
and they walked out
the room like that
just before they went
before I do this
very dangerous trick
I've got to ask four people
to move the room.
Aww.
Thank you very much.
Yeah.
Oh, I love it. Yes yeah I love it
I love it
I worked
to an audience once
and
six people in the audience
right
and the manager came in
and he said
well don't worry
there'll be a coach along soon
nice
and the coach came along
and the coach
took him in the drover
oh how horrific
that's awful
well we
our show this year
is set in a lighthouse
for no reason
oh right
we've set it in a lighthouse
that we live in a lighthouse
and we've built a set
of a lighthouse
for no reason
so now
we've planned it
we've only had like
one or two walkouts
but now we say
people leave
that the tide's in
so
the tide's in
you've no chance
but that's lovely
because you've worked it out
that's beautiful
and I think that you're prepared and it's you wanted a two up and two down now you've worked it out that's beautiful and I think that
you're prepared
and you wanted a two up
and two down
now you've got one down
five up
that was Mick and Jimmy there
genuinely
a lovely experience with Mick
yeah very nice
I enjoyed myself as well
yeah
I really liked it
but you had no idea
who they were
I did know who
I'd seen a lot of
Mick Miller stuff as they left you said that was the bloke from the Grumble Weeds no idea who they were I did know who Mick I'd seen a lot of Mick
Miller stuff as
they left you said
that was the bloke
from the grumble
weeds no I did and
that was someone
else who said that
it was Laurie
Lewin yeah who
was in Doctor
Hero as well yeah
and he said it to
Mick and the
performers but yeah
and Mick genuinely
looked put out by it
but was laughing
along yeah I mean
as he left Mick
went to Laurie
Lewin thought you
were great in
Blur by the way
that was a great
interview it was nice wasn't it I liked the way. That was a great interview.
It was nice wasn't it? I liked it a lot.
It was a bit echoey
wasn't it?
Sorry about that.
We're in a different
room because we didn't
feel right about dragging
them all the way over
here and making them
walk up 93 steps.
Yeah so we've got a
room down the Pleasance.
We paid for it so don't
be saying that we're
getting special favours
off Simon Streeton.
Yeah.
And that's it so we've
not plugged our show?
No we've not.
Our show is Peacock
and Gamble.
Don't even want to be
on telly anyway.
9.40 at the Pleasant's Dome Dome.
Final straight now.
It'll be lovely to fill out the rest of the shows.
Have a nice big send-off from the Fringe to us.
Probably sold out.
No, don't say that.
Oh.
No.
Come along.
Sell it out.
That'd be lovely.
We've had a really nice time
and we'd really like to make this final week
as fun as the rest of them have been.
If you don't come to it,
we'll punch you in the face.
Right, okay.
I was trying to be sincere there, mate.
But no, you crack on. I'm going to punch them in the face. Sincerely. I'm to it will punch you in the face right okay I was trying to be sincere there mate but no you crack on
I'm going to punch
them in the face
sincerely
I'm sincerely
going to punch you
in the face
that was my
impression of
Hughie Green
brilliant
now if you're
young tune back
in tomorrow
little something
for the granddads
today
yeah well remember
I was telling you
mum and dad that
Ray sometimes does
little anecdotes
yeah exactly
about Hughie Green oh Hughie Green we're closing this podcast by referencing Hughie Green I remember telling my mum and dad that Ray sometimes does little anecdotes. Yeah, exactly. About Huey Green.
Oh, Huey Green.
We're closing this podcast by referencing Huey Green.
He's always been in the interview with Jimmy and Mick.
Yeah, he has.
All right, then.
We have to do the credits ourselves.
No point wrapping it up now.
Oh, yeah, they didn't do them, did they?
Well, it wasn't because they wouldn't do them.
Yeah, they forgot because they're so old.
No, hang on.
Let's just get this right, what happened.
Ed Gamble, who was in charge of the recording,
because he's too young to have a conversation with grown-ups.
Yeah.
You accidentally started exporting it before we'd done the credits.
Before we'd done the credits, but to be honest,
they were chatting and Mick was on his feet anyway.
We can't really stop and hold them on any longer,
because they were, ba-ba-ba, next thing, next thing.
Yeah, next thing.
So we just grabbed a photo.
We got the photo, so that proves that it was them.
Yeah, it was them, definitely.
But we didn't.
So here's the credits.
All right, I'll do it as them.
No, I'll do it.
I'll just do it, I'll see if I can remember it
Peacock and Gamble
Edinburgh podcast
was a ready production
hosted by
chortle.co.uk
come here
and there's more
today's guests
were Mick Miller
and Jimmy Cricket
oh that's me
and they'll be
touring around the country
from now
right through
until October
so check out
your local theatre
for listings
or go on their website
Mick Mick.com don't run the Twitter until October so check out your local theatre for listings or go on their website Mick
Mick.com
They're on the Twitter
follow them on Twitter
Demute
I followed them on Twitter
I'm sure they've got a Twitter
Anyway
check them out
on the theatre
The music was all
by Thomas Fondure
See you tomorrow
I actually thought
Lee Matt was going to be
the worst one of the run
but it turned out
it was you
Weird Yeah, tomorrow! I actually thought Lee Matt was going to be the worst one of the run, but it turned out it was you.
Weird.