Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Peacock and Gamble podcast.
Hello, it's the Peacock and Gamble podcast.
And I am, um, I am it.
No, you're not it. You're not all of it.
Oh no, I'm just one of them.
You're the, I'm Gamble.
No, I'm just Gamble.
Alright, then you're Gamble, I'll be Peacock.
Alright, you must be Peacock by process of elimination.
I know, well, I like that.
Welcome to the show.
I'll tell you what I've been worried about this week.
What?
I think I've been playing Top Trumps wrong.
How have you been doing that?
Because I don't...
Right, I don't...
They don't give you the proper rules on it.
Right, but I think they just assume that you know.
Well, that's the problem, isn't it?
What about people who have been born recently?
But you haven't been born recently.
No, but think about it, right? What is the, isn't it? What about people who have been born recently? But you haven't been born recently. No, but think about it, right?
What is the best one on it?
Like, when you read them out,
is it the highest number or the lowest number?
Highest number.
Always?
Pretty much, yeah.
All right, I'm going to do AIDS.
How much AIDS have you got?
Right?
And one person has got 90 AIDS.
Yeah.
And the other person has got 30 AIDS.
Right.
Who wins that?
Depends what the
top Trump is of.
If it is of
Top Trump the dog.
If it is
top Trump's
the AIDS
then the most AIDS
wins.
Right, okay.
Because it is
the people with
the most AIDS
in the world.
Alright,
what if it is
top Trump the not AIDS?
Top Trump the healthy.
Right, then
it is the lowest AIDS
that wins in that category.
Why is having
100 wingspan such a good thing?
If anything, 100 wingspan is cumbersome, isn't it?
What are you talking about?
Right, what if you go, right, 100 wingspan, yeah,
or what if you're walking around Marks and Spencers?
Yeah, I suppose in terms of...
What if you've got an 100 wingspan, right,
but you work in a little shop?
So you're saying that people should be able to call the category.
They should say, right, wingspan.
And it is to do with its usefulness when walking around mocks and spans.
I know that it is generally acknowledged that undue wingspan is good.
Yeah, in Top Trumps.
But I don't see why it is good in Top Trumps.
Because you get more air under the wings.
But, alright, in a shop it's not good.
Alright, what if it's undue wingspan for a budgerigar in a little cage?
If anything, that's torturous for the budgerigar.
Yeah.
I think you might be looking too deeply into Top Trumps.
No, I just don't think that Top Trumps have thought this through.
I don't know why Top Trumps is all of a sudden the authority on everything.
That's what I don't understand.
When did that happen? Exactly. Exactly. So everything that's what i don't understand when did that happen exactly so that's that's no i know i know ed when did that happen
and why was it why has it gone unchecked welcome to the show
god i love you so much what What? My tyres on my car.
What?
I mean, on my car.
My tyres on my car.
The two tyres.
Basically, when I was getting to 70mph,
people were wobbling.
Right.
You know, making the dashboard wobble and that.
Okay.
So I took it into quick fit this week.
Yeah.
And as expected, the man went,
oh, yeah, two new tyres on the front.
Yeah.
I was like, oh, it won't be too much,
that two new tyres.
Because I also noticed they had a post-drop
saying, Michelin tyres, 40% off. Really? Might be 20% off. on the front I was like it won't be too much that two new tyres because I also noticed they had a poster up saying
Michelin tyres
40% off
or it might be
20% off
perfect for you
because you needed
two new tyres
I needed two new tyres
so I was like
brilliant
what a great deal
I'll take it quick
for it
because that is
a brilliant deal
and then he went
yeah you need
two new tyres
I was like
do you know what
I don't even care
because you have got
a well good deal on
I've seen the poster
on Michelin tyres
get me four for a joke
and I'll put two on each
yeah and save two for after
yeah
I'll put two front ones on and save two
yeah
because that is a good deal
it's worth buying them in advance
so yeah so nothing to worry about
you know they had that percentage
I mean they didn't
alright
they didn't have any Michelin tyres
when it came down to it
I mean,
they had these special tyres that they just bring out
for special occasions,
which were 140 quid each.
They're made of gold
and they've got diamonds
all around the side of them.
At least,
that's what I thought
they would look like.
But when I went back
to my car,
just normal tyres
they put on there.
Cost me a fortune.
The next time I met
MOT on the next day,
that was another 50 quid.
Whoa!
Tell you what, it's nice, isn't it? Mate, you must be loaded. You mustOT on the next day that was another 50 quid. Whoa. Tell you what,
it's nice, isn't it?
Mate, you must be loaded.
You must be loaded
shelling out that amount.
No, I'm not.
That's the point now.
I've spent all my money
all on it.
Why did they have a sale
on something they didn't have?
It was horrible, you know,
because I did gigs
over the weekend
and all the money
from the gigs
all went on my car
and that was horrible.
Yeah.
It's that thing of,
you know,
do you live to work
or do you work to live?
Because usually it goes on the Lego. Yeah, usually. I can put it on some Star Wars. my car and that was horrible it's that thing do you live to work or do you work to live because usually
it goes on
Lego
usually
I can put it
on some
Star Wars
I've just
bought some
Star Wars
Lego
yeah no
shit
it's a
Wednesday
isn't it
you're a
handsome devil
what
I'm just
saying that
I bought the
Death Star
it's not cheap
no
how much have you
paid for it
I'm not saying I'm not saying.
I'm not saying.
I've just said how
much I've spent on
tyres.
That's gauche enough.
I'm not discussing it.
What I'm saying is
my brother brought it
back from, he'd been
working over at
Lego.
Right.
Right.
Not Lego Land.
Because that is in
Windsor.
It's near Windsor.
Yeah.
It's Land near
Windsor.
Well obviously it
can't be in Windsor
otherwise it'd be called Lego Windsor wouldn't it near Windsor. Yeah. It's land near Windsor. Well, obviously, it can't be in Windsor, otherwise it'd be called Lego Windsor, wouldn't it?
But he went abroad to the Lego abroad thing, because he works for them sometimes. He's
brought it back for me. I mean, it was bigger than his suitcase.
Whoa. And your brother famously has massive suitcases.
My brother, right, he's known as Billy Suitcase in the North West.
Suitcase Sammy.
Yeah, Suitcase Sammy, because not only does he, I mean, he keeps all his old ones.
And he lets
working class people live in them.
That is true. They call him
Suitcase Sammy, right? He's Suitcase Potty.
And he travels round the North, right, doing
a disco and karaoke about
suitcases.
And his car is a suitcase with four wheels
on it. And he's got a suitcase
tattoo on his eye.
Actually, on the white of his eye.
It's horrible.
I mean, that's how committed he is to it.
He actually held his eye open,
and they've done the tattoo of the needle in the white of his eye.
It's horrible, really, when you think about it.
And all he ever says is suitcase.
Oh, you're going to see the mousetrap tomorrow.
Yeah?
Yeah, the policeman did it.
What?
Sorry.
tomorrow?
Yeah.
Yeah, the policeman did it.
What?
Sorry.
Should give a
spoiler warning out
actually about that.
What?
About the
mousetrap?
Yeah.
I'm really pissed
off with you about
Because it is the
policeman that does
it.
Well, why have you
told me?
So, spoiler warning,
right, if you're
going to go see the
mousetrap and anyone,
then don't listen to
the beginning of
this podcast.
Don't listen to the
bit before this.
Don't listen to the bit just before this, right, because that will give away...
That it was the policeman that done it.
I've never seen the mousetrap.
Well, why have you found out that it's the policeman, and why have you told me?
That's common knowledge.
No, it's not.
Well, how do I know, then?
Why do I not know if it's common knowledge?
You do know.
I want to kiss you in the rain.
Pardon?
Nothing.
How do I not know?
You do know, I've just told you.
Well, what, yeah, but...
Actually, I should, but it's not actually a policeman.
What?
What it is, right, is that the person you think is the policeman in the show
isn't actually a policeman.
Don't...
And one of the other characters, right,
and I'm not going to tell you who it is,
one of the other characters is an undercover policeman.
So they work it out, they find out you're genuinely cross-eyed, you.
Yeah.
You're so handsome when you're angry.
What?
Do you ever worry with role mops?
I don't...
I'll tell you what, right, straight away,
I've never had a worry involving a Royal Mop.
No, listen,
do you ever worry
that a dad's Royal Mop
is ever going to come
and get you
to punish you
for eating all his babies?
No, I don't know.
I'm mad with that sometimes.
Especially when I've had
the ones from Marks & Spencers.
Why?
Because they're a bit smaller.
They took all the skin off
at Marks & Spencers
and made them quite small
and they're just bite-sized
but they're really nice
much nicer than
normal Royal Mops.
So why are you going
to see the mousetrap?
Just with my dad
and my brother and sister
and step mum.
Okay that'll be enjoyable
for everyone.
Just for a nice evening
watch the mousetrap.
Yeah.
Well now you can be
well here we go
you're complaining
about me telling you
you've done it.
Well yeah.
It's a waste of a ticket
really isn't it?
No it's not.
No it's not right.
About three quarters in right?
Yeah.
Just start nudging him and going,
I know he's done it.
I know he's...
I've worked this out.
I don't think he's a real policeman.
And they'll go, no, he...
And you go, no, you wait and see.
I bet you anything.
I could put money on it, couldn't I?
I could go Ladbrokes and put money on it.
Do the other bookies at the theatre?
Probably.
I bet they do, yeah, for the mousetrap.
I've got bookies there,
and you put a bet
on who you think did it.
That'd be a brilliant thing
to do, wouldn't it?
Yeah, it would be.
Except people
would probably find out.
Yeah.
Don't they change it
sometimes?
Nope.
Don't think so.
Do they not?
Nope.
It's such an urban legend.
No, it's probably
what you invented
in your head
when you felt guilty
about telling me
who did it.
I don't feel guilty
about it at all.
Why not?
Why would I feel guilty
about it?
You've just wasted
a ticket to the show.
I've not wasted a ticket.
You still see the show.
Yeah, but there's no tension. There's nothing. Of course there's tension. Oh, are they going to feel good about that. You've just wasted a ticket to the show. I've not wasted a ticket. You still see the show. Yeah, but there's no tension.
There's nothing.
Of course there's tension.
Oh, are they going to remember the lines?
It's dead long, this one.
Will they all get through it?
Is the set going to stay up?
Yeah.
Will there be a fire?
Will Ed's dad stay awake?
Yeah, it's all the ones.
Your dad's been promoting our podcast this week.
He has, yeah.
Bless him for that.
The Peabody and Gamble podcast. Yeah, I him for that. The Peabody and Gamble podcast.
Yeah, I heard about that.
The Peabody and Gamble podcast.
Apparently your dad's been doing a proper promote of us.
Which is good.
I mean, if anything, that will make sure that we sell out our live show.
I think Peabody's a better name for you.
Because it's ironic, isn't it?
Oh, mate, arse.
God, I want to suck you.
What?
I'm just saying that...
I was just saying about the live show, though.
Yeah.
We've got to promote that, haven't we?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, come on.
Buy them all up and come.
Yeah.
Buy them all up with a bit of money.
Tell you what, if you think,
oh, I don't really have anyone to go with,
maybe go on the Facebook page and say,
hey, I don't have anyone to come with.
Can I meet a load of people in London
and we'll all go down
together after a
slap up dinner at
Nando's
yeah start your own
group called the
social outcast group
yeah
if you're just one
person right
and you haven't got
any friends
there's probably other
podcast listeners who
are also one person
who haven't got any
friends
start a group and
all come as a gang
if you can organise
a gang right
of over 50 people
who haven't bought tickets yet
and you can prove it, so 50 more people buy tickets
and you all organise for dinner,
then we will come and be the guests of honour
at the head of the table at the dinner and have
our napkins tucked in our collars and throw
the bones to the dog at the banquet.
Well, Ed says that.
But, I mean, what he means by that is he
will come and be the guest of honour. I'm not paying
for the meal. At your banquet.
I can't, unfortunately, because I don't live in London.
Yeah, but you will be at London because we are going to do the live show.
Yeah, but then when it's finished, I'm going home.
No, but we're having a meal beforehand.
So before the live show, rather than going and setting up the theatre and stuff,
you want to go out with a load of unpopular children.
I'm trying to get more people to buy tickets, play along.
I'm not actually going to go.
How's that going to make them buy tickets?
No, shut up, right?
They're already social outcasts.
I'm not going to really go.
I'm going to send a bucket with a football on the top
with a face drawn on it and a mop head for air.
And that will fool them.
If it's got a bucket, why does it need a football as well?
No, the bucket supports the football for the head.
And on the chair, so that the head pokes above the table. So the bucket is the upper body. The bucket's the football for the head. And on the chair, so that the head pokes above the table.
So the bucket is the upper body.
The bucket's the body.
I see.
And I might,
if they are lucky,
I will draw a bow tie on the bucket and tip X.
Yeah, so,
that's what I was saying is,
if you're a youngster, right,
who hasn't got any friends,
but you want to come to the live show,
you want to come to London,
where there's loads of crime
and stuff
and go for a meal with a pretend
person
made out of a bucket with a football on the top
of it, if that's where your life
has got to, then ring up for a ticket
now to Kingspace which is 0207
520 1490
or go to kingspace.co.uk
it's on the 19th of December that's when you're
having your
meal with
Buckethead man
enjoy that
you're like a fit bear
what?
nothing
I had an idea
when I was in
Quick Fit
oh what was it?
right I think
you know because
to put wheels on an house
and then
no not like you know when because when To put wheels on an house and then...
No, not an house.
You know when...
Because when you go to the garage,
well, you don't know this
because you don't drive yet,
but when you go to...
I've been to a garage.
I know, but when you go to...
Yeah, but have you ever been to a garage
and then come out of it
a £500 lighter?
Yeah.
When?
Fight Club.
You're making this up, aren't you?
Yeah.
Well, it's a horrible feeling
because you've got to get it done.
Yeah.
But I had this idea
about how to make sure
you don't get ripped off a garage.
Oh.
There was always...
There was another time I came out, 500 pound lighter from a garage.
Illegal liposuction.
Yeah, that's...
Yeah.
Oh.
Oh, hug me in the woods.
Oh, I want to do you from behind.
What?
But the thing is, because you always feel like...
I always feel like that i'm
being ripped off yeah i'm always worried that i'm being ripped off because i don't really know too
much about cars yeah so because of that um i've had this idea to make sure that you don't get
ripped off at a garage how have you done that which i'm going to start doing what i'm going to
do from now on was when i go to a garage for any repairs to my car and i would advise our listeners
to do this if you have cars and i think if we do this then we can beat the cowboys basically you
get a shoulder bag right right and you cut an owl in the side of it right and you stick like a video
camera lens just through the owl right that's brilliant or it could be an old camera you've
got a bible from an oxford yeah an old camera don't work or it's just gotta have a lens sticking out
of it right which which you make sure they can see, but you don't reference it.
Right, as if you think they can't see it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's a brilliant idea.
Just do that, and then say,
does it really need new tyres?
Lift the bag up slightly every time you say something.
And if they say yes, then you know that it does really need new tyres.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Are the brakes really worn?
That's a brilliant idea.
So we start doing that in future?
Yeah.
You've got quite fit legs haven't you
even though you're big.
What?
Huh?
So you've got
quite a sort of
old laptop there
you're using for
the recording.
It's not old.
It's a couple
of years old.
Bit out of fashion.
Bit out of fashion?
Yeah I got a new one.
I know you did.
Who bought it you?
I got it.
You bought it yourself? Yeah. You bought your laptop yourself? Yeah. Yeah you're going. Who bought it, you? Yeah, I got it. You bought it yourself?
Yeah.
You bought your laptop yourself?
Yeah.
Yeah, you're going to swear on that, are you?
Yeah.
Fuck, fuck.
You're going to swear on your mother's life about that?
Yeah.
Go on, then.
Yeah, swear on her life.
You swear on your mother's life?
Yeah, fuck, fuck.
You bought it yourself?
Yeah.
Yeah, okay.
And who did buy it in real life?
Yeah, she did.
Oh, she bought it?
So if she dies...
So not only...
If she dies, then I can get more of them. If she dies, then you don't have to pay it back. Yeah. Yeah, nice one. Oh, she bought it? So if she dies... So not only... If she dies, then I can get more of them.
If she dies, then you
don't have to pay her
back.
Yeah.
Yeah, nice one.
That's a good idea,
actually, that.
You should get your
mum to get you a
laptop and then swear
on her life that she
didn't and then she
will die and then you
don't have to pay her
back.
That's a brilliant idea.
Cheers, mate.
Thanks.
Yeah, well done, mate.
What sort did you get?
Black one.
Black one, yeah.
Is it a Dell?
Yeah, Dell.
Is it a Dell?
Yeah.
Yeah, okay.
Got all the buttons on it. E, E, Z. I it a Dell? Yeah, Dell. Is it a Dell? Yeah. Yeah, okay. Got all the buttons on it.
E, E, Z.
I got all them.
It sounds brilliant.
Space.
Yeah.
Got all them right.
It sounds brilliant in your computer.
Cheers, mate.
Thanks.
Got the internet on it.
All of the internet.
Not even missed any of the bits of the internet off it.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Any website.
Tell me a website.
I'll go on it.
Okay, that's good.
I drain you in my mouth. What? What? What website do you want? I'll go on it right okay that's good I drain you in my mouth
what?
what?
what website do you want
I'll go on it
you've got your computer
with you
yeah but I can go on it
at home and text you
I've got internet
on my computer
alright
it's quite good
if you've got to
sort of up
new internet
the up to date internet
yeah yeah
I've got the 2009 internet
right okay
is that another one?
no I've got a 2009X have you got Windows 7? yeah Is that another one? No, I've got a 2009X.
Have you got Windows 7?
Yeah.
Have you?
Is it any good?
Yeah, it's brilliant.
Why?
Solid air.
Yeah.
How much was this laptop, Ed?
£450.
£450?
Yeah.
That's alright for a laptop.
Yeah.
Mine was just under £1000.
But that was a few weeks ago.
What?
But that was a few years ago.
Mate, your laptop is brilliant compared to mine.
Just off it, I know. Oh, yeah. I think, yeah. Let me kiss your laptop. And your arse. What?
Or nothing. I think laptops are a lot cheaper now, aren't they? So don't worry about that.
Well, what I'm saying is, like, you do all this, you're always like, oh, I do all the shit on the podcast. Well, don't do that. Hang on. I plug in the microphones and do
all the recording on my lappy top. Oh, and then I have to do
the editing and Ed just goes home.
Yeah, well, hang on. I don't do that.
Right, you do it in that voice as well.
You do it in that voice.
All that bothers me is I'm doing all that, right?
And then I'll ring you for a break and go,
what are you doing? See if you might be doing some writing or something
for either a telly thing or for the live show or something.
What are you doing? I'm watching MasterChef.
It's then
when I've
when I've been editing
for like five hours straight
and I go
well hang on
this isn't really that fair
no well
that's what I'm saying
like you're always whining
about the editing
yeah but you can do
five hours straight
I reckon I could do
in about ten minutes
the way
the way it sounds
when it comes out at the end
like a child's done it
with a pretty stick
yeah
so yeah
I'll do the next section.
Well, just edit the rest of this section.
All right, okay.
All right, starting from now.
This is Ed's editing.
Go.
Yeah.
Whacking away at a baby.
Yeah.
You do it from a distance.
I know that they...
But then there's still, I think, one...
Basically, it's...
You start to use some sort of... I have no issue with it. And it's basically... Yeah. You may as well get your hands, I think, one. Basically, you start to use some sort of light.
I have no issue with it.
And it's basically, it's like...
Yeah.
You may as well get your hands dirty.
Right then.
Well, the flashlight...
Cut that out, baby.
Oh, what?
If you find normal or putting a...
On the off chance that it will spunk up.
And that was your section that you edited, was it?
Yeah.
Ed, what's the ultimate irony to this section?
You had to do that bit.
I would have edited it, wouldn't I?
Yeah, yeah.
I watched a man eat an entire cucumber on the tube the other day.
What's worse, the fact he did that or you watched him eat the whole thing?
Is that a dumb thing?
To watch a man eat a cucumber?
No, not the watching.
I know that that's wrong.
But he liked it.
But I still enjoyed watching it.
But somebody eating an apple, that's fine.
And eating an orange, whatever.
I bet you're not in that.
But I mean, I get it.
Is a cucumber now a snack?
No, I don't think.
I think a bit of a cucumber might be.
No, it was eating...
How big was it?
It was eating like a proper half cucumber.
A half cucumber.
Well, I don't know.
I didn't see him start.
I don't know how much he...
It might have been a whole cucumber.
It could have been a prize winning cucumber for all I know.
I don't know.
He only got on it East Finchley.
I think a whole cucumber might be a bit far.
He didn't seem to be
very conscious of it
or aware of it.
He just seemed,
he was just happily
going about his business
eating a cucumber.
What, literally just
munching it all down?
Yeah, just chomping away.
Yeah, I suppose it's
sort of designed
maybe quite well
to just eat.
He was eating it
in a weird way though.
He was like sort of
taking edges off it
and that.
Oh, that is mental.
That's perverted.
He was eating a cucumber like it was corn on the cob. It was like sort of taking edges off it and that oh that is mental that's perverted he was eating a cucumber
like it was corn on the cob
it was like he thought
he might have been blind
he was eating it like
corn on the cob
leaving the middle bit
leaving the middle bit
there is no middle bit
of cucumber is there not
well there's the seeds
the watery seeds
yeah you can eat them
yeah you can eat them
but some people don't like
the smell of cucumber
anyway do they
there's a certain
percentage of the
world that
don't call the world
a cunt
sorry mate I was just being a bit controversial today anywhere, do they? There's a certain percentage of the world that... Don't call the world a cunt.
Sorry, mate.
I was just being a bit controversial today.
A certain population
of the globe
that can smell cucumber
really acutely.
Right.
So they can't eat it.
Like, they can smell
a chemical in it.
Is this true?
Yeah, I think so, yeah.
You can say anything
and say,
yes, I think it is true.
No, it is true.
I know someone who had this, that they could smell cucumber.
One of my housemates at university.
She could smell like a chemical in cucumber,
and I've met a few people who've said that.
Not everyone else can smell, but it puts them off eating it.
How do they know other people can't smell it?
I know what a cucumber smells like.
But can you smell like a chemically smell?
Well, I can smell cucumber.
But can you smell like a chemical?
How do we know what the perception of chemical smell is? What I smell might be what somebody else considers a chemically smell well i can smell cucumber but can you smell that chemical well how do we know what the perception of chemical smell is what i smell might be what
somebody else considers a chemically smell yeah do you see in color yeah how do i know what you
might think color is just like black and white exactly yeah that's true but i do but i know
i know by by populist agreement yeah insofar as if you just go right there is a table of colors
yeah and people go yeah i can see the difference in all them yeah so that will rule it out from being black and white yeah but the fact
is yeah you could but they could be seeing completely different colors to you as well
that's fine that's fine but there's still colors aren't they yeah i don't mind if i'm seeing
completely different colors i've no issue with that yeah but what i'm saying is is that i mean
i wouldn't have a cucumber on the tube what What I'm saying is, right, is cucumbers haven't got a
chemical smell,
right,
and anyone who says
that they have
just attention seeking.
They just don't like
cucumber.
But I can't eat celery.
Hey,
here's an interesting
fact about celery.
I bet you don't know,
right?
Do you know?
Yeah.
That celery,
I bet I do know.
Now listen,
it's the only food,
right,
you can eat
if you're allergic
to all the others
gonna get some flyers
printed for the live show
I think
yeah get them all
printed up with our
fit faces on
give it all to the audience
coming out of
Russell Howard's show
when I do the warm up for that
yeah I wanna grow old
together with you
yeah get all them
all into play
nothing
we're not in the
competition section
we should run both together
just the ends
and see what happens
what?
the competition section
which is the continuing
story of Fraser
to be honest with you
I'm not enjoying this
no
thanks everyone
for joining in
yeah cheers and that
but just shut up
no I don't mean that
no don't shut up
because we need you to do it
but let's I think we should now start wrapping the shut up because we need you to do it but let's
I think we should now
start wrapping the story up
yeah so let's say
two more things
so the next one we pick
yeah
next week should be
the second to last bit
penultimate
yeah the ultimate pen right
and then the last bit
should be the last bit
yeah
and I think that's not confusing
and then let's never speak
of this competition again
yeah but
but well done in that
and the other day
we got a message
on iTunes from
some boy saying,
oh, I like this
podcast, but if
you like this one,
here's one I think
you'll prefer.
Right.
Right.
A bit brazen.
Yeah, and it was
called the Ice
Podcast.
Right.
Right.
Now, luckily when
I got there, somebody
had already left a
message about us
and saying what a
rip-off it was of
us.
And I tell you what,
the bits that I
listened to
they were bad
they were like
pirate videos
right
of us
right okay
right I tell you what
I mean
I wouldn't be surprised
if this section
we're doing now
yeah
and us talking about them
yeah
is in their show
next week
and it seems to be
happening quite a lot
it's like a lot of
student radio stations
and stuff I've noticed
when they send the blurbs
out and they send them
to us
saying oh and we've
got another complaint
letter
oh and stuff from
the last podcast
we used to do
the old Ray Peacock
podcast
and people went
oh we've got more
ghost stories
this week
and you're like
what the fuck
what's going on
are you giving
letters for RG as well
what's going on
so just be aware
right if you're
going to rip us off,
fine.
Don't send us a message
about it.
But don't fucking try
and get us to join your group.
And don't try and get us
to come and listen to it
because that's how
you'll get phoned out.
And don't think
because it's student radio
or because you're not
getting paid for it
that it's not plagiarism
because it is.
Right,
so go on.
Right, right, here's the competition for these twats. Let's get these fucking idiots out. right so go on right
right here's the
competition
for these twats
let's get these
fucking idiots
and I hate
and because of those
few people
I hate you all now
yeah it's made
it's made us hate
all our audience
yeah apart from this
bloke who's come third
right
who's third
right I didn't
I don't even know
what he wrote
I didn't write it down
mate wait till you hear it
right he's definitely
third though
point of this competition
is it's a story
mate
he lives in LA
no way
yep
LA America
LA America right
guess what his name is right
I don't know
Alan Van Dyke
I'm not joking
he lives in LA right
home of the stars
yeah
Alan Van Dyke right
I think there's a good chance
he is related
to Barry Van Dyke
maybe he's just called himself Alan as a pseudonym and it could be I think it could be Dick or Barry I chance it is related to Barry Van Dyke. Maybe he's just called
himself Alan as a
pseudonym.
And it could be Dick
or Barry.
I think it is Dick or
Barry.
Is that Dick or Barry?
I mean, how many
Van Dykes can there be?
Well, I know there's
Dick, right?
Head of the tree.
Yeah.
Barry is his son.
I think this is Alan.
I've never heard of
Alan Van Dyke.
Do you think it'd be
Dick or Barry?
Yeah, it could be
Dick or Barry, that.
So Van Dyke, third
place. Second place, Ebbs. Oh, well, you don't know that yet. It's got to be Ebbs. You don't know that yet. All right, who's second place? so this is I've never heard of Alan Van Dyke do you think it'd be Dick and Barry yeah it's gotta be Dick and Barry that so Van Dyke third place
second place
Ebbs
oh well you don't know that yet
it's gotta be Ebbs
you don't know that yet
alright who's second place
Ebbs
yeah of course it is
right second again Ebbs
right here we go
Ebbs what are you doing
Ebbs is second place
right Ebbs
second again
you'll see why Ebbs
right here we go
I revved up the moped
and sped after the numerous policemen
and the speeding wheelchair
which I realised contained
a screaming Fraser
and a cardboard cutout of Princess Diana holding a Down Syndrome.
As I drew closer, I realised that Fraser was veering off at a great speed down a hill
and was heading right towards the local chippy.
That is from Ebbs.
Well, do you know what, Ebbs?
I actually like that one.
Right.
I like the
Princess Diana
and the Down Syndrome
yeah but he's decided
to be the sickest
he can possibly be
but do you know
what he's done
he's actually done
a good entry
that he's then
I reckon he wrote that
without Princess Diana
and the Down Syndrome
and then went
I'll tell you what
I'm going to get
first place here
I'll just whack in
Lady Diana Down
yeah
so he's done it
don't think we can't
see what he did there, Abs.
Yeah, yeah.
So you're sabotaging yourself now, Abs.
Second place, Abs.
You're mad, mate.
Second.
You're a little silver meddler.
First place, Nicholas West.
West.
West in first place.
West.
And he is from SF State.
And I don't know where that is,
but it sounds like Merica as well.
Is that another Merica one?
It might be Merica.
Maybe we should do the live show in Merica.
Whoa, do you think...
How many people do you think would come or not?
If we did the Hollywood Bowl,
I reckon we'd get 30,000.
So let's do the Hollywood Bowl if it's even still there.
I'm going to do it dressed up as Andrew Dice Clay.
Nice.
Right, okay, this is Nicholas West.
West.
Number one, here we go, Westall.
West wing.
Go west.
Simon Weston.
Okay.
String west.
Okay.
I will west you in the name of the law.
Raise entry. come on.
Okay.
I was barely able to catch a glimpse
of a small bald person
who looked to be holding a pink pastry box
as the wheelchair sped down the hill
towards the zoo.
That is the winner.
Nice one, mate.
So congratulations.
Wiki wiki wow, wiki wiki wow, wiki wiki wow,
well west.
I'm thinking Wild Wild West.
Time for complaint letters.
Oh, thank God for that.
It is a good one, isn't it?
Yeah.
Time for it.
And we should tell you, by the way, at the moment,
the complaint letters are going to take a turn for the worse.
They're not going to be as good in quality because we're saving the good ones that we do for the live show.
And that goes for everything.
Yes, every time we do it.
Basically, don't be sat there going, tell you what,
I mean, it's been going downhill,
but the quality on the Peacock and Gamble podcast, right,
has proper fell off.
It's not that.
We are still well funny.
It's just that everything proper funny we think of, live show.
Straight into the live show.
Straight into the live show.
For the cool peeps.
Yes, so if you want to see us
and do a staggering
return to form
if you want to see
the big concert
I mean
this is it
right
this
I'm not messing right
this concert
right
we're doing
on the 19th of December
at King's Place in London
this is it
but anyway
here's my
B game letter
your B game letter
yeah because the A game has gone in the special box for the live podcast This is it. But anyway, here's my B game letter. Your B game letter. Yeah.
Okay, cool.
Because the A game has gone in the special box for the live podcast on the 19th of December
at King's Place.
Even this sentence that I'm saying right now that you can hear that I'm saying now, that
would be a lot funnier in a live show.
Yeah.
So if you ring up 0207 520 1490, get a ticket for that and watch it.
You're not getting good stuff free, mate.
This is, you've got to pay
for the good stuff, mate. Anyway, shush and do my letter.
Apart from the course, I've ended up writing
to someone who I've been
involved with this week.
So here we go. My complete letter to get free
stuff. Dear
Quick Fit. Yep. Right.
I know that you will say I didn't, but I did
come in your shop the other day and spent a fortune.
I was dressed as an
handsome young man called Ray Peacock.
But underneath the special effects, I am
a woman of a family. And my name
is Mrs Fraser and it is £7 for a
blowy, £15 for full.
I actually came down to your shop to do a
recce because my son's Fraser's road
tax is up soon and we need to get him MOT'd. Five pounds for French.
I know you will say a human doesn't need an MOT but he is barely that and he is sometimes in a
wheelchair anyway so just get it done. You are authorized to do a full service to getting through it, and here is what stuff I reckon needs doing.
One, new legs put on.
Two, clean all his cancer out.
Three, brake pads.
Four, new eyes.
Ideally Michelin, but just use pig ones if they're cheaper.
Five, tune up his usefulness.
Six, unfuse his hands.
And seven, spark plugs.
I want all this and the MOT doing for free
because this is a complaint letter.
Basically, I think what Jonathan Ross
and Russell Howard done to Manuel on the phone
about his satanic slut grandma
was well out of order.
And I don't pay my licence fee to watch that on the phone about his satanic slut grandma was well out of order and I don't pay my
license fee to watch
that on the radio.
I'd definitely give
Ed one.
Mrs Fraser.
P.S.
I will do anal
but that is silly
money.
So that is my
letter.
I think this might
be the week it's
going to work mate.
It is possibly
a pretty poor
that.
I mean we'll tell you now that I wrote that in between this and the last section.
Yeah, see, I think that's good, right?
But imagine what it's going to be like at the live show.
Mate, imagine what the one that I've put some work into is going to be like.
Mate, it's going to tear the roof off.
It's going to be off the hook.
The roof's going to come off of it.
I hope not.
Yeah, so do I.
Do you think we lose our deposit, though?
Possibly, because it isn't even where we live for the live show, it's down a step isn't it?
Yeah.
So if the roof falls off, then all the people above it will all end up falling in it.
Yeah, but then we've got a bigger audience.
Yeah, at least it will look full.
That is a good point.
I mean, I don't even mind if it's not full, as long as it looks full.
Yeah, and everyone is friendly and point. I mean, it's not full as long as it looks full. Yeah, and everyone is friendly
and that.
Yeah.
So,
if you are coming,
then bring a,
like,
cardboard cutout of someone.
Do you think we're sounding desperate?
Yeah.
But we're not,
we're not though.
I mean,
why are we begging people to come?
Alright,
don't come down,
you pricks.
Yeah,
ah.
Brilliant.
Reverse psychology.
Alright then,
excuse me,
you bunch of dicks,
right?
Don't come to the live show we are
doing we just want to be there by ourselves yeah having a chat like friends if you are not our
friends if you came to live show well i would just fight you yeah so don't come to live show if you
come to live show right i am gonna learn ninja and then before you know it you have come through the
door right you will just see a blur right of ed right? And I will do just a quick punch to your head, and you will not...
You'll be like, oh, I just watched a live show.
I just watched a live show.
I don't even remember that happening.
And you'll get home, and your brain will come out your dick.
Yes, and that is if you're a man.
Yeah.
And if you're a woman one, right?
If you're a woman one...
Right, and this is controversial, right?
Then take your bra off.
Yeah, take your bra off.
Get your bra off, right?
Get your bra off, and then I will stand in front of you, right? Don't take your bra off. Yeah, take your bra off. Get your bra off, right? Get your bra off,
and then I will stand in front of you, right?
Doing a punch,
and I know it's controversial
because it's a woman and I'm a man, right?
But I'll go,
stomach, solar plexus,
ed, dead.
That's what I would do in one moment.
That is if you come to the live show, right?
Yeah, but do take your bra off.
Yeah, but do make sure you take your bra off
if you are coming in.
So if you think you can stand up to all that fighting...
Then get a ticket.
Then get a ticket.
027-520-1490 or kingsway.co.uk.
Got to go now.
And Eddie's yawning.
Don't tell them that.
I wouldn't have bothered listening to this either the Peacock and
Gamble podcast was
devised and performed
by Ray Peacock and
Ed Gamble all music
by the Tiger Lilies
except the last one
which is performed by
Frank Sidebottom
the Peacock and
Gamble podcast is a big and dark
production hosted by chortle.co.uk if you spotted the live mistake in this week's show
tell us on our facebook page and you might win a prize see you next week I would lube you up and put my erect penis right into your anus
and have sexual intercourse with you.
Really, really penetrative and deep.
What?
I said, happy Christmas.