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Funny Videos - Something funny to brighten your day.

Funny Videos - September 2006

Fawlty Towers

September 29th 2006 04:14
Fawlty Towers was a British sitcom made by the BBC and first broadcast on BBC2 in 1975. Only twelve episodes were produced, but the series has had a lasting and powerful influence on later shows.

The show is set in a fictional hotel named Fawlty Towers in the Devon town of Torquay on "The English Riviera". The series was written by John Cleese and Connie Booth, both of whom played main characters, and was broadcast in two series: The first, in 1975, was produced and directed by John Howard Davies, and the second, in 1979, was produced by Douglas Argent and directed by Bob Spiers.


In a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, voted for by industry professionals, Fawlty Towers was placed first. It was also voted fifth in the BBC's "Britain's Best Sitcom" poll in 2004.

Fawlty Towers was inspired by the Monty Python team's stay in the Gleneagles Hotel in Torquay. Cleese and Booth stayed on at the hotel after filming for the Python show had finished. The owner, Mr. Donald Sinclair, was very rude, throwing a bus timetable at a guest who asked when the next bus to town would arrive and placing Eric Idle's suitcase behind a wall in the garden on the suspicion that it contained a bomb (it actually contained a ticking alarm clock). He also criticised the American-born Terry Gilliam's table manners for being too American (he had the fork in "the wrong hand" while eating), possibly inspiring Basil's treatment of an American visitor in the episode "Waldorf Salad".

The episodes typically revolve around Basil Fawlty's efforts to succeed, and his frustration at mistakes, both his own and those of others, which prevent him from doing so.



In "The Germans" below, Basil Fawlty tries to serve lunch to four Germans. Despite his advice to Polly to not mention the war, he does so repeatedly himself. It ends with him goosestepping out of the dining hall in an impression of Hitler. The phrase "Don't mention the war" and the goosestep have both become synonymous with Fawlty Towers.






This next clip is from the fire drill at Fawlty Towers, perhaps most memorable for Basil yelling "thank you god! thank you so bloody much!"





Finally, here are some out-takes.







* This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation Licence. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Fawlty Towers.


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The Office

September 28th 2006 07:42
The Office is the name of two television comedy shows created by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant. The first was the UK version, which was initially broadcast on BBC Two on 9 July 2001 and ran for two series and a pair of Christmas specials. Gervais and Merchant were then commissioned by NBC to create an American version, which premiered on 24 March 2005.

A French adaptation of the series, retitled Le Bureau, aired in Spring 2006 on Canal. There will also be a Quebecois version of the show, produced by Anne-Marie Losique, called La Job and due to premiere in October 2006.

All of the core elements of the UK series were brought over to the U.S. version. Both are structured as mockumentaries, without laugh tracks. Both are set in the offices of a paper supply company, with a boss whose high opinion of his own managerial skills (and his sense of humour) are not shared by his employees. Both feature an irritating "assistant to the regional manager" and two characters, an in-house sales representative and a receptionist, who are good friends with an apparent chemistry between them that hints to the viewers that their relationship could go beyond friendship if the receptionist were not already engaged.

BBC Films is reported as considering a motion picture for The Office.


Below are the best bits from the "Training" Episode of The Office UK.





Next are some clips from the US version.





Finally, here are some bloopers from the UK version.








* This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation Licence. It uses material from the Wikipedia article The Office.
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Thank God You're Here

September 27th 2006 06:59
Thank God You're Here is a partially improvised comedy Australian television program created by Working Dog Productions, which premiered on Network Ten on the 5 April 2006 and concluded its first series on 7 June 2006. Each episode involves celebrities walking through a door into an unknown and interesting situation, greeted by the line "Thank God you're here". They must then improvise their way through the scene. At the end of each episode a winner is announced, usually along with honourable and dishonourable mentions. It has been the most successful new show in Australia of 2006, attracting an average of 1.7 million viewers after the first few episodes.

There have been 17 different celebrities on the show so far, regular guests include Angus Sampson, Fifi Box, Peter Rowsthorn, Frank Woodley, Akmal Saleh, Josh Lawson and Shaun Micallef.

Here is a good example skit, Shaun Micallef's first, where he feigns an attack by a stuffed toy rat after a set malfunction in episode 2 of the first season.





In this scene from season 2 episode 1 below Anh Do has to be a Chef.





Finally, here is the all-in skit to end the first episode of the second season, with Hamish Blake, Anh Do, Cal Wilson and Tony Martin.






* This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation Licence. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Thank God You're Here.


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Referees

September 26th 2006 05:57
We don't often associate referees or umpires with funny videos, but below are a few reasons why we should!

This popular clip called "Gay Ref" has been doing the rounds on the net for a while now.





Here are some refs copping what they probably don't deserve, from the players and the crowd.





This Budweiser commercial shows how Referees are trained to deal with abuse.

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Ali G

September 25th 2006 06:53
Ali G is a satirical comic character invented and played by the British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen. Originally appearing on Channel 4's Eleven O'Clock show, Ali G is now the main character of Channel 4's Da Ali G Show.

Ali G's method for duping unsuspecting but extremely well-known guests into giving interviews (that later leave them looking foolish) is a very well kept secret. During the UK run of the show, his British producers never revealed the exact methods used to get interview requests granted. However, his rising popularity meant that he could no longer slip by the publicists of famous people. This was supposedly one of the main reasons for shifting the show to America.

One particularly memorable interview was with Posh and Becks.





Here Ali has an interview with an FBI agent.





Finally, here is Ali visiting Wales.






* This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation Licence. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Ali G.
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Golf

September 22nd 2006 07:12
Golf can be the most rewarding and aggravating game on the planet. For those of us not watching, it can be quite funny.


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Jackass

September 21st 2006 06:34
Jackass was a half-hour American television series starring Johnny Knoxville amongst many others, originally shown on MTV from 2000 to 2002, which features 12 people performing various dangerous, ridiculous, and self-injuring stunts and pranks.

The program was blamed for a number of deaths and injuries involving teens and children imitating the stunts. In the fall of 2000, Senator and then-Democratic Vice-Presidential nominee Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut began a campaign to have MTV pull the show off the air. MTV began to give in to some of Lieberman's demands and this led to the cast and crew finishing the show in 2002. Here are some clips from the Jackass TV series


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Stretcher Bearers

September 20th 2006 05:49
Stretchers have been used since antiquity, especially on battlefields and in emergency situations.
Therefore you would think that by now we would have figured out how to carry them, but as the clips below demonstrate, we still have a lot to learn.

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American Dad!

September 19th 2006 06:34
American Dad! is an animated television series produced by 20th Century Fox. It was created, in part, by Seth MacFarlane, the creator of Family Guy. The pilot episode aired in the United States on Fox on February 6, 2005, thirty minutes after the end of Super Bowl XXXIX; the regular series began May 1, 2005, after the season premiere of Family Guy.

The show centers on the Smith family and the various obstacles Stan, an employee of the Central Intelligence Agency, encounters to ensure that his country remains safe including the obstacles he faces with his immediate family. The Smith family lives in the fictional community of "Langley Falls, Virginia" in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. The town is a composite of Langley, Virginia and Great Falls, Virginia. Langley is the real-life location of CIA headquarters


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Naomi Robson

September 18th 2006 05:46
Naomi Robson (born 4 December 1961 in California) is the presenter of the east-coast version of Today Tonight, an Australian public affairs program which screens weeknights on the Seven Network. Robson has also made brief appearances as herself in the Australian films, Thunderstruck (2004) and Trojan Warrior (2002).
In 1997, Naomi became the host of the Melbourne version of Today Tonight. The programme was later extended to Sydney and Brisbane, with Robson as host. Figures from ratings research firm OzTAM show she has a nightly audience of more than one million people across the three capital cities.

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Family Guy

September 15th 2006 04:20
Family Guy is an American animated comedy created by Seth MacFarlane for FOX in 1999. The show was cancelled once in 2000 and again in 2002, but strong DVD sales and re-runs on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim led FOX to resume production of the show in 2005. To date it is one of only a handful of shows in television history to be cancelled and later revived by the power of their fan bases, and one of the few shows to be brought back to air by the same network that cancelled it. According to FOX, the fifth season will be airing this September, and the sixth next year.

The title character is Peter Griffin, an inept white-collar head of a lower-middle class family frequently beset by the consequences of his foolish antics. Family Guy's brand of humour is notable for the usually brief, frequently nonsensical cutaways (usually featuring oddball pop culture references) and flashbacks to various points in history, geography, and reality involving the characters and their ludicrous actions


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The Simpsons

September 14th 2006 06:12
The Simpsons is the longest-running American sitcom, and the longest-running American animated program. Since it debuted on December 17, 1989, the show has aired 379 episodes in eighteen seasons. The 20th anniversary of The Simpsons franchise will be celebrated in 2007. A feature-length movie is now being produced, to be released on July 27, 2007.

The series is a satirical parody of the "Middle American" lifestyle epitomized by its title family. It lampoons many aspects of the human condition, as well as American culture, society as a whole and even television itself, being famous for its frequent use of self-referential humor


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South Park is an American animated television series created, written and voiced by Matt Stone and Trey Parker. Distributed by and airing on Comedy Central since 1997, it follows the adventures of four grade school boys who live in the small town of South Park, Colorado. The show emulates stop motion cutout animation and satirizes (sometimes surreally) many aspects of American culture and current events, and challenges deep-seated convictions and taboos, usually employing parody and black comedy. The series is known for its characteristically blunt handling of current events and its pop-culture parody.


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Ricky Gervais

September 12th 2006 05:53
Ricky Gervais (born June 25, 1961) is an English comic writer and performer from Reading, Berkshire. Gervais found mainstream fame with his award-winning BBC2 television programme The Office, which he co-wrote and co-directed with his friend and collaborator Stephen Merchant. Besides writing and directing the show, Gervais played the lead role of David Brent.
In 2005, Gervais returned to BBC Television with his new sitcom, Extras. In 2006, Gervais became the first guest star on The Simpsons to also write the episode he guest-starred on, "Homer Simpson, This Is Your Wife", which aired on March 26 this year.
His broad career has covered radio, television, books and stand-up. He also made the "The Ricky Gervais Show", which is available exclusively online as weekly thirty minute podcasts. The first episode was made available on December 5, 2005. By January 2006, it had become the world's most downloaded podcast


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In 2004, Microsoft UK commissioned two 20-minute faux training videos featuring David Brent (Ricky Gervais from The Office) being interviewed by Jeff (Stephen Merchant), a Microsoft employee who becomes increasingly exasperated by Brent's antics. The ongoing theme is Brent's obvious resentment at the company's success. Brent also appears to believe he has what it takes to become the next managing director of Microsoft and continually drops hints to that effect. While not on general release, the videos emerged on the internet in 2006. They were posted on both YouTube (from which they were later removed) and Google Video. The clips also appeared on certain peer-to-peer networks. Microsoft were unhappy with the leak, stating that the videos "were never intended to be viewed by the public".

Fortunately both still survive on Google Video. They are entitled "The Office Values" and "Realising Potential


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Card Tricks

September 8th 2006 04:13
Playing cards became popular with magicians in the last century or so as they were props which were inexpensive, versatile, and easily manipulated.

Once of the best magicians and card trixters of all time was Richard "Cardini" Pitchford. He died over 20 years ago now but his legend lives on. This first clip is a tribute to him and his influence on modern magicians


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Steve Irwin Tribute

September 7th 2006 06:27
Stephen Robert Irwin (22 February 1962 — 4 September 2006), also known as the Crocodile Hunter, was an Australian naturalist and television personality, best known for the television program The Crocodile Hunter, an unconventional wildlife documentary series broadcast worldwide and co-hosted with his wife Terri Irwin. The pair owned and operated Australia Zoo in Beerwah, Queensland.
Sadly, just 3 days ago Steve was fatally pierced in the chest by a stingray barb whilst snorkelling at the Great Barrier Reef, at Batt Reef, which is located off the coast of Port Douglas in Queensland. He will be sorely missed all over the world. Below are some tributes to the great man. One thing's for sure, he will never be forgotten.

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Monty Python

September 6th 2006 05:59
Monty Python, or The Pythons, is the collective name of the creators of Monty Python's Flying Circus, a British television comedy sketch show that first aired on the BBC in 1969. A total of 45 episodes were made over four series. However, the Python phenomenon was much greater, spawning stage tours, a musical, four films, numerous albums, and several books, as well as launching the members to individual stardom.

Monty Python's Flying Circus was loosely structured as a sketch show and it was noted for its impossible or highly improbable events, risqué humour, sight gags, and sketches without punchlines


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America's Got Talent

September 5th 2006 05:38
America's Got Talent is a talent show who's aim is to search for America's next talent.
The show features singers, dancers, magicians, comedians and other talents of all ages. Anyone who believes they have talent can audition.
The advertised top prize is one million dollars. Regis Philbin is the host and the judges are Piers Morgan, Brandy and David Hasselhoff. Neither the host nor the judges know the content of the acts in advance of their performances


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Funny Monkeys

September 4th 2006 03:13
Why do we find monkeys and apes so funny?

Is it because they remind us of ourselves?

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Johnny Knoxville

September 1st 2006 07:47
Johnny Knoxville (born Philip John "P.J." Clapp on March 11, 1971 in Knoxville, Tennessee) is an American comic actor, best known as the co-creator and principal star of the MTV series Jackass. He also starred in the recent "The Dukes of Hazzard" movie.
Knoxville nearly died from a combination of the flu, pneumonia, and bronchitis at the age of 8, perhaps thats were he derived the urge to perform various dangerous and ridiculous stunts. Below are a couple of examples.

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