The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 22 (Al Murray)
Episode Date: February 7, 2021"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 22 (Al Murray)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 107 of 128....
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Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
Because it's not hell
Peacock and it's not play Gambleville is this way Peacock and it is out Gamble Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble. Because it's on air, Peacock and Gamble's not playing.
Gamble really is Ray Peacock and it is our Gamble.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Here they are.
It's the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast.
Just welcome, by the way, I'm Ed Gamble, that's Ray Peacock.
I'm Ray Peacock, escaping, escaping.
This is just proof that it's far too late in the fringe now.
It's far too warm in this room.
Yeah.
Things have gone wrong because Ray just did the intro to this podcast.
He's got his head back and he's got a slice of turkey breast on his face.
No, it's not.
It's one of the guard's face.
It's one of the guard's face?
Yeah, one of the guard's faces that I've cut off.
Right.
And I'm putting it over my face.
Right.
And I'm escaping an ambulance.
Right, you have gone absolutely mental. Let's silence with the lambs. I'm putting it over my face and I'm escaping an ambulance. Right, you have gone
absolutely mental.
Let's silence the lambs.
I'm genuinely worried
about you.
This is how
Annabelle Lepsh escaped.
He didn't escape
with a bit of
Bernard Matthews
sliced turkey breast
on his face.
Oh, I'm sorry mate.
Was I meant to get
an actual bloke's face
to put over my face?
You weren't supposed
to get anything.
This was not agreed
as a thing.
You didn't have to do this.
Oh, now he's eating it
off his own face
with no hands.
That is disgusting. Oh, now he's eating it off his own face with no hands. That is disgusting.
Turkey.
Right, what did you all have for breakfast this morning?
Ray Peacock had turkey from his own face.
Yeah.
He had face turkey.
I'll eat it as quick as I can.
All right, thank you.
In fact, I'm gonna eat it now and just cut this bit out.
Okay, five shows left as of now, as of today.
I'm still eating, I've gotta cut this bit out, haven't I? Right, I've finished it now. just cut this bit out. Okay. Five shows left as of now, as of today. I'm still eating.
I've got to cut this bit out, haven't I?
Right, I've finished it now.
Right, okay.
Right, good.
Okay, so five shows left.
That wasn't real time.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
I just caught a bit out where I was chewing.
I know.
It was much more painful than that.
I've still got a bit in my mouth.
Yeah.
So five shows left, mate.
Five shows left at the Edinburgh Fringe.
Yeah.
Of the world premiere performance of Peacock and Gamble.
Don't even want to be on telly anyway.
Yeah.
Which, if you wanted to catch it before it ends,
is at 9.40 at the Pleasance Dome Dome every night until the end.
Until the end.
Until the 26th.
We're not doing the 27th.
Yeah.
And then on tour.
And then on tour all over the country.
And then probably on telly.
And then probably on telly,
even though ideologically it probably wouldn't stack up right.
But that's why one of your channels, your digital channels, would go,
that's kooky, I'll do that.
So we want to be on a kooky digital channel.
All right, I'll settle for Sky Atlantic.
No, mate, that's not to settle for.
Why, is that good?
Yeah, it's brilliant.
All right, hey, Sky Atlantic are interested.
So all you other TV companies.
Because I think they mainly do imports and stuff. Right, well, we could go away and send it back. alright hey Sky Atlantic are interested so all you other TV companies probably
I think they did mainly do imports and stuff
right
well we could go away and send it back
alright okay
we're going to go and make our show by ourselves in Spain
and we're going to send it
Malta
we're going to do it in Malta
and we're going to send it back
yeah Sky Atlantic
if you're interested
we're going to make it in Malta
yeah
and then you can show it in the UK.
Yeah, over here in the U of the K.
Yeah, United Kingdom, that counts for.
Yeah.
So, you seem to be flagging a bit.
I'm a little bit.
I'm still poorly, man.
Yeah, you're still poorly.
Yeah, I'm trying to get through it.
No, you're doing well.
Struggled through our show last night.
You did very well, though, mate.
My voice is a bit shot to shit.
Yeah.
But I'm doing my best to do them singing in the show.
Yeah. And talking along with it. And shouting, I'm doing my best to do them singing in the show and talking along with it
and shouting
and being giddy
yeah
Naughty Keith
was a big push last night
yeah
really struggled
kept feeling like I was going to cough
yeah
and also
there was a big struggle
because I had that
sort of
you know that horrible disease
where you get
two horrible women
at the front
yeah yeah
and they
they're weird
because they're talking
in a supportive way
I think they're called
audience cysts.
Yeah.
We had a couple of audience cysts
last night.
Yeah.
In the front row.
Two women,
two drunk,
far too drunk.
Yeah.
Answering back
all our speech.
Yeah, yeah.
That we were saying
to each other.
Yeah.
I mean, if anything,
if it was at a bus stop
it would have been rude.
Yeah.
Because it was a private conversation.
It was infuriating.
Absolutely infuriating.
Threw the timing of the show off.
Yeah, completely.
But they were quiet. They were like quietly chatting. So it'sating. Threw the timing of the show off. Yeah, completely. But they were quiet.
They were like quietly chatting.
So it's not like people at the back could hear them
or knew everything was going on.
Oh, poor.
That's made it a bit about it.
If you're in the front row of our show,
if I got my cock out,
it would be on your lap.
Yeah.
And I have nothing to write home about,
but it would be on your lap.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We're that close.
Yeah.
So yeah, horrible.
Because he would just put it
on your lap
I'd do that anyway
I also
we actually stayed
backstage for a bit
because we felt like
they were the sort of
people that would
wait for us
and go oh
that was really good
we helped you
yeah
because I think I would
have at that point
kicked them in the leg
although I tell you what
I did kick one of them
in the leg
I forgot to tell you that
on the way out
no when we do
there's a little bit
where we do some sketches
when I went over there give her a right crack as I went past give her a right. Did you? I forgot to tell you that. On the way out? No, when we do, there's a little bit where we do some sketches.
Yeah.
When I went over there,
give her a right crack as I went.
Give her a right crack on the leg,
did you?
Yeah, yeah.
But it was an accident.
It was, no,
it's kind of amazing.
I kind of came out angry.
Yeah.
But also then,
then happy because then I thought
that's been our first
disruptive element
in the audience.
Yeah.
For the entire run
and that was show 22
or 21.
We've got more.
I know we've got more
but I just think
that's a long time
for there to not be
a disruptive element.
But I hope that's not
the mood of the week.
No, I don't think
there would be such a thing
as a mood of the week.
Right.
There's no,
you know,
it might happen again
but touch wood,
it won't.
But I just think
as I can make a comment
saying that I think
it's amazing that there's been
no disruptive influences
up until this point. Yeah. 20, 21 shows. But it's amazing that there's been no disruptive influences up until
this point.
Yeah.
21 shows.
But it's took this long
for me to feel the need
to go out and buy a
pea shooter.
Yeah.
I bought a pea shooter
and also a catapult.
Yeah, no, it's amazing
that it's taken Ray
this long to turn into
Dennis the Menace.
And for my catapult,
I've got peas for the
pea shooter, that's
sorted.
Yeah.
For the catapult,
I've made a sort of
big blob of plasticine
with drawing pins
sticking out of it
right okay
like I mean
you can't even see
the plasticine now
yeah yeah
because there's that many
it's about 500 drawing pins
right okay
just all meticulously placed
around it
like a sharp golf ball
yeah
and I'm going to put that
in my catapult
yeah
and then if I see those ladies
around Edinburgh
I will fire it
at the back of their heads
yeah okay
if it happens in our show again
I'll just fire it straight into the person's face.
Right, okay, straight into the face.
Which I think,
that's still a bit in character, isn't it?
No.
For me to have a catapult.
Yeah, but not with a,
like a big pinny glob fire out of it.
Yeah, it wouldn't be that neat, would it?
No.
Well, I'll work something out.
You just do whatever you like in your dreams, mate.
But that's the other difficulty, isn't it?
When we have a disruption,
which we've not had so far last night,
is that we're sort of locked into the characters
as well
it'll be quite nice
most of the time
when you just want to
scream at someone
it's frustrating
you just want to
really shout at them
and then just start
crying and yelling at them
and then just taking
all the frustrations
out on them
totally
break them
and I mentioned it
on Twitter
and our guest today
Al Murray
he immediately responded saying,
why do they do it?
Yeah.
And I wanted to write back saying,
well, they do it at your show,
because you ask them.
At your show they do it,
because you walk out and say,
oh, all right, what's your job?
What's your job?
But no, it's true.
But this is a nice interview we've got today.
It's really nice, yeah.
It's an interesting one as well.
We've had a few of these in the podcast this year,
where it does
straddle sort of
being like messing
about and having a
laugh yeah with some
quite salient points
and some quite
interesting things
about comedy but
what we find is
well I think what
we found is that
together we're
absolute idiots and
we don't have
anything interesting
or constructive to
say about anything
it's mainly sort of
tits and farts
yeah and then
other people not always like that
but when you bring
that element in
it calms us down
a little bit as well
Al came in here
very educated
very well spoken
very intelligent clearly
hot and sweaty
had a glass of water
dripping he was
he was dripping
but he brought us down
we've also just recorded
our almost last interview
our penultimate
I believe
today we did it
we've just recorded that,
which is very sexy.
Yeah, it was dirty, wasn't it?
Yeah, with Angela Barnes.
Filthy, like end of the pier filthy.
Yeah, and it wasn't her.
No, not at all.
We went proper, like,
got in a really sexy mood, didn't we?
I think we were just getting horny.
Yeah, so look out for that one,
the horny Angela Barnes interview,
which will be coming up soon as well.
We'll be releasing that one late at night.
Very late at night.
It is an ex.
It is an X one
yeah
but today
Al Murray
Al Murray yeah
lovely man
there was a man on Twitter
was pestering me
to have Al Murray as a guest
yeah
even though we'd already
recorded it
yeah
so I said
absolutely not
never gonna happen
let's do that
we have an agreement
that we will never
interview Al Murray
and Alport
not gonna happen
yeah
so it's a little treat
for you in it as well
that
little treat for you that man as well, that. Yeah.
A little treat for you, that man who said that.
Because we'd already done it.
We'd done it already.
Yeah, so it's not your idea, actually.
Yeah, and recorded in beautiful sound.
Yeah.
As you'll hear as it goes on.
So let's have a good time with Al, and we'll see you again in a minute.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Al Murray.
Al Murray.
Al Murray.
Al Murray. How long do you reckon we could get away with just saying Al Murray. Al Murray. Al Murray.
How long do you reckon we could get
away with just saying
Al Murray?
Well, we could
probably spin it out
for, you know, a
good half hour.
Because people would
be sat there going,
well, it is him.
Yeah.
Can we stick with it?
Al Murray.
Yeah.
Al Murray.
Al Murray.
Al Murray.
I like this.
It's nice, isn't it?
Yeah, it's good.
I don't have to
comment with any content. I promise you. We want you to isn't it? I don't have to come up with any content.
I promise you.
We want you to leave here thinking in your own head that your name doesn't mean anything anymore.
Do you love that when you do that with a word?
Yeah, yeah.
It's destroyed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I had one, I think it was suspect once.
Yeah.
Suspect.
Suspect.
Suspect.
Suspect was going around my head until I I couldn't be certain
that was the word
yeah
yeah yeah yeah
I love doing that
yeah
yeah it makes you realise
how fragile a language is
well I'm thought
Al Murray
I'm thought with it
I'm thought with it
yeah Al Murray
identity
existence
straight in
Alan Murray
no
no
never
Alistair
Alistair
I'm an Alistair
Alistair Murray
and I have this thing
where people come up and go,
Alan!
And they think what they're doing is like they're taking things up a gear.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like being more knowledgeable and friendly.
A friend of mine once went up to Vic Reeves and went,
Hello, Jim.
Like that.
And he went,
Fuck off.
Really?
Yeah.
It is a weird one, isn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
But people do that.
They go,
Alan.
Hello, Alan.
Or the thing is Alan
and I'm like
well who's Alan
yeah
there's no Alan here
weren't you Alan
in Harry Hill though
yeah yeah
that may arise
I remember Rob Rouse
used to call you Alan
all the time
and I was impressed
I was really impressed
that Rob called him Alan
I basically didn't
bother correcting him
because he
no
there's no point
he'd have gone to pieces
he'd have literally
fallen apart.
Good old Robin Rouse.
Roberts and Rouse.
Everyone in everything Harry does is called Alan.
Yeah, of course.
It was little Alan and I was big Alan.
Well, I would have put money on you being called Alan.
So it's Alistair.
Yeah.
Wow, proper posh, aren't you?
Yes, if you want.
Let's pretend that Al's really posh.
We can pretend that if you want.
Well, my first experience of you as a stand-up wasn't the pub landlord.
Was it the machine guns?
It was, yeah.
You came to our college.
It was affiliated to Leeds University, so please don't think I just went to college.
It was you, Simon Munnery, Boothby.
I think Jenny whenever we have
anyone
even a year older
than him
he has to prove it
immediately
who was this
it would have been
around 96
maybe slightly earlier
no it would have been
earlier because
I ditched the machine
guns by 94
I think
oh god how old am I
so I went to uni
at 92
it would have been
92, 93
do you know what
it could have been
the catalyst for
why you stopped
well maybe
it was at
Bretton Hall College
oh god I remember
that gig
in a big fucking
marquee
it was horrendous
it was awful
and I was
honestly I was in
the middle
as a comedy fan
literally wanted to
stand up and go
what are you all
doing
well the thing
and I remember
because a friend
of mine went to
Bretton Hall
and she'd always gone about
what a brilliant place it was
and how everyone was
you know
like it was like a really
truly artistic environment
yeah
you know
and she
you know
she's like the lion
out of Born Free
you know
the way she talks about
you know
she's truly free
and happy there
and what amazing
sensitive wonderful
creative people everyone was
so I
and I remember thinking
this gig is going to really rock.
Yeah, yeah.
These people are going to love what's put in front of them.
And I think everyone had a hard time.
Yep.
And it was just generally vile.
You did best out of everyone.
Yeah, I know.
But that really, I mean, with that machine gun, that doesn't say much.
Yeah.
It doesn't say much.
Because that was just like noises and mime and...
Yeah.
Yeah, God.
No, it was horrendous.
And League of Gentlemen came out of there,
didn't they?
Are they contemporaries
of yours?
My best friends.
They're my best friends
and I gave them the idea.
For whatever it was
they did for that village.
Whatever that was.
I think they left
the year I got there.
Right, right, right.
And they were all
spoken about
in very revered tones
like
they're going to be massive
and I had an initial
fucking show with them
like initially
I was like
better than rubbish
better than rubbish
let's die down now
isn't it
I'm a big fan
I am a genuine big fan
but yeah
I had that weird thing
going on
that sort of
cocky youth thing of being like well that's why thing going on, that sort of cocky youth thing.
Yeah.
Of being like...
Well, that's why I got into stand-up,
was that cocky youth thing.
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
Because I was at uni with Stuart Lee,
you know, he was in the year above me at uni.
And even though we are the same age,
because I had a year off,
he still treats me like he's in the year above me.
Really? Really?
He talks to me like I'm in the year below him.
Which is the thing Paul McCartney said,
George Harrison said about Paul McCartney said George Harrison said
about Paul McCartney
he's a year older than me
when we were at school
and he still is
you know
Stuart just has this thing
where you know
the thing is
you really ought to think
about this
you think
cock off
I make my own mistakes
thank you very much
but Stuart
but we were all
you know
we all did a review together and everything,
and I knew Rich pretty well.
Rich?
Herring.
Rich.
You're aware of his work.
Richard Herring.
Oh, he's the guy who records things on phones.
Yeah, he doesn't.
Yeah, he records a podcast on his phone.
Oh, blessing.
It comes across as very disorganised.
When you get there and you've slept across town
and you're taking time out out, you're busy shooting,
he's recording on the phone,
you wonder why you're bothering.
Sometimes I think it might be better if Richard...
Richmall.
It's Richmall.
Richmall.
If he just wrote his podcast down.
Just write it down, yeah.
Just write it down,
maybe he could set up a blog.
Well, he could send me some questions
and I'd answer them.
We'd all be happy, wouldn't we?
And no one has to be messing about.
I could watch the cricket and not have to cross town at a crucial period of play.
Yeah, being insulted as a professional and a respected member of the comedy community.
Be cooking gamble, be cooking gamble.
Anyway, Stuart, because he was in the year above me, left the year before me,
went to London and started getting gigs. And I remember thinking, well, he was in the year above me left you know the year before me went to London
and started getting gigs
and I remember thinking
well my act
with the machine gun
this is as easy as funny
as what he's doing
yeah
if he can do it
this should be a piece of piss
was that one of them then
hey
there was
sort of part of one of them
yeah
most of them were like
most of them are just
sort of clearing your throat
and stuff
but they had a proper microphone
through a PA
they sound amazing, you know?
It was.
I remember that night being, that night, that gig,
and I don't want to keep bringing it up for you,
because it was horrible.
And it was because they were all drama students as well.
And it was like, you should know better.
You should know better.
This is, you know, this is going to be you in like a few years' time.
Yeah, yeah.
And you'll have to deal with this, and you'll remember tonight.
But the sound effects were fantastic.
Thanks.
Like, proper impressive.
Yeah, yeah. Well yeah I got three years
out of it
when it was actually
it was wafer thin
and I always
I mean I actually
still do
admire those comics
who've done the same set
for ten years
do you admire it genuinely
in a kind of way
the people who do
the twenty
the same twenty
for ten years
because Steve Bowditch
is an old mate of mine
who's great at showing legs
and all that
and he used to talk about how it becomes like because he's done the same set I mean probably for twenty years because Steve Bowditch is an old mate of mine who's great at showing legs and all that and he used to talk
about how it becomes
like a
because he's done
the same set
I mean probably
for 20 years now
he says it becomes
like a sort of
mantra
like a zen mantra
and the time
because it's literally
exactly the same
every time
it's just the way
the time moves around
changes
and you know
you could sort of
stand above the material
and look down on it
because it's so familiar
and I sort of almost
at one point
I used to really envy people
that were content
with being able to do that
but also
it would drive you
obviously drive you mental
in the end
I think it is that
it's more for me
it's not like
you shouldn't be able
to do that
because of course you can
that's like saying to a butcher
you've got to cut all your meat
differently next week
yeah as a job so I understand that but is that what you say be able to do that because of course you can. That's like saying to a butcher you've got to cut all your meat differently next week.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
As a job,
I understand that but is that what you say?
That it would just
be like,
really?
Like the,
you know,
the entertainer thing
that's all
behind the eyes.
And so many of them,
I think Bowditch
is a good example for that
but so many of them
are so clearly unhappy
and clearly,
I mean Steve's very,
he's a
well and he does
lots of other
stuff as well
so it's not
really an issue
yeah but no
some of those
yeah some of
those guys have
been I mean
every now and
again I've you
know when I
when I go go
and do a circuit
game I find
myself on a
bill and it
you know how
15 years elapsed
and I'm on the
same bill with
these same
fucking
buckets
you know is there no new is there no one new you know it's really funny saying fucking puppets yeah yeah but what's
you know
is there no new
is there no one new
you know
it's really funny
but that's yeah
and that's the other
sort of
corner of the market
but it's
like they're still
getting books and stuff
and still
it's got to lose something
in the 15 years
of doing it
you'd think
without the spark
yeah but that's the
impressive thing though
so that's
that's where you can go
well actually
it's actually quite clever it's learning the spark like you're still enjoying it yeah pretend yeah performing that's the impressive thing though so that's where you can go well it's actually quite clever
the spark
like you're
still enjoying
it
yeah
it's the
Bob Monk
has isn't it
faking the
sincerity
yeah
Monk has never
faked it very
well though
no he didn't
I mean that's
his great quote
isn't it
once you've
learned how to
fake sincerity
you know you
got it made
you think
but look
yeah
and I'm a
big admirer
of Bob Monk
has but I
used to say I used to have it in my set and I stopped saying it when he died but I used admirer of Bob Monkhouse but I used to say
I used to have it
on my set
and I stopped saying it
when he died
but I used to say
that Bob Monkhouse
genuinely looked like
when he walked on stage
he'd just been sucking
someone off backstage
and he'd swok out
and go
mmm
before he started
I love that you could
say that when he was alive
but now he's dead
well because
you're not libeling him now
no because
because then
then he would have had
a right of reply
if we ever ended up
on the same gig
for example
but you know
it's one of them
where it felt like
it felt alright
because it's
sort of
a comic
imagining you
going on after Monk House
doing that line
like oh fuck it
I'm going to do it
I'm going to do it
why not
be cooking gamble
be cooking gamble
so we're in Edinburgh now
you've been in Edinburgh
certainly longer than me
just re-emphasising again
the summer
or like the
ever
in general
ever
I'm just making sure
that people know right
that for today
I'm not the oldest person
on the podcast
I know I am
the oldest person on this podcast yeah you am the oldest person on this podcast.
Yeah, you are.
By a considerable distance, I think.
And we had Macmillan and Jimmy Cricket the other day as well.
Yeah.
I am a spring chicken in Edinburgh.
You were a star in Edinburgh when I did my first Edinburgh, which was in 99.
Yeah.
Was 99 the year you won the award?
It was the year I won the Perrier, yeah.
And the fuss, there was a fuss as the, yeah, the Perrier, yeah. And it was the year, and the fuss,
there was a fuss as well,
wasn't there?
Oh God,
well there was a,
yeah,
there was a fuss,
but my now ex-wife,
God bless her,
was having,
was pregnant,
and we,
and my daughter was born here,
and Scarlett was born here,
so to be honest,
my eye was not on the ball,
with that big controversy.
So,
weirdly,
that one sort of whistled past me,
and Avalon have got that, they've blown the letter up, that N. So, weirdly, that one sort of whistled past me.
Avalon have got that, they've blown the letter up that Nika sent,
with all the dates scribbled out and changed, you know, and all that.
And it looks really, you know, I wasn't engaged with that thing at all.
I was worried about prenatal checks and going home, you know. We should explain what actually happened was,
was that the old Perrier Award announced suddenly
that you weren't eligible.
Yeah.
Well, because I've been nominated three times previously.
Yeah.
And I think the third time, I remember the first time,
I mean, it's such, you know, these things are so ridiculous.
And more like a passage of time.
Oh, it was a good, yeah.
And now looking back, I'm like, what?
Yeah.
The first year, I remember when I was nominated, I think, looking back I'm like what the first year I remember
when I was
nominated
thinking well
that's
what the fuck's
happened here
that's ridiculous
the second year
just thinking
well this is
surely I'm going
to win it
because this never
happens and then
I didn't
the League of
Gentlemen won it
and
sorry
my idea
full circle
look what you've
done to me
and then
you know
if that
Bretton Hall
gig had gone
well I'd probably
still be doing
the machine
I know
I know
there's so many
things I'm
wanting to
do
just one giant
what if
the whole thing
and then the
third year
I got nominated
I thought
well I was
surely
surely
this
I will
win
even though
you know
the moment
you start
thinking like
that about anything it's going to pervert you and, the moment you start thinking like that about anything,
it's going to pervert you,
poison the well.
And then the fourth year,
there was that big hoo-ha,
well,
you know,
they're never going to back down from that,
whatever.
And then I won it,
which was sort of odd,
but also kind of not the main event that week.
Scarlet was born on the Monday,
you know,
so that whole week was a newborn baby in Edinburgh,
dealing with all that
you know
and isn't that weird though
that I could name you
winners since
who would have gone
and the best thing
that happened to me
that week
was winning that award
even if they'd had a child
on the Monday
and that we could go through
winners since
I think that was a pivotal
point in that award
I think we could go through
winners since
and go
well he wouldn't have been bothered.
He would have still been doing his hair.
And that's the week I got my baby and had my first child.
After winning that, did you feel then like it was a clean slate
and you could just get on with what you were doing?
Well, no. I thought, right, well, I can't go back to edinburgh it was my first thing because you know
with a family it just got more difficult and also i just kind of felt that chapter has you know i've
got to close this chapter yeah because it because it had become like it had become a big deal and i
didn't want it you know you don't everyone's looking at the wrong thing and you want them to
you want them to like what you're doing rather than whether you're caught up in controversy
yeah you know what i mean and also i felt and uh i felt i'd reached my boundary with only doing an
hour and i can't do only an hour anymore and make the app work properly i think so i have to do
longer yeah and the cranking cutting a show to fit it into an hour is really unsatisfactory
or doing it really fast
like some people do
you know
like to try and
cram it in
I just felt like
I'd come to the end
of that road really
yeah
and that was also
before
because people now
do do more than
an hour in Edinburgh
yeah
like Stu
you said about Stu
I think Stu's an hour
and twenty isn't he
yeah
well he's lucky
I mean I've got
an hour ten slot
this year
and I'm finding it
I'm finding it really
even that really really hard
it's still a plush
yeah
well yeah
because the
because I mean you know
boring things
you know I think audiences
have 20 minute attention spans
so you take the first 20
then the second 20
third 20
fourth 20
like that
yeah
and you pace the show across it
and an hour and 10
you know you reach a natural pause
and then
and then you have to crank them up
and then you have to stop
and it's kind of yeah it doesn't work i find that really hard i mean just
really really boring no one's interested technical things you know i think people are interested i
think no i genuinely do because here's another thing i think you flatter to deceive because
you're far more technically minded than you let on on stage. Obviously, you can't.
Well, probably.
It has that character.
Right, first 20 minutes.
Yeah, probably, yeah.
Because I remember years and years and years ago,
like this even predates 99,
about mid-97 or something,
I booked you for a gig in Watford
at the Hogshead Pub.
I don't even know what it's called anymore.
It was a pub gig in Watford.
Don't look for it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I'd been hoodwinked into running it. Right anymore it was a pub gig in Watford don't look for it yeah yeah yeah but I'd been
huddled into running it
I was running another gig
in North London
somebody had asked me
to do it
but it was with a budget
it was £120
to book an entire night
and every now and again
they'd go
can you get a well known act
and we'll give you
a little bit more money
and we'll get a better act on
and I had Dave Thompson
and you
I remember this kick
it was like
literally I was going
I am giving somebody
£100
to do comedy
that is
£100
yeah
they're going to be delighted
right
and I remember you
coming doing it
and again
Rouse was there
Rob Rouse was there
yeah
and backstage afterwards
backstage
in the little bit where they keep on a beer,
which is probably where you got the idea from.
Arguably.
Yeah.
We were talking to you about interaction with the audience and that sort of thing,
and going off in certain directions.
Yeah.
And you had, I don't know if you still have it, but you had a plan.
Yeah.
A written plan about where...
How to structure this stuff and how to make it work.
How to make the lines all fall together.
Yeah, but it was also about interaction. Yeah. So was if it goes that way it goes there because yeah yeah yeah
and it was really i mean i remember rob but that that year i mean that was the year i where i
decided i had to properly engineer that build that into the act yeah i was really working on it that
year yeah because the because what i used to do before was like pick two people and they'll be
who'd be nicknamed i'd give them nicknames and they they'd essentially
perform the same
studio roles every
night yeah yeah
and then I got to
the point where I
thought actually
because the other
thing is I was
going crazy doing
the same stuff
over and over
again well the
way to the way
to break that
is to actually
learn how to
improvise with an
audience yeah so
I came up with
those sort of
situational flow
charts yeah he
says this do that
and if he says
that do this
yeah something
and I wrote down,
Stuart Lee, God bless him,
he always says, well Al's got this sort of Rolodex in his head
and he just picks the one out that he needs out of the file.
Well actually that sounds impressive for a start.
It's not what I do,
it's where I started.
The thing with Al is he knows what he's doing.
Dear old Stu has to be
in charge of the argument.
thing with Al is he knows what he's doing.
Dear old Stu has to be in charge of the argument.
But I was, at one point, I wrote down 20 jobs, 20 likely jobs to come up, and three responses,
pub landlord reductionist responses to each one.
Did the mental exercise and screwed that up and threw it away, but I'd done the thinking.
And so it just got my gears going for for how to do that and then and then it's the thing of you know you remember save two or three people up and you just know that at some point you're going to be able to reinsert them and
and make a routine you're doing yeah suddenly fresh you know of course yeah i was i mean that
year i was really i was really madly into cracking how to do it because i remember seeing someone at
i think it was Richard Morton,
I saw him at the comedy store once, where he said to some bloke,
what do you do for a living?
And the guy goes, well, I'm a toy maker.
And Richard just went, fucking hell, it's Geppetto.
And I remember at the time thinking, wow, I can't do that.
Wouldn't it be brilliant to be able to do that?
Because maybe that's what he always says.
And maybe the guy didn't even say that.
I can't remember if he replied
I think he repeated it back
but it just
it just seemed like
kapow
the instant
instant
instantness
quickness
quickness
speed
immediacy
immediacy of it
was brilliant
and
and that's something
I wanted to get my hands on
but with the character
because the character
doing it
because I'm a big fan of
have you ever read of David Mamet's
is about acting
he's really brilliant
on the subject of acting
he goes
you know
it isn't back story
it isn't what happened
when you were nine
when you were nine
it's what you're saying now
how you're behaving right now
is character
and tells you
everything you need to know
so like
that was my view
with the pub learning
because you literally
have a conversation
with the audience
and they'll get
wind of who he is
quicker
than coming on
and going
oh I had
a terrible day
in the pub
today
and then it's
fourth wall
and then it's
a monologue
and it's gone
and in comedy
clubs
you can't come
on fourth wall
too much
because they
tune out
you tune out
and it's gone
I felt that a bit
in our show
this year
sometimes where there's little moments where I think there's one little argument early on you now and it's gone you know. Yeah. I felt that a bit in our show this year you know
sometimes where
there's little
moments where I
think there's one
little argument
early on where I
felt it last night
like we were doing
a play.
It didn't bother
me because I think
we interact so much
that it doesn't
really matter.
We've got that out
of the way already
it's all direct
stress first of all
but it's just a
little moment where
we have quite a
fast discussion
where last night I
did feel like oh
it's just us here.
I quite like that
yeah
I think here you can do that
in the films you can do
but I think in Cabaret
in a London comedy club situation
yeah yeah yeah
you can really run into trouble with it
you know
because it's also
the SM58 on the microphone stand
which is the thing
I have a real problem with
I hate pictures of comics
with microphones
yeah
same
same
because the microphone
and the elbow absolutely means you're a comedian yeah and you know with I hate pictures of comics with microphones same because the microphone and
the elbow
means you're
a comedian
and you know
lads with
microphones
and the fact
they're holding
a microphone
means they're
going to tell
you something
really out there
and
you can move
in here
because I've
had a microphone
in my tie
since 97
in a piece
of blue
tack in my tie because I wanted to piece of blue tack in my tie
because I wanted
to be able to
use both hands
and also
when I'm holding
the pint glass
with a microphone
as well
I get in a terrible
tangle
but also
I was really
into being physical
with it
and waving my arms
around
if you want to
know what the
banging is
that's our
banging the table
after being told
I've only done it
twice
do you want me
to bring it back
and the microphone and see but they're being told I've already done it twice do you want me to make it back but
the microphone
and I see
people smart enough
to know better
in their picture
it's as if
it's as if to say
look I'm a stand up comic
but it's people who
some posters
of people who are
very very famous
for being stand up comics
that's how people know them
John Bishop's photo
in with the microphone that's how he came to prominence so no one's going how people know them. John Bishop's photo. Yeah. In with the microphone.
That's how he came to prominence.
So no one's going to go,
oh, it's John Bishop.
What is that microphone?
Oh, thank God.
Yes, he's not an opera singer,
is he?
Yeah.
But that scene for me
is all about
that sort of vague
dumbing down of it.
Yeah.
That vague popularising
of it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's like kind of boy bandy,
isn't it?
Put him in a suit,
white background, very, very clear what's happening kind of boy bandy, isn't it? Put them in a suit, white background,
very, very clear what's happening.
I don't mind it as much,
we have an ongoing discussion on this,
I don't mind it on posters as much
if it's a genuine live shot.
If it's a live shot, that's different.
That's different, but if you're in a photographic studio,
the thing that really makes me laugh
is the sort of deadly serious comedian face.
What are you doing
you big poof
you know
you're a clown
you're supposed to be
we're clowns
we're meant to
not take ourselves
seriously
we take work seriously
by all means
but not yourself
because then
where does that
leave the world
if you're taking
yourself seriously
how are you possibly
going to take the piss
out of anything else
it's like Barry Humphreys
that brilliant Barry Humphreys line always make sure you can laugh at yourself because you never know you might how are you possibly going to take the piss out of anything else it's like that
brilliant Barry
Humphreys line
always make sure
you can laugh at
yourself because
you never know
you might be
missing out on
the joke
of the century
but you see
all those
thinky pictures
and you think
oh you great
big nuts
we had a
discussion like
that didn't we
again it was an
Avalon discussion
where they said
because our
post this year
we're very sulky on it
yeah
but they said
people might think
you're a ranty act
that you're
we were going
I think it's
I think it's clear
I think your face
makes it very obvious
yeah yeah
Ed's face on it
because Ed is far more
sulky
stupid
I was stropping
whereas I'm just on my arms
with a genuine frown
on my face
which isn't what we do
on stage
it wasn't so we do on stage. No.
So we understood it from that point of view,
but it was about us having a sulk about not being on telly.
And I think that was that concern.
It was the concern of people will think you're a moody, ranty act.
And it's like, look at Ed.
He looks Chinese.
There's no thing.
Look how he's got his lips all pouty as well.
Yeah.
But then there's a lot of preposterousness in stand-up at the moment.
I mean, I'm really...
I'm finding the political tilt of comedy at the moment really wearying.
Right, OK.
It's almost as if there's a whole lot of people who think,
thank God there's Tories are back.
Yeah, that's a changeover.
So I can say Tory over and over again and people will agree with me.
Yeah.
And, you know,
the other thing,
I mean, my other big,
you know,
I don't know about you,
but I got into comedy
because it didn't look like a job,
because it looked like
not getting up in the morning.
Yeah.
It looked like being able
to do what I really wanted
and fuck about.
Yeah.
And get paid cash in hand
and all that.
So I am not going to lecture
anyone on politics.
Yeah.
Because I'm clueless.
So really,
that hundred quid in
Watford was
exactly what you
wanted
yeah
that's the other
thing is when I
do do club gigs
and they give
you 120 quid in
cash
you're the king
of the world
it can go into
offshore bank
accounts
but it's that
cash
you don't have
to be gone
you don't have to be gone in an hour
you don't have to
sign for it
and no one will
ever know that's gone
yeah yeah
keeping the economy
afloat
I'll put a general
200 pound
on my tax
140 of these
no I know what you
mean I know what you
mean and then yeah
then it comes down
to that
I mean you know
there's people who've got
their own thing
and they want to, you know,
they want to do political stuff
and that.
I think there's a genuine place for it.
And of course there is,
but there's this sort of,
there's this sort of
dog whistle in it now.
Absolutely.
And it's as wearying a trope
as ginger people.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, it's a loss of fun as well.
It's a loss of fun.
It's also a division.
There's a divining line between genuine political humour and satire and then just lecturing people on it.
And people have been doing like proper political humour and satire all the way through anyway.
Yeah.
But it's only now that the whole lecturing thing has come back.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's very simplistic in a way.
Yeah, I think it's a Bill Hicks fallout there. I think it's a thing of...
Have you seen Gavin Webster's show?
No, I've not.
No, I've not seen it yet. No. Bill Hicks wasn out there I think it's a thing of have you seen Gavin Webster's show no I've not no I've not seen it yet no
Bill Hicks
wasn't very good
yeah yeah
I liked Hicks
and I've gone
I've been more
quiet about that
yeah
like since the
man's death
because it became
such a
you used to have
a line about him
looking like he'd
sucked someone up
didn't you
I always thought
I always thought
Bill Hicks
had been backstage
with Bob Monk
no I remember feeling like I discovered Bill Hicks like when he with Bob Monkhouse. No, I remember feeling
like I'd discovered
Bill Hicks
when he was
gigging around
and he'd done
Edinburgh and that
and I saw him in Leeds
and it was like,
this bloke's going to be
enormous.
But I never thought
he'd be enormous
in the way that he
ended up being.
No,
but that's death for you,
isn't it?
It is death for you,
yes.
I saw him here
when he came here
and I remember thinking, he's here. And I remember thinking,
he's pretty good,
but not thinking,
lo, he walks amongst us,
touches wounds,
any of that.
He was really good.
And there used to be,
and it's gone now,
there used to be proper cultural cringe in Edinburgh.
When an American comic turned up
and we did shit together,
everyone would be like,
this guy's amazing.
And Americans could come here
and really
kind of
make quite a big
noise
usually because
they were so much
more polished
I mean
polished British stand up
is a really recent
arrival
at the party
you know what I mean
and so
I remember
it must have been
93
no 94, 95
when did he die?
He died in 94 right so it would have been 93, no, 94, 95, I think, when did he die? He died in 94.
Right,
so it would have been,
so,
yeah,
so it would have been,
yeah,
92 maybe.
Yeah.
Seeing him,
and him being really,
you know,
mega slick,
and then doing that whole,
you know,
I'm going to tell the same joke
to the entire,
you know,
all that,
that whole,
that whole really mega slick thing,
and people,
people,
people,
you know,
kind of loved him
because he was American
as much as anything else,
because emo would come and blow people away, because supposedly he was American as much as anything else because emo would
come and blow
people away
because he had
his shit together
I mean he's
brilliant
but you know
what I mean
and I remember
seeing Bill Hicks
in that light
rather than
this guy is
putting it to
the man
what he's become
this sort of
counterculture figure
it's almost
disappointing
even though
it's a weird double thing I think, even though it's what should...
It's a weird double thing, I think.
Well, it's nice.
I mean, it's actually nice
that it can happen,
that a stand-up can be taken seriously
in a way.
Yeah.
That's sort of nice,
but it's weird where it's fallen.
But it's where it spawns.
Yeah, it's where it spawns.
And it's all, you know,
American foreign...
I think Gavin's thing is, you know,
American foreign...
Whinging on about American foreign policy
is all very well, but it's not entertainment.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It is.
And that Polish thing is right.
I think even now, though, because when we were previewing, I remember people saying to us, we did that festival in London somewhere.
And we had a good night in that theatre and a really nice show.
And the bloke that ran it went, you're the only act that's come.
And it was lots of big acts as well.
They went, your show's ready. Your show's ready's ready this is amazing like you really you knew it inside out
and it was everyone's been reading off paper and that and it's amazing and we were going it's
because it starts in a week i mean i mean i remember i remember you know sitting in the
in the pleasant spa in 93 week one you, preview week, and people with giant piles of paperwork going,
I haven't learned it yet.
And you think,
we open up,
you're charging people money on Friday,
you donut.
What are you doing?
So I was always ready.
We've had a puff and on some donuts.
So I was always ready in April.
Yeah.
I was well set in April
and cutting in April,
you know,
cutting stuff and making sure that, you know, cutting stuff
and making sure
that, you know,
because,
I don't know,
I think the alternative
comedy scene,
which is what we sort of,
you know,
distant,
you know,
we're homo erectus
from the,
was punk,
came out of punk
and punk is anyone can do it
and punk is not about polish
because I think the American thing
comes from the Catskills
and there was a reaction to that.
So super shiny and mega slick.
Yeah.
You know, we have gentlemen amateurs in our arts culture.
And Americans have hardball professionals, you know.
Yeah.
There's a difference in musicians as well, I think.
But speaking of Hicks as well, though,
there's also an element where what you do could influence people
in that thing of going,
I'm going to just make it up.
Yeah, I know. With my comedy, I'm going to just make it up with my comedy
I'm going to do that
I'm just going to go
and just make it up
just walk on the track
and just talk to people
and get it all from there
and it'll be fine
so that could influence
I'm saying that
you could have a
yeah no no
we're a bit of diving
yeah
so you're doing the Puppet Amateur this year yeah is it two so you're doing
the Poplar Landlord
this year
yeah
is it two shows
you're doing
we were doing
two shows
we're doing the
quiz as well
we only did
three nights
of that
because it's
that's an hour
and a half
and we have
to do it
at midnight
because it's
not really
something
because it's
so ramshackle
yeah
and midnight
brings the
pricks
yeah
and it's
exhausting
yeah
the second
dose is just
you know
yeah
I run around a lot
in that as well
which I find increasingly
difficult
you just run
past that
I know
which I regret
do you regret it though
I do yeah
was it showing off
no it was
I was shouting down at you
no it's my daily struggle
with making my
you know like
I don't like
I'm not really mad
about exercise
and boring
yeah stupid
boring you know,
why not read a book
while I have a wank?
And that is a bit of exercise.
That is cardiovascular.
Because you've got to concentrate
on the words.
Yeah, exactly.
But no, it's this thing of,
all right, come on,
you can still get up these stairs quickly
if you wanted to.
And then, you know,
you get to the top
and there's burning in your head.
Yeah, yeah.
I learned very early on.
Just take it slow
just don't worry
about it
no one's watching
no one's watching
just do it
at your own pace
you were watching
Al because you
were stood at
the top of the
stage
yeah
tell him to
slow down
what on earth
are you doing
I don't listen
have you done
other characters
since doing the
programme
on stage
no no
we did the
sketch show
thing
that opened to mixed reviews but that's alright I don't No, no, we did the sketch show thing that opened to mixed reviews.
But that's all right, I don't care about that.
And I did a load of different characters in that.
There were two I wanted to pursue,
but because the programme didn't get recommissioned and ran out of juice.
I mean, the Publand to me really felt,
when people say, who are you going to do, why don't you do something else?
I feel like saying, well, should we ask Jack Dee if he's going to do a cheerful hour?
Yeah, of course.
Why not?
I am trying to...
I've got to write a book at the moment.
A classic thing. January, I'd say to myself,
hold January off. I'm not going to do
a thing. And then
one night I have an idea for a book.
Start writing it. Write 50,000
words in a month. send it to a publisher
and now I've got to
write it, right?
Yeah.
But he wants 100,000 words
and basically I've written
as much as I was interested in.
Got this, you know,
bloody thing to do
but it will probably
turn it into sort of
a Dave Gorman style
presentation.
Okay, nice.
Chat but not in character
which I've never done before,
never done me.
Yeah.
I've never seen the point.
But you can do you. I could do me,
so to speak.
There's lots of people
who do me, but the way it works out,
they never do.
Yeah,
but this is going to be about something
and I wouldn't mind talking about
something I'd find easier. I mean, I don't
know how some people have the nerve to go on as themselves.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Knowing a lot of comics.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You think, well, how can you go on stage and present yourself as a coherent human being?
But that's sometimes the joke.
Well, maybe.
Don't ever go at me about it.
I'm a little smasher.
That's the grand jest, yeah.
So how long
off that
will you be
to think
will that be
next year
that'll be
for next
year
for next
summer
yeah
it's about
why I like
history
so it's
kind of
like
yeah you
are a bit
because I'm
into it
but it's
because my
dad is
massively
into it
yeah
and you
know we
didn't go
to football
we went
to Waterloo
and looked
at the
battlefield
and Normandy
and the
Ardennes
and Holland and you know and the ardenne and holland and you know
and that's i and i you know grew up on that reluctantly once i was out of my sort of action
man phase but but i'm seriously interested in it now yeah and uh i'm always reading about it
everything so this book's about growing up with that in your life yeah as a as a pastime and and
my my dad god bless him he's really picky with war films.
You can't watch a war film with my dad
because he'll go,
well, look,
they're too close together
and that officer
wouldn't be wearing binoculars
because they're used
for a sniper
and, you know,
literally like that.
I mean, the book's called
Watching War Films
with my dad
because I remember him
taking me to see
A Bridge Too Far
when I was eight.
Right.
And he knew,
from his national service
and his time in the army,
he knew a lot of the people who'd been at the Battle of Arnhem who were his senior officers. Yeah. So he knew from his national service and his time in the army he knew a lot of the people
who'd been at the Battle of Arnhem
who were his senior officers
so he knew all the stories
he knew all the inside
all the things
that haven't made it
into the history books
because they're either dreadful
or they're like
too terrible for anyone
to know
anyone surviving to know
and there's a scene
in the movie
where this German tank
comes over the bridge
and starts blowing up
all of the British
houses on the side of the bridge.
And it's the wrong tank, right? They made the film in 1977, it's the wrong tank.
They've got a contemporary tank and dressed it to look like a World War II tank.
But it doesn't look anything like the right tank.
I was eight though, when my dad took it. And I'm like, well, tank, yeah, pfft.
I don't know, our boys are in trouble. And he couldn't help himself.
He leant over and he went, that's the wrong tank.
You know, and scene.
And that's it.
That's the end of the film.
And every time I watch it now,
because it's a good enough boiling down of what happened for a movie.
It's a movie.
I can't watch that film now.
He couldn't stop it.
He couldn't help himself.
He just couldn't help himself.
My dad has a massive problem with any film
where it's set
it's set during
a historical event
or a set at a point
in history
but it's a fictionalised
account of someone
who wasn't real
within that event
like he can't bear it
he can't cope with it
even if it's an amazing film
he can't cope with it
yeah well
people get really funny
about it
I mean
being in Scotland
you know
Braveheart
it's just hilarious it's just it's hilarious that that's influenced anybody because it's you know it's i mean i mean being in scotland you know braveheart braveheart thing it's just hilarious yeah it's hilarious that that's influenced anybody because it's such dreck
and uh but anyway you know i think that says more about now than it does about them yeah yeah but
anyway so this book's about that and why i'm interested in history okay and i made it made
a couple of history documentaries so there's a lot of stories from doing those and yeah you know
what it's like talking to these you know because talked to a lot of veterans, which was really interesting.
But there is also the thing of once you get to 80, you've got your patter down.
Yeah.
Stories about when you were at Pegasus Bridge.
And we met a couple of professional anecdotes.
And that was quite interesting.
Because are they being honest?
You don't know.
It's a learned story.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They were doing the same 20 for 60.
Well, yeah.
That's exactly it.
Yeah.
And there was one guy in particular,
and he's since died,
called Wally Parr,
who was an absolute pro-anecdotaliser.
Right.
And there's a couple of people
who were also at the battle.
Because he's in a book,
and he's in one of the books
and obviously Stephen Ambrose
who wrote Band of Brothers
obviously talked to Wally a lot
and Wally is at every,
in the book,
I mean this isn't denigrating Wally Park
because he was a very brave
and incredible soldier
but he is at every single
major fucking band.
And there's a couple of the other boys
who go,
yeah well Wally, a couple of the other boys who go yeah well
Wally
yeah
a couple of the other veterans
yeah well Wally
yeah mate
yeah of course he was there
oh yeah
oh we all remember
tag along Wally
but you know
no I mean
I'm not
he was
I'm not having a go
he was a brilliant
brilliantly interesting man
but he had his patter down
and that's quite
it's quite interesting
running into that
when it's history
and you want tell me the truth tell me the truth and that's quite it's quite interesting running into that when you want to when it's history and you want
tell me the truth
tell me the truth
and that's really interesting
but you know
so the book's about that
because what
also the book's about
like what is it
what is history
because it isn't
what happened then
and that happened then
it isn't that
it's you know
it's how we tell stories
actually how we tell stories
about ourselves
you know World War II
is one giant moral projection
that people you know it's a thing you can project War II is one giant moral projection that people
you know it's a thing
you can project
anything you want
onto it morally
so that's what history
is
every history book
you will ever read
is about now
it's not about then
no no
I'm not pulling you
up there
it's history
what history is
is when
it's all
all the things
that happen
it's like 1066
back in the day
yeah it was that sort of stuff the war all the things that happen. It's like 1066, back in the day. Yeah, it's that sort of stuff.
The war.
The thing is,
I've got to write 100,000 words, right?
So I've got to spin this bullshit.
Yeah, you can say all that.
But when it comes down to it...
It's Harold with an arrow.
It's all like, you know,
pyramids and all that.
All the olden times things.
It's the spinning journey. Yeah. It's black and white cobble street, Jack the Ripper, that sort of thing. pyramids and all that all olden times things it's olden times
it's the old spinning journey
yeah
it's black and white
cobble street
Jack the Ripper
that sort of thing
but I see what you're
trying to say
I'm going to pull you
on that
so if anyone's thinking
of buying Al's book
bear in mind
he's coming at it
from the wrong
perspective
it's out next Christmas
Al Murray there
Al Murray
the pub landlord but he wasn't the pub landlord justble. Al Murray there. Al Murray. The pub landlord.
But he wasn't the pub landlord just now.
Just Al Murray.
He was Al Murray the bloke.
Yeah.
But it's still the man who's inside the pub landlord working it.
Yeah.
So that was a night.
I did enjoy that interview.
Yeah.
I thought it was really good.
There are some of the interviews.
I've enjoyed all the interviews.
Don't get me wrong.
But there's some interviews where I've come out and gone, that was a belter.
Yeah.
That was a really, really nice one.
Also, for you, it's in terms of the edit as well
see that one
was pretty straight up
relatively easy
yeah it was relatively easy
where sometimes
it's got nothing
to do with the quality
of the guest
or it's the way
the interview goes
so sometimes
it might end up
being more bitty
we might discuss
lots of topics
and lose a thread
halfway through
then come back
to that for a later
and that's more
of a difficult edit
or we might wait
if someone's
relaxing as they
go on in the interview
we might take something
from later in the interview and put it to the beginning to make the flow better.
There's lots of things. But Al was straight in there. Straight down the middle of the
line. Banging on. Giving it all out about Estia. I mean I zoned out on the Estia bit.
Oh, no idea about that. Thank you. No idea. We also had a quite long chat with our friend
Raji. Yes. Who was on a show with him once but I cut that out. Yeah, we cut that out.
Because I felt it was unfair on Raji. because basically we all agreed he's a prick.
So I didn't want to put that in because I thought that would be
a bit unfair on the prick.
A bit unfair on the old prick.
We didn't think you were a prick Raji.
Let him be listening to this.
He never listened to it
when he was on it.
He didn't did he?
No.
Weird.
So there we go
that's the show for today.
Don't forget our show
Peacock and Gumball
don't even want to be on telly anyway
still every night at the Pleasant's Dome
9.40pm
that's a nice late nearly late night show
yeah okay come in at 9.40 and then we'll take you to 10.40 oh get out on the beers mate
don't take that some bamboo right all the audiences from now onwards yeah for the rest
of the run wait for us yeah wait for us yeah whatever's after the show right make a big
fuss about us then we'll all go down to pub together knock some beers
back
if there's any
girls there
we'll probably
have sex with you
alright definitely
with a Johnny on
I like that
I'm just happy
mate that just now
when you plugged
our show
you used the
correct name
for the venue
thank you very much
see you soon
the Peacock and Gamble
Edinburgh podcast
is a ready production
hosted by chortle.co.uk today's guest is Al Murray and my show The Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast is a Ready production,
hosted by chortle.co.uk.
Today's guest was Al Murray,
and my show is The Only Way is Epic at 8.55 at George Square Assembly,
going on the road into the rest of the UK shortly.
All music by Thomas Fun the Ray.
See you tomorrow.
Nice.
Poor Thomas.