The Peacock and Gamble Podcast - The Peacock and Gamble Podcast: Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 7 (Richard Herring Part 1)
Episode Date: October 25, 2020"Edinburgh Fringe 2012 Episode 7 (Richard Herring Part 1)" from archive.org was assembled into the "The Peacock and Gamble Podcast" podcast by Fourble. Episode 92 of 128....
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Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble, here they are.
Hello and welcome to the Peacock and Gamble Edinburgh podcast episode something.
Here we are, in the hizzle, here with Ed Gamble.
In the flat.
Here's Ed.
Hello, from our flat.
Ed Gamble.
Ed Gamble, hello, hello, hello. The gambler. The gambler, yeah. The the flat. Here's Ed. Hello, from our flat. Ed Gamble. Ed Gamble, hello, hello.
The Gambler.
The Gambler, yeah.
The Diceman.
The cards. The Diceman and the Slug.
9.40 at the Pleasant's Dome.
Dome.
The betting on the all-straighten.
That's not quite a good nickname, is it?
Do the lottery.
Ed Gamble.
Ed Gamble.
Ed Gamble, the man done the lottery.
He gambles on the lottery.
I don't.
I don't do the lottery.
I did the first ever lottery presented by Edmunds.
Really?
I don't think I've done one since.
I didn't do it for about
ten years really I think.
Did you not?
No, I did it
when I started for a bit.
Yeah.
And then I started thinking
you know what?
It's not about this is it?
It's not.
Life's not about this.
Do you remember how much
the first jackpot was
in the lottery?
Two shillings.
Two shillings on the
first ever lottery.
Yeah. It wasn't the big machines that we're used. Two shillings on the first ever lottery. Yeah.
It wasn't the big machines that we're used to now,
the Camelot machines.
No.
What they did was they engraved little numbers on peanut shells.
Yeah.
Then they made a woman swallow them.
Yeah, yeah.
And then they, it was Edmonds, the first one who picked all the,
he put white gloves on, which you still see to this day.
The tradition of the white gloves.
But the white gloves that were there originally,
because they had to sift through the poor
unfortunate woman's
fecal matter
to find six peanut shells
and whichever they picked out first,
they were the numbers.
Two shillings.
Yeah, two shillings.
The winners of two shillings.
How we've moved on.
I know.
But no,
I sporadically do the lottery.
Sometimes I'll be in a shop
and I'll go,
hey, I've not done it
for like a year.
This is like when you would win,
isn't it?
We went through a very addictive period
and when I say period
I mean about 20 minutes
of getting in a cycle
of buying scratch cards
in the supermarket
yeah didn't we
well we went up
and sat in a Starbucks
in a supermarket
above a Nasdaq
yeah
and we both bought
a scratch card each
lots of product placement
in this
yeah
it was the same
was it
well there you go see covering all bases apart from the obvious bought a scratch card each. Lots of product placement in this. Yeah. It was the same to me actually. Was it? Well there you go, see, covering all bases. Yeah. Apart from the obvious. Yeah.
Bought a scratch card each. Yeah. I won on that scratch card. Yeah. I think I won on
my first one. Yeah, and we went back and got another one. Then I kept winning. Winning
streak. And kept having to go back to the woman working behind the counter who looked
more and more worried for me. It's exciting though, isn't it? It is. It just shows you
how easily people can get hooked into gambling.
Yeah.
Of course,
a former friend of ours,
he had a very bad gambling problem.
He did, yeah.
On the old fruities,
which I think is,
I personally think
that's the most
sort of scabby,
scummy gambling.
I would disagree.
I would say scratch cards.
You think scratch,
well maybe scratch cards
now, yeah,
because you're more
modern and up to date.
Yeah.
But I think traditionally,
being addicted to the
fruit machine,
you know,
the same person
in the corner in the pub ploughing their rent money into a fruit machine, it's heartbreaking,
isn't it?
I don't think that's scabby because I think they take, not skill, but they take an understanding
of it because they're so weird and complicated.
Yeah.
There's people who know exactly what they're doing with them and they...
How do you find that out?
That's a genuine...
I don't know.
Who finds it out?
I don't know because they're so complicated.
Yeah.
And this predates like Google where you can just go and Google how to do it.
Yeah, how to use a fruity.
There's no instructions on the front of it.
No.
And interestingly, the people playing on fruit machines are always the sort of people who
look like they've never had a bit of fruit in their life.
Exactly, yeah, yeah.
So pale.
Yeah.
So pale.
They're services.
Yeah, and all the people playing on the scratch cards look like they've never had a scratch.
Yeah, so that's Ed Gamble and that's his catchphrase.
I mean, it's quite long, that, isn't it?
In terms of, let's call it the gambler.
Talking of scratch cards.
Yes, mate.
Do you remember there was a controversy because a company tried to make a Diana Memorial scratch card?
I don't, well, I vaguely remember that.
It only lasted a couple of days, but everyone was up in arms that they were going to make a Diana Memorial scratch card.
And I went to the school with the son of the person who was head of that company.
And it was his idea.
Really?
To make these scratch cards.
I seem to remember at the time being quite a quick-witted gentleman in my younger days.
Yeah.
Saying the scratch card should be themed about scratching out her various organs.
Or you just, like most scratch cards, get three emblems in a row.
And it could be, oh, oh, crown,
oh, crown,
oh, crash car.
Yeah.
No, no,
not what this is.
Suddenly.
Of course we're not
making light of the
death of Princess Diana
because it is still
very raw in the memory.
But today,
speaking of controversy,
today we've got a,
we normally say
special guest,
today we've got a guest.
We've got our guest.
Richard Herring, Richard's stupid idiot penis Herring. He's going to be, we recorded this interview got a we normally say special guest we've got a guest we've got our guest Richard Owen Richard stupid
idiot penis
Owen
we recorded
this interview
with him
before we
came up with
a brilliant
funny clever
witty
name for
him
so we don't
say that
as I recall
maybe we will
it's going to
be a two
parter
today and
tomorrow
because he
bands on
that's something
to look forward
to
we'll carry on talking for a bit now so just to put it off we'll plug our show in that plug our show It's going to be today and tomorrow. Because he bangs on? Bangs on. That's something for you to look forward to.
We'll carry on talking for a bit now,
so just to put it off for a bit. We'll plug our show in that.
Plug our show?
What's our show called?
It's called People Can Gamble Don't
if you want to be on telly anyway.
Why is it on anyway?
It is on in Pleasant Stone.
And what time does it start?
Don't, don't, don't, don't.
It starts at 9.40pm every night from tonight
when you're listening to this
all the way through to the 26th of August.
Yeah, but tickets have picked up
eh in the last few days
yeah it's been good
we've been selling quite a lot
of tickets and stuff
so that's not to say
don't come and see it
definitely come
we can only maintain that
if you do it
but I think there has been
a correlation
between us releasing the podcast
and people coming to it
and we do appreciate that
very much
and we just checked before
we were number 4
in the iTunes comedy chart
so thank you very much
for that as well
very very nice.
Although it's always going to be a hollow thing, as long as Richard Idiot Stupid Penis
Haring is number one.
Yeah.
It's never going to feel, even number two, it's never going to feel right.
I think we're going to have to plant something on his computer and call Operation Orb.
That's the only way we're going to knock him off the...
Well, get him locked up for kiddying.
Yeah, yeah.
It's only a matter of time anyway
do we actually do that
well people will find out
eventually
I just whether
whether we should give him
a nudge in the right direction
yeah yeah
alright we'll just say
we're not saying that
he's definitely got a chair
on his computer
but he might want to check
yeah
have you seen any shows yet
I've seen two shows
because I'm a VIPER
no
yeah no
but you don't really
I mean I've seen
a lot less than I normally see yeah yeah if you know usually in Edinburgh although I didn't last year but the don't really I mean I've seen a lot less than I normally see
yeah yeah
usually in Edinburgh
although I didn't last year
but the year before that
I would probably
have seen about 20 shows
by now
right
but I've only seen 2
I've genuinely
not got the time
it's not just a lack of interest
it's that as well
but I've genuinely
not got the time
because I go see stuff
in the daytime
and we're usually
interviewing in the daytime
yeah
and doing press and stuff
so
just can't
we can't
but I've seen Tom Deacon who is very very good and we're interviewing him in the daytime. Yeah. And doing press and stuff, so. Just can't be fine. We can't enter into this.
But I've seen Tom Deacon.
Good.
He was very, very good.
Yeah.
And we're interviewing him at some point as well.
Same, yeah, that's good to see.
And Merrick Lowood.
His interview is, I believe, on, is it Thursday?
It's sometime this week.
It'll be Friday because this is Wednesday now.
Is it?
Oh, no, this is Tuesday now.
This is Tuesday.
So, yes, Merrickix will be on Thursday.
That's some of the slick podcast hosting.
Which should see us eventually dethrone the king.
Yeah.
On the top there, thank you very much indeed.
Also, the Russell Howard interview came out yesterday.
Yes.
So Russell's got lots of fans, hasn't he?
Yeah.
Like, girls and that.
Girls, yeah.
We just had a lovely little thing on Twitter,
where a girl said,
hello sexy.
Yeah.
Because Russell had retweeted it on his Twitter.
His Twitter,
his Twitter,
yeah.
It's not him,
by the way.
I know it's done as if it's him,
but it's not.
I know,
and to that girl,
right,
well this is what happened,
we'll say what happened.
She,
he said,
oh I did the Peacock and Gamble
podcast
you can get it from
here
she put hello sexy
tagged us both in it
she just replied to
all
then immediately
realised that there
might be some sort
of misunderstanding
and tweeted I do
mean Russell
yeah
she took us out
on it completely
she just gave us
that slightest taste
of what it's going
to be like when
we're a big hit
with the girls
and then just took
it all back again
yeah and now we
never but at least we now know what it feels like for a second yeah so big hit with the girls and then just took it all back again yeah and now we never but at least
we now know what it
feels like for a second
yeah so we said back
hello pretty and then
immediately put we do
mean Russell
yeah
but then let ourselves
in a little bit too
much and now she's
talking to us
yeah talking to us a
bit but it's
it's quite difficult
for us to maintain
but at least it is
us
yeah exactly
it is us
so if you said hello sexy to Russell but at least it is us on our Twitter. Yeah, exactly. It is us. So if you said
hello sexy to Russell
you basically said it
to an IT bod
who is now hunched over
hunched over in front
of the screen
looking at a picture of you
and you saying hello sexy
and I'll be honest
he is wanking
he is wanking himself silly.
Yeah, probably imagining
that it's a,
because I had a
quick one when I
imagined it that
you were saying
it to me.
Yeah,
we were in a
cafe.
Yeah,
in a cafe.
I did it all
over Miss
Scone.
I did it
over Scone,
it was a bagel.
Yeah.
So,
but thank you
for your lovely
messages,
even though a
lot of them
weren't really
to us.
They were to
an IT person
who's pretending
to be Russell
Howard.
If you want to test
that, by the way, if you ever meet Russell Howard, because he does meet his fans after
he gives them that. I mean, it's lovely down to earth like that, Russ. He's not like, you
know, there's some wankers in there knocking about in comedy, but he's not one of those
people. He's a nice lad. And he does meet his fans and that is perfectly nice, perfectly
pleasant. But just say to him, say, hey, Russ, I spoke to you on Twitter. And he'll maintain
the facade going, oh, yeah, yeah, I I remember you and then say to him yeah yeah just tell
me now how do you
log into Twitter
Ross there's a quick
question quick question
do you literally have
any idea what Twitter
is?
Yeah what is Twitter?
Say just that
I speak to him on
Twitter and I say
oh yeah and then
say to him what is
Twitter?
Yeah
And he'll look at
you he'll half look
at you
Right there we go
another reference
thought we were
going to escape it
this time He'll have no idea but he is a nice lad we go. Another reference. Thought we were going to escape at this time.
He'll have no idea.
Yeah.
But he is a nice lad.
But he wears disguises,
doesn't he,
when he's out and about?
He does.
I thought he was going to tell you
what he wears.
Yeah.
Because we saw him,
we chatted with him yesterday
in the street.
Very good disguise.
Yeah.
I said to him,
that's a really good disguise.
He went,
yeah,
yeah,
it works.
Well,
I thought he went,
yeah,
yeah,
but I couldn't actually hear
what he was saying
from underneath the big,
the big cartoon That massive beard.
Yeah, the big cartoon pirate head.
Don't give it away!
Oh, no!
Don't give it away!
And then we stopped chatting, and he wheeled himself off in his little wheelchair.
Yeah, but that's a couple of clues about his disguise.
Yeah, but there's lots of big cartoon novelty pirates in wheelchairs knocking about Edinburgh
these days.
At this time of year, there is certainly.
Well, look,
here's our first part
of our interview
with Richard Herring.
Try and enjoy it.
Call him by his full name.
Richard Idiot Penis Herring.
And, you know,
do try and enjoy it
best you can.
There's another one tomorrow.
I mean, essentially,
we're having two days off
is what's happening.
The editors get a bit
too much from me.
We know none of you
are going to listen to this.
A quick thank you as well
to Laura Barron
who's done some of the sub-editing on this to ease a bit of the pressure off none of you are going to listen to this a quick thank you as well to Laura Barron who's done some
of the sub-editing on this
to ease a bit of
the pressure off me
also Pete Donaldson
of Absolute Radio
sent me a text
at 2 o'clock this morning
saying
podcast brilliant
loving it
hit a brother up
if you need some help
editing
oh that's nice
that was nice
so I got that text Pete
but it was like
2 in the morning
I was doing a gig
and then I was going over
and also Pete you are sort of the white gentleman so I'd that text Pete but it was like two in the morning I was doing a gig and then I was going over and also Pete
you are sort of
the white gentleman
so I'd rather you
didn't use things like
hit a brother up
hit a brother up
Pete it's embarrassing
mate you doing that
yeah well I've actually
cut off the last two words
that you said on the text
oh
let's just say that
the first one was
my
oh
yeah anyway
hit a brother up man
yeah
so that at the end
but well done Peter
on your show
on Absolute Radio
if it's still going
I presume it is
if you're not too busy
on ICV2 going
and next programme
coming up
is anyway
is that six
or however you speak
I do miss Pete
can I just say
I start to apologise
there did my little squeak
at the end of my laugh there
which I know you hate
and made me listen to
the other day
to show me
how horrible it is
through headphones
what a horrible sound
it is through headphones
it's a real like
sorry everyone
it's like white noise
just for a moment
here's the interview
with Richard
don't forget our show
is Pleasant's Dome Dome
9.40
Peacock and Gamble
don't even want me
on tape anyway
we'll listen to Richard
for a bit
and then we'll
re-plug our show
later on
sorry if we keep doing this
but we have to
because that's why
we're doing a podcast
here's an interview
with Richard Ayrton
Peacock and Gamble
Peacock and Gamble
here we are on the
Peacock and Gamble podcast
and we are joined today
oh what a rubbish day
this is
oh boo
because we've been
doing so well for guests
it's been going
really really well
oh we've had Lee Mack
and Russell Howard
all the good ones
all the best ones
who wanders in
off the street
like a tramp
probably
gonna come in
and just copy this podcast now
oh please can I be on your one
the best one
yeah oh please can I be on your
your best podcast
that isn't me speaking
that's you two saying
in my voice
oh no now it is
now it is me now
no oh no
this is me Richard
Stu
Stu this is me
oh Stu
let's do a podcast
like Peacock and Gamble
so there you go
um a very warm welcome to our edinburgh podcast to richard herring hello how are you man i'm good
yeah i'm fine looking good thanks by which i mean you look like me i do quite like you
looking you're looking so brilliant i've got a suit on we're recording this before edinburgh
this is weird because most of them are doing up there and this one's been recorded before
because you said no I'm not giving you
any time in Edinburgh
I'm too busy in Edinburgh
being the king of it
I'm too busy being
the king of Edinburgh
so I'm not coming on it
I said that you'd do
anything you wanted
for however long you wanted
you did say that in fairness
so alright
I will say that
before we even start
can you do me a favour
yes
can you tell your
stupid fans
right
that we haven't
ripped off Lee and Eric
I think you have a bit it's very similar and you do it Stupid fans. Right. We haven't ripped off Liam Herring.
I think you have a bit.
It's very similar.
And you do.
It's very, very similar.
You do a bit about BCG.
That's in Liam Herring.
Is that in Liam Herring?
Yeah.
The false rod hole has a BCG.
A man with a jacket on doing a puppet, except he doesn't have a puppet.
Yeah, but we have got a puppet.
We've got a puppet.
But you put a jacket on, don't you?
Like the false rod hole.
You've got a jacket on now, so you're ripping yourself off. You've got a jacket on now's like not a goose but you put a jacket on don't you like the false red you've got a jacket on now
so you're ripping yourself
you've got a jacket on now
you're living in the past
what do you know
I think no
yours is very childish
ours was quite
yours was clever
ours was really intellectual
very grown up your one
you could see that
they were messing about
they were educated
but with our one
you're like
no they are just thick
straight off a council estate
this one it's nothing like Lee and herring it's nowhere near as good i'm happy to say that but
you know what the thing is though i'm genuinely right i'm more familiar with it now with leon
herring now having gone watched bits and bobs but i missed it at the time thing is we were so
influential that everyone you've ever seen was influenced by us so by even if they didn't say
so by proxy yeah we've soaked up
your influence
but actually genuinely
I think through the
circuit
because Stu did the
circuit for a lot
earlier and longer
than I did
and I think
and this isn't
you're not like this
at all
but a lot of
stand-ups are very
influenced by Stuart
so it's weird to see
that influence come back
in fact when I came
back to doing stand-up
in whatever it was
2005
I suddenly fitted in to stand-up because everyone was doing stuff like we did 10 years
before that no one was interested in me doing you've been accused of ripping off stewart lee
yeah yeah yeah when i when i first came back you know people were going well it's very very
influenced by stewart lee clearly and again i did a awful routine about um having sex with jesus's
stigmata that kind of got more and more extreme and brian logan said oh it's obviously influenced
by stewart lee's vomiting the anus of christ and i you know i said i've never seen that routine of Jesus' stigmata that come out more and more extreme. And Brian Logan said, oh, it's obviously influenced by Stuart Lee's
vomiting the anus of Christ.
And I said, I've never seen that routine.
You know, we've obviously, you know,
both of our routines are influenced by something
that we did as Lee and Harry.
Yeah, of course.
And we've never even seen each other's thing.
He said, I find that very hard to believe.
Wow.
So, you know, it's like,
because they've seen something first,
they see something first,
they think, oh, that was the order it happened in then,
because I saw that one first. Yeah. So this brings us back onto the podcast yeah but you would yeah it is the same thing but but you know you would think someone would go what he's a bit
they're rich and stew doing quite similar things i wonder why that is yeah is it because one of
them is it because one of them's confident no one was thinking oh maybe stewart confident rich
so uh you know so it was a
very weird thing
but that kind of
stopped quite
quickly I think
when I first
came back and
it was a concern
and I deliberately
didn't watch
Stu because I
didn't want to
end up because I
hadn't done stand
up on my own as
much and I
didn't want to
end up doing
being like Stu
and doing Stu
like things but I
knew we were
inevitably going to
be doing similar
stuff because that's
what we worked
out our comedy
ethos together
because you are
in love because you kiss each other all are in love so yeah we love each other because you are
in love and you because you kiss each other all the time but we used to write each other i'm sure
you if you write i don't know if you actually write your stuff it doesn't look like it but if
you uh when you spend a surprising amount of time trying to make it look like that
you know we would write we i knew what stew would say better than he would know what he would say
you know and when we were writing the double act often so we would often write each each other's, you know, we'd have a clear idea of each other.
I know, because sometimes he gets to a point, but he takes ages over it.
He does, and I just say, it's better when you're there going, this is what you're trying to say now.
Yeah, it's true.
Have a funny one come in.
This is, weirdly, me and Ed are very similar sort of sixth sense between us, isn't it?
Because I know what he's going to do now.
He's going to call you a prick in a minute.
Yeah.
Obviously.
Yeah, prick.
Peacock and Gamble, Peacock and Gamble.
Do you like Cannon and Ball?
I do like Cannon and Ball.
I'm more influenced by Cannon and Ball.
We were quite a little bit influenced by Cannon and Ball.
When I was eight years old,
I remember the first series of Cannon and Ball came on.
And I remember watching it with my sister
and us both just being in tears
from Bobby Ball banging his braces.
Because you look like your dad.
But it was very subversive that first season.
It became more and more
a bit more schmaltzy
and a bit more
kind of traditional
but a lot of these
old fashioned
traditional guys
have a really great
comedic sense
we worked with
Michael Barrymore
in the early 90s
we wrote for this thing
but none of our jokes
got on
but it was like a pilot
for a Saturday night show
that I think eventually
became his big
Saturday night show
but not quite
he would come on
and improvise
in the rehearsals
and it would be
unbelievably brilliant it was nuts and he went all over the place and
then he'd play off the audience to be slightly rude and cheeky and really and he was yeah he
was actually a big fan of uh simon munnery like god and jesus was it really yeah yeah i think
cannonball were really anarchic and i think you'd never seen anything like that you know as a as a
kid but perhaps you know it was do you know bobby ball i've tweeted. I do, I do, I know him. Right. I tweeted him the other day
because he said,
Tommy Cannon is now on Twitter.
I said, why don't you let Tommy do four serious tweets
and then you come in and spruced him.
And he did.
He tweeted back and said,
ha, ha, ha, ha,
which is hard to know whether he's going,
ha, ha, ha, you stupid fucking spruced.
No, that's his northern follow.
But I didn't tweet him to say I'm seriously...
And I think the way we used to...
One of the earliest routines me and Stu did
was a triple act called Knife, Fork and Peterson,
which was basically two guys who were quite like Cannonball.
Stu was the straight one.
I came on and just got some braces out of my pocket
and twanged them.
And then the third one was a guy who sat there
drinking beer in the corner
saying nothing.
So we're trying to reinvent
the double act.
Get that down as well.
We need a knife out of four.
We need a knife out of four.
We need a knife out of four.
For the Edinburgh show.
Peterson.
Peterson.
Drink beer in the corner.
But I think, you know,
I think when you've got
to about 12 or 13
and you sort of try
and be cool with comedy and stuff
you kind of rebelled all against it
and you've got to imagine someone
being like Bobby Ball all the time
which I guess is kind of you too
then how annoying that would be
let's just smack him in the face
it's our podcast
if we want to smack him in the face
we can
yeah we can in our podcast
but then he'll probably do it in six months
where he smacks people in the face
people in the face
number one in the world
I've done smacking in the face better.
I've won an award for it.
Two words.
How is it going on with you?
Because you got all married up.
I got married three months in at this stage,
so four months by Edinburgh.
Presuming we're still together.
Yeah.
This might be a bit...
We might have to re-edit this.
Does it bother you
that she finds me
really funny
no I like it
does it niggle you
a little bit
no I like it
you said you liked it
but you crossed your arms
your arms are defensive
I'm furious about it
because my other half
she finds you really funny
yeah well you're all I love
used to come and see
Lee and Herring
when she was about 13
yeah alright don't do it
so people can work out
the ages
that's probably where we where we nicked all their stuff from.
Yeah.
Subcontinent.
With Tamara coming back
and just saying all the sketches
and you going,
I'm not listening,
but it was all soaking in somehow.
No, but sometimes she's in there.
Because in my head,
she's still 13 years old.
I think you're a disgusting piece of shit.
That is basically my problem with it.
I can't believe you're actually having sex
with that tiny girl.
Well, you are.
It's awful.
Right, well,
I will show you some photos of it and then it will
properly upset you then is it known is it an open thing about you and katie or is it yeah i think so
i mean we didn't i when we first started going out with each other i kind of didn't want to
thought it wouldn't be helpful to her or at least i want i didn't want people thinking oh she's
getting gigs or whatever or doing this because of course if her boyfriend is or whatever turns out
she's better than you.
She is much better than me.
So I didn't really want to make a big thing about it,
but we weren't keeping it secret.
We didn't want to make a big thing about it.
And there was sort of slight issues with...
I mean, I've written about it in the book.
She was going out with someone else before I met her and stuff,
and it felt like to make a big thing about it
when you're slightly in the public eye
seems a bit insulting to the other person involved.
But yeah, now we're married, I think it's sort of safe to say that but yeah she's you know she's very good she's
doing a edinburgh show katie wilkins uh joy is my middle name which it is all about names and now
she's ended up with this stupid surname in a real life she's still using her stupid idiot husband
yeah herring imagine ending up being called herring it's horrible isn't it yeah she must love me do
you think she does yeah what what are the clues that your wife loves you?
Let's try and...
Let's get some clues now, right?
How would you tell if a woman loved you?
I'll send her up on there, right?
Because I think Katie's brilliant.
I think she's a great stand-up.
And I think she's a lovely, lovely girl.
Like, genuinely, really.
And, you know, it's an enormous injustice that you've ended up with her.
But how did you...
What sort of...
What mental health issues has she got? What were the clues that came out that you were like hang on
and what did you do as well to make her fall in love with you i don't know i don't really
understand it was very uh it was a very um it was i've been i've written it i did write about
in my book and i've did no one's interested in your book just read my book it's easier
what's your book called how How Not To Grow Up.
Oh, I had the idea for that book.
I was going to do it.
Here Comes Trouble.
And then they were like, oh, no, that would never sell.
And it's like, oh, look, another bloke who looks just like him.
At least someone didn't want to read your book.
Well, we just sort of fell in love with each other very rapidly.
Not having that.
It was sort of a kind of weird thing.
So I was... Not having it. I'm not having that. You can't just say, oh, we fell in love with each other very rapidly. Not having that. It was sort of a kind of weird thing. So I was...
Not having it.
I'm not having that.
You can't just say, oh, we fell in love with each other.
Well, I fell in love with her.
I don't know whether she was...
Right, I get that.
I understand that.
What sort of thing happened where she went...
Where one day you were like,
God, this girl is actually falling in love with...
What were the clues?
What clues did she give you?
She was kissing me.
Where?
Where?
She was kissing me on my face.
It was really nice.
Always avoiding the lips.
It's all around the mouth.
It was, but the early kisses were so amazing.
And I've kissed quite a few people.
I have as well.
I have as well.
How many?
How many, right?
And we will all say at the same time, right?
And then whoever is the winner is the winner.
I don't really know what the number is, though.
I don't keep a count of that.
I keep a count of some of the other things.
I reckon I have kissed about 100.
And I'm not even messing about 100.
Right.
I'm younger, but probably...
How did you say 100?
No, just do the truth.
100.
That's not true.
Kissed?
Yes, just kissed.
I did 20 on one holiday.
Just kissed.
Did you?
Nice one.
Just kissed and nothing else after the kissing.
It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
You know, more than you two young men together.
No, but I reckon that I have done at least 100.
By which I mean, like, that is the least that I have done.
Yeah.
That's not counting all the millions that I've done that I can't remember about.
Yeah, there's a lot I can't remember.
That's the problem with kissing.
Right, well, I can't remember more of them.
But I've kissed a lot, but when I first kissed my wife yeah the woman who would be my wife yeah my first wife yeah i
like to keep her on her toes yeah um i there was something pretty amazing about it why though
because it just was like but you know it was like i had all these things happen to me that i've never
really and i you know i get it's hard to say because you've once you've been in love with
someone falling out of love with them you kind of forget all the nice things. You only remember the nasty things
and you forget how it started.
You realise how many clues there were.
I went weak at the knees.
That's only happened
to me and Jenny Agata
when I was 23.
I walked past Jenny Agata
and went weak at the knees.
That happens to me
when I'm wanking.
Yeah.
That's if you do a stand-up wank.
Yeah.
If you stand up when you're wanking
your knees will go at some point.
I did a joke about that
saying it was some kind
of muscle memory of all the times i'd watched american
wealth in london so yeah in conversation but um but yeah so you know it was but it was it was i
there is the really weird thing that happened it was the second time i'd met her and uh i talked
to her and then i walked away and i kind of felt this like a an actual magnetic force trying to
pull me back towards right and that's kind of what i don't then did you hear her behind you going my hair my hair
my hair my hair my hair's in your zip my hair's in your zip it might have been that so it was it was
it was a real kind of impactful thing but i think i would but i also think you've got to be both in
the right place if i i know you don't want any serious answers you've got to be both in there
facing you've got to be in the right place. The same place.
The right angle.
Not right too close to each other.
To get the penis.
Not inside each other.
The penis to go into the vagina
has got to be at the right angle.
But I think at that point,
I had just turned 40
and I'd gone a properly bit crazy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I think I'd realised
I had to calm down.
So I was definitely like on the,
my mindset was definitely like looking for somebody. So you've got to have that. Because I think I've met I had to calm down. So I was definitely like on the... My mindset was definitely like looking for somebody.
So you've got to have that.
Because I think I've met a lot of people in my life
if I'd met them at a different point.
There's millions of people in the world.
Billions, in fact.
And so the chances of just the one person you meet
being the one person you would get on with
is scientifically ludicrous.
You're listening to the Peacock and Gumball podcast?
Richard Herring doing some... Was it philosophy philosophy science and philosophy mathematics um so you know you've got
to bet you've both got to be you know i've met i i think when in the book i wrote about you know
there's a couple of girls i've met before that i kind of thought fifth mention of his book
i thought i'd kind of fallen in love with they weren't interested in me but you know if i'd
if two months earlier one of those girls had said oh yeah let's go out i'd have been going out with
someone yeah so there's all there's all these kind of things that come together but it but you know if two months earlier one of those girls had said oh yeah let's go out I'd have been going out with someone so there's all these
kind of things
that come together
but it was you know
I think we were both
in the right mental headspace
Something Changed
have you heard that song?
Yeah it's good
by Pulp
that's about that
oh yeah yes
it's by Pulp
were you thinking
of a different song?
I was thinking about
a Terry Hall song
but it is a different
something changed
something changed by Pulp
but if you'd have walked
the different way
down the street
then would all this
have happened
Sliding Doors that's another that's the street then would all this have happened in that sliding doors
that's another
that's the exact lyrics isn't it
yeah
but that's what all of life
that's what all of life is
if you'd have walked down a different road
would it have happened
and all that
and all that
that's why
but that's why I think
sliding doors is a shit film
because basically
all life is that
all life is just chance
you could do sliding
if I'd happened to be
two minutes later
than we were here today
something different
would have happened
would eventually have impacted on everything in the world.
That's what life is.
Everything you do impacts eventually on everything else.
It's just a story, Richard.
That's the point it's making.
This is what you do.
It just so happens that there's two branches.
How about in Sliding Doors,
when a bloke who quotes Monty Python sketches
gets to get off with Gwyneth Paltrow?
That would never fucking happen.
That's the thing that would never...
A bloke who quotes the Spanish Inquisition
sketch quite badly
in a stupid way
and Gwyneth Paltrow
sits there and goes
yeah I want to fuck him
that's the guy
I'm going to fuck
if that
you'd have snogged
like about a thousand women
if that was
I have I have
I meant a thousand
I meant a thousand
when I said it
a thousand and seven
I spent a lot of time
in the 1980s
reciting Monty Python sketches
and girls
didn't want to have sex with me afterwards.
Quite the opposite.
But when you'd done your double acts.
That's because the doors had opened on the tube.
So critical of things, isn't it?
Oh, that's a shit film.
So venomous.
It's a shit film.
It's my least favourite film.
Have you got a film that you want to tell us about?
What's your film that you've done?
You must have an idea for a film.
Sliding Doors 2.
Yeah, right, we're doing that.
And what happens?
What happens in it? They get killed in the sliding doors.
Paltrow's head comes off.
Right, but we're fine.
But in both versions of it.
Just exactly the same.
Just exactly the same.
But she's got a different hairstyle.
And one of the heads comes off as a different hairstyle.
And it annoys me because Sliding Doors, in the end,
basically it works basically the same
it works out the
same thing would
have happened
anyway more or
less or what she
dies in one but
then she gets
injured at the
same time it's
like fate's there
ready to do the
thing but then
she does die
so what does
that say
you want to make
sliding doors more
like the final
destination series
now I want my
sliding doors where
two completely
different things
happen and because
everything that will
change make changes the whole world yeah avalanche effects butterfly wings that sort of thing all that yeah I want my sliding doors where two completely different things happen because everything that will change makes changes
the whole world.
Yeah, avalanche effects,
butterfly wings,
that sort of thing, all that.
I know about all that.
It's lucky for us
that the First World War
happened, for example, right?
So if the First World War
hadn't happened,
none of us would be alive.
Yeah, so it's good, isn't it?
So like all those things.
So it's good.
From our perspective,
if all those millions of people
hadn't been slaughtered
needlessly,
there'd be a lot of
different people around.
History would be very different.
If it hadn't been made,
then sliding doors would never have been made.
Fair point.
It still might have been.
Yeah.
Do you think?
Yeah, someone else would have made it.
Even in the infinite universe,
there are some constants.
The one constant is...
Whatever civilisation you go to,
there is a...
Peter How...
Was it Peter Howarth?
It was Peter Howarth.
He played...
Joey in Bread.
You look back,
there's hieroglyphics
buried in pyramids
with Gwyneth Paltrow
trying to get onto the tube.
Peacock and Gamble.
Peacock and Gamble.
Richard Herring,
you were at my
first ever stand-up gig.
Was I?
Yeah.
When you saw that,
did you think,
oh, he's going to be brilliant
and I can't wait
to be interviewed by him?
I thought that young man
could do with losing
a bit of weight
and then he'd be
quite a handsome young man.
Is that,
did you genuinely
do a gig with him
the first time?
No,
he was just at it.
He was just at the gig?
He was at the gig.
Yeah,
it was just so you think
you're funny.
It's a weird thing to do,
isn't it?
Just be loitering at a gig
with a notebook.
Walking around,
just going,
oh,
I wonder what.
Oh,
I love that.
I love that.
I was doing my,
it was like my first ever gig
and I was doing
a five minute spot
and now I'd grown
a Hitler moustache
with his cock out
yeah
he'd say his cock out
and I'd go
do you know what
with my cock out
and oh fuck I was 40
yeah
if I was doing a longer set
I'd talk about that
yeah
I don't remember seeing it Ed
alright
what's your obsession with Edinburgh I really how many have you done I've done this is the Ed alright what's your obsession
with Edinburgh
I really
how many have you done
I've done
this is the 25th
anniversary
sorry I should read
I should let you answer these
25th anniversary
I'll touch you when you ask
alright sorry
what's your obsession
with Edinburgh
my obsession with Edinburgh
is I think it's a great place
to go
it's great to have an opportunity
to go and put a new show on
and have something
to work towards
and it's just
a brilliant arts festival I think it's just a brilliant arts festival, I think.
It's just fun.
But I think because I have done it so much,
I think when I started it was like my holiday
because I had no money and I'd go to Edinburgh
and I'd lose more money.
But I did it as a student and it was just like, you know...
In fact, the first time I did it,
the first couple of times were pretty horrible
because we got kind of battered as students and verbally.
And I think maybe part of it was wanting to come back
and do well there.
Was that doing the Cambridge or Oxford? Oxford Review. oxford review we did one of them two things uh and uh in 87 so i've
done i've done this is the 25th anniversary 1987 1987 was the first show it went up yeah and i was
thinking the other day that you know to me in 1987 i was in born in 1980 in 1987 someone who'd be
someone whose 25th anniversary would have been up there in 1962.
Some bloke would come up to you and say, I was in the office with you in 1962.
A, there'd be Michael Palin, but B, you'd be going, wow, fuck, what an old fuck.
I have met him.
I have met Michael Palin.
I've met him very briefly.
I've met him twice.
He's my absolute hero, but I think I was just kind of like, oh, really nice to meet you.
I will let you carry on talking. Do you when i met my friend right listen first time right um i met him
was on a bench in swiss cottage when i went down are you sure that was michael payne definitely
was right because listen right i went down to london with my girlfriend at the time who was
auditioning at central school and i sat outside central school while she'd done her audition even
though i knew that would be the end of our relationship and i sat there and michael payne
came and sat next to me and i sat like for like maybe five minutes and just not
saying a word like really still and then um he looked at me and i went yeah michael palin and
he went yeah and i yeah and that was it and then the next time i met him was last year i met i
worked on a tv show with him yeah and i told him about it and you know what he said what i remember
that no he didn't he clearly didn't and i, isn't that just a lovely thing to do?
To actually say,
oh, of course, yeah, I remember.
No, because if you know...
So I failed
because I didn't pretend to remember Ed
when the first time I saw Ed.
Yeah, so you should have gone,
yeah, no, it was great.
I remember you were good.
Yeah, it was brilliant.
I liked the stuff he did about,
you know, the cats and dogs.
Yeah, the stuff, yeah.
And so when I met him recently,
he went, oh, yeah, I remember that.
That was, yeah,
you pissed on me and took my dog.
And I thought, do you know what?
He actually does remember this.
Because I did. I've still got the dog.
Sorry, so go on.
So I've done, so this is the 25th anniversary.
It's my 21st actual Fringe
performing. I've done 35
shows or something like that. Do you genuinely
remember when bits of Edinburgh were all fields?
I remember it being different.
There's lots
of differences, but the weird thing about Edinburgh, it took me
years to get over, and I still didn't quite, there's years I've
been up there, I mean, I've been pretty
unhappy up there most of the time
until about the last four or five years.
I think it correlates to people coming to see
the show, but it's really stressful,
it's really difficult, and the whole
place is just imbued with these half- and memories and every corner you know that's where you
argued with some girl or that's where you fell over drunk or that you know so you know there
was there was some there was a girl that i'd really liked that i'd met in edinburgh and then
i went out with her for a couple of years and then we broke up but she was always coming up
to edinburgh so but you remember the places you saw it that's where your whole relationship began
and then to be there with someone else, it was just kind of...
I have a hard break up.
I want to try walking around Edinburgh with him this year.
Honestly, genuinely.
It's like a fingering mystery to her.
That's true, though.
I literally walk around with her in Edinburgh
and I'll go quiet and I'll go,
well, I was made to sound.
But then, weirdly, after enough time passes,
it becomes kind of happy.
It's sort of this bittersweet nostalgia thing
where you sort of go, oh, that's where that kind of... You get over it and you kind of happy it's sort of this bittersweet nostalgia thing where you sort of go
oh that's where that kind of
you know you get over it
and you kind of think
you have these nice memories
of everywhere
and some weird
and funny memories
and some awful memories
but you know
when I first went up
it was really about having fun
and you know
it was really genuinely
an opportunity
that I might actually
meet some girls
I think I might be
it's like sliding doors
I think I might be him
we're the two halves.
It's really weird.
So what do you think the point was?
I don't know.
Probably in the applications for university.
I don't want to think about which one is the better story.
Oxford and School of Hard Knocks.
But it was, you know,
the show was almost an inconvenience.
We didn't work.
We'd get the show half together
and by the end of Edinburgh it would be a good show. But you'd go to Edinburgh and dick around with it until it was good an inconvenience. We didn't work. We'd get the show half together and by the end of Edinburgh,
it would be a good show.
But you'd go to Edinburgh
and dick around with it
until it was good by the end.
And now, A, you can't.
I mean, in the early days,
you would lose £2,000 in a year,
a good year, you'd lose £2,000.
Now, if a new kid's got,
they're losing 10, 15 grand
straight off the bat,
even if they sell every ticket.
You can't afford to go up
and think, I'm treating this as a holiday
and having a bit of fun.
You've got to go up and have a really solid show.
And even as an established act,
I now do 50 or 60 previews before I go to Edinburgh.
What? Is that normal?
Is that normal?
So when the...
50 or 60 is fucking 10 grand.
What? What's wrong about this book?
Even with Talking Cock, which is largely an old show,
it's really important to,
the first few days,
you've got to be really good.
So, like, we'd go up and do shows,
we'd go up and do shows in the 90s.
Sorry, we don't have time for this.
Let's go with this.
Right, let's show you this now.
You've got to, you know,
I think that's,
A, that's a change in my mindset,
but it's a change in Edinburgh as well,
that I think you have to,
there's no point in going up
if you're really just going to
But do you know what?
First, I've done a thing,
I think this is my eighth one.
Seventh or eighth one.
First year I went, I made 50 quid.
Yeah.
Right?
Cash.
And I kissed 26 girls.
I made 50 quid.
So that...
And the show was...
And that was a quarter of all the girls you've kissed.
Yeah.
I did five in one night once.
Kiss.
Just kissing.
But we did it...
But I did it...
I manipulated the situation. Because I wanted to kiss one of... Kiss Just kissing But we did it But I did it I manipulated the situation
Because I wanted to kiss
With your hypno
Yeah
And one of them right
Was Ed's mum
And I'm not even messing
I'm not even messing
I'm not even messing
And that was the only one
That I slid to figure in
She was in the toilet
That dirty fucking cow
That's why she won't come
To Edinburgh anymore
Yeah
Yeah
Because it's all
A bit too much for her
Yeah
But yes It's an amazing festival of art Yeah Isn't it's all a bit too much for her. Yeah. But yes,
it's an amazing
festival of art.
Yeah.
That's why I go now.
Isn't it?
Kiss all the girls
out of it.
So that was part one
of our interview
with Richard's
stupid idiot penis hair.
I can't imagine
people are going to be
going,
oh, what happens
in part two?
Does he survive?
Unfortunately, yes.
I can reveal that now.
If you're bored now,
imagine how you'll feel
with another hour
yeah nice
it was nice to chat
with Richard wasn't it
yeah it was
I say chat with him
be chatting up
second part of that
tomorrow
do keep downloading
do keep telling your friends
do keep tweeting about it
and on our Facebook
and all that
about our podcast
we do appreciate that
a lot of you doing it
and plenty more if you can
we know how many people
download it
we know how many people
tweet about it
and there's a massive fall off oh yeah so get tweeting yeah if you can help We know how many people download it. We know how many people tweet about it. And there's a massive fall off.
Oh, yeah.
So get tweeting.
Yeah, if you could help us with that,
that'd be really, really good.
Also, if you could plug our Edinburgh show,
that'd help us as well.
Beacock and Gamble don't even want to be on telly.
940 plus is dum-dum-dum.
Dum-dum-dum-dum-dum-dum-dum-dum.
And you missed that.
Anyway, Beacock and Gamble don't even want to be on telly.
Anyway, 940 plus is dum-dum-dum-dum-dum.
Anyway.
And if you're listening to this on the day it comes out,
which is the 7th of August
it's two for one
tonight
nice one mate
yeah
I might come
oh yeah you should
come
yeah I might
oh I'll come with you
we can get in for two
for one
nice one mate
50 page
yeah
that was the
Begot and Gamble
Edinburgh podcast
it was a ready
production
hosted by
chortle.co.uk
presented by me
and Ed
our show is
what the one
we just told you
we'll be back again
tomorrow
on music by
Thomas Menderay
and we shall see you
tomorrow with
the second part
of Richard Herring
bye bye
up your bums
up your bums
bye bye