1. It's... Ah!
Copy !req
2. Monty Python's Flying Circus.
Copy !req
3. Have you finished in there yet?
Copy !req
4. Dear sir, I object strongly
to the obvious lavatorial turn
Copy !req
5. this show has already taken.
Copy !req
6. Why do we never hear about
the good things in Britain,
Copy !req
7. like Mary Bignall's
wonderful jump in 1964?
Copy !req
8. Yours et cetera, Ken Voyeur.
Copy !req
9. Dear sir, I object strongly
to the obvious athletic turn
Copy !req
10. this show has now taken.
Copy !req
11. Why can't we hear more about
the human body?
Copy !req
12. There is nothing embarrassing
or nasty about the human body
Copy !req
13. except for the intestines
and bits of the bottom.
Copy !req
14. Dear sir, I object strongly to
the letters on your programme.
Copy !req
15. They are clearly
not written by the general public
Copy !req
16. and are merely included
for a cheap laugh.
Copy !req
17. Yours et cetera, William Knickers.
Copy !req
18. - That was absolutely revolting.
- Appalling.
Copy !req
19. Disgusting. Disgusting.
Copy !req
20. Disgusting rubbish.
Copy !req
21. I, too, take strong exception
to this resurgence of cheap jokes
Copy !req
22. about poo-poos.
Copy !req
23. Mr. Voyeur's letter stated very— Ooh.
Copy !req
24. Oh, excuse me.
Copy !req
25. As I was saying,
Copy !req
26. the letter previously read made
clear the view of a great majority...
Copy !req
27. 1348. The Black Death,
typhus, cholera,
Copy !req
28. consumption,
bubonic plague.
Copy !req
29. Oh, those were the days.
Copy !req
30. Now, I'm not— I'm..
Copy !req
31. Now, I'm not prepared to go on with
this unless these interruptions cease.
Copy !req
32. All right?
Copy !req
33. Right.
Copy !req
34. The devastating effect
of these, um—
Copy !req
35. No, don't follow me.
And don't zoom in on me.
Copy !req
36. No, I'm off. I'm off.
That's it. That's all. I'm off.
Copy !req
37. Are you nervy, irritable,
depressed, tired of life?
Copy !req
38. Keep it up.
Copy !req
39. This house
is surrounded.
Copy !req
40. I'm afraid I must not ask
anyone to leave the room.
Copy !req
41. No, I must ask nobody.
Copy !req
42. No, I must ask everybody to...
Copy !req
43. I must not ask
anyone to leave the room—
Copy !req
44. No one must be asked
by me to leave room.
Copy !req
45. No, no one must ask
the room to leave.
Copy !req
46. I ask the room shall
by someone be left. Not.
Copy !req
47. Ask nobody the room
somebody leave shall I.
Copy !req
48. Shall I leave the room?
Copy !req
49. Everyone must leave
the room as it is...
Copy !req
50. with them in it.
Copy !req
51. Understand?
Copy !req
52. You don't want anybody
to leave the room.
Copy !req
53. Now, alduce me
to introlow myself.
Copy !req
54. I'm sorry.
Alself me to myduce intro—
Copy !req
55. Intro me to lose mylow—
Copy !req
56. Mme to you 'mtrosefi my
Copy !req
57. EXCUSE me a moment.
Copy !req
58. Allow me to introduce myself. I'm afraid
I must ask that no one leave the room.
Copy !req
59. Allow me to introduce myself.
I'm Inspector Tiger.
Copy !req
60. Tiger?
Where? Where? Oh.
Copy !req
61. Me Tiger.
Copy !req
62. You Jane.
Copy !req
63. Beg your pardon.
Copy !req
64. Allow me to introduce myself.
Copy !req
65. I'm afraid I must ask that
no one leave the room.
Copy !req
66. Why not?
Elementary.
Copy !req
67. Since the body was found
in this room and no one has left it.
Copy !req
68. Therefore, the murderer must be
somebody in this room.
Copy !req
69. What body?
Somebody...
Copy !req
70. in this room
must the murderer be.
Copy !req
71. The murderer of the body
is somebody in this room
Copy !req
72. which nobody must leave.
Copy !req
73. Leave the body in the room
not to be left by anybody.
Copy !req
74. Nobody leaves anybody
or the body with somebody.
Copy !req
75. Anybody who is anybody shall
leave the body in the room body.
Copy !req
76. Take the tablets, Tiger.
Copy !req
77. Anybody with a body
but not the body is nobody.
Copy !req
78. Nobody leaves the body
in the Bo—
Copy !req
79. Albody me to introbody a—
Copy !req
80. Now for Sir Gerald.
That's better.
Copy !req
81. Now, I'm Inspector Tiger and I must
ask that nobody leave the room.
Copy !req
82. Now, someone
has committed a murder here
Copy !req
83. and that murderer
is someone in this room.
Copy !req
84. The question is who?
Copy !req
85. Look, there hasn't been a murder.
Copy !req
86. - No murder?
- No.
Copy !req
87. Oh.
Copy !req
88. I don't like it.
It's too simple, too clear-cut.
Copy !req
89. I'd better wait.
No, too simple, too clear-cut.
Copy !req
90. By Jove, he was right.
Copy !req
91. This house is surrounded. I must
ask that no one leave the room.
Copy !req
92. I'm Chief Superintendent
Lookout.
Copy !req
93. Lookout?
What? Where?
Copy !req
94. Oh, me, Lookout.
Lookout of the Yard.
Copy !req
95. Why, what would we see?
Copy !req
96. I'm sorry?
Copy !req
97. Well, what would we see
if we look out of the yard?
Copy !req
98. I'm afraid I don't
follow that at all.
Copy !req
99. Aha! The body.
Copy !req
100. So the murderer must be
somebody in this room.
Copy !req
101. Unless he had very long arms.
Say, 30 or 40 feet.
Copy !req
102. I think we can discount
that one.
Copy !req
103. Lookout of the Yard.
Very good.
Copy !req
104. Right. Now we'll
reconstruct the crime.
Copy !req
105. I'll sit down here.
Copy !req
106. Constable, you turn off
the lights.
Copy !req
107. Good. Now then,
there was a scream...
Copy !req
108. Then just before the lights
went up, there was a shot.
Copy !req
109. All right, all right, the house is
surrounded, and nobody leave the room
Copy !req
110. and all the rest of it.
Allow me to introduce myself.
Copy !req
111. I'm Assistant Chief Constable
Theresamanbehindyer.
Copy !req
112. Theresamanbehindyer?
Copy !req
113. You're not going to catch me
with an old one like that.
Copy !req
114. Right, let's reconstruct
the crime.
Copy !req
115. Constable, you be Inspector Tiger.
Right, sir.
Copy !req
116. Nobody leave
the room ask shall.
Copy !req
117. Somebody I leave nobody
in the room body shall.
Copy !req
118. Take the tablets, Tigerbody.
Copy !req
119. Alself me to myduce introlow
left body in the roomself.
Copy !req
120. Very good. Sit down there.
Thank you, sir.
Copy !req
121. Right. Now we'll pretend
the lights have gone out.
Copy !req
122. Constable,
you scream.
Copy !req
123. Somebody shoots you.
And the door opens—
Copy !req
124. Nobody move.
I am Chief Constable Fire.
Copy !req
125. Fire?
Where? Where?
Copy !req
126. We're interrupting this sketch,
Copy !req
127. but we'll be bringing you back
Copy !req
128. the moment anything
interesting happens.
Copy !req
129. Meanwhile, here are
some friends of mine.
Copy !req
130. Dear sir, I'm sorry this letter is late.
Copy !req
131. It should have come at
the beginning of the programme.
Copy !req
132. Yours, Ivor Bigbottie, age 2.
Copy !req
133. From the plastic arts,
we turn to football.
Copy !req
134. Last night in the
Stadium of Light, Jarrow,
Copy !req
135. we witnessed the resuscitation
of a great footballing tradition
Copy !req
136. when Jarrow United came of age
in a European sense
Copy !req
137. with an almost Proustian display
of modern existentialist football,
Copy !req
138. virtually annihilating
by midfield moral argument
Copy !req
139. the now surely obsolescent
catenaccio defensive philosophy
Copy !req
140. of Signor Alberto Fanffino.
Copy !req
141. Bologna, indeed, were a sight
intellectually out-argued
Copy !req
142. by a Jarrow team
thrusting and bursting
Copy !req
143. with aggressive
Kantian positivism.
Copy !req
144. And outstanding in this fine Jarrow
team was my man of the match,
Copy !req
145. the arch-thinker, free-scheming,
scarcely-ever-to-be-curbed
Copy !req
146. midfield cognoscente,
Jimmy Buzzard.
Copy !req
147. Good evening, Brian.
Copy !req
148. Jimmy, at least one
ageing football commentator
Copy !req
149. was gladdened last night
by the sight of an English footballer
Copy !req
150. breaking free of the limpid tentacles
of packed Mediterranean defence.
Copy !req
151. Good evening,
Brian.
Copy !req
152. Were you surprised
at the way the Italians
Copy !req
153. ceded midfield dominance
so early on in the game?
Copy !req
154. Well, Brian...
Copy !req
155. I'm opening a boutique.
Copy !req
156. This is, of course, symptomatic
of a new breed of footballer,
Copy !req
157. as it is indeed symptomatic of
your whole genre of play, or is it not?
Copy !req
158. Good evening, Brian.
Copy !req
159. What I'm getting at, Jimmy, is you
seem to have discovered a new concept
Copy !req
160. of the mode of which you dissected
the Italian defence last night.
Copy !req
161. I hit the ball first time, and
there it was in the back of the net.
Copy !req
162. Right. Do you think Jarrow will
adopt a more defensive posture
Copy !req
163. for the first leg of the
next tie in Turkey?
Copy !req
164. I hit the ball first time, and there
it was in the back of the net.
Copy !req
165. Yes, yes, but have you
any plans for dealing with
Copy !req
166. the free-scoring Turkish forwards?
Copy !req
167. Well, Brian...
Copy !req
168. I'm opening a boutique.
Copy !req
169. And now let's take a look at the
state of play in the detective sketch.
Copy !req
170. Alself me to
introlow mybody.
Copy !req
171. Cheeky.
Oh, temper, temper.
Copy !req
172. Well, some of us
don't like having men
Copy !req
173. crawling over us
the whole time.
Copy !req
174. You need to take all the
opportunities you can get, dear.
Copy !req
175. Unlike some people I could mention,
I'm quite happily married, thank you.
Copy !req
176. Yes, I've seen you often,
tethered up in the garden.
Copy !req
177. Hello, good evening and welcome to yet
another edition of Interesting People.
Copy !req
178. And my first interesting
person tonight
Copy !req
179. is the highly interesting Mr. Howard
Stools from Kendal in Westmorland.
Copy !req
180. - Good evening, Mr. Stools.
- Hello, David.
Copy !req
181. Mr. Stools, what makes you
particularly interesting?
Copy !req
182. Well, I'm only half an inch long.
Copy !req
183. Well, that's extremely
interesting.
Copy !req
184. Thank you for coming
on the show tonight, Mr. Stools.
Copy !req
185. I don't think that was
interesting, David. In fact—
Copy !req
186. Mr. Howard Stools from Kendal
in Westmorland, half an inch long.
Copy !req
187. Our next guest tonight has
come all the way from Egypt.
Copy !req
188. He's just flown into London today.
He's Mr. Ali Bayan.
Copy !req
189. He's with us in the studio tonight
and he's stark raving mad.
Copy !req
190. Mr. Ali Bayan, stark raving mad.
Copy !req
191. Now it's time for our music spot.
Copy !req
192. We turn the spotlight tonight on
the Rachel Toovey Bicycle Choir...
Copy !req
193. With their fantastic arrangement
of "Men of Harlech"
Copy !req
194. for bicycle bells only.
Copy !req
195. The Rachel Toovey Bicycle Choir.
Copy !req
196. Really interesting.
Copy !req
197. Remember, if you're interesting and
want to appear on this programme,
Copy !req
198. write your name and address
on your telephone number
Copy !req
199. and send it to this address:
Copy !req
200. Thank you, thank you.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Copy !req
201. Now here's an interesting person.
Copy !req
202. Apart from being
a full-time stapling machine,
Copy !req
203. he can also give a cat influenza.
Copy !req
204. Well, you can't get much more
interesting than that, or can you?
Copy !req
205. With me now—
Copy !req
206. With me now is Mr. Thomas Walters
of West Hartlepool,
Copy !req
207. who is totally invisible.
Copy !req
208. Good evening, Mr. Walters.
Copy !req
209. Over here, Hughie.
Copy !req
210. Mr. Walters, are you
sure you're invisible?
Copy !req
211. Oh, yes, most certainly.
Copy !req
212. Well, Mr. Walters,
what's it like being invisible?
Copy !req
213. Well, for a start,
at the office where I work,
Copy !req
214. I can be sitting at my desk all day
and the others totally ignore me.
Copy !req
215. At home, even though
we are in the same room,
Copy !req
216. my wife does not
speak to me for hours.
Copy !req
217. People pass me by in the street
without a glance in my direction,
Copy !req
218. and I can walk into
a room without—
Copy !req
219. Well, last week on Interesting People
we met Mr. Oliver Cavendish who—
Copy !req
220. Even now, you yourself
do hardly notice me—
Copy !req
221. Mr. Oliver Cavendish
of Leicester,
Copy !req
222. who claims to be able to recite
the entire Bible in one second
Copy !req
223. whilst being struck on the head
with a large axe. Ho-ho, wow.
Copy !req
224. We've since discovered that
he was a fraud. He did not—
Copy !req
225. Yes, a fraud. He did not,
in fact, recite the entire Bible.
Copy !req
226. He merely recited the first two words,
"In the...", before his death.
Copy !req
227. And now it's time for
Interesting Sport.
Copy !req
228. And this week it's all-in cricket, live
from the Municipal Baths, Croydon.
Copy !req
229. All-in cricket. Great, great.
Copy !req
230. With me now is Mr. Ken Dove,
Copy !req
231. twice voted most
interesting man in Dorking.
Copy !req
232. Ken, I believe you're
interested in shouting.
Copy !req
233. Yes, I'm interested
in shouting, all right.
Copy !req
234. By Jove, you certainly
hit the nail on the head
Copy !req
235. with that particular
observation of yours, then.
Copy !req
236. What does your wife think of this?
I agree with him.
Copy !req
237. Shut up!
Copy !req
238. At parties, for instance,
people never come up to me.
Copy !req
239. I just sit there and
everybody totally—
Copy !req
240. Now, that is Tiddles,
I believe.
Copy !req
241. Yes, yes, this is Tiddles.
Copy !req
242. Yeah? And what does she do?
Copy !req
243. She flies across the studio
and lands in a bucket of water.
Copy !req
244. By herself?
No, I fling her.
Copy !req
245. Well, that's extremely
interesting.
Copy !req
246. Ladies and gentlemen,
Mr. Don Savage and Tiddles.
Copy !req
247. Oh, I'm more interesting
than a wet pussycat.
Copy !req
248. —for hour after hour after hour—
Copy !req
249. Yes, great. Well, now, for the first
time on television, Interesting People
Copy !req
250. brings you a man who claims he
can send bricks to sleep by hypnosis.
Copy !req
251. Mr. Keith Maniac from Guatemala.
Good evening.
Copy !req
252. Keith, you claim you can
send bricks to sleep.
Copy !req
253. Yes, that is correct. I can.
Entirely by hypnosis.
Copy !req
254. Yes. I use no artificial
means, whatsoever.
Copy !req
255. You've injured
Mr. Stools.
Copy !req
256. I simply stare at the brick
and it goes to sleep.
Copy !req
257. Well, we have
a brick here, Keith.
Copy !req
258. Perhaps you can send it
to sleep for us.
Copy !req
259. Oh, uh... Well, I'm afraid
that is already asleep.
Copy !req
260. How do you know?
Well, it's not moving.
Copy !req
261. I see. Have we got
a moving brick?
Copy !req
262. Yes, we've got a moving brick, Keith.
It's coming over now.
Copy !req
263. Now fast asleep.
Very good. Very good, indeed.
Copy !req
264. Yes, it's all done with the eyes.
Copy !req
265. Yes, Mr. Keith Maniac
from Guatemala.
Copy !req
266. Mr. Stools.
Copy !req
267. Speak to me, Howard.
Copy !req
268. And now, four tired undertakers.
Copy !req
269. We're interrupting this to take you back
very quickly to the Jimmy Buzzard interview,
Copy !req
270. where we understand something
exciting's just happened.
Copy !req
271. I've fallen off
my chair, Brian.
Copy !req
272. Shh! I think my wife's
beginning to suspect.
Copy !req
273. - You, shut up, up there!
- What do you mean, shut up?
Copy !req
274. - You shut up! Be quiet!
- Shut up!
Copy !req
275. Shut up! Shut your trap!
Copy !req
276. I apologize for that.
Copy !req
277. I think you'll find this
a bit more interesting.
Copy !req
278. Good evening.
Copy !req
279. Tonight I want to examine
the whole question
Copy !req
280. of 18th-century social legislation:
Copy !req
281. Its relevance to
the hierarchical structure
Copy !req
282. of post-Renaissance society...
Copy !req
283. and its impact on the future
of parochial organization
Copy !req
284. in an expanding agrarian economy.
Copy !req
285. But first, a bit of fun.
Copy !req
286. To put England's social legislation
in a European context
Copy !req
287. is Professor Gert Van Der Whoops
of the Rijksmuseum in The Hague.
Copy !req
288. In Holland in the early part
of the 15th century,
Copy !req
289. there were three things
important to social legislation.
Copy !req
290. One, rise of merchant classes.
Copy !req
291. Two, urbanization of craft guilds.
Copy !req
292. Three, declining moral values in age
of increasing social betterment.
Copy !req
293. But first, a bit of fun.
Copy !req
294. Oh. And now,
Professor R.J. Canning.
Copy !req
295. The cat sat on the mat.
Copy !req
296. And now, the Battle of Trafalgar.
Copy !req
297. Tonight we examine popular views
of this great battle.
Copy !req
298. Was the Battle of Trafalgar fought
in the Atlantic off southern Spain?
Copy !req
299. Or was it fought on dry land
near Cudworth in Yorkshire?
Copy !req
300. Here is one man
who thinks it was.
Copy !req
301. And here is his friend.
Copy !req
302. What makes you think the Battle of
Trafalgar was fought near Cudworth?
Copy !req
303. Because Drake was too clever
for the German fleet.
Copy !req
304. I beg your pardon?
Copy !req
305. I've forgotten what I said now.
Copy !req
306. Mr. Gumby's remarkable views have
sparked off a wave of controversy
Copy !req
307. amongst his fellow historians.
Copy !req
308. Well, I think we should, uh,
Copy !req
309. reappraise our concept
of the Battle of Trafalgar.
Copy !req
310. Well, well,
Copy !req
311. I agree with everything
Mr. Gumby says.
Copy !req
312. Well, I think cement
Copy !req
313. is more interesting
than people think.
Copy !req
314. One subject, four different views...
Copy !req
315. 12 and six in a plain wrapper.
Copy !req
316. The stuff of history is indeed
woven in the woof.
Copy !req
317. Pearl Harbor.
Copy !req
318. There are pages in history's book
Copy !req
319. which are written
on the grand scale.
Copy !req
320. Events so momentous
that they dwarf man and time alike.
Copy !req
321. And such is
the Battle of Pearl Harbor,
Copy !req
322. re-enacted for us now by the women
of the Batley Townswomen's Guild.
Copy !req
323. Miss Fairbanks, you organized this
reconstruction of the battle. Why?
Copy !req
324. Well, we've always been extremely
interested in modern drama.
Copy !req
325. We were, of course,
the first townswomen's guild
Copy !req
326. to perform
Camp on Blood Island.
Copy !req
327. And last year,
of course, we did
Copy !req
328. our extremely popular re-enactment
of Nazi war atrocities.
Copy !req
329. So this year, we thought we'd like
to do something in a lighter vein.
Copy !req
330. So you chose the
Battle of Pearl Harbor?
Copy !req
331. Yes, that's right,
we did.
Copy !req
332. Well, I can see you're all ready to go,
Copy !req
333. so I'll just wish you good luck
in your latest venture.
Copy !req
334. Thank you very much,
young man.
Copy !req
335. Ladies and gentlemen,
The World of History is proud
Copy !req
336. to present the premiere of the
Batley Townswomen's Guild
Copy !req
337. re-enactment of
the Battle of Pearl Harbor.
Copy !req
338. The Battle of Pearl Harbor.
Copy !req
339. Incidentally, I'm sorry if I got a little
bit shirty earlier on in the programme
Copy !req
340. when I kept getting interrupted by all these
films and things that kept coming in, but I—
Copy !req
341. And so I said if it happened again, I'd get
very angry and talk to Lord Hill and—
Copy !req
342. Tell Lord Hill.
Copy !req