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Welcome to the Peacock and Gamble podcast.
Hello and welcome to the Peacock and Gamble podcast. This is Ray Peacock.
Hello, I'm not here without Gamble. He's probably at home playing PS3.
Basically what's happened is this has now turned into a 40th episode special.
Unplanned special, which is going to be all deleted scenes.
Stuff that didn't actually make it
into the podcast
the last time around,
so, you know,
not as good stuff.
Basically, what's happened is
we recorded a new podcast last week
when I've gone to edit it today.
It's coming out buzzing.
In fact, you might even be able
to hear buzzing on this now
because I'm recording it
with the same mics.
And I don't mean buzzing
as in, like,
a good Manchester club.
I mean buzzing as in
fucking annoying noise
as if we've got love eggs
in when we're talking.
So it's a compilation.
You'll get the idea if you've heard before.
If you've not heard before, don't start with this one.
Don't listen to this one first.
Hopefully All Being Well will be back next week.
But it's looking, got to admit, at the moment, kind of unlikely.
It's now Saturday night and the only day we can record is Sunday night.
And this isn't going to get sorted out by tomorrow night.
I've been trying all day to sort out the mics, but it's not looking
good. We can't even find out what is actually
wrong, whether it's the mics, whether it's the iMic, whether
it's the Mac. We don't know what it is. We've tried to
narrow it down, but so far, it's proving
bafflesome. My personal theory
is that Ed has knocked a glass of water over the mics
and not told me. But for the time being,
enjoy the compilation, and we'll see you as soon
as possible.
If any of our listeners watched the media stand-up on the telly the other night,
they probably noticed that diet didn't work.
How committed to it were you?
Relatively.
Diet-wise, completely.
I ate healthy food.
I know that certainly the night before you were on telly,
you told me that you got an Indian takeaway.
Well, I got an Indian takeaway because I hadn't had a meal.
Right.
But as it turned out, I still didn't have a meal.
I didn't have a big Indian takeaway.
I mean, what I wanted was a mixed kebab,
which is all properly cooked meat.
Not doner kebab, like properly cooked meat
within a chapati thing.
Yeah.
Is that what it's called?
Or a naan.
I like naan if you want.
Which I've had before,
which is quite nice.
And when they brought it,
basically they brought me
a chapati or a naan
with a shit in it.
And a little shit.
Only a little one.
Like, yeah, okay.
I don't know what you mean.
Little shit,
like Ian Wright.
He's a little shit,
isn't he?
He is though,
Ian Wright,
and he's a little shit.
We haven't just been watching live from Studio 5.
Yeah, yeah.
What is that?
Yeah, it's funny, though.
Is it, though?
I find it really funny,
because it's just three idiots talking over each other.
Ian Wright just called a black man chocolate face on it.
Yeah, he did, yeah.
Is that allowed?
I don't think so.
I don't think it's allowed at all.
No.
If you had Richard Madeley's revolting offspring on there.
Lisping away through it.
Yeah.
You know, I'm from Studio 5.
They're off the apprentice.
That's what she's called.
Kate.
Fit one off the apprentice.
And Ian Wright in the middle.
I mean, talking absolute guff.
And it's not even intelligent.
Talk about a cunt sandwich with slag bread.
Pretty much, yeah.
Yeah.
That is a cunt sandwich with slag bread. That is, yeah. That is a cunt sandwich with slag bread.
That is what Life from Studio 5 is.
Yeah.
I mean, proper idiots.
Yeah.
They were talking about Pete Doherty or something,
because Pete Doherty was on it.
He was a cock on it as well.
Yeah, spat his beer all over Mindy.
All over Mindy.
Was it Mindy?
Mindy.
Mindy.
And she was rubbish.
Yeah.
I mean, to be honest with you,
I think Life from Studio 5 is a legitimate terrorist target.
Blow it up by all means.
Sensory sparklers.
Yeah, yeah, I will do, definitely.
And Ian Wright comes on and he said what he doesn't like about Pete Doherty is his aggressiveness.
Or the aggressiveness he does.
So that's aggression, isn't it?
Is it not aggression?
I think that is aggression, you're right.
Yeah, not aggressiveness.
But no, I'm sure he was good at, what was it, cricket?
What did he do?
I think it was cricket, yeah.
Cricket, yeah.
But he was a good cricketer.
Tennis.
Yeah. But I mean, stick with that. Anyway do I think it was cricket yeah cricket but he was a good cricketer tennis yeah but I mean
stick with that
anyway I think
one day you could present it
only if I lose some weight
yeah if you lose some weight
but
I look massive on the telly
what I wanted to talk about
was that you were worried
about looking massive
on the telly
yeah
right
I'm going to talk about it
but I didn't do it
no you didn't
let's explain to everyone
what you were going to do
I went and got some posh clothes
you went to get some
posh clothes posher clothes to get some posh clothes.
Posher clothes.
Posher clothes, right.
And then you texted me.
Got a nice brown top.
Yeah, all right.
None of this matters.
Got new trainers from new DCs and I put blue laces in them.
Yes, but you nearly bought a corset.
I did.
It wasn't a corset.
Well, you texted me saying, I'm very close to buying a corset.
I know, but I know that I was making it sound funnier.
It was called Body Max, I think it was called.
You don't want Body Max, you want Body Min.
That's the wrong one you were getting.
Well, it just shapes you, apparently.
Right.
It's just like a tight thing that you put on.
Well, I don't know, because I was thinking, right?
You might have been wearing it.
You might have got the Body Max Circle Edition.
But I was thinking.
I put it in my basket.
You weren't thinking if you were going to buy a corset.
Right, I put it in my basket, but then I started thinking.
I started thinking two things.
One was I was thinking, right, it's not made out of water or air or the fat.
Yeah.
So it must squeeze it somewhere else. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it depends on how you put it on again.
Totally.
I didn't want to go in there with a particularly fat knob
or a big thick neck.
A big balloon head.
Yeah.
Or just one big space hopper
hanging out the sleeve of my T-shirt.
You know, just hanging down
out of my T-shirt.
I didn't want that.
Yeah.
So, but that was what I thought.
And the other thing I thought...
One massive leg.
Totally.
And the other thing that I thought
was this is just
ridiculous
this is everything
that I hate
you know people
being judged on
appearance
people being judged
on an image
conscious things
and all that
everything that I
can't stand
that I despise
about the media
as well
and then I was
suddenly going
I must look slim
I tell you what
if I get slim
I will be on telly
and then I thought
no I'm already booked on it yeah yeah yeah under my real weight yeah I tell you what if I get slim I will be on telly and then I thought no I'm already
booked on it
yeah yeah yeah
under my real weight
yeah I tell you what
they
and this says a lot
for them
they booked you
having met you
yeah
having seen a picture
of me
yeah they booked you
they still went ahead
and put me on the
television
yeah exactly
yeah so fair play to
them you can't knock
that from a production
point of view
so I didn't buy the
thing I put it back on the shelf. So I didn't buy the thing.
I put it back on the shelf.
And also, I didn't know what size to get.
Because they had medium, large, and extra large.
Right.
Now, I would automatically go, extra large.
Yeah.
Then I thought, oh, no, because I don't want it being baggy.
No.
I want it tight on me, don't I?
Yeah, get the small.
What wonder about it?
Is extra large in them?
Yeah.
Is that for, like, fucking proper massive blokes or no you just extra large might have fitted but you you want to
go the smallest possible because that'll make you look smaller yeah this is what i'm talking about
i didn't get any right i didn't get any and i went on there with my real belly on busters yeah but
you look lovely no i won't go that far i don't know i'm not saying it so that's that well um it's not
it because after you'd been on looking all handsome
yeah
I thought right
I'm not having my friend Ray
get all deplored
it's a celebrity
because the story I told them
was about you
yeah it was about me
and me as well
yeah I saw you do that story
and I thought right
I'm gonna get picked up off this
I've heard about this
right
so on the way out
with the rest of the studio audience
yeah
I just I told all of them
that I was Ed from the story.
Yeah, yeah.
How did it go down?
Really well.
But a lot of them were a bit scared to approach me.
I don't think it was that.
So that's why I was going,
I am Ed from the story.
Because the girl behind me said,
oh, I like that London Dungeon story.
To her friend I went,
I am Ed from the story.
Yeah.
And then she sort of laughed a bit.
And then I went,
I am a comedian.
And I was telling her,
I was walking in the crowd going,
I was trying to drop it in subtle light.
So I was just going,
oh, I am Ed from the story.
Don't worry.
And then everyone was sort of like,
oh, a bit nervous.
Walking away.
Yeah.
So they're all walking away,
like a bit like,
oh, I'm a bit embarrassed.
In his company,
like if you saw Jude Law or something.
So I went,
so I went,
don't worry,
I am approachable.
Yeah.
But still,
but even though I said that,
nothing.
Well, sorry, man.
That's all right.
But I thought you did very well,
and I think I still might get picked up off there.
I think you get picked up.
I mean, I think you are now famous a bit.
Yeah, exactly.
Because you've been spoke about on telly.
Yeah, exactly.
Only one thing worse than being spoke about,
not being spoke about, Ed.
Yeah.
That's what Stephen Fry done, isn't it?
So well done,
and it was nice seeing you on Russell Brunsback News for you.
Ed.
Yeah?
I had a dream the other night, and I wanted to check with you whether or not it's real.
Well, I'll stop you there.
Yeah?
Immediately, because you said it's a dream.
Yeah.
It's not real.
No, but I think it's something that I've heard in real life, and I've dreamt about it.
Right, okay.
So I just want to check it with you.
Right. Right. Is there such a thing as an aids mouse
see now you've got me worried um i don't know i don't think there is such a thing as an aids
right here's what i dreamt mickey mouse did look thin in that last especially his legs yeah legs
and his arms yeah i'll give you a few more facts about an AIDS mouse.
And you tell me whether or not it's true.
Right.
They spread AIDS.
Right.
In Yorkshire.
They, basically, you think, oh, how do they do it?
Do they bite you and stuff?
Yeah, that was my first thought.
No, they don't.
They give you AIDS, right, in the other way.
They fuck you. Well, it's't. They give you AIDS, right? Right. In the other way.
They fuck you.
Well, it's not as clear cut as that.
You had a dream
where a mouse
fucked you.
Listen.
And gave you AIDS.
They don't even fuck you.
They climb inside you.
Right, listen.
No, don't laugh
because I think
this might be real.
And if you laugh,
there might be people
listening to this
who think it is a joke.
Right.
And then they're
susceptible to AIDS mice. Yeah. Right right so please take it seriously they get
they get inside you up your bum well i don't know how and they're like the aids is on them
it like like a flower it's like flour on the fur right they shake themselves like a wet dog
when they're inside you yeah and they shake all the eggs into you
all the eggs into you
I mean
do you not get to the point
where you think
what's that climbing up my arse
and then pull it out
no because
how do you put cheese
up your bum again
no
not in the dream I had
but not in real
they don't
sometimes
they do two things
yeah
they will either give you
the eggs like that
if they don't like you
if they don't like you
so it's malicious
this is the weird thing
because if they do like you they just kiss you slowly and you don't like you? No, this is the weird... So it's malicious? This is the weird thing because if they do like you,
they just kiss you slowly.
And you don't even get AIDS from that
because you can't get AIDS from kissing.
Is this a dream you had?
Is it real?
No, well, I think if it is real,
you better go and get a prescription
for a bum trap.
I can't sleep now, me, for AIDS mice.
Right, so you don't think AIDS mice are real
no AIDS ducks
cancer rats
multiple sclerosis
foxes
what about hepatitis B
you know we're laughing now though
but I bet we both come a crocropping to an E. coli elephant.
Tell you what, mate.
The other day, we bumped into a girl, didn't we,
that you hadn't met before?
Yes.
Yeah, and you... Yes, in London.
You went all blushy and started looking at the floor.
And usually you're all right with that sort of thing.
I can usually talk to a girl, easily. You're like all confident little fat man.
Like James Corden or Pavarotti.
Yeah, I am.
That is just what I am like.
I'm like a cross between the two of them.
But this woman, right?
Yeah.
You bumped into her, right?
And you went, hello.
And then you started looking at the floor and doing all blushing.
And you crossed your legs over.
I did do that.
You crossed your legs over and I looked down
and there was a spot of wee.
Do you know what?
I wouldn't have been surprised
if there was a little spot of wee.
Yeah.
Because she took my breath away.
Yeah.
She was like a four metre jog.
I know.
She was like an enforced
roly-poly in a medical.
She's gorgeous though.
Bit old.
She's not.
No, that's not fair.
I'm not having that.
Alright, well don't have it but she was born in 1904. I've just been on Wikipedia. That's not true. She wasn old. She's not... No, that's not fair. I'm not having that. All right, well, don't have it.
But she was born in 1904.
I've just been on Wikipedia.
That's not true.
She wasn't born in 1904.
No, she...
No, but she...
I'll tell you what.
I think if you had seen her and didn't know who she was,
if you'd just seen her in the street,
you probably would have gone,
oh, that's an attractive older woman.
Right.
But because you fancied her when she was younger,
we should say who it is, really, shouldn't we?
Cleo Rocos.
Cleo Rocos off Kenny Everett.
Yeah. Off Kenny Everett off Kenny Everett
and off my friend
yeah
and I think
it's because you've got
the memory of her
when she was younger
lodged in with the memory
of her now
and they've crossed over
which means that you
still fancy her
no I
that is true
yeah
is I did find her
very attractive
when she was younger
yeah
but I think she is
absolutely stunning now
she's got
she's got a certain
something
she's very glamorous
she is very glamorous
yeah
and she's all like
ooh give us a kiss.
She gave us a kiss
I didn't know what to do.
Yeah.
Did a kiss on that
there and that bit
on the side
and then she went
and kissed the other side
and all opposite of it.
Yeah and then when
we got on the tube
you could still smell
her perfume so you
Yeah but it wasn't
horrible perfume.
You started smelling that
and going I wonder
what Cleo's favourite
film is.
I don't know what
it would be. I've looked on the internet and I can't find it i don't know what if anyone could tell us what
cleo rockers his favorite film is and i'd like to know so i'm gonna take her pictures on the date
i'd done that joke as well didn't i you went um which is weird to start a joke with you went i
can still taste it and i went is it all in the best possible taste yeah that's can you have written
yeah but what i'm doing is i'm announcing now that I am going to marry Cleo Rockus.
Right, okay.
Right?
And I don't even believe in marriage.
No, exactly.
You don't, I mean, you literally don't believe it exists, do you?
I think getting married is for idiots.
Yeah.
I really do.
And that's not even aimed at our friend who's getting married in a couple of weeks.
No, it's not, no.
I mean, generally speaking, I think getting married is for idiots.
I mean, he is an idiot, so let him.
So if he wants to get married, then go and have your little day. Yeah. By all means, I will come along
and throw rice in your face at the end. But I'm not, I'm not, I don't believe in marriage.
That's fine that you don't believe in it. That's all right. That's allowed. But you're
saying that all this belief will be put in the bin. That's changed. To marry Cleo Roccas.
Because I'm going to, I am going to marry Cleo Roccas. Yeah. Whether she likes it or not.
What are your thoughts
on marriage?
When I think about it,
if someone said it quickly,
like, what do you think?
Yeah.
I'd say, yeah, it's alright,
I'd do it.
But then if I think about
the logic of it,
no.
If someone said to me quickly,
when I think of marriage,
I'd go, sausages!
Like that.
That's what I'd do.
If it was that quick.
I think if I think
about it logically logically it doesn't
make sense
I've split up with
girls over marriage
right
I have an ex-girlfriend
of mine who
it was all about
just getting married
yeah even though
it doesn't change anything
yeah but it wasn't
even about
it was also about
well if I won't
marry them
yeah
and have children
then they're not
going to stay with me
right
I can see why
the children thing
is a bigger thing
because that does
change stuff
and that's what
people want to do with their lives.
No, but that shouldn't alter being in love with someone.
No.
I mean, what if I can't have children?
You can have children, yeah.
Do you reckon I could?
Yeah, anyone can have children.
That's smoked for a long time.
All you need to do is give a blow and get stabbed.
You're a fucking idiot.
Right.
Yeah.
Now that Fraser is dead and in heaven getting all felt up by God.
Yeah.
With St Peter watching.
Yeah, with St Peter watching and touching himself on the ball.
I can't believe St Peter would do that. Because he has only got one ball, St Peter.
That's it.
Right.
No, I think St Peter has as well.
Oh, right.
Okay.
He lost it in a skiing accident.
Skiing down a cow.
Yeah.
And do you know what?
And he went to God and he went,
God, I've lost a bollock.
Can you sort it out?
Yeah.
And God went, no, because if I do, you'll never learn.
Right.
He went, no, you can't have another bollock.
So Peter was like, but I've only got one.
And God went, well, you can't have another one.
And then St Peter walked away and God lifted up his frog
and God has got 50 bollocks.
Yeah, it's not like he hasn't got spares ones.
Yeah, exactly.
God could have plucked one of his ones off and stuck it on St Peter, but he wanted loads.
God has got bollocks to spare.
And do you know what?
I think if we take anything from today's podcast, I think we should take that.
Yeah.
God has got bollocks to spare, right?
That is the motto of this podcast now, right?
That's the sort of thing you see on the board outside a church.
It's true, though.
Right.
I'm not saying vandalise things, necessarily.
But we can't stop you if all the people listening to this decide to go down to the local church
when you've got them big signs outside, cross it out, the bit that says,
Only God works Sundays, or whatever they put on there.
Yeah.
With God, you're not the weakest link goodbye
whatever bollocks
they've come up with
and just put
cross that out
and put
God has got bollocks
to spare
and do you know what
there's people
there's young lads now
get to stick in the
counter and lose a bollock
lose both the bollocks
and they never
wake up with one
under their pillow
yeah God has never
to my knowledge
God has never
blessed someone with
a bollock after they've lost one yeah no one as far as i know has ever lost a bollock and then
just grown a new one and god could do that like that yeah if you go go on yeah i've never bollocked
i mean if anything because people say oh god created man god created us all and all that yeah
then there should be a guarantee yeah yeah you should be able to take it back. So, if a little lad gets born right, and has cancer, like Fraser,
we should have been able to take Fraser back. Yeah, because he's got... And go, God, this
boy you made got old cancer and that. Yeah, but, right, now I am God and you are coming
back with... Alright, God. Hello. Oh, yeah. I've got this little boy, Fraser, he's got
cancer. Oh, yes, I remember him. He's rubbish.
Oh, I'm sorry about that.
What do you want me to do about it?
Can you do a replacement one?
Have you brought the receipt?
Well, isn't the boy the receipt?
How old is he?
Seven.
Oh, no.
You could have brought him back before 30 days, but seven years?
No, no, no.
He didn't have his cancer then, no?
Oh, no, no, no, no, no.
If you don't have a receipt, you're not bringing him back.
Do you know what?
Now get out of my shop.
I think God takes the piss.
Yeah, so do I.
Especially in terms of refund policies.
Right, here's some things.
I think you should speak to your local ombudsman.
God has got bollocks to spare.
Yeah.
And God has got a really poor returns policy.
I'll tell you what, God's customer aftercare is appalling.
Yeah, it is.
It's awful. I know.
We should all complain to the Ombudsman.
Yeah, let's do it.
If God was a shop, he'd be on Watchdog every week.
Oh, we've had a bit of mail this week.
Look who's been in touch.
Oh, here he goes.
Yeah, here he comes again.
Listeners who listen regularly
will know that last week
I mentioned Perry from Diversity.
And how he had a rivalry with him.
The little specky, curly-haired one.
Yeah, the little one
who does the backflip
and hurts himself
outside Downing Street.
Yeah, well, I've got...
Basically, I've kept it quiet
because it's out of the press.
But me and Perry
have got proper nemesises.
Yeah, nemesis.
Of each other. Nemesie? Nem got a proper nemesis of each other.
Nemeside?
Nemesy?
Nemesum?
Nemesum.
Dim sum.
We've got a proper
rivalry going on.
We have kept it
out of the press.
Don't like people to know.
You've been keeping it
out of the press.
He's been trying to
get it in the press.
Oh, he's always
ringing up Matt's
Clifford and giving it.
Will you put something
in the press about
Ray Peacock?
Slag him off.
I'll be the best one.
And this is what
Perry's written.
I mean, he's only like nine or something.
Yeah, he's a twat.
But like I said last week, American listeners,
well, is that what I said last week?
But here's the letter that I got this week.
Come through the door.
Couldn't believe it.
In an envelope with all like dried tea on it.
Yeah.
Like, make it look like old fashioned.
And he burnt the edges, hadn't he?
Burnt the edges and there was a wax seal on the back with a picture of death, you know, with a sc like old-fashioned. And he burnt the edges, hadn't he? Burnt the edges, and there was a wax seal on the back
with a picture of death, you know, with a scythe and that.
Yeah.
And this, of course, was delivered to the house that we live in together.
Yeah, yeah.
Ray Wee's Playhouse.
So here's the letter.
Dear Mr R Peacock Esquire,
My attention has been drawn to your pathetic, asinine internet broadcast
in which you bad-mouthed me and my reputation.
You really are a tawdry, obese cunt, aren't you?
Oh, Perry.
Rampaging through your insignificant existence,
desperately trying to deflect attention away from you,
lest everyone see the talentless charlatan that you are.
Oh, dear.
I, on the other hand, can do a backflip without my glasses falling off.
And I've done a gig for the Queen in Blackpool.
Feel free to further mock me, but you may wish to start looking behind you.
Regards, etc.
Perry off diversity.
Right, I can't believe that.
Yeah, so, do you know what I mean?
I might, he's probably thinking I'll report him or something.
He had a point about the backflip with his glasses on.
Alright, he can do a backflip with his glasses on.
Yeah.
Yeah, but Perry, who do you think put oil on the floor in Downing Street? He had a point about the backflip with his glasses on. All right, he can do a backflip with his glasses on. Yeah. Yeah.
But Perry, who do you think put oil on the floor in Downing Street?
Who do you think that was?
Do you remember when they tossed you upside down and you fell on your neck?
And then you started crying in front of the president.
He doesn't even mention me in the letter at all.
I know.
Do you know why?
Why?
Because I think he's in with you.
Right.
I think there's something going on with you, too. Mate, don't get para.
He wouldn't listen to our podcast.
Someone's giving him the heads up, aren't they?
Just because it's called the heads up, don't think it's got anything to do with me.
Someone's give Perry the nod.
And your name is Ed Nod.
Like the drink at Christmas.
That's an eggnog.
All right.
Well, that's what's getting wrong.
That's for our American listeners.
Like the time I went to the Chinese takeaway and asked
for Edmongmong
and they didn't
give me egg
for you long
it did
Ed what?
Edmongmong
Edflit
Egg
Fu
Young
it's hard to go
from saying
Edmongmong
to Eggflit
oh fuck
are you trying to do it? Edmongmung to egg-foo-noo- Oh, fuck.
Are you trying to do it?
Edmungmung, egg-foo-mung.
So you've got to do it.
What is it? It's a famous tongue twister, that.
What is it?
It is Edmungmung, egg-foo-yung.
But say it fast.
Edmungmung, egg-foo-yung.
No, you said egg-foo-yung.
No, I said egg-foo-yung.
You said Ed.
Edmungmung, egg-foo-yung. No, now you're concentrating. Edmungmung, eggoo Young. No, you said Ed Foo Young. No, I said Egg Foo Young. You said Ed. Edmungmung Egg Foo Young.
No, now you're concentrating.
Edmungmung Egg Foo Young.
But now say it like you're just in the street.
All right.
All right.
All right.
Please speak like you did.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, yeah, you're going to Chinese, are you?
Yeah, Edmungmung Egg Foo Young.
Oh, you're coming.
It's time for our occasional section,
Ray's Secret Origins.
Right, okay.
Where Ray tells a nice story,
and then it turns out at the end
that that story was...
The start of something.
How they came up with the idea for a particular programme.
Right.
If you don't remember it,
the last time that it happened was the Feather House and that was the idea for weakest link yeah somewhere in a
feather house yeah right get ready once upon a time there were um there was a school and at the
school there were lots of children obviously as you have at schools and they had a swimming pool
in the middle of it right that was only three foot deep and they eventually a swimming pool in the middle of it that was only three foot deep.
They eventually stopped using it
because children kept insisting on diving in
and it was in their noses.
But that's not the point of the story.
In the school, there were gangs such as you get at school.
Some were killed, some weren't.
There were also lonely children.
Two of the lonely children were these
two little boys right who may have been homosexual right not definitely yeah they may have been
homosexual right i'm not saying they definitely are okay and even if they are i'm not saying it's
a bad thing you're right i'm just saying they might have they might have been homosexual okay
they didn't know themselves yet okay they were children they weren't sure yeah they had an idea yeah you know they like they
like looking at knobs and that yeah but that doesn't mean they're homosexual they could just
be experimenting couldn't they so what happened was um they weren't very popular with the other
children right okay because children can be cruel yeah and they were going oh look at the two
benders right i'm not being offensive.
That's what they said. That's what the children
were saying. That's what the children were saying.
Children can be horrible. And that was just making
them more insecure about their potential sexuality.
But, you know, they were alright because
they had each other. But no one had Facebook
at that point, so they couldn't join Peter Tatchell's group.
No, they couldn't. But they
did alright. They got on alright.
Time went on, and they'd done the gcses and left right um and as they got older i think they they realized that
there was a decent chance that they were gay but they weren't definitely right yeah okay and they
lived together and stuff yeah and because they've been picked on at school they didn't go into any
of the sports classes right or anything like that didn't play rugby or football or anything because they got picked on by the other boys yeah so they
ended up being dead good at cooking right they've practiced cooking yeah um okay i've got well good
at it yeah but they were like they might be gay right and they weren't they were like they weren't
butchering often i mean they were you know they were quite they were in touch with their feminine
side certainly if they weren't gay they look quite butch, they were quite, they were in touch with their feminine side, certainly, if they weren't gay. Because they look quite butch, though.
No, not really.
Right.
They were in touch with their feminine side a bit.
You know, if anything, as they got older, they were, I mean, I'm not saying they are definitely gay, but you know that there's the gay movement, the Bears.
Right, okay.
Right, I've done gigs for the Bears.
Yeah.
You know, they have a big bear ball.
Yeah.
In Manchester.
Yeah.
And I do that, because I'm a little fat man with a beard.
Yeah.
So they really love me.
But these two boys
from the school,
as they got older
they got a bit chubby.
They actually got very fat.
And hairy and that.
There were like
a couple of hairy bears
but they weren't
definitely gay.
I'm not sure
if they were gay or not.
Anyway, one day
they went,
you know what,
we've got so good at cooking
we should get on telly like this Jamie Oliver
bloke. And Gordon
Football. Right, Ramsey.
Yeah. And so they went for a
meeting at the BBC. And they went, oh hello.
Like that. I'm not saying they're definitely gay.
And they went, oh hello. And the BBC went, hello.
And they went, we want to do, me and him, want to do
a cooking programme. Yeah. Like
Jamie Oliver. And they're going, well, Jamie Oliver's
kind of like, you know, he's a bit trendy and stuff.
Yeah.
I mean,
even though he's not,
even though he's not really
particularly good looking
or trendy really.
Yeah.
He's the sort of person
we could get away with it.
What about Gordon Ramsay?
He does all the effing and that,
doesn't he?
Yeah, and all the football.
Yeah, he's all aggressive
and all the football.
So that's why we can put him on.
But we can't put you on
as cooks, you know,
because you're a couple
of what appear to be,
you know,
just all effeminate blokes. Fat, hairy gay men all effeminate yeah and we
don't want to like make it like stereotypical yeah and they're like oh shit and then uh the
person in me went tell you what have you ever had a bit on a motorbike right and the both of them
straight away went no god wouldn't go near one right like that and the man from bbc went just
come on me right took him around the back and there's two there's motorbike there right
just two motorbikes yeah just there get on them and they got on them and they went i'm a little
driver and they were crashing into walls falling off them and getting crying because they broke a
nail yeah but as time went on they got used to the bikes yeah and the bbc man went tell you what
we're gonna crack on right we're gonna crack on that you two are bikers right yeah and they went brilliant and they went
i'm gonna put you on telly and as they were leaving the man went hey lads keep the beards
and that that is how they came up with the idea right for ready steady cut What are you looking forward to most about Toy Story 3?
Is it coming out?
Yeah, in a few weeks.
Is it?
Yeah, it's not far off.
I think I just would look forward to it a lot.
It's got a bear in it.
Has it?
Yeah, I don't want to ruin it for you, but it has.
Oh, shit, and I eat sport at the end.
The trailers are online somewhere.
Are they?
I've watched them.
I don't really care for it.
I liked Toy Story. I didn't really care for it. I liked Toy Story
and I didn't really care
for Toy Story 2.
I loved Toy Story 2.
Really? Why?
I just thought it was brilliant.
Because you're in love
with that woman.
What woman?
Cow woman.
I don't remember the story.
Cow girl woman.
I should watch it again I think.
Yeah, I did enjoy it.
I think it's because
there was a lot of hype
wasn't there around it?
Was there?
I can't remember how old it was
but I went to the cinema
and I remember it being packed
and people were sitting
on the stairs and stuff.
Wow.
And then the lights came up a bit and we saw like three chairs in a row and run down and sat in them.
Right.
I just remember being excited about going to see it and I thought it was really good.
And I liked the first one as well.
It was a good review.
I thought the first one was amazing.
And I've met Tom Hanks.
Yeah, I know.
Keep going on about it.
I know, I'm going to say it again.
Well, I've met Tim Allen.
Who's Tim Allen?
Oh, Buzz Lightyear?
When?
Where?
Well, you have met Tim Allen.
When? You were on the programme with him.'s Tim Allen? Buzz Lightyear. When? Where? Well, you have met Tim Allen. Where?
You were on the programme with him.
You co-presented Home Improvement.
What?
You won't get that.
You keep doing references of things
that I don't know what they are.
You presented Home Improvement with Tim Allen.
Right.
Well, you were in Animal Quackers.
Right?
What's that?
Exactly.
Before you were born, mate.
Right.
Animal Quackers.
Animal Quackers.
Bongo, Rory, Twang and Boots.
Well, you work with my Uncle John.
Gonna go to Poplin, gonna go to Poplin.
Da-da-da-da-da-da.
Animal Quackers, Animal Quackers, Bungo Rory, Twang and Boots.
That's you.
That's what you were in.
We could all make up children's programmes.
Daddy A-Team, you know they're soldiers of fortune.
Daddy A-Team, helping people in need soldiers of fortune. Dirty A-Team,
helping people in need. You can't
pretend that you're Hannibal, Murdoch
or Face, or maybe B.A. Baracus.
You know each one is an ace. Stop making
stuff up. Each is sold separately with
weapon and thing. You know if there's
trouble to escape, do you know the A-Team's
here? Dirty A-Team.
Yeah, that's the advert.
That's the advert for the A-Team figures before you were born.
Well, you look like the baddie in Nosy Nigel and the Evil Watch.
Right, I don't know what that is.
Right.
Nosy Nigel and his evil watch.
Put his watch on.
Ow, it's killing him.
You're making this up, aren't you?
Nigel doesn't know.
Watch out, Nigel, for the evil watch.
Right, I'm having this.
What time is it?
Evil o'clock. Nosy Nigel, for the evil watch. Right, I'm having this. What time is it? Evil o'clock.
Nosey Nigel.
Don't be so nosy next time and take that watch from the evil travelling gypsy salesman.
Do you know what?
I hope somebody...
I hope somebody listening to this hears that, nicks it, and makes £55 million off it.
Because you haven't copyrighted it.
Oh, I've really tickled myself there.
Yeah, I know you've tickled yourself, dirty boy.
Stop tickling yourself when you're one of the animal quackers.
That'll be a scandal.
Shout out Boy Beats World.
All right, you shut up, Jamie and the Magic Torch.
I know that one.
No, not this version I'm thinking of.
In my one, he's black.
Yeah, was he black in your one?
No.
Racist.
Why can't Jamie be black?
Well, he's just not in the video. Because you are a racist.
Because you...
Right, it's about time we said this on the podcast, actually.
Ed is an official racist, right?
Because when I said Jamie and the Magic Torch,
Ed immediately thought about him as being
white. He was white. Straight away he thought
he's a white
little boy. And I had him
as a black little girl.
What race is Nosy Nigel from Nosy
Nigel and his evil watch? Trick question, he's not
a race. Yes he is. That's a trick question.
Why? Because he is a clock.
He is a clock and that's why his
watch has gone evil. Made in Peru.
So he's Peruvian.
Yeah.
Yeah, I knew that.
All right.
Yeah, I'm not racist.
I know, but you are racist because you think Jamie is white.
What colour has he got?
I can't remember.
Blonde?
No, ginger.
What have you got against ginger people?
He's a black ginger.
A black ginger child, yeah.
Why is that so unlikely?
Right.
Racist.
unlikely.
Right.
Racist.
Peacock and Gamble podcast was devised
and performed by
Ray Peacock and
Ed Gamble.
All music by the
Tiger Lilies except
for the last one
which is performed
by Frank Sidewaters.
The Peacock and
Gamble podcast is
a ready production
hosted by
Chortle.co.uk.
See you next week.