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Welcome to the Peacock and Gamble podcast.
You know, they can say what they want about you and me, Ed Gamble.
Can they, Ray Peacock?
Yes, but they can't say we're not grafters.
Yeah, we are grafters.
Yeah, welcome to the Peacock and Gamble podcast.
And we are recording this right in the middle of rehearsal.
We have stopped rehearsing to do another project, this one.
So how about that?
We are at the open coal face.
Yeah, we are like miners.
It's like we are miners and we are chipping away at coal all day, all day.
Hanging onto a bit of a cliff, chipping away at coal with our legs dangling.
Yet we have stopped halfway through to record a podcast. Yeah, we've stopped recording a podcast from dangling off a cold with our legs dangling. Yet we have stopped halfway through to record a podcast.
Yeah, we've stopped to record a podcast
from dangling off the cliff with our legs hanging down.
And I don't care what you say,
it might sound like it is a collection of deleted scenes.
Right?
It might sound like that, but it's not.
It's not.
We are recording it all today.
We're just in a bit of a collage-y mood.
Yeah, exactly.
In our heads.
So if you think this sounds like,
oh, hang on a minute,
they've just used all the old shit that they were going to use in other ones. No, no. It's not that. We are grafters, exactly. 60. Yeah, hello, welcome to it. Yeah, and in episode 60, we are going to be doing all new stuff. Yeah. All new stuff, aren't we? What's happening in the news to prove it? In the news, there is a war. Is that true or not? I don't know, I don't know. Oh. But even by the time this comes out, the news will have changed, won't it? Oh, yeah. The war's finished. The war's finished. Congratulations, give everyone a medal. Even the baddies. Yeah. Come on. Yeah. Let's all play along.
So we are, in truth, we are going to just use some old deleted scenes.
Yeah.
In this one, because we're very busy.
But it's good, though.
It's good shit.
Oh, it's good.
It's all good shit, mate.
Yeah.
But we're in the middle of rehearsal still.
I know that the emergency broadcast was ages ago.
Yeah.
Although there is another one coming up.
So please don't think that we're going to stop going on about the emergency broadcast.
We're not.
Because there's another one.
Three more. 24th of March. So come on the 24th going on about the emergency broadcast. We're not. Because there's another one. We've got three more.
24th of March.
So come on the 24th of March if you like.
Yeah, please.
Kingsplace.co.uk.
That's where you can get tickets for.
And the first one, I think you will agree, was brilliant.
Yeah.
That was amazing.
The way we learnt it.
We definitely learnt it, didn't we?
The way we definitely learnt it by the time the show came on.
We've been stupid busy as well.
I've been up Liverpool. I've been up Liverpool.
I've been up Bristol.
Have you?
How was that?
Yeah, fine.
Yeah, nice gigs.
Yeah.
There for the weekend, weren't you?
Yeah.
I was up Liverpool for the weekend.
Yeah.
Fucking idiots.
I don't mean Liverpool.
I mean like the people that were there.
Yeah.
Some were from Liverpool.
Some weren't from Liverpool.
Yeah.
The most threatening one I got.
You know that I sometimes say on stage, that's the weirdest thing that's ever happened to me.
Yeah.
This is all new, by the way, we haven't just cut in a deleted
scene. This is a deleted scene now, this is
the new bit. But we won't be saying that in the middle of
all the other new bits. No, don't worry about that.
We're going to stop saying it in the new new bits.
But this is a new new new
new bit. You know that I often say on stage
oh that's the weirdest thing that's ever happened to me.
And I say it like a tick, I can't help
myself saying that if something weird happens in the room.
And audiences like that because they go, oh, maybe it is.
Yeah, yeah.
But genuinely, on Saturday night.
Yeah.
And it wasn't really funny.
Right.
It was just really, really sinister.
Right.
What happened, right, this guy in the audience, he said his name was George Rainey.
Right.
That's what he said his name was, by the way.
That's not me making up a name.
Right.
So if you can find him, by all means do.
Right.
George Rainey is what he said his name was. With his wife, who I think was called Janet. Janet Rainey. Right. So if you can find him, by all means do. Right. George Rainey is what he says his name was.
He was with his wife, who I think was called Janet.
Janet Rainey.
Right.
And he was an American gentleman.
What sort of American?
Well, he had a weird voice, sort of a mix between Scouse and American.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It transpired that he said he was born in Florida, grew up in California, and then moved
to Hyten.
Right.
In Liverpool, right?
Then asked his name, and he said, George Rainey.
I went, oh, come on, what's your name?
You just thought of what the weather was
And just said it quick
Yeah
I said give me some ID
And he passed forward a card
That was from the American government
That said George Ray
And the American Air Force
Yeah
And then he passed me another card
Which is another Air Force thing
Yeah
And then another card
And then he passed me
In total six cards
Right
He just kept passing them forward
Yeah
Right kept passing them forward
Right
Yeah
And I had them all in my hand
And I'm like this is ridiculous
I've got so many cars.
And then he suddenly stood up and went, give them back.
Right, this is the beginning of the show by the way.
Yeah, yeah.
Give them back.
I went, what, what?
His wife stood up, give them him back.
And I went, I didn't pick your pocket.
You gave me these things, right?
And then he went, and this, listen to this.
You have three seconds to comply that I'm taking them off you one
right
and the audience
went deathly quiet
they were really scared
and then I just went
I can't
I can't give them
your back
because I need to know
what happens at three
I've got to know
the audience laughing at that
no not at all
not in any way
it was silent
and then one woman at the front went,
please give him back, I'm really scared.
Oh, God.
Right.
So I give him him back.
He sat down, utter silence, and I went,
right, should we have our first act done?
You brought the first act done?
I had to.
I'd done like 25 minutes.
I had to, and I was really apologetic,
and I brought him on.
And it was still like touch and go.
It would have been awful comparing,
but if I'd have stayed on longer, that would have made it even worse.
And then I won it back, but God, it was horrible. During the first act, George Rainey just stood
up in the middle of the room, stayed stood up for about two minutes. Security went over
and they went, what are you doing? And he went, I'm waiting for my wife. And then his
wife stood up and they both walked out, never to be seen again.
That's mental.
I know. How terrified is that? He might have had a gun or a plane.
I think he was probably just mental, mate.
He had all the cards.
Yeah, but mental people can have cards.
Yeah, I suppose he might have made on the motorway on the way.
Yeah. At the services.
Do you know anything nice happened at your gigs?
No, everyone laughed. I wish my gigs would just
go like that for a bit.
I'd just go on and have a talk with everyone.
Maybe then I will get a venue for Edinburgh. Welcome to the show! Hoes, they're hoes Hoes, they're hoes
I said that each of them
Hoes
You're doing hoe activities
With hoe tendencies
Hoes are your friends
And hoes are your enemies
With hoe energy
Do what you do
Blue what you blue
Screw what you screw
You're a professional like DJ Clue
Pulling out my coattail
Why do you think you take a hoe to a hotel?
Hotel everybody
Even the mayor
Reach up in the sky for the hoes on land
Come on player
Once a hoe always
And hoes never close their open neck hallways
And here's a hoe cake for you the whole hoe crew
And everybody wants them
Cause hoes gotta eat too
Hoes
Use the hoes
Use the hoes I said that use the hoes Jimmy Hoes Jimmy! Jimmy! Jimmy! Jimmy! Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy!
Jimmy! Jimmy! Jimmy! Jimmy! Jimmy! and give me the boy and put crackers in their bum and hop over it on the bike. Jumped it and hopped over it.
He hopped it.
Bunny hopes are different things.
Alright, sorry mate.
The Peacock and Gamble Podcast.
I've been meaning to ask you for ages.
What?
Are you any relation to Neve Gamble
from the Scream films?
Now, right.
It's Neve Campbell.
Well, are you related to her?
I'm not.
No.
Different surname.
I've been wondering.
How long have you been wondering that?
About 14 years.
Since the first Scream film came out.
No, I'm not.
It's a different surname.
I remember when the name came up on the screen.
I thought, I must ask Ed.
Yeah.
Who I've not met yet.
I must ask him if they're related.
It's different surnames, you see. Neve Gamble. Neve Campbell. You're Ed Gam Ed. Yeah. Who I've not met yet. I must ask him if they're related. It's different surnames, you see.
Niamh Gamble.
Niamh Campbell.
Niamh Red Gamble.
Yeah.
We had a hire car this week, and we took it back today.
Yeah.
And realised it was a bit missing.
Because we took out, it was quite a big car, we took out the...
The wheel at the front.
Yeah, the wheel.
That wheel that makes it turn.
We took that off.
No, we took out...
What would you call it?
I don't even know what it's called.
Like the boot shelf.
Yeah.
Like, but it was...
The shelf.
Yeah, the shelf.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It wasn't really a shelf, was it?
Yeah.
But anyway, you get the idea.
Yeah, it was a shelf.
Yeah, it's sort of like a shelf,
but it's not really a shelf.
But those things in the back of them,
we took that out so we could get more bags in.
Yeah.
And then we took it back to the hire firm today.
Yeah.
And I completely forgot.
Yeah.
And just, we remembered when we got there,
and I went, I was like,
oh, we've not put that fucking thing back in the boot.
And then, because normally I would go,
oh, I've got to drive home and get it.
And I just thought, oh, fuck it.
Yeah, just leave it.
Fuck it.
Let's just go in now.
And if they say, then we'll go, oh, shit, yeah.
Yeah.
So we went back, and the girl come out, and she's all going then we'll go, oh, shit, yeah. Yeah. So we went back.
Girl come out.
She's all going over, filled up her petrol.
Yeah, yeah.
She was like, oh, was that scratch already there?
Yeah, it was, and it was.
And then she got around the boot, and we're going, oh, fuck.
Not a word, not a word.
Went past, it's like, come on, get in.
So basically, if anyone wants to, if anyone needs a boot shelf, right?
Yeah, mate, here's an idea. Don't give the boot shelf away. Right. anyone needs a boot shelf, right? Yeah, mate, here's an idea.
Don't give the boot shelf away.
Right.
Right, what we do, right?
Yeah.
We get a hire car every week, right?
Yeah.
And we've already got a boot shelf.
We take one bit from each car.
Brilliant.
And then by the time, like in a year,
we can build a whole new car,
and that is for free.
In a year, we'd do that, wouldn't we?
Yeah.
So you're saying that in a car, there are 52...
There are just 52 bits. Yeah, well, if'd do that one, wouldn't we? Yeah. So you're saying that in a car, there are 52... There are just 52 bits.
Yeah, well,
if we take big bits,
like,
but if we take a bit
from each car...
And how are we going
to drive a car back
with no bonnet on it?
Well, that's fine.
Or were there no windows
when you got it?
We just say that there
weren't any windows
when you got it,
and it was obviously
because they're see-through,
they thought they were there.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, yeah.
So we can get the windows
easily.
People often get me stuck.
Yeah.
For there being nothing there when it's a window.
That can happen, that, doesn't it?
So I think we could...
Same as just glass generally.
And it is a free car, that.
It's not really a free car, because we'll be spending money on a hire.
Well, how much is a hire for a week?
I mean, all added up.
Yeah.
Probably better off just saving up for our new car.
Because don't forget, what you're not factoring in is labour costs.
We'd do it.
Yeah, putting it together, storage.
Where are we going to put half a car?
Well, the thing is, if we're building the car, we can move your sofa out,
build the car in here, and then we'll have a car in the living room.
Right, that is true.
But at the moment, I'm annoyed that that boot shelf is in my house.
I'm not pleased that I've nicked it.
I don't need it. It's not going to fit in my car, is it? No, I suppose not. What use is that? That's what I'm my house. Right. I'm not pleased that I've nicked it. I don't need it. It's no use.
It's not going to fit in my car, is it?
No, I suppose not.
What use is that?
That's what I'm saying to the business.
Yeah, but imagine it added on to the rest of the car that we're going to build.
I think it's a bit like a cape.
What, the boot shelf?
Yeah, because it pulls out, doesn't it?
Yeah.
There's a cloth thing on it that pulls out.
Make a cape out of it.
I might make a cape out of it.
All right, do it.
Yeah, jobs are good.
They'll probably ring up on Monday, won't they?
Yeah.
And do you think I want a Tuskegee as well?
I'm not related to Alistair Campbell
right
I cannae believe this is the 49th podcast
what are you doing?
Scottish
why?
I cannae believe that
why are you doing Scottish?
I just think
I've not done any acting work for ages
so I think I should just show some of my talents right alright so you can doing Scottish? I just think I've not done any acting work for ages, so I think I should
just show some of my talent.
So you can do Scottish. Imagine I'm a
casting director for a big Hollywood
film. Oh, they wouldn't want Scottish in that.
Hello there, you're right. What? I'm a casting
director for a big film. What?
I'm from, my name's
Paddy Debussy. Right.
Alright, how you doing? Sorry, that's
just me horn going off in my body.
Hey, well covered, mate. Cheers, mate.
That was good because there was a horn, somebody beat an horn
outside. No, it's just the one in Paddy Debussy's
body. I like the way you covered
the extraneous noise
on the podcast. Oh,
that's your liver just driving off.
Right. Hello. welcome to the casting director
suite okay don't worry about
that noise that's just my trainers just ticking
over I'm helping
now as well excuse me I've bought
a pet bird with me
in my head right
so you've come here you want to
show some of your skills we're casting
for many programs right now.
Many programmes.
Many programmes, so we do need to see what you can do in terms of skills, accents, whatever you've got going on.
Alright?
What are you now? What are you being now?
I'm Irish.
Are you sure?
No, don't fucking insult me, son.
No, there's a little bit of Cheryl Cole popping in there.
Don't say that, Simon.
I don't even know what that means.
Right, okay, Paddy Debussy, Paddy Debussy, Pad. Beth allwch chi ei wneud i ni, Ray?
Dwi ddim yn gwybod beth ydych chi'n ei wneud.
Dwi ddim yn gwybod fy mod yn dod yma.
Mae rhywfaint o'ch ymarfer, nid yw hynny'n amgylch.
Mae hyn yn gyflwyniad cyffredin i mi.
Ychydig munud yn ôl i mi fy mhen, roeddwn i ar ffwrdd.
Efallai y byddwch chi'n gallu gweithredu ar y gwaith.
Ie, gallaf wneud hynny.
Ie, gallaf wneud hynny, heb can do that. Alright. I can do that, no problems.
Have you got any cowboy ones coming up?
We do. I'll do the hoof.
We've got a new
cartoon called
Nosy and the Mosey.
And Manfred being the blacksmith in it.
The blacksmith? Yeah, that'd be me. Okay, what voice would
yield for the blacksmith?
Can he believe this horse? Right, we've heard you
Scottish. No, that was country and western.
Country and western, right.
I cannae...
I cannae believe this horse.
Okay, that's really good.
That's a tick next to American.
Put me on the maybes for that one.
All right, maybe for American.
Right.
So what else can you do for us?
Now, we've got a part coming up for a very old...
Sorry, I'm sorry.
My knee just slammed.
So please don't think that that was a door outside slamming.
That was my knee slamming then.
Right, no, that's fine.
So it is.
Right, so now we've got a new part coming up for a very old,
very old Chinese cleaning
lady.
Right. Can you do that for us?
What's the film? What's she going to be in?
No, she's the main part.
Oh, right. It's sort of a live action
Chinese version
of Hong Kong Phoey.
Hong Kong Phoey? Hong Kong Phoey.
Hong Kong Phoey. Hong Kong Phoey. Don't Phoey. Hong Kong Phoey. Hong Kong Phoey.
Don't take the piss.
I would break you.
You do get
threatening every now
and again,
don't you?
I do.
Right,
so I'm
the Chinese.
Old,
Chinese.
Now,
bear in mind
she's very old
and very Chinese.
Right,
again.
So I've got to do that
in my acting?
In your acting,
yes.
Can I have a line to say?
Alright, yes. Okay, here we go. We've got to do that in my acting? In your acting, yes. Can I have a line to say?
Alright, yes.
Okay, here we go.
We've got... Oh, sorry.
Sorry, my balls were just starting up.
Yeah, I would have just
rubbed my wrist for a minute.
Yeah, go on.
Right.
Oh, bloody hell.
Who's left...
Who's left all this rubbish in defiling cabinet?
Right.
Or, and I want a crab sandwich.
Why crab?
Oh, right, because it's a crab.
Right, okay.
It's a Chinese lady.
Yeah, very Chinese.
And she's old.
Yeah.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh. Yeah, very Chinese. And she's old. Yeah. Who's left all this rubbish in the filing cabinet?
I don't want to clap somebody at all.
Right.
No, I think you really nailed that part.
I can't even believe that they've left me there.
You'll definitely be in the running for Sue May.
What other parts would you like me to try out for?
Okay, there's one I think you'd be perfect for.
It's basically in a film about a dog that's been turned into a man.
So what you've got to do is
you can speak the English
but you've got to embody
all the qualities
of a dog who's just been turned into a man.
And the man lives in a
dustbin because he was a dog
and he's got no way of working out
how to get together the money for a flat.
But that's what he has to try and do.
But he lives in a dustbin.
And he can have any accent you want,
whatever you think a dog might have.
Say, actually, I tell you what, he's a schnauzer.
So a German accent would be perfect here.
Okay, so a dog that's turned into a man that's German
and lives in a dustbin.
Here we go with that one.
Don't worry about the revving.
Right.
It's because you're nervous, I know.
I'm going to just leave that ticking over. All. It's because you're nervous, I know.
I'm going to just leave that ticking over.
Alright,
I know you're nervous.
Yeah,
I'll leave.
I'm going to park,
what I'm going to do,
I'm going to,
it's almost like
someone's parked
right close to an house.
I'll just leave in the car,
just ticking over
really loud.
Yeah,
no,
I know,
I know you're nervous,
so I understand
that your engine
is going to be loud.
Yeah,
right.
German,
German.
A German dog turned into a man. Turned into a man, right. Right, German. It says German. A German dog
turned into a man.
Turned into a man.
Right.
It's not quite sure
what's going on
a lot of the time.
I can't believe
that I've been
turned into a man.
I can't believe that.
You've definitely
fucking got that.
Right.
Thank you.
Anyway,
nice meeting you.
Paddy Debussy.
Barry.
Oh, Ray.
Yeah.
Hello.
Hello.
So apparently they are releasing the Star Wars on Blu-ray.
Yeah, they're coming out next year.
The Star Wars are coming out next year.
2011.
I have heard that they are not the updated,
oh no,
they are the updated versions,
not the original
cuts of the Star Wars.
Right,
that normally happens,
yeah.
Yeah,
so I think
it is a different actor
at the end of one of them
than normal.
Oh right,
okay,
so Anakin,
yeah,
Sebastian Shaw
was replaced by Anakin Skywalker,
replaced by Hayden Christensen.
In the Star Wars,
that's right.
That was in Return of the Jedi,
that was.
In the Jedi.
Yeah.
I like the Star Wars. was in Return of the Jedi that was in the Jedi yeah I like the Star Wars I enjoy the
the space elements
right okay yeah
and also
the strip lights
yep
the strip lights
the lightsabers
the lightsabers
are you trying to make friends with me
are you trying to
pardon
are you trying to get in with me
about
have a discussion about Star Wars
but I love the Star Wars
I know you like it as well,
so we can talk about it if you'd like.
Yeah, who's your best character off the Star Wars?
Who?
Vader.
Vader?
Yeah.
Vader?
Vader.
What's his full name?
I don't know.
I call him Vader.
All right, okay.
Why do you like that?
I'm your dad.
Right.
That one.
That bit, yeah.
I'm your dad.
Yeah, I'm your dad.
And then...
Chop your hand off. Chop your hand off, I'm your dad. Chop your hand one. I'm your dad. Yeah, I'm your dad. And then Chop Your Hand Off.
Chop your hand off, I'm your dad.
Chop your hand off, Craig.
Craig?
Craig Skywalker.
Craig Skywalker, yeah, is he your best one?
Yeah.
No, no, Vader is.
Vader's your best one, but you like Craig Skywalker?
I like Craig Skywalker as well in the Star Wars.
Yeah, what other bits of the Star Wars do you like?
Slimer.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's good, isn't he?
Slimer is good.
Yeah.
What did he do?
He goes, oh, get out of my woods, wrong way around. Oh, Yoda. Oh, no. Yoda, isn't he? Slimer is good. Yeah. What did he do? He goes, Oh, get on my words
the wrong way around.
Oh, Yoda.
Oh, no.
Yoda, not Slimer.
Not Slimer.
All right, so Slimer is good.
Slimer, of course,
was in the first
Star Wars Ghostbusters.
Oh, the Ghostbusters.
Yeah.
I like the Ghostbusters.
You do?
What's your best one
out of the Ghostbusters?
I think it is
the Blues Brothers.
The Blues Brothers, yeah.
Yeah.
Just admit that you haven't seen
any of these films.
What?
You've seen the adverts for them.
Yeah.
Because your mum won't let you go to pictures.
Just admit it.
You can't go to pictures on your own
and your mum doesn't want to see the films.
So all she does,
every time a new film comes out,
your mum tapes it on VHS on the adverts
and tells you that's the full film.
Right.
Is that not the full film?
That's not the full film.
They have a thing called a cinema, which is a big building, right, where they have a big screen and they show a lot. It's the full film. Right. Is that not the full film? That's not the full film. They have a thing called a cinema, which is a big
building, right, where they have a big screen
and they show a lot. It's over an hour.
A lot of films are over an hour. The Odeon Sweet Shop?
Yeah, but behind that. Behind it?
Yeah, there's a cinema. What the fuck?
Yeah, there's a big screen.
It's your mum just, it's because your dad left.
Right. And she's having to save money.
She gets child support. She only gets £7 a week.
She has to save money. She can't take it in her pictures, Ed. Right. So she's having to save money. She gets child support. She only gets £7 a week. She has to save money.
She can't take it in a picture, Zed.
Right.
So she's trying her hardest.
Well, I've written a pitch for a film.
Have you?
Yeah.
Didn't we drop that section?
No.
What's your film pitch?
Harry Potter 7.
You've written a pitch for Harry Potter 7?
Yeah.
I'm just getting bored waiting for it to come out.
Now, I've not...
I think I've seen the first Harry Potter.
I'm just letting the listener know you're scrolling on Harry Potters. I'm just letting the listener know
you're scrolling on your phone now.
I'm just getting the film pitch.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because I've been sort of sending it to film people.
How's it going?
Well, I heard that Harry Potter 7's being made.
What?
That's all right, isn't it?
You're doing well there.
Oh, yeah, no, I'm not sure.
Yeah, this is it.
I think it's being made.
All right.
I don't really know a lot about Harry Potter.
I mean, strictly speaking,
I don't think we're even allowed to say Harry Potter. Right, Harry Potter, Harry Potter. I mean, strictly speaking, I don't think we're even allowed to say Harry Potter.
Right, Harry Potter, Harry Potter.
Yeah, I know, but I don't think we're allowed to do that.
Alright, J.K. Rowling.
Harry Potter.
Harry Potter, I believe.
Right.
Harry Potter is the tale of a geeky young lad who can't get to girls at his high school
in Britain, England.
All he does all day is laments his life with his only two friends, the chubby loser Wallace
and pet salmon Wolverine,
who he keeps in his locker,
which is filled with water.
Using some of his knowledge,
he is picked up from one of his beloved science experiments.
But this is all about to change.
In Harry Potter 7,
Harry is about to find out
that the key to his popularity has wheels.
What the fuck are you talking about?
Harry invents what will become to be known as a skateboard, a sort of massive roller skate.
The kids in the school go crazy for this new craze and lose their mind when they see Harry do a flip.
Even Wolverine gets in on the action.
When Harry builds him his own little skateboard for underwater.
Soon all the girls in the school are chasing Harry,
but troubled times lie ahead.
His invention has picked up some unwanted attention
from the business corporation,
headed by the evil Mr Business,
who wants the skateboard all to himself and his big corporation,
which is based in a big glass office in a city.
He sends his minions and henchmen after Harry,
who will have to skate and flip for his
life if he wants to escape the evil grasp
of the gang, led by Richard Blackwood.
He can't do it, he's playing donkey in the track.
Kids and adults alike are bound
to be skated away by this emotional
and fun-filled coming-of-age tale.
It's the sequel that everyone's been waiting
for, starring Ray Peacock as Harry Potter,
Rick Waller as Wallace,
Justin Timberlake as Mr Business,
Richard Blackwood as King Henchman,
Ed Gamble as the voice of Wolverine the Salmon,
and Daniel Radcliffe from Equus as the headmaster of the school.
That'd be lovely as well, wouldn't it?
I mean, that as a fun pitch is lovely.
Yeah.
Why have you felt
the need to call it
Harry Potter 7?
Because I just thought
it's popular Harry Potter,
isn't it?
Yeah,
but I think that'd be
a new franchise on its own.
Do you think?
I don't know why
you're trying to skim off
Rowling and that.
No,
well,
I just think maybe
if we'd had a base of fans
then it might work.
I think that
won't get made now
because you've called it
Harry Potter 7.
Right.
So they go,
this has got nothing to do with Harry Potter.
Right.
And they put it in the bin.
They won't even read it.
No, the main guy's called Harry Potter.
You can't really do that, though.
Why?
It just happens to be called Harry Potter.
I know, but it's traded under someone's name, isn't it?
It's traded under another thing.
It doesn't exist, Harry Potter.
What?
You can't trade under a name that doesn't exist.
It does exist, though.
It's a trademark.
It doesn't, mate.
It's made up.
Idiot.
It's a trademark name. It's made up. It's a trademark name. It's It's made up Idiot It's a trademark It's made up
It's a trademark name
It's made up
Oh yeah
It's Barry Armus
Oh that's real
What was that
That's a spell
From Harry Potter
See I mean
You're really
You're leaving us open
To so many legal
Right
Challenges here
By just essentially repeating
Right
First off you're passing off
Harry Potter as your own idea
And using the name Harry Potter
Then you're using actual words from
the books and that.
Yeah, Muggle.
Yeah, there's another
one there.
Am I an E-Granger?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We'll get sued.
Gandalf.
She does sue
Ben Gandalf as well.
Yeah.
Gandalf the Headmaster.
Yeah.
She does sue people
joking around
or there might be
Warner Brothers
you assume
but the people
involved in Harry Potter
they do sue people.
Sorry.
Do you want to
take it all back?
Yeah, sorry.
I've changed the name of the film now.
What's it now called?
Lord of the Rings.
Did you ever, ever hear a fool
That raises From you
Didn't really say
The one thing
That
You would really
Make that for me
Or drink Tell you what, mate
I'm genuinely working proper hard at the moment
Yeah
I'm doing gigs
Got this cast in for next week
I've got to learn lines for that
Yeah, well I'm going to out-view it now, aren't I?
Yeah, cheers, mate
I'm doing the keynote
The presentation for the
Yeah
Broadcast, which is a big screen thing
Yeah
That'll be going on at the same time as the show.
I've also been learning Pixelmator,
which is a graphics
programme to make some of the graphics for it.
Really hard. Not user-friendly
at all. Doing the
pilot thing that we filmed, I've been working
on that and putting that together and just
knackered, mate. You look really nice, though.
You don't look tired. Cheers, mate. I am tired.
I've been doing exercises. You don't look tired.
You look really nice.
Oh cheers mate.
I've been doing exercises on a treadmill until it blew up.
Yeah you made a treadmill blow up didn't you?
Yeah that's.
I'll tell you what.
That is a depressing part of someone's life.
It really is.
It's like.
It's the sort of thing you normally see in like the Beano.
In the Bass Street Kids.
Where like Fatty just stood on it.
And it's all broke.
Just sparks everywhere. But that happened for real wasn't it? Yeah. faulty like it wasn't because i'm fat was it faulty it
felt like it no it is changing it today yeah but it was expensive as well when they book they're
changing it today when that man comes around and picks up i'm hiding and sees you no it's not they
go the treadmill has broken mate me and you are going in the other room when they come and deliver
it i think i think you you should put on some really tight, like, lycra jogging stuff
and be really puffed out when you're rising.
Treadmill broke.
It broke.
It broke.
And have a big cream bun in one hand.
Well, anyway, the point of the change, it was a faulty one, but it felt horrible.
It set my house on fire.
Sparks went everywhere.
Oh, but the nice bit about that was when I said it on Twitter
everyone made a nice joke
about it
did they
everyone was going
oh feel the burn
fuck off
my fucking house is on fire
that's good
feel the burn
there must be some more there
shut up
it was terrifying
no keep going
because I'm thinking
and I got electric shock
off it as well
it was horrible
you got electric shock
that's another angle
I could take
shocking
absolutely shocking
that is
that's a good one but anyway the point is listen jog on some fire yeah that's another angle I could take. Oh, shocking. Shocking. Oh, absolutely shocking, that is. That's a good one.
But anyway, the point is, listen.
Jog on some fire.
Yeah, that's good.
Somebody said, oh, that'll teach you to go for a run with petrol in one hand and a blowtorch in the other.
That's a run, mate.
That makes no sense at all.
Not only was I pissed off about my house being on fire, I was pissed off about my house being on fire.
That's making a good joke.
Someone said, that'll teach you to exercise by setting fire to your pets they just want to say something i know bless them
anyway point is um when i am slim i am gonna get all love i'm gonna get girls will fancy me then
gonna get all love and girls all girls will fancy me because i don't i know that you've never had a
girlfriend right but in my teenage years in my years, I had girls that loved me and that.
Love you, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, God, what are you holding?
I was reminded of this.
Ray, what are you holding?
Because when I did my taxi the other week,
I was writing through just some files and stuff,
and I found some old love letters.
Oh, and you're going to exploit those now.
I'm going to exploit some of those.
For cheap comedy.
I also found some school reports,
which is why I've talked about how much work I do.
Right.
Because these school reports seem to think that I didn't.
These school reports seem to think that I wasn't hard working.
For example, Mr Swindler's,
who I've just added on Facebook.
Mr Swindler?
Yeah, it's great.
Who you just added on Facebook?
He was my form tutor.
He was brilliant.
Listen to this.
The general theme of Ian's...
Ian's my real name, by the way.
Yeah.
I know you're all getting confused. That's my real name. The general theme of Ian's... Ian's my real name, by the way. Yeah. I know you're all getting confused.
Yeah.
The general theme of Ian's report
indicates that he cannot afford
to waste any time
between now and summer.
He has the ability to do well
and he should now match this
with a determined effort.
He should look at English
to see the results
that solid application can bring
and his final grades
should then be improved.
His lively, extrovert personality
may have to suffer
a certain amount of self-discipline.
Now, imagine if it had.
Yeah. Imagine if it had yeah
imagine if it i don't be doing a podcast now i won't be all famous as a comedian
i'd be oh mr boring mr boring all working in office doing counting
for my living don't think you would i think you'd be dead yeah i'll probably be dead by now i'll
tell you what i'll just take my grades uh maths c5 it's not very good, is it? C5? What's that? C for effort,
5 for achievement.
Awful.
English,
A2.
That's pretty good, mate.
Well done.
English again, A2.
That means you tried hard
but weren't quite the best.
His written work
is often original
and shows care and thought.
Spoken English effort grade,
A.
So take that
all you radio stations
that won't take us on.
An A. I'm an A in speaking. So take that, all you radio stations that won't take us on. An A.
I'm an A in speaking.
So there.
Art, B4.
That's bollocks.
She can fuck off with art because I was miles better than that art.
I don't know why she's slagging me off.
Ian has worked much better this year.
B4.
But I've worked much better.
But he still needs to take more care in the quality of his finished work.
Why are you getting angry about this now?
For the examination.
Well, this is relatively recent.
It's 1989, this.
That's not recent.
For the examination, he must prepare his ideas more fully.
That's 22 years ago.
So that he can make as much use of the examination time as possible.
A very pleasant student.
She fancied me, yeah.
Right, it's 22 years ago.
Physics, straight to the point.
44% night off revision.
Biology. Oh, this enough revision. Biology.
Oh, this pisses me off.
C3.
Ian demonstrated only too clearly in his recent examination paper
that he has the ability to do well this summer.
However, he is far too inconsistent at the present.
And this, I fear, is due to a rather poor attitude to hard work.
What?
This is Mr. Scutt said this.
They could see you now.
Yeah, a rather poor attitude to hard work.
No, I just find your lessons boring. Yeah, Mr. Scutt said this they could see you now yeah I'd rather pour attitude to hard work no I just find your lessons
boring
yeah
Mr. Scutt
Scutty
your teacher's had
really weird names
Swindlehurst and Scutt
Mrs. Moffat
C5 geography
right and I got on with her
yeah
you sat on her toffer
didn't you
yeah
Ian is an able pupil
but wastes a lot of time
his examination performance
was mediocre
he could do much better
next time
but would have to work
very hard from now on
yeah fuck
do you want to just
kick me in the balls?
Punch me in the face? I mean, send this
to my mum and dad. French, C4.
Ian has the ability to reach a pass grade in this
subject. However, he must be prepared to learn his
grammar notes thoroughly and to acquire a wider
vocabulary in French. Yeah, what for?
Why? What for? No reason.
Physical education, right? Fat lad.
Yeah. A. This is more like it.
A for effort, though. No, just A.
It's just A.
So they haven't even written an achievement number.
Ian is a keen and enthusiastic pupil who always gives his best.
The most valuable member of the school rugby team.
Thank you.
Most valuable?
What, in sort of a way?
Right.
If they sold you to a human market, they'd get more than tuppence.
You'd be in our border.
I took art at A level. Did you? No, I'll tell you you now i threw me a levels because i wanted to go to drama school not teacher training
right so why did that i got accepted at a teacher training college okay i had to get certain grades
right so it's very important i don't get them grades right right is that true very important
and i'm not saying to anyone who's taking their railroad, please don't do that. Well, no, no, no. What I'd say to people is apply to places that you want to go.
Yeah.
I felt a bit strong-armed into it a bit, you know.
So that's what it was.
And then it got to a point where I was like,
no, I'm going to do what I want to do.
So I had to make sure I didn't get in a jail college
where I'd been accepted.
So I didn't.
And I just didn't.
I did it quite cleverly.
Typewriting.
I don't even remember taking that.
Typewriting?
To prove it, she's typed it out, the report.
All the others are written and the typewriting report is typed.
That's amazing.
I bet she's dead now. She was an old lady.
He will be entered for the examinations at ULCI Stage 1 and RCA, RSA Stage 1,
which he's capable of passing.
I did.
You did a section, didn't you?
I did.
And also, you've got to sign this.
This says,
Would parents please sign and return this slip
to show the report has been received?
If you were to come out on the report,
please do so in the space provided.
So if you could...
Is your school still a school?
If you could sign this for me now.
Is your school still a school?
Yeah, I think so.
Can we sign that and send it back?
That'd be hilarious.
My university isn't.
That's finished.
Did you run on it?
You're a twat, mate. Anyway, here's a bit we're waiting for the love letters here we go now i've got here two letters of love yeah right and it's written by you no no no no oh no these are
ones that girls sent to me you're hang on yeah you're gonna read out love letters that other
people sent to you i was 13 when i got them too right right and she was as well i'm not sure this
is on both of them hurt me in the long run, so...
So fuck them, you know.
Yeah.
If I can't use what happened in our relationships...
Yeah.
...to then later on essentially further my career...
Yeah.
...then what was the point in having the relationship?
Well, how do you think this is going to...
This bit now, specifically...
Kiss and tell, kiss and tell.
...is going to further your career?
Kiss and tell.
Do you think you're going to get picked up off this?
I will get picked up off this.
I will get loads of money off to sun.
And a show called Ray's Love Letters.
Yeah, let's see why not.
These two here, same girl.
Yeah.
And they're lovey ones.
Lovey ones, yeah.
This one here, sadly, is breakup letter.
From a girl?
From a girl.
Right, okay.
Now you might notice on it, it has got Blu-Tack in the corners.
Right.
That's because I had it at my wall for ages.
That's how much I loved it.
Right, okay.
Right, I think we should do love, love.
Love, love. Break up. Love, love, break up. And then end the podcast. Yeah, that's often what happens in it right okay right I think we should do love love love love
breakup
love love breakup
and then end the podcast
yeah that's often
what happens in real life
isn't it
yeah love love breakup
love love breakup
sometimes there isn't
an happy ending
no
sometimes there isn't
and by the way
the breakup letter
wasn't from the same girl
as the loved ones
so I won't mention names
what I will say about
the girl who wrote these letters
is as far as I hear
she's now an alcoholic
she's wasting her life and I think she had her kids took off right is that true far as I hear, she's now an alcoholic. She's wasting her life
and I think she had her kids
took off.
Ray, is that true?
If memory serves.
Right, you can't say that.
Why?
You can't leave that in.
Why?
She hurt me, mate.
She hurt me.
Yeah, I got my own back
in the end.
Oh, I got my own back
around social services.
I told them.
Put whiskey in her flask.
Yeah, I rang them.
I said, she's drunk.
Right, here you go.
Here's one love letter.
Ian, I will love you always
and I hope you feel the same way. Oh, piss when she's drunk. Right, here you go, here's one love letter. Ian, I will love you always and I hope
you feel the same way.
Oh,
piss when she's writing that.
And I hope
you feel the same way.
Listen to this,
I don't know
where this came from.
I also hope
that we'll be married
on August the 14th,
1998.
What?
It seems awfully specific.
Yeah, it does.
Yeah, and luckily we weren't.
But footnotes were that good.
That's amazing.
I love you.
Please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please, please,
please love me half as much as I love you.
Right.
There's another letter she sent me.
Wait till you hear this.
Dear Ian, how are you?
I am fine.
This sounds like a Mrs Fraser letter.
Doesn't it?
Because I think that's where I get that joke from. The Raji joke. Yeah, how are you? I am fine. This sounds like a Mrs Fraser letter. Doesn't it? I think that's where I get that joke from.
The Raji joke.
Yeah, how are you?
I am fine.
Because there are people that are idiots who do write letters like that.
How are you?
I am fine.
How are you?
Me?
I am fine.
It's normally to write in French.
Anyway, what are you going to buy tomorrow?
I want a tape.
You're going shopping the next day, I take it.
I put my knob in this.
I want a tape.
Some cards for my blank tapes and a present for Gareth.
I love you!
Two exclamation marks.
Why do you love me?
Good question, Baba.
In my opinion, I am ugly, too short, and last but not least, a moody bitch.
Right?
I love you because...
Now, wait.
By the way, all these things are true, by the way.
Right.
I love you because...
You're masculine.
Sexy. Funny. I love you because you're masculine, sexy, funny,
you have a good personality,
you're kind and loving,
and most of all, because you're crazy enough to love me.
That's arrogant.
Well, then compliments,
and then the main thing she likes is that I like her.
Fucking bitch.
So I'm just saying.
Very loving, mate, very loving. I'm just saying very lovely mate very lovely I'm just saying
that I
you're masculine
I think I remember that
why didn't you marry
this girl
on August 14th
1998
I have no idea
what were you doing
on August 14th
1998
Christ knows
but I wish there was
a way of finding out
I just don't
she didn't go there
and wait for me
maybe that's what
started her off
on her drinking
this is so bad
this is my favourite one.
So I was going out with this girl.
Yeah.
I liked her.
Yeah.
She smoked, which I didn't like,
because I wasn't a smoker at that point.
But she was a laugh, and she was silly,
and she was sexy, and funny, and all the rest of it.
And masculine.
And a good personality.
Yeah.
And most of all, she was crazy enough to love me.
No, this girl, she was really, really sound.
She was talented girl, that, but she was dead funny.
I found a letter off this girl recently.
The beginning of it was,
thank you for your letter, which you stuffed in my fag packet.
At least you didn't write it on the cigs this time.
Which I thought was a nice way of demonstrating our relationship.
It was only a little casual thing, but it was a good laugh.
But this is how she dumped me.
Right.
And when I got this letter, I thought then,
I should probably have married this girl.
Right.
Because to be able to write that is incredible
as a parting shot
but anyway
this was the final letter
I got off her
Dear Ian
Your letter that you gave me
last night
only emphasises to me
the great injustice
I did to myself
when going out with you
Yes it is over
and believe me
I will never
degrade myself again
You are a filthy
lowdown uncouth
gutter snipe
I cannot believe
it has only been four
days but they've been the best four days of my life we part sincerely yours
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 which is performed by Frank Seidlissen. The Peacock and Gamble podcast is a ready production
hosted by Chortle.co.uk.
See you next week.
Ha ha ha ha!
Oh!
Oh, what a laugh we've had today.
Oh, all that new stuff we've talked about.
All that new stuff we've talked about, which we're not sure what it was yet.
Yeah, but it was brilliant, I what it was yet yeah but it was
brilliant I remember
it
brilliant but that
was brilliant
I've laughed a memory
right out of my head
yeah I forgot what
we did over the last
hour
yeah
to record it
to edit it down
to around about
half an hour
so thank you for
listening to the show
we'll see you next
week for episode 61
I know there are
some people on
like Twitter and
stuff like that
who last week
thought there
wasn't a beer show
this week
because I said it
was the final show before the emergency broadcast it was and it was that, who last week thought there wasn't going to be a show this week. Yeah, silly Wally. Because I said it was the final show before the emergency broadcast.
It was.
And it was that.
But it wasn't the final ever show.
It was the final show before the emergency broadcast.
I mean, maybe read beyond the first four words.
You might be able to work it out.
You don't have to get yourself all upset first thing on a Monday morning.
But thanks for listening.
We shall see you again next week.
Bye.
Bye then.
Thank you, Ray. Hey, let's have a little kiss quick. No, naughty. We shall see you again next week. Bye. Bye then. Thank you Ray.
Hey let's have a
little kiss quick.
No naughty.
Alright let's
edit it off and do
it.
What got
off Ed?