Yes, because British people crom surprisingly badly.
Yes, because British people crom surprisingly badly.
Miniscule
Minuscule
Miniscule
Minuscule
Miniscule
Minuscule
The famous Scouse rhyming slang, there.
Well, that's just, like, your opinion, man.
Agreed x 900. I mean "Mumford & Sons wouldn’t exist without him"? Jansch has only been gone a month, don't desecrate the poor man's memory just yet
Yeah it's a great show, much like the similar One Born Every Minute on C4, although I felt there were a few too many episodes in the run. There are only so many touching/tragic/amusing accident/illness stories I can take at a time. But the techniques and interviews are really excellent.
I love when Feech starts talking about the differences he's found since he came out of prison. "Know what the biggest change is for me? Broads shaving their bushes. I
went over to the Bing, it's like the Girl Scouts in there." And he's completely serious.
Two episodes
that demonstrate the immense strength of this show.
The guy who plays Hitler in Indiana Jones (Michael Sheard) also played Mr Bronson in long-running BBC children's TV drama Grange Hill, for added weirdness. Of course he's dead now.
A British person writes
You mean LYNX of course.
So
where is Hallie Eisenberg now, eh? EH??
Can't believe Todd started a Spaced review by asking us to indulge him in a somewhat rambling (if relevant) nostalgia trip! Surely there is only one response to that.
Agreed. I think they may be the only commentaries I've ever listened to more than once.
I hadn't and still haven't seen Mulan, and yet that's one of my favourite jokes in the whole series. It doesn't matter whether you recognise the plot or not; the payoff's the thing. "It's a Disney film." "It's a Disney film!"
I always thought the not-very-interesting Matrix parody was redeemed to quite a large extent by the ending of the episode, which if memory serves is something like this:
But what about his second family, the crew?
Fitter Happier is a waste of space and everyone always skips it. I don't skip anything from The Bends. There's that.
"Mumford & Sons, who moved nearly 50,000 copies of its already big-selling debut, Trouble No More"
Bill Bailey's contribution to the success of Spaced is tiny but significant.
Pegg befriended Michael "Tyres" Smiley on a comedy tour in Australia - so quickly that by the time they returned they were ready to get a flat together.