The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 6 (Russell Howard)
Episode Date: October 18, 2020"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 6 (Russell Howard)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 91 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 great.
Gamble, it is great, Peacock and it is out there.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Here they are.
Oh, come on.
What?
It's the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast.
Is that how we're starting them now?
Come on, everyone.
Oh, come on.
Come on now, concentrate on this for a bit.
Here we go.
Have a break from your day.
Now, as you know, we have to have silence before we start, but your tummy gurgled during
that one.
It was my throat.
Was it?
Yeah.
I've just had some Metatone tonic.
What's that?
It's a thing.
Oh, lovely.
Yeah.
It's supposed to boost your immune system a little bit, apparently.
And if you're feeling a bit tired.
Yeah.
And then you have that.
Yeah.
I bought it after I was ill.
Right.
Earlier in the year.
Just to sort of build myself back up again.
I'm Ray Peacock, by the way.
Oh, hello.
I'm Ed Gamble.
So I decided to get some more while I was up here.
Yeah.
Just to have it every day.
Do you think it's working?
No.
Well, you're not ill, are you?
I'm not ill, no.
But I'm certainly not helping on an energy level.
No, but that's because you're staying until seven to edit.
I'm tuckered out.
You're a little tuckered out fella, aren't you?
Yeah.
Do you know what?
I really enjoyed
doing the podcast
yesterday with
Gareth Richards.
Yeah.
That's one of my
favourite ones.
Yeah.
I really enjoyed
the interview
and I enjoyed
doing the edit.
Yeah.
But the edit went on
because it was
quite a long one.
Yeah.
And I'd done our show
and then I'd done
another gig
that I was comparing
late into the morning.
Yeah.
And then I got home.
I could have met you
afterwards to take you home.
You did didn't you?
Although you put off
the last act.
I did.
Because Joe Domet
was on stage
headlining it. Well he was wrapping up. Alright wrapping, didn't you? Although you put off the last act. I did. Because Joe Domet was on stage headlining it.
Well, he was wrapping up.
Oh, right, wrapping up.
And you popped your arm
around the door
with your phone
and took a photo.
Yep, I did,
just to get a picture of it.
But he didn't know
that was you.
No.
And that put him off.
Well, he was finished,
really, wasn't he?
He was finished, yeah.
No, he did a good job
but he thought he hadn't
but he was fine.
Yeah.
So I'm a little bit tired.
I'm a little bit tuckered out
to be honest
because it was editing the podcast
there'll never be people
who listen to it
and they hope you enjoy it
I always feel bad
when you have to stay up late
doing it
yeah
because I just go to bed
yeah
and that feels bad
because then you have to
stay up doing it
good
good
but I can't
it's weird if I just sat there
looking at you editing it
yeah exactly
yeah so I can't do that
yeah
so that's strange
and our stage manager Sophie you know the big six months girl yeah she came back with The Night I just sat there looking at you editing it. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, so I can't do that. Yeah. So that's strange.
Our stage manager, Sophie, you know,
a big Six Miles girl.
Yeah.
She came back with the night and was like, I want a drink.
Yeah.
And she just sat opposite me watching me edit.
Yeah, well, that's not helpful for you, is it?
And I went, this is, I can't.
Yeah.
I went, you like Scrabble, don't you, Sophie?
You like Scrabble?
I've got Scrabble on my iPad.
Yeah.
And she went to the other room. Yeah. With Scrabble on the iPad. Yeah. I I said, well, I've got a score on my iPad. Yeah. And she went to the other room.
Yeah.
With Scrabble on the iPad.
Yeah.
I finished the edit.
Yeah.
Went through to say, all done now, a little quick drink and then go home.
And then I went through, fast asleep she was.
Face on the iPad.
Right.
Dribbling on the iPad.
And I came, I was going to come and wake you up.
Yeah.
And I got my phone out ready to take a picture and I must have moved a bit and she heard
it and woke up.
It was heartbreaking, it really was.
That's a shame.
But also,
my mum's just texted me
to say,
just looking where
the Pleasance Dome is.
Well, I mean,
she's put it in wrong.
Thank you.
She's put Pleasance Dome.
Yeah, no,
you've said it already.
You've said it already.
You've said the correct name.
No, I was quoting my mum.
No, well,
you've said it now.
I've got that in my head now.
Our show is Peacock and Gamble.
Don't even want to be
on telly anyway.
9.40 at the Pleasance Dome Dome, of course.
Dome.
Actually, I'm just seeing where you're on at.
And the picture that came up.
I'm sure it's you and Ed on stage.
Right.
Sure it's you and Ed on stage on that, what, come up on Google?
And I've checked, it's our website.
Right.
It's just on our website.
So she's just Googled Peacock and Gamble and found the website.
Well, she's essentially just texted me to say,
there's a picture of you and Ed on your website. Well, she's proud. Yeah,acock and Gamble and found the website. Well she's essentially just texted me to say there's a picture
of you and Ed
on your website.
Well she's proud.
Yeah she is proud
I suppose.
She's proud mate
that we've managed
to get a photo
onto the inter.
Yeah exactly.
We've done well
getting a photo
on the inter
haven't we?
At the end of it
anyway.
So show's going well
you brought the show
up we're enjoying
it very much.
Mmm.
Mmm yes.
Nice food.
Good.
Mmm.
Only 10p.
Yeah.
You are tired. I am tired. I'm thinking of choppa chop lo 10p. Yeah. You are tired.
I am tired.
I'm thinking of chupa-chup lollies.
Yeah, last night was particularly fun.
There was a gentleman in the front row,
and he had a face on him.
All the way through?
All the way through.
Yeah.
Large, sort of imposing gentleman.
Portly man.
Very Father Christmas-like.
Yeah, nice white beard.
Yeah.
But grumpier than Father Christmas.
Yeah.
But there's a very, very strange bit in our show,
which you'll have to come and see.
It involves us basically playing in quite a silly manner.
There's no in for the audience.
I was going to say it's a running joke,
but it's more of a running thing.
Yeah, it's not a joke.
It's deliberately inaccessible to the audience.
And stupid.
It's just us being stupid.
Stupid comedy.
But he loved it. That's stupid. It's just us being stupid. Stupid comedy. But he loved it.
That's the only bit he loved.
Yeah.
And he was giggling like a child.
Yeah.
And then once you brought
everyone's attention to this,
every time we came back to it,
everyone would look at him.
Look at him.
And then you'd just see
his shoulders go
and he'd start crying with laughter.
Yeah.
It was absolutely lovely.
To be honest with you,
even though he didn't appear
to enjoy the rest of it,
although afterwards
he came and found us
and said that he was enjoying it, I've never in my life stood on
a stage, and I've done a lot of gigs and we've done a lot of shows together as well, never
ever seen an audience member enjoying something I'm doing on stage that much.
He was enjoying it so, so much.
He went very, very red, shoulders up and down, which must have looked hilarious to the rest
of the audience.
Yeah, I think it did
you couldn't see his face
just the shoulders going
it was brilliant
and then I gave him the prop
yeah
the prop we used in that bit
I gave it him at the end
he put it back on the stage
I know he did
but it was a massive cheer
when I gave it him
now the strange thing was
why did he come to our show
he came to our show
because we were outside afterwards
chatting with Tim Vine
and he came
and got us
afterwards. And he said, the reason I came was
I was looking through the Fringe programme and I saw
your face to me. Yeah.
And I knew you were off Doctor Who.
Yeah. You were from the episode Blink.
Which is, let me tell you, a brilliant episode.
Yeah. And I said, thank you very much. I wrote it.
And he went,
and that's why I came. Yeah.
And I thought, well, that's nice. It's a weird reason to come and see an hour, to invest in an hour Fringe show. So you were like, oh, that's why I came yeah and I thought well that's nice it's a weird reason
to come and see an hour
to invest in an hour
fringe show
so you were like
oh that's nice of you
and then he quoted
one of your lines
exactly
yeah
so he was a fan
oh he was
yeah yeah yeah
but here's what I thought
when I did the episode
of Doctor Who
I was credited
under my real name
which is Ian Bolesworth
yeah
because Ray Peacock
is his stage name
yeah which came about from a character that he used to do which. Because Ray Peacock is his stage name. Yeah.
Which came about from a character that he used to do,
which is called Ray Peacock.
And it's not a joke name.
No.
And if you say that to me,
I'll block you on Twitter.
I come very close to telling you
it's just to fuck off when you say that.
And I will, you know,
it will very much annoy me.
If you say it to me in the street,
it will very much annoy me.
And I will get angry and aggressive.
Please don't be fooled by my character
I will punch you in the face
that was his old character
so I'm credited
to something else
so he's gone in the
fringe programme
and gone
that's that bloke
out of Blink
now if that was me
I'd have gone
he just looks like
that bloke out of Doctor Who
he really looks like him
doesn't he
really
I wouldn't have been certain
that it was me
well maybe you just did
a little bit
a tiniest bit of research
maybe you did
by searching your name
look I'm grateful that you came I'll be honest mate I love you and you're a lovely looking lad Well, maybe you just did a little bit, a tiniest bit of research. Maybe you did. By searching your name.
Look, I'm grateful that you came.
I mean, I'll be honest, mate.
I love you.
And you're a lovely looking lad.
Not like that.
But it's quite a unique look.
There's not many people who look... It's not like me.
I've got a boring look.
Just like normal, sort of, like, shaved short hair.
Yeah, like a little boy.
I think you could look at a poster of me and say,
Oh, that looks like Ed Gamble if I had a different name.
But it might not be him. But I think you very much look like
you. You've got your own brand. You've got your own image.
Invented this, mate.
Yeah.
Long hair and a beard. Invented it, mate.
Yeah, exactly.
Loads, loads of people have copied it since.
Yeah.
But I was the first person.
Hairy bikers.
Yeah, I was the first person to do it.
Jesus.
Jesus copied it a little bit.
Yeah.
I was the first person to do it, so thank you very much indeed for that.
Thank you.
I'm a man from the magic numbers.
Yeah, I had that for a while.
And then to the point where I got mistook for the man from the magic numbers so much,
it got to a point where I had to go and meet the man and have my photo took with him.
To go, look, it is different bloke.
Yeah, we don't look that similar.
And we actually don't look anything like him.
No, he's much taller, isn't he?
No, not really.
Yeah, he's nine foot.
No, he's not.
Who am I thinking of? Is it someone out taller, isn't he? No, not really. Yeah, he's nine foot. No, he's not. Who am I thinking of?
Is it someone out of a science fiction film?
No, fairy tale.
Sorry, carry on.
So, but we appreciate him coming, that bloke.
And his wife said to me, because she was laughing all the way through.
Yeah.
And she went, oh, he is.
He's a miserable sod.
He's a miserable sod.
But he said he really likes it.
So that's coming.
So that's, how many people is that now that's in our show?
That's five now, isn't it?
Well, I think we've just broken double figures. Included them too. Yeah. So
that's going all right, isn't it? Yeah, it's going all right, I think. Yeah, it is. Yeah.
So look, today we have a special interview because we, I'm very aware I'm slurring my
words. I don't know. It's because I'm over tired. Yeah. And all that vodka that you had.
All that vodka I had before I did the programme and I didn't like it. I haven't had a drink
for three days. I had my had a drink for three days.
I had my first
alcoholic drink
in about three days
last night.
Right.
Nearly killed me.
Like, I had way less
than I would normally have
and I had to tot at home
and I was feeling
a bit woozy.
I don't think I'm going
to drink for the rest
of the fridge.
Oh, shut up, mate.
Maybe later on.
Bambuca's in a bit.
I've been having
vodka and cranberry juice
up until three days ago.
Drives you mental though. It does doesn't it? Yeah. I wonder why? Well because it's
alcohol. You don't really drink alcohol. Plus you shouldn't be allowed juice because of
all the E numbers. Right. You're a little mischievous little scamp anyway. I am I'm
a lovable scamp. Give you a sip of juice or a jelly baby and you go off the deep end mate.
I put vodka in that
and then A pressed A
and naughty boy
all around Edinburgh.
Exactly.
You have a jelly baby vodka
then you're going to go mad.
Oh I'd love that.
Which one would you have?
I would have the strawberry one
I think best.
Black one.
So yeah it's been fun
but today we've got
Russell Howard
in an interview
that we did
before we came to Edinburgh.
Yeah we pre-recorded right?
Yeah.
We thought we'll get
that pre-recorded
because obviously
Russell doesn't come to the Fringe anymore, right?
Have a nice chat with him.
I was out having a drink last night.
Who did I bump into?
Russell Howard.
So pointless pre-record.
Could have done it here, better sound quality.
Wouldn't it?
Because the sound quality is pretty bad on this interview.
But try and bear with it.
It's not as bad as, not like a herring podcast.
Yeah.
You know, it's listenable too.
Yeah.
But yeah, it's pretty bad.
I saw Tim Vine last night.
Yes, I know you did. I know Tim Vine. Yeah. I know Tim Vine, because I've worked with. Yeah. But, yeah, it's pretty bad. I saw Tim Vine last night. Yes, I know you did.
I know Tim Vine.
Yeah.
I know Tim Vine because I've worked with him loads.
Yeah, I know.
I saw him last night.
Thrashed him at darts.
That's what we're maintaining.
I thrashed him at darts.
We'll talk about that at some stage
because I'm sure we'll have a chat with Mr Tim Vine at some point.
Thrashed him.
I think the thing was, I think what put him off was
the way I put our names on the dartboard.
Yeah.
Like, I sort of put mine in massive on the dartboard. Yeah. And then I put him in really lower place. Tiny, tiny. Really tiny at the top. The thing is you've
got a handicap with darts as well because you're throwing up. Throwing upwards, yeah.
Yeah, you're throwing upwards, yeah. Tim's really tall. Yeah, Tim is tall. Well, Tim's
the right height for that dartboard. Yeah. And you are not. I'll just put it like that.
Yeah. You're a little boy. Smaller than him. You're a smaller littleboard. Yeah. And you, you are not. I'll just put it like that. Yeah.
You're a little,
you're a little boy.
Smaller than it.
You're a smaller little boy.
Yeah.
Basically,
you have to throw
almost just up in the sky.
Yeah.
Straight up.
I'd be better at darts
underarm.
Yeah,
you would be.
You should do it underarm.
Alright,
well.
And then you'll beat him.
I mean,
you did beat him.
And then,
I mean,
you did beat him.
And whatever he says,
if anyone sees him talking about darts, whatever he says, Ray beat him.
I did beat him, so that's fine.
Anyway, come on.
Thanks for joining us.
We've got a lovely interview with Russell coming up.
Don't forget, our show is Peacock and Gamble.
Don't you want to be on telly anyway?
Peasants Dome Dome 940.
Every day of the year, Edinburgh Fringe.
Come and see it.
We'll sign your flyer after.
Good night, God bless.
Here's Russ.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
We're in Russell Howard's
office.
We're here with
you now.
Yeah.
Are you going to
get in trouble
if we're in your
office?
Not at all,
no, I run this
shit.
And you've got
your office all
nice, mate.
It's all done up
lovely.
We've got an
arse, a cock.
A big arse on
the wall, a big
cock just
freestanding.
You've got
yourself some
toast with your
name on it.
Is that something
that you insist on?
Is that having a
big bit of toast
with your name?
Is this like,
you know when Metallica ask for
they ask for
Aaron Brown
it's just to show
that if they can do
that then everything
else is going to be
fine for the rest
of the day
I was fucking
living because it's
white and I need
brown
what's annoying as
well because someone's
been in this office
over the summer
because you see
that whiteboard
we've got basically
they're all the clips
that we used on
last year
we haven't
used
this is under
news
yeah
and somebody
if you look
293
deep bucket
fucked until
gaping was
spun
that's a good
one
that's good
that's very
different to
the one
about
well fisting
anus
that's not
ours
yeah
that's different
to a cat
on the sofa
yeah
but again
Russell
if we
I mean
what you're
doing now
you're saying oh the out there,
you're saying,
oh, my show is much
better than that,
my show is much
cleverer than that.
But we'll go look
over some of the
other notes that are there.
If we look maybe
at 181,
Guy has big cock.
184,
Simon Cowell's penis.
191,
Louis Spence stretch.
We can get Spence,
we tried to get Spence
for a sketch.
Yeah, I know,
because you also,
you or one of your team,
asked me to be in that sketch, to play a caveman.
Is that right?
Yeah.
And you didn't fancy it?
I would have done that, yeah.
No, what I didn't fancy was the sketch you asked me to do.
Well, first off, the one sketch that I have done on Good News.
That is a great one.
I'm Mr Teflon.
Because that didn't come back to haunt me.
You tricked me into doing it.
I didn't trick you.
Yeah, you did, because some of you worked on the production.
Look, I'm assuming that everybody that works on this production, you're a buff. I didn't trick you. Yeah, you did, because some of you worked on the production. Look, I'm assuming
that everybody that works
on this production,
you're above.
Right.
In some sense.
In fact, if we rewind this,
you did say you run the show.
Yeah, no,
you said you run the show.
Yeah.
Right, so I get a phone call
saying,
hey, Ray,
who's that?
That's Ray's impression
of everyone else
apart from me.
Yeah.
Oh, hey, Ray.
I think you're really good.
Ray, we're doing're really good. Right,
we're doing a sketch
and the boys,
is what they said,
the boys,
I'm sure that means you
and your co-hosts who write it.
Yeah.
The boys,
I think you'd be really good in it.
Oh, great, yeah.
Would you be interested
in doing it?
That was it.
Yeah, yeah,
of course I'll come down
and do it.
Yeah, yeah.
Contract.
That was exactly it.
Right,
and then I get the script
from you.
I've said yes at this point.
Yeah.
Get the script from you the next day so you can be dressed up as a lady, with you as well, so you for you. I've said yes at this point. Yeah. Get the script for the next day.
So you'll be dressed up as a lady,
with you as well,
so you know,
in fairness,
you were doing it yourself.
Yep.
Dressed up as a lady boy.
Well, it wasn't a lady boy,
it was just a transvestite,
that's important.
It was a parody of,
but it was,
the idea I think was,
it was a Thai airline,
that the stewards,
all the stewards are going to be lady boys.
Uh-huh.
And our gag was,
let's hope they don't go over here,
because, you know,
our budget airlines,
and there was a joke on that.
But it got in our hand.
It did get out of hand.
So I was like, I spoke to them and said, I don't want to do this.
But I was like, but if I now say no, I'm making a judgment call on their sketch.
Yeah.
When you said that, when you described the phone call,
and you got a phone call from whoever this was going,
and the boys think you'd be really good in it.
The immediate image I got was of Russ and the boys like
standing off to the side during that phone call just trying to control their laughter.
Yeah. But you were like, yeah, sure. I'll go and do my acting. I do acting all the time.
Put these balls on. So yeah, and they got all upset, didn't they? All the, um. It was
in the newspaper, wasn't it? Was it? With a photo of you. Is that true? Do you know
what I'm talking about? I think it was like the Gay Times or something like that.
Is that genuinely true?
I think so.
Do you not know that?
You're not in the photo.
I wasn't in the photo.
Why were you not in the picture?
Mr. Teflon, mate.
That's it.
But it looked like you'd sort of rolled on and ruined my telly show.
It's really funny.
It's Prince's episode.
When he edited the stand-up.
Pea-cooking gamble, pea-cooking gamble. Well, come on. Let he edited the stand-up. Peacock and Gamble,
Peacock and Gamble.
Well, come on,
let's do a proper
interview now.
Okay.
Because this is
our Edinburgh podcast,
which is in the
Edinburgh Fringe.
So we're there now.
Yeah, we're there now.
Lovely.
Play along with that.
I am here.
Isn't it a nice Edinburgh?
Yeah.
Oh, Russell,
what's that over there?
That is a Cambridge
student trying to
entice me to their
play.
There it goes. It's lovely. And with a castle. I to entice me to their place. That's lovely
and with a
castle.
I also want to
say before we
even start as far
as the interview
is concerned,
of all your
achievements,
of which there
have been many,
this is kind of
like certain
members of your
family or one
certain member of
your family.
This is the
pinnacle.
My brother will
be absolutely
delighted.
In fact,
I haven't told him
about this.
Have you not
really?
No, it's going
to be a real
treat.
But what's
weird is I
regularly hear your
voices coming from his
room which is fucking
odd in itself.
And you'll listen to
your podcast and you
can tell when he finds
it funny because his
laugh does tend to
carry.
Yeah that's a
ridiculous laugh.
So you'll hear that
a lot and I've always
listened to it.
You and Frank's
going to know it's
his podcast of choice.
Yeah but which one
does he listen to most?
Which one's his best one do you think listen to most? I'm not sure.
Which one's his best one,
do you think?
Which one?
I think he really likes Frank.
Really?
I don't know.
Right, he's a wizard, right?
A wizard that's captured
me and Frank Skinner, right?
He unlocks us in a cage of light.
Yeah.
In a cage of light.
A weird cage of light.
Okay.
Right?
Right?
And all you need is shapes.
Yeah.
No, it's bad light.
He has got one wand
because he's
going to kill
just one person
right
now me and
Ed are
considered to
be one person
because we're
a team
so we can't
so Daniel
can't just go
oh I'll just
kill red or red
because then
they can both
still act right
so we're a team
and we're all
trying to get on
and have a good
laugh and a swear
and he's not
having any of it
if anything
we're trying to
be friends
but he's having none of it why has the wizard captured you having any of it. Yeah, we're trying, if anything, we're trying to be friends with Franz Gehrig. Right.
Right, but he's having none of it.
Once the wizard captured you...
I'm getting to that now.
And we're trying to make the best of it and have a bit of chill out and having none of
it.
But then the wizard, right, goes a bit mental.
Daniel arrives.
Surely he's already gone a bit mental.
Yeah, he has a bit, but he goes more mental, right?
And then Daniel arrives.
Because you've nicked his grosh.
Yeah, we have nicked his grosh.
He's come back.
He's had a hard day's sorcery. Yeah. All he wants is a couple of fucking groche. Yeah, we have nicked his groche. He's come back. He's had a hard day's sorcery.
All he wants is a couple of fucking cold ones.
Yeah, yeah.
And you've nicked his suds.
We've not nicked them.
We thought they were for everyone.
Right.
So the wizards.
It's not looking good.
Anyway, Daniel gets it.
Ooh, I'm sure of my sweet beers.
Daniel arrives.
He's there now, your brother.
Yeah.
And the wizards...
No, he's just come home. Has he? I think he brother yeah no he's just come on
has he
yeah because he's like
he'll often say that to me
right where you going to now
I'm going to hang out
with that necromancer
down the road
because I've heard
that Peacock and Gamble
and Frank Skinner are there
yeah
so he comes over
I can smell peril
and the wizard
right
goes like proper insane
and goes
right
right
Daniel
I'm glad you're here
because I'm going to kill one of these.
In France, you can get a lot of people to come with me, won't you? And in a bad way,
and they can't come back to life. They're normally that colloquial, aren't they, wizards?
It's not his first language. So he's actually translating for your brother. So this is for
your family. Yeah. Right. So he's saying to Daniel, all right, I'm going to kill one of
them now in a minute. Because you have an accent, if it's not his first language. No,
this is just a dick. Look, this isn't...
You've got a dick accent, haven't you?
Which one would Daniel say kill?
Dan. He would... Dan. Dan, if you want.
His name's Daniel. Daniel would...
He would kill Frank Skinner. There you go.
Is that categorically true?
I don't know, because it's a very hypothetical
scenario. But you're twins.
We're not twins. He's twins with my sister Kerry.
Yeah, I know, but surely you're his brother.
I'm his brother.
You're not a twin as well.
You're asking what I would do.
What I would do,
I'd pull off my mask,
it was me all along.
Yeah, I have the wisdom.
All joking aside,
those were expensive beers.
Yeah.
Yeah, all right then,
well, fine.
At least we can't
go up in there now.
He loves you.
And by association, Russell Howard as well, would rather kill Frank Skinner. Yeah, would kill, well fine. At least we can categorically know now that Dan Howard, and by association Russell Howard as well,
would rather kill Frank Skinner.
Would kill Frank Skinner.
We're saying that essentially Russell Howard would kill Frank Skinner
if he'd given half a chance.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
So, we're in Edinburgh.
Lovely.
Edinburgh shows, how many did you do?
I did, well, I did a bit of a sneak,
you know when Quentin Tarantino kind of dismissed his earlier work. Right, okay. So, I always said I did well I did a bit of a sneak you know when Quentin Tarantino kind of dismissed his earlier work
so
I always said
I did five
but I did
The Comedy Zone
and a show
before that
called Ebony and Irony
that was my first
I'd only just
learned about this
oh you
yeah I knew
about that
we asked Steve Bennett
about that one
because we
we were asking him
about old reviews
oh yeah
we never
the podcast didn't go out
in a live podcast last year we interviewed Bennett live and we were asking him about old reviews. Oh yeah, we never, the podcast didn't go out. In a live podcast last year, we interviewed Bennett live.
Yeah.
And we were reading, Ed found loads of old reviews that he read out
and said, who was that about?
Oh right, I see.
But it was loads of scathing reviews from people that have got them to do really, really well.
Yeah, we got an absolute fucking, when me and Matt did the show,
me and Matt Blades did Ebony and I really.
Which, weirdly, was fucking brilliant.
Yeah. Because I wasn't doing Edinburgh. Matt Blates did Ebony and Ivory, which weirdly was fucking brilliant. Yeah, yeah.
Because I wasn't doing Edinburgh.
I was 21 at the time.
Was that you remembering the lie of your age?
No, I don't.
I was like Russell King.
I was, oh God, what was I?
What was I?
I was three.
I was three at the time.
It's just one of the bonuses of being a wizard.
But how old is he?
That is the major talking point on the circuit.
Russell King, how old is he? I had to think the major talking point on the circuit. How old is he?
Anyways.
I had a big deal with Ross Kane the other night
where after he went off at the end,
I went,
what's the claim age of him?
40 years old.
I did that for ages.
I was quite weird.
When I was 19,
and then when I turned 20,
I was doing comedy.
I didn't like that.
I wanted to be like 19 forever.
But why?
Like, I got a review in the Bristol Evening Post
that called me
a comedy wunderkind
and I love the idea
of being this kind of
young sort of buck.
It's really sad
but I was only a kid
and it kind of,
there's something odd
about being 20
wasn't as exciting
as I'm 19.
Wow.
But now we're 25 years later
and you still look it.
It's not,
it's true,
it's all about,
you know.
I'm 32 now yeah actually
you're 32
how old are you
39
just 39
26
that's a good age
22
you're one
let's get this on record
I am one
I am one
but yeah
so I did
the first show
was Ebony and I
with Matt
which was brilliant
because from that
I got signed
and then started doing gigs yeah after that I did the comedy Matt which was brilliant because from that I got signed and then started doing gigs
yeah
the year after that
I did the Comedy Zone
which was really good
and then we got another
kicking review
in the zone?
yeah from the same lady
the year before
a lady called Margaret Schoeler
just twice
gave me an absolute maul
so she was going after you
yeah
it was really weird
to the point where
I haven't been with many women
but I thought
is there someone
that she knows
have I done something to her?
You know what I'm saying?
It was so brutal.
And then from then on,
it's alright, really.
I thought,
see,
I thought what you were going to say then,
when you said,
I've not been with many women,
I,
because my immediate thought was,
and he tells me off for this loads,
was I was thinking,
right,
excuse me,
it's too bad reviews,
but I would charm her one night in a pub,
and then I would fuck her as a punishment.
But he keeps saying that,
I can't have sex with women as a punishment. Yeah, well, I just don't like you even saying, I would fuck her as a punishment but he keeps saying that I can't have sex with women
as a punishment
yeah well you can't
I just don't like you
even saying
I would fuck someone
as a punishment
you certainly can't
threaten that
no I mean
consensually
it's the only way
you could make rape
more despicable
no no
it's just to say
I am going to fuck
it's like if you've
got very low self esteem
that you consider
the fucking that you
give out to be punishment
I would charm her first I did say that and then that you consider the fucking that you give out to be punishment. No, I tell you what, I would charm her first.
So, I did say that.
Yeah, and then when you get a bat then you'd switch.
Yeah, alright.
So, we've got Ebony and Irony so far.
Yes, that's it.
And Black King and Matt Blais, that's important.
Ebony and Irony.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Who came up with the title and how long did you spend deciding?
Well, I was on my own. All I had was Ebony.
I was so good at work.
And luckily,
he pointed out the fact
that I wasn't black.
Candidate Black
was slightly ironic
and I went,
hang on a minute.
This could sell.
And he did it.
No, basically,
he was doing a show
through the Amuse Moose
and he was going to do it
with a comedian
called Javanka Steele
and she pulled out.
It was like
with a month to go and he was, Jago said, oh, do you want to do it? It comedian called Javanka Steele, and she pulled out. It was like with a month to go.
And Hills, Jago said, oh, do you want to do it?
And it cost me like 500 quid.
Right.
To do the whole, like for everything.
Cool.
And it was amazing.
And I got to do, you know, 20 minutes every night for, you know, 25 nights.
Yeah.
And by the end of it, could sort of do a 20.
Yeah.
Do you know what I mean?
Whereas before, I kind of, sometimes I could be decent, sometimes not.
There's something about doing gigs that are that difficult.'s like the zone yeah when you do them and they're
that hard night after night you kind of learn how to play play any rhythm yeah so you took so you
probably took baby steps then I mean it's because of Bristol I think me basically me and Mark Holber
right Mark was amazing for me because he basically put on gigs and was a real just organised the whole
he created a scene
out of which came me, Will Hodgson
and John Richardson and now
John Robbins and we
basically he would put a gig on for us every week
where he would compare and then one of us would
close and we'd all have, we'd have to have new stuff
every week because it was only about 30
people that came but looking back on it
it was brilliant because we weren't really
none of us had a tight five
or anything like that but we were always
kind of challenging each other
and then you know it's like you sort of come to London
thinking oh this is my, I better do well here
and you don't so it takes you about four years
to do well at doing just five minutes
and then I signed with
Avalon and then started doing the comedy network
and I've supported like John Oliver
and Zaltzman
and Craig Campbell and Kitson
and people like that, it's just brilliant
I do 20 minutes on with properly brilliant comics
and learning loads
I remember doing loads of gigs with John Oliver
where I'd spank him
and he'd be at the back of the room
because I'd be doing something that was a bit cheap or a bit sheer
and it kind of like made you get rid of like crap habits.
But it was also awful to the point where I still can't gig in front of John
because I get so paranoid like that he's going to be at the back of the room literally wagging his finger.
Halfway you can't gig in front of him because he's gone American and won't talk to you now.
There is that zone though.
Yeah.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
So how many solo shows?
I did five.
Five?
So you've got five there.
Not to say that we're on seven now, but you don't need to wait the first two weeks, which is fine.
I'll allow that.
Are you counting in that Edinburgh and Beyond?
No.
Right, we'll put that one in.
Okay, yeah, let's put that in.
That was good fun.
So there was, see, did Edinburgh and Beyond, see, did Edinburgh and Beyond with me?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Russell Kane.
Wee!
Reg D Hunter. Brilliant. So you had Reg D Hunter, Russell Kane did Edinburgh be on with me? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Russell Cain. Wee! Reg D Hunter.
Brilliant.
Yeah, Reg D Hunter, Russell Cain, Russell Howard and me.
Yeah.
Like, quite sincerely, how do you think I feel?
I don't know.
You spent the whole...
You spent the whole...
You were reading that book about Jack the Ripper.
That's all he did on that tour.
That's all.
That's lovely, isn't it? It was the Ripper. I saw what he did on that tour. He was in the front.
That's lovely, isn't it? It was the ultra.
He would sit in the front
reading his book
about death.
And so I understand
that we...
So you were all
thinking about
planning superstardom.
What was fucking
going on?
I was just thinking
about...
All together on the
top.
Where's Ray?
Oh, he's reading
the Yorkshire
Rebel.
What's he doing?
How's your day been?
And you come in
all like,
sort of ashen face.
Oh, fucking hell.
Touring's hard
at the best of times.
It's like reading
about murder.
Yeah.
But I don't do
just that.
Sometimes I would
play with Lorraine, yeah?
Because me and
Russell Kane were,
you know,
quite young.
I think Russell
even younger than me.
Yeah.
Russell was like 11. Russell was like 11.
He was like 11.
Yeah, yeah.
He'd never even seen any Rubik's Cube.
He was a child of the noughties.
Yeah.
But yeah, and Reg would sort of school us in the way of life.
And it was so, so funny.
Just like some of the, we probably can't mention, but some of the escapades.
Why can we not mention them though? Because I'll then see Reg. Oh, so I don't see him
anymore. I will see him as well. You'll see him on telly. It's different. Yeah, if he's
going at the telly. So all this is going on, you're being schooled in life by Reg D.
And every so often from the front, you just say, cut their throats. Yeah, exactly.. I can't help but feel, we passed a good time, that I probably did that tall or wrong.
And we had Simon Street in there and he was a bit of fun, wasn't he?
His stage manager's Sarah Millican there.
Did he really?
I mean, he's done better than me.
Out of that truck.
Right?
I mean, the actual van was in Transformers.
Yeah.
Right, ask me any question about Peter Sutcliffe.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Right, so we're in Edinburgh now.
What's your top tip for cheering us up
slash surviving this miserable time that we're in at the moment?
We're essentially, we've started our run at Edinburgh,
so we need cheering up.
Computer football?
Do you play computer football?
Well, do you know what? I'm all for that.
But we did it for two days last year, and then I just started refusing to play.
Yeah, why?
It's not going to put me in the mood.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I just wouldn't play.
Play together.
Then you can do it all together.
No, that was together.
Oh, you mean I'm the same team?
We should play on the same team.
Wouldn't pass it.
Well, playing the same team, you wouldn't pass.
I do lots of long runs.
Yeah, I think that says everything
you need to know about us as a double act
refuses to pass
likes to run to the goal himself
absolutely
go to
what did I used to do, go to Fabric
it was always a nice thing, I'd just hang out with your
I used to hang out with my mates, I'd hang out with
Pitcher and Oliver and
John Richardson, Kitson
John Oliver, those kind of cats.
Hodgson, me and Hodgson had some, in the early days, me and Will Hodgson had some properly brilliant kind of Edinburgh moments.
When we were kind of on the periphery, we were hanging out with the bigger boys, you know, and he was getting up to various escapades and just great, man.
We all, me and Will, bizarrely, had a part in John Oliver's show, and we could not treat that with less respect.
Really?
So all we had to do, I had to play the role of a...
John did this bit about a Russian guy
who got his penis stuck to a bus stop in the snow.
Right, OK.
And then he wrote a letter to his wife.
And then I played the role of his wife offstage,
writing him a letter back.
And I was meant to learn a female Russian accent, didn't bother.
Yeah.
Just a bit, just a bit in my voice.
And Hodgson had to come on and play the role
of a kid from John's school, I think.
The thing about, remember that game,
Stuck in the Mud?
Yeah.
And Will was, had to stand up
and kind of play the role of this kid,
and everyone went underneath Will's legs,
and that was like the end euphoric moment.
And we just sort of,
John was inside
in this hut
doing his show
and me and Hodgson
were outside
fucking arguing
and giving each other
wedgies and stuff
at one point John
literally had to come up
and go
do you want to shut the fuck up
do you think about
how important it is
how important your Edinburgh show is
and for some reason
you get two fucking idiots
outside
who argue and bicker a lot
and then you get
them in your show
I think that's the
way people feel
about trying to
have a drink
outside our show
they want to come
in and just go
will you two
shut the fuck up
we're trying to
have an Edinburgh
drink
we do wear people
down quite
dramatically
proper wear people
down
what do you do
because I can wear
people down
I broke a picture
you wouldn't
break us
I broke Zaltzman every't break us. Which case?
I broke Zaltzman every time,
every single time Andy Zaltzman
for a shit in 2005.
I banged on the toilet.
I went,
what the fuck is wrong with you?
And you just hear him
for the half a fuck's sake.
You know,
25 days.
Fucking hell, Andy.
The fuck did you eat,
you grisly cunt?
Give it a rest, mate.
We should get out of here.
How many rooms have you got
in your house?
In my house?
Yeah.
I don't mean it in a
shown-off way.
Are there enough rooms?
I've never fucking counted
getting enough rooms.
What sort of fucking person
buys an house
and doesn't count the rooms?
What's happened to you?
I've not had time
to count all the rooms.
You're all too busy
beating around the tummy
all the time. I don't have a spare room've not had time to count all the rooms. You're all too busy beating on the telly all the time.
I don't have a spare foot.
Look at this.
Which house?
Which house?
Which house is going down?
That's the question.
Which one else?
The main one.
The main one.
Give me my country pad
on a seat.
No, no.
Not the north one.
The one down in London.
The one in London.
I've got a flat with Danny
and there's three of us.
Three rooms.
Right. So, Dan can go and Oliver can also go. Yeah, Danny in it. There's three of us. Three rooms.
Right, so Dan can go on holiday elsewhere.
Yeah, yeah.
Me and Ed will be happy in the same room.
Yeah, that's fine.
And we should just say it.
Who breaks first?
And whoever leaves first, the other person gets the house.
And that is the game. That is now up.
That'd be a good... It sounds like an A4 show, doesn't it?
Oh, I've that idea.
If you stop short of saying it, it'd be good. Now, this brings me an E4 show, doesn't it? Oh, I've got ideas. You stopped short of saying it would be good.
Now, this brings me on to my next question, actually.
Um, come on. It's time for us to go on the telly now. Have you got any ideas?
Yeah. Okay.
This is what I did for a TV show, right?
Is this specifically for us?
It's not, you can be in it if you want.
Somebody should do a, and I know,
because I know you like Les Dawson.
Yeah. No one has done a, like a big a big warm interesting biopic about Spider-Man again. Have they not? I haven't seen it.
I thought there was one. Zav was going to do a biopic about Les Dawson and then it just got so messy and tangly.
You sort of think back to that's the way I'm trying to look at it. If there was a TV show that I would watch that at Christmas.
I would really, because I know a huge amount
but what I know about him
I like
and I find it very interesting
I read
Hitler My Partner's Downfall
yeah
fucking great
it's kind of his
master way
yeah
that's one idea
the other idea is
sort of like a show
set in the 70s
you know
in a similar way
that Mad Men
kind of
is sort of about
advertising but it's also another 60s but he Men kind of is sort of about advertising
but it's also
another 60s
but you set it
in the sort of
world of TV
you know
when there's kind of
drinking going on
I'm having that
both of those
I'm not bothered
about Spike Milligan
I like Spike Milligan
but I think it's
a difficult project
do you really?
yeah
but surely
if somebody knew
a lot about him
it'd have to be
a specific thing
about a specific part you'd have to get the right guy to play him yeah yeah a lot about him... It'd have to be a specific thing about a specific
You'd have to get
the right guy
to play him.
Yeah, yeah,
that all comes later,
but it'd have to be
a specific thing.
Remember when
the Stepton and
Sun won,
or the Frankie
Howard won,
it was about a
specific...
So the Frankie
Howard was
specifically about
his relationship,
and the Stepton
and Sun won
was specifically
about this
supposedly perceived
argument that
they had on
going between
them,
which wasn't
nearly as vicious as they made it out to be.
And it's since been withdrawn.
It's really interesting, isn't it?
All the old guys.
Like Frankie Howard's fascinating.
The story that his sister, I think,
used to go and watch it.
She would walk and she would sit
in different areas of the theatre
to make sure he was kind of making every area look amazing.
But there was a lot of that, though. With the old comics, there was a lot of that.
Yeah, it doesn't exist in our era.
But what do you think though, Russ, that it'd be the other way around?
Do you think that that'd be something that would start happening now?
That'd be something that, as people got more analytical about it,
do you think that'd be something that Jimmy Carver did?
You know, it'd be like, I want to see in certain...
Like Ken Dodd has his giggle map, he calls it,
where he'll say in
different parts of the country, where
you just have someone with a pen just say what they laughed at and
where, and actually analyse it as a thing
you know, and how you then tailor your act to different
areas, but that's been going on for years
But that's when getting the last is
an end in itself, like when you've
achieved that and you know where it was, then that's where you
stop rather than thinking, get the gig
out of the way and just do fine on that and then try and but it is
interesting it is interesting when you're starting out where you have decent gigs yeah like i used
to have loads of really great gigs in lincoln lincoln uni yeah why is that it just happened
to be a nice route and they talk to you though as well because you're still you're still revered
in lincoln uni it was bad yeah it was really like that was the first place that, because I did it once a month for ages.
And there's a promoter called Sean Alvey, he's amazing.
He used to get me up there.
And I travelled from Bristol to do it.
And I always try and do new stuff.
But that was the first time that I kind of went,
God, I'm sort of getting all right.
Why is it? Why in Lincoln?
Just because the room was perfect?
I've always done well in Lincoln.
I've always done well in Lincoln.
I did pretty well in Lincoln. It've always done well in Lincoln. They're pretty good. They're all in there.
It's odd that certain gigs like this,
the Worcester Mars part,
it's one of the best gigs on the set.
Bristol Comedy Box is a really nice gig.
These are really weird little rooms
for no rival reason.
People say,
do you need Wendon?
No, I just every so often get burpy.
I drink a lot of Diet Coke.
I'm trying to stop.
Is that an advert?
Is that an advert?
Yeah. Do you know what they are? No, that's your name. No, no. I drink a lot of Diet Coke I'm trying to stop Is that an advert? Is that an advert? Yeah
Do you know what they
I am
No that's your name
No no no
What?
I got offered
I get offered
You've not done adverts have you?
No
I get offered stuff
but
I got offered a
Nando's
blank card
the other day
which means
you get free chicken
and I said
I'm alright
so I sort of found
that whole idea
morally reprehensible
you know
I can afford chicken
give it outside
well that was it
it was really weird
and I was sort of
telling the guys in there
because
they were like
why do you refuse that
and I said
because you've got to
have your photo
and you can't give it
to your friends
only you get the free chicken
no you get to take
four friends as well whenever you want I haven't got how many mates three three three you haven't give it to your friends, only you get the free chicken. No, you get to take four friends as well.
Oh really?
Whenever you want.
I haven't got that many mates.
You haven't got any new flatmates?
Me and my other new flatmates and then whoever's left.
But the point is, it felt wrong.
It felt wrong to kind of, you know, I can afford chicken.
And then a, who shall remain nameless, came in the next day and went, hey guys, look what
I've got, I've got a Nambus black colour.
But do you know what, it's a weird thing though as well. I mean, I've never been, I mean when I turn my one down as well.
You refuse to go to Nando's.
I've never been to Nando's.
I remember one of them kids at school.
I've never been to Nando's.
Fucking made his own card. You know when you sort of, did you ever do that? I wrote Nike on a pair of trainers.
You did that, you drew your own face and put Nando's on it.
Nando's black colour. So that, I'm going put Nando's on it. Nando's black.
So that,
I'm going out
and it's like,
oh, I've got a bully.
You only had a dark blue felt tip.
Do you ever do that?
Fuck,
I thought it was
a really good idea.
You got bullied there.
Of course,
I drew a fucking knight.
Yeah, you're right.
You're right.
A pair of daps,
like proper.
It's a difficult thing,
isn't it,
to not side with the bullies
on this one.
Yeah.
Fucking error.
Error.
But did you do that
thinking in your head
that that would fill people?
I just thought...
I was ten, so I was bullied.
I just thought it was a good idea.
And my mum agreed with me.
She said, yeah, that way
I'd spend all the money on it.
See?
I was expecting some better ideas for us
than a biopic.
What do you want to do?
What do you want to... Just something... Right. Do you want to be on tell. What do you want to do? What do you want to achieve?
Just something...
Right.
Do you want to be on telly?
Do you want to be on telly?
No.
No, we don't.
It's completely our choice.
But if you...
You want us to be, probably.
So you must have some ideas specifically for us.
Like a quiz show format or something like that.
Why don't you do something based on this wizard idea?
Like with What's Up the wizard's sleeve?
Yeah, we could say,
what's up the wizard's sleeve?
Couldn't we?
Escape from the wizard's lair.
You have to answer questions
to get out of the light cage.
Yeah, exactly.
And we do kill someone who doesn't.
Yeah.
Or maim them, at least.
I think that's the way
quiz shows are going, isn't it?
Got to hurt them.
Yeah.
Give them a little maimment.
The wizard, yeah.
Maim or feign.
I'm not like that, bro. Maim maim or fame I don't want writing things down
when I'm recording
so you become
famous
or you know
you hobble out
but if you get
maimed
you probably
become more famous
than if you left
without a maimment
so that's the trade off
isn't it
yeah
maim and fame
that's good
so how about
we do this right
so that's good
so we're humiliating
people
chop off locks
how about we make it
like celebrities yeah we'll make it like celebrities?
Yeah.
We'll do it in the jungle or something.
And then, Russell, on our little ITV2 show,
will you come on and do like 10 minutes of stand-up every day?
Just press the red button and I'll be conversating on you.
Oh, oh.
Poor Dean Gaffney.
I thought he was fucking offended.
Isn't it terrible that your first thought with a desperate celebrity
is always Gaffney
but he probably
doesn't mind that
I quite like him
I met him
I say I met him
I shouted at him
across the problem
my mate
my mate Sam
has got a
he's a
lovely bloke
you know you're
one of his friends
you never believe
a word he fucking says
but he reckons
that Gaffney
owns a nightclub
in Stevenage
called Gaffney's
and it's got mirrors on the floor so he can see up ladies' vaginas.
Up their vaginas?
So it's not even just up their skin.
It's an amazing mirror.
Right up their vaginas.
And you can literally see their fucking kidneys, mate.
Apparently Terry Notkins used to own a Dolphinarium,
like a bar where you'd go for a drink
and there'd be like behind the bar was big tanks with sexy ladies swimming around with dolphins.
Really?
Yeah.
Well, my mate Carl told me, Carl Mintz told me another bit, but he's adamant this is true, that apparently Nutkins was driving home from London to fucking Norwich, where we lived, and somebody drove past and he had a sea lion in the front seat.
With his fucking head out the window.
I like that.
And kind of like
Carl's blue in the face.
You go,
no, definitely true.
Pickle can gamble,
pickle can gamble.
Can you see a scenario
where you go back to Edinburgh?
I like,
my friend Charlie
described it beautifully
that going to Edinburgh now
feels a bit like
going to a wedding
with someone
you used to be in love with.
Right, okay, yeah.
And it's everything that once was beautiful is now ugly.
Yeah.
And I don't know, it just feels, I would never want to be those, I did an interview with
a guy about this where he sort of said, oh, you're going to do Edinburgh again.
And the last time I did it, I did the musical, which is like a 600 seat, and I did it for
five nights.
Yeah.
And they sold out.
This is in 2007, I think.
And I felt terrible because I went to see a few of my friends
and they had eight people, ten people in.
I just felt like, fuck, I don't need to be here.
Yeah.
And I'm actually stealing an audience from people.
That's it.
And that was a comparatively small room.
So it was just the idea of going there.
If I was going to do it,
I sort of had a bit of a fantasy about doing a show called
Bringing It All Back Home and then doing The fantasy about doing a show called bringing it all back
home
and then
doing the
hut
doing a
50 second
then what's
the point
because it's
a shit
gig
so it's
that I'd
rather just
do
3D gigs
oh stealing
an audience
6-5 people
who come and
see you
because they've
seen you on
the telly
they're not
the sort of
people who
would go
I'm going to
go and
see someone
it just
feels like
dick swinging
it just
feels like you don it just feels like
you don't need to do that
yeah
that makes more sense
you just feel awkward
because you're kind of
hey how you doing
you go
I'm fine
you know
like Edinburgh should be about
kind of
young
and up and coming acts
and like things
in their infancy
you know
it shouldn't be
anything bigger than that
it just feels weird
whenever anyone does that
I kind of don't get it
and fanny as well
it's about
and fanny
you're going to get
all the fanny
you've got the fanny
you've got to get
to have the fanny
at the end of the run
oh what a lovely chat
with Russell Howard there
hey and you couldn't
see this for a lot of it
but he's got a very
slight turn in his eye
yeah he does
yeah
I think we have
never mentioned
Russell Howard
on this podcast
without referencing
his birth defect
alright let's do it
today then
alright
let's not mention it
today
okay deal
yep
yep
it's done
so our show is
Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to
be on telly anyway
9.40 at the
Pleasant's
Dome
Dome
Dome
Dome
Dome
Dome
Dome
right
our show is
Peacock and Gamble
don't even want to
be on telly anyway.
9.40, blessings.
Dumb, da-dumb-dumb.
And we will see you at that.
Thank you very much for joining us today.
Russell Howard's not got a show,
so if you've enjoyed this podcast,
then just come to our show.
Come to our show and that's it.
Yeah.
And you don't even have to buy his DVDs.
Most of them are on YouTube.
Just go watch them.
Go watch them for free, no?
Thank you very much.
We'll see you again tomorrow
with another brilliant guest
and more fun chat and updates. Love you very much. We'll see you again tomorrow with another brilliant guest and more fun chat and updates.
Love you very much.
Here's Russell with the credits.
The Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh Podcast is a ready production
hosted by Chor.co.uk.
The guest was me, Russell Howard.
All music is by Thomas Thunderay.
Is that right?
See you tomorrow.