it's kinda too bad all of the sweet comments excited this finally turned up on youtube are going to end up pushed to the bottom, but I guess that's just how it goes
When you know who she is and you make the connection to the same thing happening to her in her biggest part in a very popular cult film, then you realise this was most definitely planned.
good to see this again, I remember when it aired, it created a whole new genre of TV show and it was made for just 16,000 pounds! This was the very first 'Blooper' show, anywhere in the world.
I saw this when it first aired, and I'd given up all hope of ever seeing it again. Wish I could upvote this more than once! Thank you so much for posting it. 27-18 - I've seen two versions of the "swim dance", though I didn't remember that I'd seen the first one here. An American blooper show also showed this clip, but ... suddenly there were two pink circles dancing about on the screen. It took me a couple of minutes to realise that these were covering the woman's nipples - and I'd never noticed on this clip that she had both breasts exposed. Just goes to show that censorship only draws attention to what it's trying to suppress.
I haven't seen this since the late 70s because the earlier editions weren't repeated ad infinitum like the later ones. Thanks a million for putting this online, you've made this 70s child very happy :)
I saw this the first time it aired in the late 70s, I was still at school and thought it was the most hilarious thing I'd ever seen! I think it was the first time anything like it had been seen on British TV, and set a trend still with us today, for good or ill. I say it was the most hilarious thing I'd seen because I was 14 and Benny Hill stopped being funny at puberty, mainly because scantily clad women started to raise things with me other than laughter. 🤭
The really strange thing as I've got older is seeing people who were very famous when this was put out and I can't remember their names. Luckily it doesn't distract from the laughs.
It's a symptom of my age that some of these names which were once so readily available to me can be so difficult to recall. Sometimes I will not research them online because I try to use other methods to remember and 'relearn' them after some years of disuse.
15:00 - from Space 1999 : The Bringers Of Wonder Part 2 - in the finished product she still stuns the guard but the other actor who trips over him here isn't present - having been summoned away - and isn't seen after that point at all - so he may have been injured by the fall and had to be concocted out of the episode.
Haven't seen this for absolute ages, but totally remember the guy from Strabane. Probably the most famous thing about the town, although they did build ships there, I believe!
At 34:53 is legendary American TV news reporter and anchor Harry Reasoner, who was a co-anchor of one of the major evening news broadcasts in the U.S. for decades before ending up on a weekly news program called '60 Minutes". He's been gone for years but it's nice to see some footage of him when he was younger.
Yes, I recall seeing this when it first aired. As a matter of fact, I was waiting for the coffee cup gag in the intro, and the hanging by the balls from the Christmas tree cock-up, which I still remember fondly. The trouble with life is that you only get one take, so be sure to ad lib your way through all the cock-ups. At least with flash memory cards you can delete without loss of material.
Pity it's mot 100% complete, but so much better than nothing at all. I seem to remember that the Swimmer was preceded by an introduction from Denis stating her name was "Little Nell". Also, there was an out take from Dr. Who with Tom Baker and Liz Sladen in the original from "The Seeds of Doom" where Sarah Jane and the Doctor are outside a house, looking up and say something like "We can't get in, the door's locked." and then the door slowly swings open.
I was the person who asked if the first IBAOTN existed in someone's collection on that other clip, and I was a bit doubtful. I am pleased that it has been downloaded, and thank you as well.
Am I the only one suspicious of the video noise between 27:47 & 28:17 (the Little Nell "Do The Swim" routine with the strapless bathing costume)? Heck, no harm being a little curious! :-) Although there might be more than suspicion being aroused there! :-D Still, I'm glad that the series is now full and complete!
That sinking feeling, the moment the title sequence starts. They can't...but they did. Pluses - two well-known outtakes, "the Man from Strabane" and "Do the Swim", are included in their entirety (the latter with added audio boobies)
Denis Norden in collaboration with his pal Frank Muir wrote some good comedy scripts in their day, Norden went on to do his blooper show but I never understood why he did it in a Woody Allen face mask... perhaps all the Grouch masks were sold out.
First time I have ever seen this edition, and it's amazing how it is seen compared to future editions. It is very much like a pilot. I think that the programme picks up properly from the third edition in 1981. The thing is that the studio looks too dark, I am not sure about the opening titles - a good job they changed them for the second edition, and Norden's positioning on stage almost makes it feel like a Clive James/ Floyd/ Tarrant on TV programme - indeed, Norden did do a similar programme back in 1980. Also, this was made probably before Christmas tapes were being made more prominently in the television industry as they were in the 1980s. I see that it ran for an hour just like the other editions, but this edition is only 38 minutes on here, the equivalent of 45 minutes of ITV time. I assume that there is at least 12 to 15 minutes missing? Lots of outtakes I have never seen before, and have obviously never made it onto any future compilations - quite a lot of black and white, American and film outtakes on here not surprisingly - and movie outtakes seem to be the focal point unlike in 1990s editions. To think that we were less than eight years into colour television, things have moved along quite quickly by the time this was made. Great to see that the very first one was the source for the "Moray Firth IV" one, as well as the fast talking trade unionist at 22:24, and the HTV Within These Walls/ Yogs advert (that TV Cream referenced on its old website), which had resurfaced on later compilation editions e.g. the 21st anniversary one in 1998. 27:22 Very surprised to see that one in this edition - I thought that was from the mid 1980s. It's different but fascinating, but I do say that the 1980s editions were the best. How about the Cock Up Trip edition from 1996 being downloaded? If this edition can be downloaded, then, than the Cock Up Trip one should be a doddle.
I did notice from the LWT logo at the end that this must have been the January 1979 repeat (LWT only started to use that ident from 1978 onwards). I also noticed when I found out from UK Press Online (The Times were on strike) that it was repeated in January 1979, and the repeat that it was only 45 minutes long, compared to the original 60 minutes in 1977. I suppose that is my answer.
You're right. The new LWT logo was used on the repeat and some material was left out. Haven't watched this through, but I believe the repeat left out some cock-ups from one of David Jason's shows (possibly A Sharp Intake of Breath) where a car windscreen falls out and was supposed to smash, but didn't?
Hey, I used to watch this show throughout the 90s, there's a blooper segment I'm looking for, basically it's an ad for an American alcoholic beverage (I think). Basically, it features a white American man with a mustache sitting on a stool at a bar, he says the line, and then a beer is supposed to come sliding along the bar table from off-screen and into his waiting hand, but the person off-screen keeps missing his hand hillariously with the glass because of not sliding hard enough/sliding with too much force and keeps creating extremely funny bloopers over a number of takes lol Can anyone here possibly help me remember which "It'll Be Alright On The Night" it was actually from?
I suspect that 27:35 was the first time I saw a woman's nipples on screen. I was twelve and Dad wasn't too embarrassed to allow it to continue (indeed, he was rolling with laughter). Those were prudish times, and the nipple thing had my eyes on comedy-stalks, but it passed the censors and made prime-time TV when there were only three channels. Happy days.
I'm trying to find the clip from 3-2-1 where two old ladies leave when Ted shouts "We'll be right back, Dont go Away!'' Do you know which episode its in?
27:30 - I wonder what must have gone wrong. I mean, the costume designer, the choreographer, the talent, the director - any of them should have said "How about we rehearsed that, just to be sure it works." Or they didn't have the time, that's more plausible, I guess...
It's interesting that a lot of the clips are cut so short in the early ones, maybe before the producers realised that most of the laughs are in the seconds after "impact": watching performers crease with laughter, hearing the last shards of glass tinkle to the floor or just giving viewers time for the comedy to sink in. Except the lady with her boobs out, that ran about twice as long as in the recut 21st anniversary edition 😁
I am sure I have seen it on here in the past - it made a surprise repeat appearance in around 1996 when a Euro 96 match couldn't be shown, and so ITV shown that episode in its place instead. Was too young to remember it, so it was like a first time showing for myself.
The Waltons clips put me in mind of the Carol Burnett Show parody the Walnuts. ruclips.net/video/3OykLkZi4_Q/видео.html and I remember that clip of Little Nell doing The Swim. I wonder why?
all i can say about that is that on his last Alright on the night he walked off leaving the clipboard on the table, the camera zoomed in on it to reveal there was nothing on it anyway! so he must have benn using the clipboard as a sort of comfort prop
I came here by way of a Tom Scott video.
me 2
Take me to the top together with this comment!
And what a video it was!
@@roecocoa ruclips.net/video/mUF4afxMpQk/видео.html
@@johnjames8594 Yep, that's the one.
Here before the tom scott comments are at the top
it's kinda too bad all of the sweet comments excited this finally turned up on youtube are going to end up pushed to the bottom, but I guess that's just how it goes
Are you aware, that it is going to be your comment?
@@simony1210 Don't worry it will be alright on the night.
He says as he makes a Tom Scott comment that ends up at the top
Tom who?
Why hello Tom Scott fans!
Clearly "Do the swim" was well watched on that VHS!
Holy shit i thought you were joking, but you're right, that part is worn to shit! Amazing!
What was the point of that part? If it really was accidental, why would they keep filming?
Maybe they were thinking of editing it?
and paused!
When you know who she is and you make the connection to the same thing happening to her in her biggest part in a very popular cult film, then you realise this was most definitely planned.
R.I.P. Denis Norden, you are missed!
good to see this again, I remember when it aired, it created a whole new genre of TV show and it was made for just 16,000 pounds!
This was the very first 'Blooper' show, anywhere in the world.
Thanks tom
Yup. Here cuz of him too
I saw this when it first aired, and I'd given up all hope of ever seeing it again. Wish I could upvote this more than once! Thank you so much for posting it.
27-18 - I've seen two versions of the "swim dance", though I didn't remember that I'd seen the first one here. An American blooper show also showed this clip, but ... suddenly there were two pink circles dancing about on the screen. It took me a couple of minutes to realise that these were covering the woman's nipples - and I'd never noticed on this clip that she had both breasts exposed. Just goes to show that censorship only draws attention to what it's trying to suppress.
The Young Frankenstein clip at 13:19 was the funniest. I believe Marty's biting of Madeline Kahn's fur scarf was ad-libbed.
1977, strewth, I thought this started in the late '80s!
I haven't seen this since the late 70s because the earlier editions weren't repeated ad infinitum like the later ones. Thanks a million for putting this online, you've made this 70s child very happy :)
Pleasure!
Thanks Joanne!
I saw this the first time it aired in the late 70s, I was still at school and thought it was the most hilarious thing I'd ever seen! I think it was the first time anything like it had been seen on British TV, and set a trend still with us today, for good or ill.
I say it was the most hilarious thing I'd seen because I was 14 and Benny Hill stopped being funny at puberty, mainly because scantily clad women started to raise things with me other than laughter. 🤭
Perfectly, perfectly mirrors my own upbringing ...
2/10/1976 Nickelodeon, I didn't realize it was that old, wow.
Just like I remember it. You tape even got damaged in the same place my tape got damaged.
Maybe from the source. 1977 this wouldn't have been taped off the TV at home.
@@jackjude r/woosh
Finally!!! Someone has it!! You sir, have my thanks :P
You're very welcome!
The really strange thing as I've got older is seeing people who were very famous when this was put out and I can't remember their names. Luckily it doesn't distract from the laughs.
It's a symptom of my age that some of these names which were once so readily available to me can be so difficult to recall. Sometimes I will not research them online because I try to use other methods to remember and 'relearn' them after some years of disuse.
Loved it loved it loved it , Loved it !!!!!!!!!!
15:00 - from Space 1999 : The Bringers Of Wonder Part 2 - in the finished product she still stuns the guard but the other actor who trips over him here isn't present - having been summoned away - and isn't seen after that point at all - so he may have been injured by the fall and had to be concocted out of the episode.
THOSE STUN GUNS! I'd forgotten all about them.
I remember this first episode very well.
Been looking for this for years...thanks!
Hilarious brought back a lot of memories . Thanks
My 21st century attention span had me losing it about 6 seconds into the intro...
Don't blame being an idiot on the time period you live in. Also, turn off your computer and go read a book, you can fix it.
@@barretprivateer8768 Ouch
Jesus, how right you are… it’s worse today.
Haven't seen this for absolute ages, but totally remember the guy from Strabane. Probably the most famous thing about the town, although they did build ships there, I believe!
Where on earth did you find this? Fantastic! ?After 40 years it's here! Thanks
Sorry it took so long, was at the bottom of a big box
The Irish guy is a classic!
Fantastic!
The fast talking worker must be the model for Lee Mack's fast talking jockey in the Sketch Show.
9.15 : A genuine classic - and then the look on his face afterwards.
At 34:53 is legendary American TV news reporter and anchor Harry Reasoner, who was a co-anchor of one of the major evening news broadcasts in the U.S. for decades before ending up on a weekly news program called '60 Minutes". He's been gone for years but it's nice to see some footage of him when he was younger.
I love how well spoken Norton is and this kind of tongue would be most lost on today's yute!
Yes, I recall seeing this when it first aired. As a matter of fact, I was waiting for the coffee cup gag in the intro, and the hanging by the balls from the Christmas tree cock-up, which I still remember fondly. The trouble with life is that you only get one take, so be sure to ad lib your way through all the cock-ups. At least with flash memory cards you can delete without loss of material.
Pity it's mot 100% complete, but so much better than nothing at all. I seem to remember that the Swimmer was preceded by an introduction from Denis stating her name was "Little Nell". Also, there was an out take from Dr. Who with Tom Baker and Liz Sladen in the original from "The Seeds of Doom" where Sarah Jane and the Doctor are outside a house, looking up and say something like "We can't get in, the door's locked." and then the door slowly swings open.
holy shit that was great, i havent laughed this much in a long time
Thank you :)
You're welcome!
I was the person who asked if the first IBAOTN existed in someone's collection on that other clip, and I was a bit doubtful. I am pleased that it has been downloaded, and thank you as well.
Took a while to find but found it in the bottom of the box!
GeorgeASFTHM o
20:15 "I'm from Westward Television..." "I _know_ you are!" Oof.
George Cunningham from Strabane N Ireland 25th December 1920-4th January 2011. He lived his whole life in Strabane 21.42
Bless him
Very well sourced.
maybe I only saw it once (in 1977) but I remember Nearly all. The Man From Strabane, swim girl, the yoghurt add.........
THe new theme from 1981 wasn´t such a bad idea after this lol!
Am I the only one suspicious of the video noise between 27:47 & 28:17 (the Little Nell "Do The Swim" routine with the strapless bathing costume)?
Heck, no harm being a little curious! :-)
Although there might be more than suspicion being aroused there! :-D
Still, I'm glad that the series is now full and complete!
I suspect a lot of pausing a rewinding...we've all been there...lol
TelevisionVault i
Like my copy of Return of the Jedi...
29:47 is a clip me and my dad have a lot of fun with. Poor ITV must’ve been flustered lol
Wasn't it, "A bouquet of barbed wire?" Not what he calls it, "Another bouquet?"
Little Nell, reprising her swimming pool nipples out in The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
You can really see that the BBC was stepping into new territory with this show. Now everything is so static.
It was on ITV Mark
Nice advert for Letraset at the beginning
Anyone know where the ad one is? I'm sure there was an episode of this show that did just TV ads.
101 comments as of 12:49 PST, December 21
118 now
That sinking feeling, the moment the title sequence starts. They can't...but they did.
Pluses - two well-known outtakes, "the Man from Strabane" and "Do the Swim", are included in their entirety (the latter with added audio boobies)
9:55 If I heard any sort of tree giggling, I would find that disconcerting.
Tom Scott
30:58 the posh voice makes it so much funnier
I loved this the first time around, I came looking for it especially, because I needed a laugh (sick to my back teeth of this bloody scamdemic).
it makes me smile a bit seeing old brits have zero time for reporters
33:41 here’s roger moore and I’m afraid he’s died aged 89 3 months before Bruce Forsyth
Denis Norden in collaboration with his pal Frank Muir wrote some good comedy scripts in their day, Norden went on to do his blooper show but I never understood why he did it in a Woody Allen face mask... perhaps all the Grouch masks were sold out.
33:03 - recoil in perfect synchronisation
Roger Moore is so cool
First time I have ever seen this edition, and it's amazing how it is seen compared to future editions. It is very much like a pilot. I think that the programme picks up properly from the third edition in 1981. The thing is that the studio looks too dark, I am not sure about the opening titles - a good job they changed them for the second edition, and Norden's positioning on stage almost makes it feel like a Clive James/ Floyd/ Tarrant on TV programme - indeed, Norden did do a similar programme back in 1980. Also, this was made probably before Christmas tapes were being made more prominently in the television industry as they were in the 1980s. I see that it ran for an hour just like the other editions, but this edition is only 38 minutes on here, the equivalent of 45 minutes of ITV time. I assume that there is at least 12 to 15 minutes missing? Lots of outtakes I have never seen before, and have obviously never made it onto any future compilations - quite a lot of black and white, American and film outtakes on here not surprisingly - and movie outtakes seem to be the focal point unlike in 1990s editions. To think that we were less than eight years into colour television, things have moved along quite quickly by the time this was made. Great to see that the very first one was the source for the "Moray Firth IV" one, as well as the fast talking trade unionist at 22:24, and the HTV Within These Walls/ Yogs advert (that TV Cream referenced on its old website), which had resurfaced on later compilation editions e.g. the 21st anniversary one in 1998. 27:22 Very surprised to see that one in this edition - I thought that was from the mid 1980s. It's different but fascinating, but I do say that the 1980s editions were the best. How about the Cock Up Trip edition from 1996 being downloaded? If this edition can be downloaded, then, than the Cock Up Trip one should be a doddle.
love t one
I think this is the full episode, I would have paused on the adverts.
I did notice from the LWT logo at the end that this must have been the January 1979 repeat (LWT only started to use that ident from 1978 onwards). I also noticed when I found out from UK Press Online (The Times were on strike) that it was repeated in January 1979, and the repeat that it was only 45 minutes long, compared to the original 60 minutes in 1977. I suppose that is my answer.
Think you're spot on George, 1979 would be about right for the time I had my first video recorder
You're right. The new LWT logo was used on the repeat and some material was left out. Haven't watched this through, but I believe the repeat left out some cock-ups from one of David Jason's shows (possibly A Sharp Intake of Breath) where a car windscreen falls out and was supposed to smash, but didn't?
31:05 The Yogs advert. Does anyone know if it is still exist?
Hey, I used to watch this show throughout the 90s, there's a blooper segment I'm looking for, basically it's an ad for an American alcoholic beverage (I think). Basically, it features a white American man with a mustache sitting on a stool at a bar, he says the line, and then a beer is supposed to come sliding along the bar table from off-screen and into his waiting hand, but the person off-screen keeps missing his hand hillariously with the glass because of not sliding hard enough/sliding with too much force and keeps creating extremely funny bloopers over a number of takes lol
Can anyone here possibly help me remember which "It'll Be Alright On The Night" it was actually from?
9 the 1 when lwt ran out of cash to film ol giggles
35:00 - the hippies really were free. My hat's off. Only my hat.
The Yogs!
I wonder what the Yogs Pineapple tasted like?? LOL
21:39 is priceless
Norman Eshley and John Thaw at 11:54.
I suspect that 27:35 was the first time I saw a woman's nipples on screen. I was twelve and Dad wasn't too embarrassed to allow it to continue (indeed, he was rolling with laughter). Those were prudish times, and the nipple thing had my eyes on comedy-stalks, but it passed the censors and made prime-time TV when there were only three channels.
Happy days.
I'm trying to find the clip from 3-2-1 where two old ladies leave when Ted shouts "We'll be right back, Dont go Away!''
Do you know which episode its in?
27:23 Columbia??
this one @31 mins is right out of a monty prthon sketch or it should of been!
Does anyone know the name of the film at 2:00?
Shame to hear of the passing of Denis Norden, a lexicon of comedi
27:30 - I wonder what must have gone wrong. I mean, the costume designer, the choreographer, the talent, the director - any of them should have said "How about we rehearsed that, just to be sure it works."
Or they didn't have the time, that's more plausible, I guess...
From what little I know of Hollywood, they probably didn’t have time or didn’t think it was necessary
It's interesting that a lot of the clips are cut so short in the early ones, maybe before the producers realised that most of the laughs are in the seconds after "impact": watching performers crease with laughter, hearing the last shards of glass tinkle to the floor or just giving viewers time for the comedy to sink in. Except the lady with her boobs out, that ran about twice as long as in the recut 21st anniversary edition 😁
Is this cut? 38:40 is too short for an hour timeslot on ITV in the 1970s. Also, may be the second rather than the first.
It's an abridged version of programme 1
I used to have the edited version, but now finally have a copy of the full programme on dvd, quite a few more clips on it
Anybody have episode number four?
I am sure I have seen it on here in the past - it made a surprise repeat appearance in around 1996 when a Euro 96 match couldn't be shown, and so ITV shown that episode in its place instead. Was too young to remember it, so it was like a first time showing for myself.
ahhh saw it live
I've got number 4 - not brilliant picture quality though.
oh no first got into the show in the late 90s
Paula Wilcox at 35:53?
The Waltons clips put me in mind of the Carol Burnett Show parody the Walnuts. ruclips.net/video/3OykLkZi4_Q/видео.html
and I remember that clip of Little Nell doing The Swim. I wonder why?
26:10 Did she say "Frick"?
_Why couldn't my son take over or something? Well, Dennis.. he's eighty four.._
Was the fast-talking man in the vox pop inspiration for the IRA man on The Day Today who used helium to make his statements more ridiculous?
mostly shocked that they allowed full nudity on national british tv
3:57 what's the film
And 28:51 if enyone knows
Why does he have a clipboard?
no ipads in them days...
all i can say about that is that on his last Alright on the night he walked off leaving the clipboard on the table, the camera zoomed in on it to reveal there was nothing on it anyway!
so he must have benn using the clipboard as a sort of comfort prop
Denis said he always holds a clipboard because he didn't know what to do with his hands.
I liked this programme but Dennis did go on a bit used to wish he would just get on with it
Nickelodeon? 17:17
33:17 is that Deborah Kerr?
No. It is Norma Crane guest-starring on Gunsmoke.
The days when people used to laugh at silly things before the world got serious.
21:39 Straight outta Strabane.
frist
The dude in glasses is completely unnecessary.
Shame he has to present it wastes so much time
That's an awful studio. No-one likes that studio.
Thumbs up if you fast forward past Dennis Norden...
Paul Morphy As Denis put it in the 8th Alright:
"Hello. Or for those of you who fast forward through me to get to the funny bits, goodbye".
He did say that as well...hehe
in a bad day mood
What does 'in a bad day mood' even mean?
Dislike if Tom Scott sent you here.
The unfunniest part being Dennis Nordern.