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Welcome to the Peacock and Gamble podcast.
It's time for the highlight of your week, it's the Peacock and Gamble podcast.
Hello.
Hooray, I'm Ray Peacock.
I'm Ed Gamble.
And sorry, but that's the end of the show.
What?
Because Ed can't be bothered with you today.
No, I could be bothered at two o'clock.
And now it's seven o'clock.
Ed is whining.
There is no time in a podcast.
There is time in a podcast.
No, there's not.
Well, how long is it then?
What are you on about?
How long are the podcasts?
No, it's not about how long they are.
How long are the podcasts?
There's no time.
You can't.
There's no time.
Right, how long are they?
30 minutes.
What is that?
A time.
A time.
Welcome to time.
The concept of time.
In a podcast. Time. We can't do time checks or anything in a podcast. Yeah. We don't know A time. Welcome to time. The concept of time. In a podcast.
Time.
We can't do time checks
or anything in a podcast.
Yeah.
We don't know when people
are listening to it.
One time.
Time.
There's a bit of time
in a podcast.
What time is it now, everyone?
Seven o'clock
where we're recording it.
Time.
See, that's Ed.
He's in a bad mood
because...
I'm tired
and I got here
and you dragged me
for half a big doughy buffet.
What?
No, hang on.
And then go play a game and get you a
slush puppy from Blockbuster again and they're starting
to look at you weird in there.
When, are you quite finished?
When I pick you up from the
station when you come here, we always go
into one garden city and have
some beverages. Yeah, and swing back here and record.
Not swing back here and have 90 games of
racing on the PlayStation 3.
That was something on my own.
I just wanted one race on it, right?
One try of it.
Right.
So we got into it and then you went,
oh, it's first 200 points.
And that was when you're on about four points
and you get two points a race.
It is first 200 points.
I know, but it doesn't have to be.
You could just say first to 10 and then stop it.
Isn't it interesting that you should be saying this now?
What was the score?
104 to Ray.
Yeah.
How many for Ed?
I don't know, like 20.
Like 21 or something.
So that's all that's up with him.
That's why he's sulking.
I've already started going mad today.
Why?
At King's Cross Station, I was just pointing at the sign shouting,
is it because someone stole his crown?
Why are you doing that to no one?
Yeah, I thought it was funny.
It is funny, but you don't have to shout it out loud.
Just think it in your head.
I will next time anyway
when I am let back there.
You'll never be allowed there again.
And you have made me your slave.
That was just an idea
that got out of hand.
I am your slave of the day.
Yeah, well just remember that then
for the podcast.
Here's something to do in the podcast.
We'll say what we did
in Walnut Garden City today.
Right.
Just fills a bit of time, doesn't it?
Yeah, I suppose.
Obviously I'll do my food.
And we'll do...
Don't forget, Ed is Ray's slave for the entirety of the podcast.
Because I've paid him to be my slave today.
Five pounds.
Five pounds he got for holding my slush puppy while we walked around Welland Garden City.
Servant. He's servant.
I have, like, a slave.
Slaves are unpaid, aren't they?
Oh, good call.
Maybe I'm giving it to you as a birthday treat.
All right, OK.
You're a slave, but it's your birthday.
OK.
Yeah? Welcome to the show.
Got a bit of a ruckus today, bit of a fight.
Bit of a fight?
Most unlike me.
Bit of a barney, mate.
Yeah, down the old...
I won't say the name of the bank,
because I don't want to get anyone into trouble.
Yeah.
But down the old bank. Down the old bank, mate. Yeah. Down the old I won't say the name of the bank because I don't want to get anyone into trouble yeah but down the old bank
down the old bank mate
yeah
went down the old bank
in town
you make it sound
like you live in a western
yeah
went down the old bank
went down the old bank
went down the saloon
had a sarsaparilla
I would love a sarsaparilla
if I knew what it was
yeah same
I think it is like
coke and milk mixed together
I think it's dandelion
and burdock
oh right
that's what I always
assume it'll taste like
was it
is that what it is
I don't know
I don't know
no idea
anyway we're in the bank and I'm queuing up it is? I don't know. I don't know. No idea.
Anyway we're in the bank and I'm queuing
up.
Yeah.
Right.
Because I don't
mind.
I'm not one of these
celebrities that just.
You left me by the
trough outside didn't
you?
Yeah.
I tied you up by the
trough.
And I put your face
in it.
And then I nosied on
into the bank.
Mosey.
Yeah.
You don't nosey do
you?
No I don't.
I have a little root
around the bank.
Is it mosey? Mosey yeah. What does mosey mean? Mosey on down. Like don't nosey, do you? No, I don't. I have a little root around the bank. Is it mosey?
Mosey, yeah.
What does mosey mean?
Mosey on down, like sort of walk, like go.
Nosey on in the bank.
Nosey on in the bank.
That's what old ladies do on a day off.
Oh, I had a nosey in the bank.
Maybe that's what I should be then, isn't it?
You'd be a cowboy, I would be an old lady.
All right then.
That's a sitcom waiting to happen, isn't it?
That'd be brilliant, then.
Old lady defrosts her chest freezer in the garage for the first time ever, right?
Yeah.
And there is a cowboy in there from the olden days.
Now, should it be that way round?
Or should it be old lady falls into a freezer?
Something goes wrong with the electrics.
Goes back in time, ends up in olden times.
No, it's more believable if there's a cowboy in the freezer from olden times I think that is more
believable isn't it
it is more believable
that there is a man
frozen from olden times
who she then soars out
soars out
soars out yeah
what do you call it
thaws
thaws out yeah
now soars it isn't it
we're nosy on down
to the freezer
we're nosy on down
to the freezer
we could
soar some sausages out
is it called nosy and mosey the sitcom I don't know nosy and. Is it called Nozy and Mosey, the sitcom?
I don't know.
Nozy and Mosey, brilliant.
Nozy and Mosey.
Nozy and Mosey.
Howdy.
Hello, dear.
I think it should be a cartoon now.
All right, okay.
Nozy is the lady.
Yeah.
Don't worry, I'll come back to the bank in a bit.
Nozy is the lady.
She thaws out a cowboy out of a fridge.
Yeah, freezer.
Then what?
Freezer.
And then she has to teach him modern life.
Why does she have to teach him modern life?
Why is she not screaming and running out of her house?
No, because she's old.
And she can't run and she can't scream
because she lost her vocal cords in the war.
Hey, how about let's make it a bit satirical
because she survived Daryl Ship war. Hey, how about let's make it a bit satirical because she survived
Harold Shipman.
Right, okay.
But it left her
with permanent
vocal damage.
And you find out
in like the sixth
episode that the
cowboy is Harold
Shipman's great
great great
grandad.
And so if she
kills him,
Shipman wouldn't
have existed.
Yeah, so that is
the dilemma but
she loves him as well.
He was a piece of
shit that Harold
Shipman was.
Yeah, I didn't
like him.
I call him Harold Shipman. I call that Harold Shipman. Yeah, I didn't like him. Yeah, Harold Shipman.
I call him Harold Shipman.
I call him Harold Shitman.
Piece of shit.
Fucking, he was a piece of... I saw a thing the other night on telly of him being interviewed in his cell,
and he refused to speak.
Right.
He just took a vow of silence, wouldn't respond to any questions at all.
It speaks to his lawyer.
Yeah.
So his lawyer could tell him that he wasn't going to answer the questions.
Right.
Could have shit a kick
fuck out of him.
You've really dropped
a bombshell saying that
Harold Shipman was a bit
of a shit.
He was a shit though
wasn't he?
He was a shit.
Nosy has to teach
Mosy modern life.
Right.
But the irony is
Nosy doesn't really
know modern life
because she's an old lady.
Right.
So she's teaching him
all of them.
So she's going
oh what you have to do
is you go to the dance
and you have to go
and ask a nice lady to dance with you.
Like a nice American come here during the war,
have a cigarette out of a tin.
And then he goes, oh, ma'am, that sounds wonderful.
And then they go out and then a hoodie just comes up and goes,
what are you doing, what are you doing?
Yeah, what's with your threads?
Yeah, what's with your threads, what's with your threads you stupid cowboy
and he goes
step away son
step away from nosy
the old lady
yeah
and then the hoodie's like
what you saying
what you saying
shut up shut up
and he goes
okay
I did warn you
I warned you
right and he whistles
and his horse
just comes out of nowhere
it has been in another freezer
and just
runs over the hoodie
and then
so what happened at the bank the problem I think the problem who's been in another freezer and just runs over the hoodie and then...
So what happened at the bank?
I think the problem with this sitcom
I'm writing, mate,
it's become vaguely farcical.
Isn't it already?
Yeah.
So anyway, so I'm in the bank.
Yeah.
And there's a lady in there,
could have been nosy.
Yeah.
And she's at the counter,
till thing that they have.
Yeah.
And it's a weird thing,
she was haggling over euros and this was like
a major bank
one of the big boys
one of the Nat Westy big ones
and she's going
I can't even hear probably what she was saying
it was something about how many can I get for that
and she told her
and she went can you not do me a few more
and the woman I can you not do me a few more?
And the woman I was going,
not really,
no,
that's not how it works.
But anyway,
she was going,
and she wouldn't move.
She was showing no signs of actually committing
to actually get these euros.
It was all a discussion about it
for about 10 minutes.
And it was entertaining to watch,
but it was really fucking annoying
because we were all still queuing.
And the queue got massive.
And you were just
stood at your counter
just watching it
yeah
and the queue was
building up behind you
and my one's going
excuse me
excuse me
no shush
this is good
shush shush
sweetheart
this is good
right and then
it was a moment
it was like a shock moment
yeah
because she was going
well they do it
at the post office
and then the woman
behind the till went
well fuck off
to the post office
it was brilliant that is great it was brilliant and then another woman behind the till went well fuck off to the post office then it was brilliant
that is great
it was brilliant
and then another woman
who worked there as well
went Anne
and everyone went
well she's ridiculous
and she went
Anne go for your break
and Anne was going
oh no but it's ridiculous
Anne go for a permanent break
yeah Anne come on
and I read up
she doesn't get sacked
and I thought
I'm going to step in
and I was going
no but in defence of her I know she shouldn and I was going no but in defence of her
I know she shouldn't
say that to customers
but in defence of her
this woman is acting
like a fucking
car boot sale
it has been going on
for ages now
and it must have
wound her down
you are like
a proper hero
you are
stepping in like
you're like
Mayor Lan Robinson
on Watchdog
I am a bit like that
maybe I'll get
10,000 vouchers
you're like Cook Report
you're like Roger Cook Report I am a bit like that. Maybe I'll get 10,000 vouchers. You're like Cook Report.
You're like Roger Cook Report.
I am like Roger Cook Report.
I was thinking that.
You know the Jeremy Kyle show?
Yeah. We'll speak about this
when we're done again.
Yeah.
Do you think that nowadays
Jeremy Kyle ever just feels
a bit silly when he says
about put something
on the end of it? Do you know what I mean? I just feels a bit silly when he says about put something on the end of it?
Do you know what I mean?
I suppose once a catchphrase gets out.
I mean, that's a stupid catchphrase.
Yeah, it's a bad catchphrase.
Put something on the end of it.
Yeah.
Do you know what I mean?
When he says it, he's like, I wish that wasn't.
I wish it was just like, use some contraception and be sensible.
Yeah.
Rather than put something on the end of it.
It's not even sound advice.
No.
Put something on the end of it, chances are it'll fall off. Yeah. You've got to roll it down, haven't you? Yeah. Rather than put something on the end of it. It's not even sound advice. No. Put something on the end of it, chance it'll fall off. Yeah.
You've got to roll it down, haven't you? Yeah.
I mean, I don't know what Jeremy Kyle, I mean, I think
he has got children himself. Yeah. Maybe that's what
happened. Yeah. He just went, oh, that's a nice little
hood. Put that on the end of it.
I'll just put that on the end of it. Plus, a lot of
the people who go on the Jeremy Kyle show are stupid.
Are they? Right, yeah. Right.
I know you've seen it. And you know what, the other thing that I've noticed about people on the Jeremy Kyle show are stupid. Are they? Right, yeah. Right. I know you've seen it. And you know what,
the other thing that I've noticed about people on the Jeremy Kyle show?
What? They're often very beautiful,
thick girls, and then they open their mouth and they've got
bad teeth. Right. And it ruins it. Okay.
And you're enjoying looking at them, and then you're
going, oh, no.
They are stupid, right?
Yeah. And he says, put something on the
end of it. Yeah. He doesn't specify what.
They might not know. They might be going home, and the bloke's going, well, apparently I have to put something on the end of it. Yeah. He doesn't specify what. They might not know.
They might be going home and the bloke's going,
apparently I have to put something on the end of it,
but I don't know what on what.
Yeah.
So he's just balancing a cabbage on the edge of a Monopoly board going,
oh, maybe this means we won't have babies. Can't get pregnant now.
Yeah, he does say, put something on the end of it.
Yeah.
So they're not going to know, are they, either way?
Maybe, maybe this is what, see, this could be awful. Jamie Carr could be responsible for the end of it. So they're not going to know either way. Maybe this is what...
This could be awful. Jamie Kyle could be responsible
for the deaths of infants. Because if you think about it,
maybe they go home and they go,
Jamie Kyle, when we said about the baby,
they said, why don't you put something on the end of it?
And then the mum goes,
oh God, Gary, what have you done?
And they go in the garden
and there's just the body of a child
sticking out from under
a paving slab
because he
he has put a paving slab
on the end of it
on its head
yeah and then
no more paving
and he's going
but Jeremy Kyle said
that is the way of sorting it out
put something on the end of it
we wouldn't have a baby
if we put something
on the end of it
yeah
yeah
so I've done that
I've put something
on the end of it
and it exploded
and poor Gary he doesn't know what he's done wrong.
He's got no idea, has he?
No.
No, so then they have to put a paving slab on the other end and then it's just there for years.
Yeah.
And they're all worried about it.
And then they have to go back on the Jeremy Cole show and have a lie detector for,
do you have a baby on your patio?
Right, well you have been being a right ladies man in Welland today.
Mate, I can't help myself.
You're alright.
I am definitely a ladies man.
You're alright, David Tennant in Casanova.
You are.
I am just like that.
Or someone else.
Yep.
I'm just... The thing is, I'm just...
A. Very good looking.
B. very charming.
Yeah.
C.
Cup.
B, tall.
E, speak French.
F, can cook.
G.
Spelling.
Spelling.
H, Star Wars.
I. Love you.
J. Cloth.
K. Pax.
L. Boy.
L. Boy.
L. Boy.
M. L boy. M
in M.
N
to at your own risk.
O
Vienna.
P to Sutcliffe.
Q to the right.
Are you interested?
S especially for you.
T mobile. S-pecially for you. T-mobile.
You are lovely.
V for vendetta.
X-ray.
Why did we do this section?
Zed.
Cars.
So, I think I won that game.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
You're a ladies' man for all those reasons.
I'm a ladies' man for A, come here.
No, stop it now.
B, good.
No, stop it, stop it.
C, that knob.
No, stop it.
Delightful.
We drove into Welland.
E, by God.
We drove into Welland in your...
You say we.
I did the driving.
You can't drive in your pussy wagon.
We rolled into town, roof down.
Yep.
It's hot, isn't it?
Yeah.
Which meant we couldn't raise the roof, unfortunately, because it was already down.
Yep.
Pops herself into blockbusters for you to get a slush puppy.
One and one and one and one.
One and one and one and one and a slush puppy.
Who should be behind a desk?
Yeah, but Flossie, as you decided to call her.
Flossie, I think her name would be.
Yeah, and she was quite the sweet piece.
I don't know how old.
She impressed me.
Yeah, she did impress you because she did one, then one, then one, then one on your slush pocket.
Yeah, they normally don't.
They normally put the red one on the bottom or the blue one at the bottom,
and then the red one on top of it or the blue one on top.
Yeah.
Depending on which one alternates with which.
Yeah.
And that's fine.
I've no issue with that.
But she pulled it out of the bag, didn't she?
She did.
She bloody well gave me my one, And I went, what the... Yeah,
she'd done one in one in one in one. Yeah, but it was like a swirl. Yeah, it was amazing.
So you thought... I had to say something. I'm going to marry this woman. Yeah, one day.
You went, you've done that lovely. Yeah. I didn't say it like that. I did it more like
a four-year-old going, that is amazing. Yeah, he did do that. You have done that brilliantly.
She went, I always do it like that. She said it quite flirty.
Yeah, she did.
But I said to her, I said, I hope you're always here.
Yeah.
I do, I hope she's always there now.
Yeah, well, maybe she will be.
Yeah.
If you're, maybe she sleeps there now.
If I'm ever going to marry someone, which I'm not.
Right.
Right, that would be.
You could have a slush puppy fountain at your wedding.
Definitely have a slush puppy fountain at my wedding.
Yeah.
She can be in charge of it.
Yeah, she could be in charge of it on her wedding day.
Bring her in. Do you? Yeah, yeah, I do. Right, yeah, fine. Right, Flossie, go and get, you go and mand her the slush puppy fountain at my wedding. Yeah. She can be in charge of it. Yeah, she can be in charge of it on a wedding night. Bring her in.
Do you?
Yeah, yeah, I do.
Right, yeah, fine.
Right, Flossie,
you go mand her the slush puppy fountain.
She could have a dress
made of DVDs
to represent blockbusters
when you first met.
Perfect.
Yeah, there you go.
But there's another lady
competing for your affections.
Who's that?
Well, I went into
Marks and Spencer's
to get myself my lunch
because I'm doing alright.
And I came out.
Marks and Spencer's
bought a bag.
Yeah.
Came out
and you were
you were chirpsing
another bit of skirt.
Yeah.
I think I've been
chatting to all the birds.
You were proper chasing the tail.
Yeah.
And you're out there
with, you sure,
an older lady?
Yeah, I found out
she was 90.
Too late.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Done the deed then.
Done the deed done the deed mate
yeah
she was a nice lady
I was chatting with her
she started talking to me
yeah
because I moved out of her way
yeah
she was using the rail
as a rail
yeah
I was using the rail
as a leaning post
so I moved
so she could get past
you moved
because you were checking out
her caboose
oh yeah
I was having a good look
like as they want to do
she went thank you very much and I went you're alright love and asose. Oh yeah, I was having a good look. Like, as they want to do. She went, thank you very much.
And I went, you're right, love.
And then she went past.
She went, I'm 90.
You wouldn't think it, would you?
And that bit my tongue going, well, probably wouldn't.
I'd have been there or thereabouts.
Yeah.
I certainly wasn't going to say 23.
No.
She went, I'm not bad for 90.
And I went, no, you're doing brilliant.
Look, you know, I was chatting away with her.
Yeah.
And she went, do you know what?
I put it down too. And I went, what? I thought doing brilliant. I was chatting away with her. Yeah. And she went, do you know what? I put it down too.
And I'm like, what?
I thought I wanted to find out something amazing.
I was a waft in the war.
I went, well, that's no fucking out to me, is it?
Did you say fucking?
As if I can do that now.
I can't go back in time and be a waft for a bit.
Yeah, you can't even be a waft anyway.
I can't even be a waft even if I wanted to.
You're a boy, wasn't it?
Yeah, I know.
I've got the busters.
And then I came out.
I've got the busters. I could just tuck myap even if I wanted to. You'd be a boy, wouldn't you? Yeah, I know. I've got the busters. And then I came out. I've got the busters.
I could just tuck my penis under my legs.
Yeah.
Do it like that woman in the Olympics at the time.
And then I came out and I thought,
I'll join in with this conversation.
No, she wasn't having any of it.
In fairness, she was having none of the ocean.
No, she was just, she was like,
she's looking in your eyes.
Yeah.
And just thinking, they go on forever.
Yeah.
Unlike my life.
Well, we were having a lovely section then, weren't we?
And then she walked off, I saw her fart and some dust came out. It's because I fancied
her and now I'm angry.
Exactly, just because you can't get any.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
Just because you can't get any from the young skirt of blockbusters or the old woman in
the street.
I don't think it's on me, mate.
That would be your sobriety.
There's plenty of girls who fancy you. Does that one keep trying to add you on Facebook?
She wrote to you today and asked you why you're not accepting her.
Yeah.
She said you're fit.
Yeah, I know.
What is she seeing?
What have you got on your Facebook picture?
Peter Andre.
Why don't you?
You can't do that.
One of my favourite little tricks that I sometimes do, just to amuse myself at home, bit of fun, do a loud trump yourself, just pop one, and then as soon as you've done it, send an email
straight away on an Apple Mac, because it makes a noise like a spaceship going whoosh.
So if you time it right it'll go whoosh. It's
like Trump into the moon. That's a lovely tip. Yeah I know. It kills time. It's a lovely
PG tip. It kills time that little PG tip. Yeah. Thanks for that tip Ray. You're welcome.
Now it is time for the section that everyone looks forward to. Laugh again. And has a great
laugh about it. Yeah. It is Ed says a food. Oh right. I see right you're doing that you
know. That everyone is thinking
about in their head
at the back of the
head
and then suddenly
the memory will
come flooding back
and they will want
that food or drink
or crisp
so there we go
Ed's food this week
you're not doing this
Ed's food this week
is
ghosts
have a ghost
all light and bubbly like a haunting arrow. How are you
gonna get a ghost? Stand with your mouth open next to a crash. Why are you doing this?
Don't get mixed up with spirits or you'll get drunk. Why not try a famous
ghost? Have a slice of maratma Gandhi if you don't mind a bit of spicy.
Why doesn't Casper have legs?
He just tapers off at the bottom.
Don't worry about that.
Just get him in your mouth.
Have a ghost with a bit of lasagna like garlic bread.
Garlic ghosts.
Ghosts.
Bootyful food.
Dead nice food.
Bootyful.
Food to take scare over!
Ghosts!
Who you gonna call?
Ghost takeaway!
Who you gonna call?
Ghost mustard!
Beans on ghost!
I don't wanna see a toast!
I'd rather have a piece of ghost!
Afterlife or afterlife!
Boo-boo-boo-boo!
Have a ghost!
Maybe you would like a ghost pot noodle.
That is a new flavour.
Pot noodle ghost.
Eat that all up nice.
Have a ghost.
Oh, have some ghost on toast.
No, I said things on ghost.
No, ghost on toast is a different one.
Have a ghost toasty.
In a bubble sandwich maker.
Ghosty toasty.
Have ghost for a salad
Have ghost sweets
Sweet ghost
Oh a lovely sweet ghost
Ghost
Have a ghost
Ed's food
Have a ghost
Ray's food
Ed and Ray's food
Ed and Ray's food
Food
Ghost
The end of it now
Three two one
Ghost
Ghosts
Right so Ed Yeah all right so ed yeah oh shit we're driving me and you are driving i can't drive no but
you're in a passenger seat all right and i'm driving it's late at night on a windy road
right and oh got the headlights on normal beam and I go oh I'm going to pop them on
full beam for a bit
yeah
slow motion
right
beams go on
all trees by the
side of the road
and they're all
hanging over it
and they're all
creepy
headlights go on
there's somebody
in the middle of the road
what on earth is that
we get closer and closer
what is that in the road
oh my god
it's a woman
she spins round
it's Floella Benjamin
no shit that don't It's Floella Benjamin.
No, shit.
That dome.
It's Floella Benjamin.
Genuinely.
Just staring at you. Is it?
Just staring at you.
And you look to the driver's side
and I've just gone.
Oh, fuck.
I've vanished.
What am I going to do?
And the car just comes to a slow stop
and Floella Benjamin just climbs upon a bonnet.
Oh, fucking hell.
Gets right into the windscreen.
Dome.
And she's just banging on the windscreen.
Bang, bang, bang.
Bang, bang, bang.
And you're going, no, stop it, stop it, stop it.
Bang, bang, bang.
And you see a little crack.
Oh, no.
In the windscreen.
It's still banging and banging and banging.
And she reaches behind and gets umpty, right?
And she's hitting the top of the car with umpty.
But then later on, when the police arrive,
they find out it was your head.
That feature would come
through the round window.
You're scared of
Floella Benjamin?
I'm terrified of
Floella Benjamin.
I'm going to find this out
this week.
I wasn't.
I had lots of black friends
when I was little.
I never mentioned black people.
Don't say you're
cutting this out.
Don't say you just
cut that out.
What was that about?
What was that about?
You can't just say
you mentioned
Floella Benjamin.
They suddenly start saying
I had lots of black friends. You cut out an entire What's that, man? You can't just mention Florella Benjamin. They'll suddenly start saying...
Suddenly say, I had lots of fun.
Oh, Ray, you cut out an entire discussion.
What was that?
But anyway, go on.
Right.
I'll let that slide, but...
Right.
Go on.
Why are you scared of Florella Benjamin?
Because she's got really big eyes,
and she used to have a pineapple on her head.
She didn't have a pineapple on her head.
Well, it looked like a pineapple.
Well, why is that scary?
Because it's got big hair. The rude holic's scary as well. No, I liked him. Well, why? What's the difference? He didn't't have a pineapple on her head. Well it looked like a pineapple. Well why is that scary? Because like big heads. Did Rude Hollett scare you as well? No I liked
him. Well why? What's the difference? He didn't really have a pineapple. He just had dreads.
So what's the, what, Jazzy B? Did he scare you? I don't know who Jazzy B is. I mean there's
a trend going through all these people. Right. Yeah dreadlocks. And I don't know because
Rude Hollett didn't scare me and I don't know who Jazzy B is but Floella Benjamin scared
me. Could you say as well that Ed is genuinely
scared of Floella Benjamin?
Yeah, no, I really am.
We were watching a programme
about kids TV the other night
and she suddenly came on
about PlaySkill.
Yeah, suddenly as well.
That's the problem with her.
She's sneaking.
You acted like it was a Dalek
and you were four.
Yeah.
But it is deep-rooted.
I think it's probably
since I was about three or four
I was scared of her
on the television.
I think she's just really
overbearing as a woman.
So if she was a man you'd have no problem with her?
No, as a person, she's overbearing.
So you're saying that if Luella Benjamin...
She's got eyes like tits.
You're saying that if Luella Benjamin was a white man,
you'd have no problem with her at all?
No, I've never said that.
But because she's a black woman,
you're scared of her?
She's got big eyes and she's overbearing.
And that's all it is.
And I do find her terrifying.
Surely there's something from your childhood that you find scary.
Yeah, but not just a normal person.
Yeah, but I find her scary, I'm sorry.
Like, some people find Davros scary.
Yeah, but he's a monster.
Yeah, but still, you might look back and see the actor
and you might be scared of him, even if he's just having a chat in real life.
I don't think you would.
If you saw whatever his name is, Roger Delgado.
Roger DeCorse.
Roger Delgado.
And you saw him, you'd be scared of him.
Was he?
No, he wasn't Dan Ross, he was the master.
The master, then.
Who's Dan Ross now?
Gillian Bleach.
Shockerly Peter, isn't he?
Yeah.
Shockerly Peter.
That's how I know that he's West Ham fan.
He's brilliant, by the way.
Yeah, he's great.
He's very, very good. Anyway. There isn't it? Choc-A-Pierre, the title of his West End thing. He's brilliant, by the way. Yeah, he's great. He's very, very good.
Anyway,
there isn't,
no,
the thing that I can
remember scaring me
as a child was
I watched American
Wealth in London
and there's a bit
where he has a dream
sequence and all
these Nazi monsters
come in and one
cuts his throat
and that stayed with
me to the point
where I had a dream
that night that
there was just a
dismembered hand.
Oh, I like how you've
had time to think about it.
It was crawling up.
It's a black woman
that scares me
and now it's Nazis
that scare you.
No, no, no.
How liberal
are you trying to be?
It's not...
It's not...
You go,
oh, well,
a black woman scares you.
It's Nazis that scare me.
Yeah.
I'll tell you what scares me.
The concept of prejudice.
Yeah.
One of the things
that very much scares me
What?
is Adolf Hitler.
You know you were saying
the other day
you're scared of
Nelson Mandela?
No, I didn't!
I was thinking about that
the other day.
I'm scared of Adolf Hitler.
Horrible, horrible,
nasty man.
But you're scared
of Nelson Mandela.
It's weird.
Again, sticking with
the trend, isn't it?
But that night
after seeing
American Wealth in London
I jumped a dismembered hand
crawled up my body
so remember it very vividly crawled up my body.
I still remember it very vividly. Right.
Crawled up my body and cut my throat with its nails.
Oh, God.
And I can still remember the feeling of that.
That is horrible.
Worst ever nightmare I've ever had.
Yeah, it's horrible, that.
Yeah, horrible, isn't it?
But, no, I am scared of Floella Benjamin,
and I'm sure she's a very nice lady in real life.
I do apologise.
If we do ever meet, I will run away screaming,
but if you're listening to this now, you'll know why.
She'll think it's because she's a black lady this now, you'll know why. She'll think
it's because she's a black lady.
No, she won't. Why would she think that?
Because of the way I'm going to edit it.
Your mum didn't make it onto the news.
She didn't, no, I'm sorry. So she clearly doesn't listen to the podcast.
No, well, I told you she didn't. Well, why's she being such
a rude bitch? I'm sorry I don't know it.
I beg your pardon?
I know it's your mum but why'd you be such a bitch about it?
I beg your pardon?
Ray Jemima Peacock.
You do not use language like that about my mother.
Mate, I know it's your mum but she's being such a fucking bitch.
I beg your pardon?
She's being a fucking bitch.
Racer for Joseph Mugabe.
You are a...
I wish that was me, mate.
I'm bloody looking like Racifer Joseph Mugabe.
You're a potty-mouthed little dictator.
There's another series we should write.
The thing about Mugabe, right,
he's been so demonised.
We should re-humanise him
as a lovely little cartoon character.
He's a potty man.
We should make him two foot tall and a proper little round little man.
He just goes around trying to do nice things.
But he just keeps getting so wound up.
He accidentally kills a load of people.
But anyway, stop trying to distract me because your mum is still a biatch.
I beg your pardon.
She is, mate.
If she doesn't listen to the podcast, she's a bitch, mate.
What?
And what's happened now is, is she's ruined the chart.
What?
There you go.
James Turner up the top, our manager.
He's all coloured in.
Yeah.
Steve Bennett there, all coloured in.
Yeah.
Anne Gamble, your mum.
Fuck all, mate.
Nothing.
Right.
Which means that's the end of the chart.
That's it?
Can't we just do another person?
No, that's the chart.
Well done, James.
Thank you, James.
Well done, Steve Bennett.
Thank you, both of you.
Thanks, Steve Bennett.
Yeah.
Fuck you, Anne Gamble. Oh. Fuck you and all you stand for. Right Bennett. Thank you both of you. Thanks, Steve Bennett. Yeah. Fuck you, Anne Gamble.
Oh.
Fuck you and all you stand for.
Right.
You've only ever done one good thing in your life.
Yeah.
Is it, mate?
You've only done one good thing in your life.
What?
You.
Oh, thanks, mate.
But I'm still angry with you.
Well, that's because I know you've got a thing with her.
What?
You and your mum.
Right, we're not doing this.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no, yeah.
And don't mention that time that you were in a fanny.
Oh, no. We mustn't mention the time that Ed was in his own mum's funny.
Don't mention that.
Right, well, I happen to know that you have been in your mum's funny.
That isn't true.
I was cesarean.
The only reason you are here is because you love your dad's spunk on some eggs.
Right, right. I know something about you. By the way, I wasn't even cesarean. That on some eggs. Right. Right.
I know something about you.
By the way, I wasn't even a caesarean.
That was a trick.
Yeah.
My brother was, though.
Right.
Right.
Here's something that I know about you.
Right.
One day, right, you were living in your dad's balls.
That's because you were a gay incest.
You lived in your dad's balls.
And you were just happily just
you were there
in like loads of liquid
just swanning about
going
oh I love being in a man's balls
I love it
I love it
I love it
I always enjoy being in a man's balls
oh
and then one of the other people
that lived there went
oh good on that pipe there
that is the penis
and you go
oh
oh lovely I love, I want to go in my dad's penis, so Ed was going, oh, look at me dancing in
my dad's penis, that's what I love doing, dancing, I love it, I love dancing in my dad's
penis, oh, look how close to the edge I'm getting.
Oh, look how close.
Oh, shit.
And then you fell.
And there's other ones there as well.
And you're going, I fell in this.
I don't know what this is.
I don't like this.
This isn't my dad's genitals.
And somebody else went, it's all right.
Don't worry.
You're in your mum's fanny.
And you're going, oh, that's brilliant.
Oh, I can't believe I am in my own mum's fanny finally once and for all.
And I'm allowed.
And you're in there. You're doing body popping and kissing the walls.
Because you're not... And you're rubbing yourself against the walls.
Going, oh, I love being in my mum's fanny.
I love it.
I love it.
And your dad's penis kept banging in the back of your head as well.
That was still moving in and out of it.
And so you're going,
Oh, my dad's penis is touching me in the face.
And I'm rubbing it in my mum's fanny wall.
Rubbing it in.
And then nine months later,
out you popped and never mentioned it again.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
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 Seidhausen
the Peacock and Gamble podcast
is a ready production
hosted by
chortle.co.uk
see you next week
I couldn't think of one for W
but I think I got away with it