Best British Comedy
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Well, extending the topic to comedies (because I can't pick just one):
Coupling - sophisticated and very funny. Captain Subtext rules.
Black Books - surreal and has Bill Bailey in it.
The League Of Gentlemen - very, very dark but an extraordinary range of characters performed by only 3 men.
The Royale Family - very 'council' and what the majority of the British are really like.
The Pub Landlord - only shown on Sky before we moved to NZ, but was very blokish. Al Murray is very funny.
One Foot In The Grave - aren't old people strange.
Dinnerladies - I have to mention this as Julie (my wife) wouldn't forgive me if I didn't.
I can't watch The Office. It's way too realistic. I find myself making excuses to leave the room rather than laughing.
Tom
Coupling - sophisticated and very funny. Captain Subtext rules.
Black Books - surreal and has Bill Bailey in it.
The League Of Gentlemen - very, very dark but an extraordinary range of characters performed by only 3 men.
The Royale Family - very 'council' and what the majority of the British are really like.
The Pub Landlord - only shown on Sky before we moved to NZ, but was very blokish. Al Murray is very funny.
One Foot In The Grave - aren't old people strange.
Dinnerladies - I have to mention this as Julie (my wife) wouldn't forgive me if I didn't.
I can't watch The Office. It's way too realistic. I find myself making excuses to leave the room rather than laughing.
Tom
"so marvelously had it been constructed, that from a hundred feet away the tiny crack between wood and stone was completely invisible."
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absolutely fabulous
Only one mention of Absolutely fabulous, the repeats on Comedy Central cable, IMO, redeemed CC's existance. And if you liked AF, you have to see The Vicar of Dibley another Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders collaboration.
I'm not sure if it's poor form on my part to bump such an old thread, but I've just found this one and couldn't believe that no-one else mentioned "People Like Us".
For the uninitiated it's a mockumentary where a reporter, Roy Mallard, interviews members of a different profession in each episode, showing that they are indeed "People Like Us."
What makes the show work is that Mallard is at least as big a freak as the people he is interviewing, and you never see him as the camera is always focused on the interviewee. You just see their discomfort, condescending amusement, irritation, and sometimes anger as they look at him.
Sample voiceovers by Roy Mallard:
(Banker episode) "...by the coming of the Railway, which inevitably foreshadowed the arrival of the Train."
(Banker) "In the meantime thoughts of marriage and children can wait, which puts extra pressure on her husband David, and Alex their two year old son or daughter."
(Airline Pilot): "Each flight is required to include at least the minimum of one take-off and one landing in each direction, as laid down by the International Laws of Physics."
****************************
Sample discussions with subjects:
(Airline pilot): These tires are full of nitrogen. They're inflated to a pressure of something like 150 lbs per square inch. About 6 times the pressure of the tires on your car.
RM: Right. Presumably that's why they're so big!
AP: Another interesting thing about them is that they're designed to melt.
RM: (with forced heartiness, as it turns out later in the episode that he's petrified of flying) Good!
-----------------------
RM: Do you feel that you have to be "all things to all men"?
Air Hostess: No, I think that's a bit of a male fantasy.
I also loved "Human Remains."
For the uninitiated it's a mockumentary where a reporter, Roy Mallard, interviews members of a different profession in each episode, showing that they are indeed "People Like Us."
What makes the show work is that Mallard is at least as big a freak as the people he is interviewing, and you never see him as the camera is always focused on the interviewee. You just see their discomfort, condescending amusement, irritation, and sometimes anger as they look at him.
Sample voiceovers by Roy Mallard:
(Banker episode) "...by the coming of the Railway, which inevitably foreshadowed the arrival of the Train."
(Banker) "In the meantime thoughts of marriage and children can wait, which puts extra pressure on her husband David, and Alex their two year old son or daughter."
(Airline Pilot): "Each flight is required to include at least the minimum of one take-off and one landing in each direction, as laid down by the International Laws of Physics."
****************************
Sample discussions with subjects:
(Airline pilot): These tires are full of nitrogen. They're inflated to a pressure of something like 150 lbs per square inch. About 6 times the pressure of the tires on your car.
RM: Right. Presumably that's why they're so big!
AP: Another interesting thing about them is that they're designed to melt.
RM: (with forced heartiness, as it turns out later in the episode that he's petrified of flying) Good!
-----------------------
RM: Do you feel that you have to be "all things to all men"?
Air Hostess: No, I think that's a bit of a male fantasy.
I also loved "Human Remains."
CovenantJr wrote:
Not a British comedy though!
I wholeheartedly agree! Father Ted was brilliant.Father Ted. One of the few that can rival Blackadder, IMO, along with Red Dwarf at it's best.
Not a British comedy though!

Quin, suffering from total amnesia, slowly discovers himself possessed of inexplicable abilities as his world expands...
https://www.quinsabduction.org/
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I don't know how I missed this thread before Trapper bumped it. (GOOD form, indeed!!) Nor can I imagine how so much time went by before MPFC was mentioned, or why they are getting so little attention. Holy crap, are you all nuts?? If it's not the funniest show ever, anywhere, it's damned close!
I remember them getting accidentally cemented into an apartment building for about 70 years. With not much else to do, two of them were playing "I spy with my eye..." The problem being the only thing available to spy was the chair between the two standing men. The game went something like this:
1: I spy with my eye something beginning with a C.
2: Is it a chair?
1: Yes. Your turn.
2: I spy with my eye something beginning with a C.
1: Is it a chair?
2: Absolutely correct! Your turn.
1: I spy with my eye something beginning with... *pauses to look around, his eyes landing back on the chair* Ah! With a C.
2: Is it a chair.
1: Indeed, it is! Your turn.
Yes, I remember this one!Cheval wrote:There used to be a show called "The Goodies".
It had 3 British "hippies" with a Benny Hill flair.
Has enybody else ever heard or seen it?
It aired on American Television back in the early - mid '70's.

1: I spy with my eye something beginning with a C.
2: Is it a chair?
1: Yes. Your turn.
2: I spy with my eye something beginning with a C.
1: Is it a chair?
2: Absolutely correct! Your turn.
1: I spy with my eye something beginning with... *pauses to look around, his eyes landing back on the chair* Ah! With a C.
2: Is it a chair.
1: Indeed, it is! Your turn.
All lies and jest
Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest -Paul Simon

#1. Monty Python
#2. Fawlty Towers
#3. Blackadder
I have seen a nuber of the English "Who's Line..." and although enjoyed it, did not find it as overall funny as the US one. The best episode I saw was one where Colin Mockery and Ryan Stiles were guesting on the show! ...
Oh, that Colin ...
#2. Fawlty Towers
#3. Blackadder
I have seen a nuber of the English "Who's Line..." and although enjoyed it, did not find it as overall funny as the US one. The best episode I saw was one where Colin Mockery and Ryan Stiles were guesting on the show! ...
Oh, that Colin ...

~...with a floating smile and a light blue sponge...~
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