Jochen Tösmann wrote:
> Anyone ever watched "The IT crowd"?
Anyone ever thought of reading a whole thread?
Regards,
Nick FitzGerald
___
Fun and Misc security discussion for OT posts.
https://linuxbox.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/funsec
Note: funs
...@linuxbox.org] On
Behalf Of David Harley
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 8:00 AM
To: 'Peter Evans'; funsec@linuxbox.org
Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
That was he. Back in the days when you could indulge at least some of your
vices on camera.
--
David Harley BA CISSP FBCS CITP
Director
Of Peter Evans
> Sent: 30 June 2009 15:10
> To: funsec@linuxbox.org
> Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
>
> On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 12:02:23AM -0500, buf...@greenjeans.net wrote:
> > Dave Allen at 10:30pm
>
> Dave Allen, was he the guy who would sit on a sto
Never missed an episode. check out Youtube they are mostly all on there.
2009/6/30 Jochen Tösmann
> Anyone ever watched "The IT crowd"?
> > On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 3:02 PM, wrote:
> >
> >> I remember Sunday nights watching the local PBS station WTTW in Chicago
> in the late 70's and
> >> early
3:54
> Cc: funsec@linuxbox.org
> Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
>
> Anyone ever watched "The IT crowd"?
> > On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 3:02 PM, wrote:
> >
> >> I remember Sunday nights watching the local PBS station WTTW in
> >> Chicago in t
Anyone ever watched "The IT crowd"?
> On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 3:02 PM, wrote:
>
>> I remember Sunday nights watching the local PBS station WTTW in Chicago in
>> the late 70's and
>> early 80's and seeing the three of the best shows produced in the UK:
>>
>> Monty Python at 10pm
>> Dave Allen a
On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 3:02 PM, wrote:
>
> I remember Sunday nights watching the local PBS station WTTW in Chicago in
> the late 70's and
> early 80's and seeing the three of the best shows produced in the UK:
>
> Monty Python at 10pm
> Dave Allen at 10:30pm
> Dr. Who (no commercials - 1 1/2 hou
quot;Drsolly"
Cc: funsec@linuxbox.org, "grandpa of Ryan Rob, Trevor, Devon & Hannah"
Sent: Monday, June 29, 2009 7:50:44 PM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
Drsolly wrote:
> As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
Drsolly wrote:
> As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
>
> Top of the list is Fawlty Towers. There's only 12 episodes, every one a
> gem.
Re-watching it, I like it again.
But I am not sure I like the extreme racism depicted there.
--
Gadi Evron,
g...@linuxbox.org.
On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 8:01 AM, Ned Fleming wrote:
>
> In the 70+ years of television, it's good to note that British
> television has produced 3 or 4 series that people have genuinely
> liked. Blind pig, acorn, and all that.
>
> Ever seen that stoopid shit on Aussie or Kiwi TV? Oh, oh, painful.
>
On Tue, 9 Jun 2009 22:57:24 +0200, Predrag Ivanovic
wrote:
>On Sun, 31 May 2009 02:03:55 +0300
>Gadi Evron wrote:
>
>>My favorite UK COMEDY of all times is Coupling (UK version, naturally).
>>It is one of the best shows EVAH! Jeff FTW!
In the 70+ years of television, it's good to note that Briti
On Jun 9, 2009, at 5:01 PM, Ned Fleming wrote:
> Canadian TV? Utterly unremarkable, like watching snow fall.
No, not entirely (and I'm not Canadian either).
Early "Red Green" episodes are hilarious, but the later ones just
cover too much of the same ground. The segments where Red Green
bui
On Sun, 31 May 2009 02:03:55 +0300
Gadi Evron wrote:
>My favorite UK COMEDY of all times is Coupling (UK version, naturally).
>It is one of the best shows EVAH! Jeff FTW!
>Some compare it to Friends, as it features three female actresses and
>three male actors. It's much smarter than any sitcom.
You're right, The Goodies!
On Fri, 5 Jun 2009, quispiam lepidus wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 3:35 AM, Gadi Evron wrote:
> > Drsolly wrote:
> >> As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
> >>
> >> Top of the list is Fawlty Towers. There's only 12 episodes, every one a
>
> What are you fav Brit shows?
Coupling naturally. The Giggle Loop is genious.
I haven't seen anyone mention Father Ted or Keeping Up Appearances
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Not
On Thu, 4 Jun 2009, Nick FitzGerald wrote:
> Drsolly wrote:
>
>> As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
>
> As a human being, I'm constantly amazed that anyone liked (let alone
> may still like) Benny Hill...
>
Ok, I give up! I believe the phrase I used was "scandalous".
On Wed, 03 Jun 2009 20:35:05 +0300, Gadi Evron said:
> I remember it as Folty's Hotel something.. It was that long ago. It was
> cute but come on!
"I'm sorry, but we appear to be all out of waldorfs."
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Description: PGP signature
_
Gadi Evron made the following keystrokes:
>Acquired taste, I s'pose.
I haven't seen it, but for some shows the question is:
Is it an aquired tasted, or the lack of aquired taste
that makes it funny to people. ;-)
In some cases you remember watching a show in the early
years of your life,
David Lodge wrote:
> On Mon, 2009-06-01 at 11:46 +0100, Martin Hepworth wrote:
>> and I remember seeing it the first time around when my grandad got a
>> colour TV and we could watch BBC2 for the first time.
>>
>> my votes also go for Little Britain and Red Dwarf.
Someone recommended The Mighty Bo
On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 3:35 AM, Gadi Evron wrote:
> Drsolly wrote:
>> As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
>>
>> Top of the list is Fawlty Towers. There's only 12 episodes, every one a
>> gem.
>
> I remember it as Folty's Hotel something.. It was that long ago. It was
>
Drsolly wrote:
> As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
>
> Top of the list is Fawlty Towers. There's only 12 episodes, every one a
> gem.
I remember it as Folty's Hotel something.. It was that long ago. It was
cute but come on!
Drsolly wrote:
> As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
As a human being, I'm constantly amazed that anyone liked (let alone
may still like) Benny Hill...
Regards,
Nick FitzGerald
___
Fun and Misc security discussion for
As a Brit, I'm constantly amazed that Americans like Benny Hill.
Top of the list is Fawlty Towers. There's only 12 episodes, every one a
gem.
Monty Python, of course, and it's predecessor "I'm sorry I'll ready that
again", ISIRTA, on radio. ANd "I'm sorry I haven't a clue", still going.
The Go
There's always the Jeeves and Wooster series, as done by Hugh Laurie and
Stephen
Fry. I think this was after they did four, very short, seasons of "A Bit of
Fry and
Laurie," which had good bits. During college they did a review with Emma
Thompson and someone else that was great.
Which leads
On Mon, 2009-06-01 at 11:46 +0100, Martin Hepworth wrote:
> and I remember seeing it the first time around when my grandad got a
> colour TV and we could watch BBC2 for the first time.
>
> my votes also go for Little Britain and Red Dwarf.
Red Dwarf gets a thumbs up (as long as we're talking seri
On Tue, 02 Jun 2009 09:09:57 EDT, Mark said:
> I can't believe Young Ones isn't in your list. One of the best ever.
"Don't bother trying to crucify yourself, you can never get that last nail in"
-- Niel.
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_
On Sun, May 31, 2009 at 02:03:55AM +0300, Gadi Evron wrote:
>
> My favorite UK DRAMA show is Spooks, following a fictional MI5 team
> (think British 24). The first couple of seasons made sense (within
> reason, they didn't carry hand-cuffs and guns) and was ridiculous
> (terrorists were environ
> I can't believe Young Ones isn't in your list. One of the best ever.
>>> Mentioning Monty Python's Flying Circus [...]
>> No Benny Hill?
>> No Faulty Towers?
>> [...]
Blackadder?
/~\ The ASCII Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
X Against HTMLmo...@rodents-m
I can't believe Young Ones isn't in your list. One of the best ever.
-Mark Coleman
Jon Kibler wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Gadi Evron wrote:
>
>> Mentioning Monty Python's Flying Circus seems too out of date even for
>> this listing, but it has a place of hon
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Gadi Evron wrote:
> Mentioning Monty Python's Flying Circus seems too out of date even for
> this listing, but it has a place of honour on my DVD shelf.
>
> What are you fav Brit shows?
>
What?
No Benny Hill?
No Faulty Towers?
Monty Python *STILL*
Martin Hepworth wrote:
> and I remember seeing it the first time around when my grandad got a
> colour TV and we could watch BBC2 for the first time.
>
> my votes also go for Little Britain and Red Dwarf.
Red Dwarf rocks, but it's very genre.
It didn't get into my list by a small margin.
___
On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 12:00 PM, wrote:
> --
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 01 Jun 2009 06:48:47 -0500
> From: rac...@mcs.anl.gov
> Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
> To: Peter Evans
>
selt...@ziffdavis.com
http://blogs.pcmag.com/securitywatch/
From: funsec-boun...@linuxbox.org [mailto:funsec-boun...@linuxbox.org]
On Behalf Of Larry Seltzer
Sent: Monday, June 01, 2009 7:46 AM
To: Martin Hepworth
Cc: funsec
Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
I have fond memories of Blake's 7,
One must include on the favorite Brit shows
Fawlty Towers.
Red Dwarf
Blakes 7.
The last 2 have a comedic effect in the special effects.
By todays standards (or even then), most of them look like
they came as prizes out of cackerjack or cereal boxes. ;-)
--Gene
worth
Sent: Monday, June 01, 2009 6:47 AM
Cc: funsec
Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
and I remember seeing it the first time around when my grandad got a
colour TV and we could watch BBC2 for the first time.
my votes also go for Little Britain and Red Dwarf.
--
Martin Hepworth
> Cc: funsec
> Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
>
> On Sun, 31 May 2009, Gadi Evron wrote:
>
> > Mentioning Monty Python's Flying Circus seems too out of date even for
> > this listing, but it has a place of honour on my DVD shelf.
> >
> > What a
6:13 AM
To: funsec
Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
MPFS ran 69-74.
Larry Seltzer
Contributing Editor, PC Magazine
larry_selt...@ziffdavis.com
http://blogs.pcmag.com/securitywatch/
-Original Message-
From: funsec-boun...@linuxbox.org [mailto:funsec-boun...@linuxbox.org]
On
: Gadi Evron
Cc: funsec
Subject: Re: [funsec] British Television
On Sun, 31 May 2009, Gadi Evron wrote:
> Mentioning Monty Python's Flying Circus seems too out of date even for
> this listing, but it has a place of honour on my DVD shelf.
>
> What are you fav Brit shows?
>
>
On Sun, 31 May 2009, Gadi Evron wrote:
> Mentioning Monty Python's Flying Circus seems too out of date even for
> this listing, but it has a place of honour on my DVD shelf.
>
> What are you fav Brit shows?
>
> Gadi.
Number one would have to be Monty Python's flying circus. I do not how
fa
Gadi Evron wrote:
> Mentioning Monty Python's Flying Circus seems too out of date even for
> this listing, but it has a place of honour on my DVD shelf.
So many shows to write from flying circus to The Prisoner, but yes, I
tried very hard to limit myself to what's newer (except for Yes Minister)
My favorite UK COMEDY of all times is Coupling (UK version, naturally).
It is one of the best shows EVAH! Jeff FTW!
Some compare it to Friends, as it features three female actresses and
three male actors. It's much smarter than any sitcom.
Coupling is cult for me.
My favorite UK COMEDY of the 198
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