I was hoping they'd show where a bloke got interviewed about geopolitics who thought he'd come for backstage job. It's hilarious and what was what that scene in The IT Crowd where he gets interviewed about the Iraq war live on the news you loved was based on. The clip with the car crash is even funnier when you know the context. She was reporting on the trial of a TV host who'd had a drunken car crash himself
@@Jack-om1qw Often the presenter is expected to control it (tell the robot what to do) themselves - when it's just a single presenter in non-peak hours. Or at least that was the case ~10 years ago.
In 2022 they replaced the automated system with a different automated system I keep meaning to look out to see if they still use the rails because production staff used to trip over it all the time and often got hit by the cameras. A childhood friend of mine worked for the BBC before switching to sky as a camera operator and she got absolutely floored one day by a camera executing the wrong code.
You've got to find the one with the news anchor going over to the weatherman Tomasz Schafernaker, who is caught a few seconds earlier doing an "interesting" gesture and then trying to cover it up. I nearly peed myself the first time I saw it.
Yeah, poor guy was obviously just having a laugh presumably with the camera person gesturing at him as well but then he got caught out. Was good to see they'd rehired / welcomed him back.
The cameras are robotic, there is still a bloke at a desk telling the cameras which route to take, and where to end the shot, to repeat the noise 15 times- or not, this production team is hilarious. I don’t see one instance where any of them would be hired at our LOCAL news stations let alone our NATIONAL news stations here in the US. Do you want to know how many times this has happened on our national news, ZERO. It truly is baffling.
@@joshuacoldwater Nope, even a lot of that stuff is automated, and if it goes wrong it's not always easy to jump in and overrule the automation. The BBC were early adopters of this technology and a lot of these bloopers were early on in their use of it. So stuff went wrong from time to time. I think they've actually rowed back on the extent of the automation since.
@@joshuacoldwater The thorny issue of the next BBC funding round is in the offing after the General Election. There's a rumour that this rash of bloopers is not necessarily only the result of the Dalek cameras, nor indeed Sunday staff's inexperience. No, theories abound that it's Aunty Beeb's subtle way of showing that it needs an injection of more money.
These days it's 'wall to wall coverge', 24 hours a day, on all national and regional stations. Therfore these mistakes are still relatively uncommon, we're just made aware of them.
The BBC had brought in some expensive, state of the art robotic cameras. Lets just say they had some teething problems - Bet the cameramen they replaced were loving this!🤣🤣🤣
This very often happens at the night news because I think they rely on the automated camera set ups a lot more with reduced staffing at night (that’s just my guess) I have been to the studios, really interesting seeing behind the scenes.
The clip at 10:20 with huw the legend where it kept restarting and he didnt know he was live i actually saw that one live and i remember being so confused and if i was hallucinating or not. It was so funny
9:30 "they need a spanking". Always a risky phrase where BBC staff are concerned 😃 My favourite news blooper happened on Aussie TV - ruclips.net/video/skFSuov8iRA/видео.html
Just to explain why mistakes in timing are common, because they have to hand off at an exact time to local stations and get the hand back equally synchronised exactly!
What would make a lot of sense of this would be how few people are in the studio galleries for UK TV news vs. USA. Your TV is heavily unionised, UK is not. There may be as few as 2 or 3 people running the shows that you see. The output is heavily automated, relying on the production teams to insert automation instructions into the "news production system" so that certain cameras are cut to or perform pre-programmed moves. When the automation instructions are wrong (the usual cause) or something technical goes wrong, there are few human hands to get the programme quickly back on track - hence a presenter moving to be in front of the camera which is live. 20 years ago in the UK (and probably still in the USA) the person who's sole job is to be the vision mixer would cut to the correct camera. De-staffing and relying on automation adds the comedy to news!
One of the memorable bloopers on the BBC was when some guy turns up for an interview for a job and was mistaken for a guest on a news segment, the guy knew nothing about the questions being asked which was going out live, looking confused he didn’t say much but played along 😂
I remember one once where they were showing off the redesigned one pound coin and Dan Walker he had dropped his coin and it had fallen down the back of the sofa and then you had him on air trying to find it down the back of the sofa. 😂😂😂
I once caught a blooper live on a news report in Brazil. They were discussing an issue (how can we prevent such and such) and were also sharing spectators' opinions sent via their message system. One of which was "Dr Cuca Beludo" which is a joke name (similar to "A. Nellsechs", "Bender Over", etc) that roughly translates to "doctor hairy a**hole". They just said that name out loud, and the funniest thing is that they didn't even realize it.
There’s a Russian one where the news reporter has a dog gallop up to her, steals the mic thinking it’s a toy and she has to chase him to get it back, it’s adorable as well as hilarious!😂😂🥺
I remember watching the one that keeps repeating at 9:30 😂 funny and infuriating at the same time They have multiple channels trying to line up the same live broadcast which messes them up, “apparently”
I remember when discoboy Lee got in a van outside a live BBC news interview and played loud sex noises in the background and the woman had to keep composed and continue on haha
The best blooper was when David Dimbleby spilled his tea all over the desk and his trousers on air. He carried on as if nothing had happened - a true professional.
It must have been an ITV news correspondent when he's Standing in front of a mountain of burning confiscated weed and gets the giggles from the fumes 😂😂
My favourite news blooper is on RUclips. It’s an Australian channel 10 news blooper and it’s simply called “an awkward moment” I’d definitely recommend it, but it’s only a few seconds long. Maybe if you decide to do a few videos together sometime?
A lot of the camera switching especially early show from the intro are on auto playlists, so that's why the same thing seems to keep happening. The wrong playlist for the start of the show is chosen. That includes the camera movement, pan/zoom too, so is normally easier just to go to where the live camera thinks you are rather than manually change it.
The male presenter in the last clip is Simon McCoy. He used to get sent out to cover royal baby stories because of his lack of enthusiasm. There's some very funny clips of him being forced to stand outside the hospital reporting on nothing.
There was one where it was something to do with Scotland so they had a few men in kilts there. One dropped his kilt when it was live. It didn’t go down well. 😮
I think a lot of the problems arise when BBC News insist on having loads of screens and newsreaders wandering about from story to story rather than using the tried and trusted method of a guy sitting behind a desk just reading the news in a way that has worked well since television first existed.
We have a politician called Jeremy Hunt. On one occasion the BBC announcer got a bit confused and, live on air, introduced him as Jeremy Cu..ouldn't make it up. They did laugh. Didn't do his career any harm, he's now Chancellor if the Exchequer!
This is what happens when the IT crowd convince the bosses that a computer can make everything more predictable and reliable. A lot of the chair cock-ups were clearly on a pre-programmed scheme that wasn't adapting to what was actually going on.
My favourites, not included here was the presenter Vick Derbyshire talking about the (now) Chancellor Jeremy Hunt and calling him Jeremy C**t! (Got it right, the first time!) And, a woman presenter, at the beginning of Covid giving a run down of the obvious symptoms to look out for, including a "continuous cough." She then proceeded to cough, uncontrollably and was at pains to point out that it was just a "frog in her throat!" Talk about timing. It was like something out of a horror movie! 😉😉
When they pan to the empty chair rather than the standing presenter it is made more funny by the fact it's computer driven and the wrong panning shot is precisely the same wrong panning shot as previously, to the inch.
Be great when the cameraman zoomed back out nobody was anywhere,it was just him left in the world and he lived a few more years untill dying from food poisoning because everything was out of date
The funny thing about the car shunt is that the presenter was talking about Ant Mcpartlin who was in court for drink driving, he happens to be the presenter for I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here
BBC News 24 channel launched they had difficulty with the new computerized cameras system went on for about three months to the actually got it working perfectly
Have you seen the Guy Goma interview? This man turned up for a job as a driver, and they accidentally put him on the air, and started asking him questions about Apple computers. Apparently their tech correspondent had the same first name. After all that, he didn't get the driver's job!
@Howlerss What do you mean he was found innocent? He came out and admitted it! Lol. He said he would be seeking counselling for his behaviour. He also resigned from the BBC shortly after; not something you would do if you was innocent.
@@SpartasEdge he didn't admit anything he was just accused and everyone jumped on him. The police found no evidence that it was him. Then because of the media and public hounding the poor bloke he became suicidal. He resigned because his doctors advised him to. It's a big problem with the UK public hounding on people with no proof or throwing out false accusations
@Howlerss There is absolutely no question that he did it Lol He himself said he was seeking help for it and reigned over it, wake up.. The police didn't charge him because he hasn't technically done anything illegal or criminal, but is it a bit morally questionable and dubious what he was doing? Yes. On not one occasion has he denied that he did it, and the BBC itself has since apologised to the family of the other person onvolved; open your eyes. Everyone (including Huw) accepts that he did it, apart from you Lol.
@@SpartasEdge even if he did which there is no evidence, like you said he did nothing illegal. Yeah maybe the guy has some weird kinks but people acting like he's a criminal for that is ridiculous. The police investigated it and there was no issue with what he was doing. Instead the media and public just made up stories and destroyed the guy's career. The Sun were the one who came up with all the bullshit and made a big story over it. If you really believe The Sun of all things in 2024 then I don't know what else I can say to you my guy
I was hoping they'd show where a bloke got interviewed about geopolitics who thought he'd come for backstage job. It's hilarious and what was what that scene in The IT Crowd where he gets interviewed about the Iraq war live on the news you loved was based on. The clip with the car crash is even funnier when you know the context. She was reporting on the trial of a TV host who'd had a drunken car crash himself
Guy Goma?
His face when they start asking him question 😂😂😂
KB has already reacted to him I believe
They missed a few obvious ones. Like "morning Mrs Shamus" and guy Michelmore knocking over his coffee 🤭
@@StephenSE9 the BBC Ulster announcement - milk a cow.
The best news bloopers usually involve somebody trying to say Jeremy Hunt's name.
That's not a blooper, just the beeb being factual 😂
But they usually get it right if you know what I mean.
**news intro**
"hello pedophiles"
You need to find the newsreader sticking her middle finger up at the camera.
BBC news sacked their studio camera men 15 years ago for these robot
The BBC used to be the very best.
You realise someone still controls them right?
No really I thought it was the cloud
@@Jack-om1qw Often the presenter is expected to control it (tell the robot what to do) themselves - when it's just a single presenter in non-peak hours. Or at least that was the case ~10 years ago.
In 2022 they replaced the automated system with a different automated system I keep meaning to look out to see if they still use the rails because production staff used to trip over it all the time and often got hit by the cameras. A childhood friend of mine worked for the BBC before switching to sky as a camera operator and she got absolutely floored one day by a camera executing the wrong code.
The time Simon McCoy appeared on set holding a packet of printer paper instead of his Ipad was good one.
Absolutely the best that one is! Others a great too.
You've got to find the one with the news anchor going over to the weatherman Tomasz Schafernaker, who is caught a few seconds earlier doing an "interesting" gesture and then trying to cover it up. I nearly peed myself the first time I saw it.
I think Schafernaker was fired and then rehired?
Yeah, poor guy was obviously just having a laugh presumably with the camera person gesturing at him as well but then he got caught out.
Was good to see they'd rehired / welcomed him back.
Oh boy, you saying they need a spanking over a picture of Huw Edwards... LOL if only you knew!
Wasn't he found innocent and then his life was ruined by it all?
@@Howlerss Yep, but there but enough 'dirt' to get him gone I guess.
Gutted the black guy got a interview when he was only after a cleaning job that's the best one!
Here's a you tube title for video I'm on about "Guy Goma: 'Greatest' case of mistaken identity on live TV ever? BBC News"
Agree!
They're never f*cking ready 😂😂
BBC news cameras are robotic so this happened a few times before they were reprogrammed. It's funny when things go awry 😅
The cameras are robotic, there is still a bloke at a desk telling the cameras which route to take, and where to end the shot, to repeat the noise 15 times- or not, this production team is hilarious. I don’t see one instance where any of them would be hired at our LOCAL news stations let alone our NATIONAL news stations here in the US. Do you want to know how many times this has happened on our national news, ZERO. It truly is baffling.
@@joshuacoldwater Nope, even a lot of that stuff is automated, and if it goes wrong it's not always easy to jump in and overrule the automation. The BBC were early adopters of this technology and a lot of these bloopers were early on in their use of it. So stuff went wrong from time to time. I think they've actually rowed back on the extent of the automation since.
@@joshuacoldwater
The thorny issue of the next BBC funding round is in the offing after the General Election.
There's a rumour that this rash of bloopers is not necessarily only the result of the Dalek cameras, nor indeed Sunday staff's inexperience.
No, theories abound that it's Aunty Beeb's subtle way of showing that it needs an injection of more money.
That shot of an empty desk has got to be a hazing ritual they do to camera operators on their first day.
11:34
"Goodbye Mike"
How fitting..
These days it's 'wall to wall coverge', 24 hours a day, on all national and regional stations. Therfore these mistakes are still relatively uncommon, we're just made aware of them.
It's been 24 hours since 1997, so that is a lot of hours for things to go things to go wrong.
03:50 he might actually be there in Ukraine in a boring studio due to the audio lag (if there's no lag they aren't where they say they are)
The BBC had brought in some expensive, state of the art robotic cameras. Lets just say they had some teething problems - Bet the cameramen they replaced were loving this!🤣🤣🤣
4:40 ROFL I’ve never seen that one before! 🤣🤣🤣 that’s brilliant
Was that Ant McPartlin arriving to his drink driving court case?
😂
No interview with Guy Goma, which has to be the best ever news blooper and no apology from Michael Fish.
That Huw Edwards one gives a whole new meaning to Breaking News
6:53 Was Ant McPartlin driving himself to court?🤣
OK I'm enjoying this more than I thought! Love the our news bloopers in Britain and its better with reactions XD
The one where it kept doing the breaking news then cutting to Hew in the studio and back again went on for like 4 minutes lol
This very often happens at the night news because I think they rely on the automated camera set ups a lot more with reduced staffing at night (that’s just my guess) I have been to the studios, really interesting seeing behind the scenes.
Omg please do a part 2 of this! I haven't laughed this hard in a long time 😂
2:36 and now the 6 O' Clock News with John Cena
They didn’t show the news presenter giving the finger to the camera not knowing she was live. Brilliant.
The clip at 10:20 with huw the legend where it kept restarting and he didnt know he was live i actually saw that one live and i remember being so confused and if i was hallucinating or not. It was so funny
I saw the swimming pool one live, it was so good 😂
Are you there Peter O'Hanraha-hanrahan?
😂😂
You weren’t actually there, were you Peter?!
''I SO PALE'' will always be the greatest news blooper
I believe these BBC cameras are semi automatic. Those robots are still more intelligent than the bots in the comment section though.
Yeh BBC use auto track rail cameras .
9:30 "they need a spanking". Always a risky phrase where BBC staff are concerned 😃
My favourite news blooper happened on Aussie TV - ruclips.net/video/skFSuov8iRA/видео.html
The robot cameras are hilarious, they just have a mind of their own.
Just to explain why mistakes in timing are common, because they have to hand off at an exact time to local stations and get the hand back equally synchronised exactly!
What would make a lot of sense of this would be how few people are in the studio galleries for UK TV news vs. USA. Your TV is heavily unionised, UK is not. There may be as few as 2 or 3 people running the shows that you see. The output is heavily automated, relying on the production teams to insert automation instructions into the "news production system" so that certain cameras are cut to or perform pre-programmed moves. When the automation instructions are wrong (the usual cause) or something technical goes wrong, there are few human hands to get the programme quickly back on track - hence a presenter moving to be in front of the camera which is live.
20 years ago in the UK (and probably still in the USA) the person who's sole job is to be the vision mixer would cut to the correct camera.
De-staffing and relying on automation adds the comedy to news!
One of the memorable bloopers on the BBC was when some guy turns up for an interview for a job and was mistaken for a guest on a news segment, the guy knew nothing about the questions being asked which was going out live, looking confused he didn’t say much but played along 😂
You can tell the guy at 7:45 is all ears when it comes to the News 😁
I swear we are competent over here. The empty chair is our version of the weather map with 4 figures
The one with the man and woman talking about the tiger i bet they where sleeping together 😂
Twelve Fousand! Five FOUSAND!! 😆
You must find the old black and white 60s BBC children's program of what happened when they had a baby elephant in the studio. It's hilarious!
Blue Peter?
That's right. Blue Peter. 😅😂
I remember one once where they were showing off the redesigned one pound coin and Dan Walker he had dropped his coin and it had fallen down the back of the sofa and then you had him on air trying to find it down the back of the sofa. 😂😂😂
I once caught a blooper live on a news report in Brazil. They were discussing an issue (how can we prevent such and such) and were also sharing spectators' opinions sent via their message system.
One of which was "Dr Cuca Beludo" which is a joke name (similar to "A. Nellsechs", "Bender Over", etc) that roughly translates to "doctor hairy a**hole".
They just said that name out loud, and the funniest thing is that they didn't even realize it.
"The bbc has messed up a lot" u can say that again.
Oh, Huw Edwards, with his clothes on. There's a novelty!
A lot of those happened when the BBC had a new automated camera system which was supposed to rely on fewer humans... it had some teething problems
I just love your laugh, dude, greetings from Spain
There’s a Russian one where the news reporter has a dog gallop up to her, steals the mic thinking it’s a toy and she has to chase him to get it back, it’s adorable as well as hilarious!😂😂🥺
I know its been there a while, but your 'new' intro does make me giggle 🤣 so i thought I should tell you lol
I remember watching the one that keeps repeating at 9:30 😂 funny and infuriating at the same time
They have multiple channels trying to line up the same live broadcast which messes them up, “apparently”
Oh nations:
"I wish we had reliable news like the BBC"
The BBC:
Camera goes brrrr!
The intro still gets me :)
News without commercials, no time to react lol
As a Brit I can't tell you how surprised I am that we don't get as many people jumping in front of camera as I would have thought 😂
When the chair was empty, the presenter would often in front of the screens, over to the left - but it is hilarious!
The guy called Ben, did he have a pair of false Ears on ?
I remember when discoboy Lee got in a van outside a live BBC news interview and played loud sex noises in the background and the woman had to keep composed and continue on haha
The best blooper was when David Dimbleby spilled his tea all over the desk and his trousers on air. He carried on as if nothing had happened - a true professional.
It must have been an ITV news correspondent when he's Standing in front of a mountain of burning confiscated weed and gets the giggles from the fumes 😂😂
My favourite news blooper is on RUclips. It’s an Australian channel 10 news blooper and it’s simply called “an awkward moment”
I’d definitely recommend it, but it’s only a few seconds long. Maybe if you decide to do a few videos together sometime?
Yep and remember that we pay a TV license to that corporation. The fact they mess up so much is actually an insult.
Martine Croxall is my favourite BBC news anchor, for two very good reasons.
6:40 yup.
“See those coming ‘round the corner, still got time to comb your hair”, Samuel L. Jackson, The Long Kiss Good Night.
her and yalda hakim 😍
A lot of the camera switching especially early show from the intro are on auto playlists, so that's why the same thing seems to keep happening. The wrong playlist for the start of the show is chosen. That includes the camera movement, pan/zoom too, so is normally easier just to go to where the live camera thinks you are rather than manually change it.
Theres a newsreader who had a carrier bag blow into his face mid sentence, russel howard covered it in his show
Welcome to uk tv haha
The male presenter in the last clip is Simon McCoy. He used to get sent out to cover royal baby stories because of his lack of enthusiasm. There's some very funny clips of him being forced to stand outside the hospital reporting on nothing.
There was one where it was something to do with Scotland so they had a few men in kilts there. One dropped his kilt when it was live. It didn’t go down well. 😮
"It didn't go down well"
There are about 3 innuendos in that statement following a comment about loose Kilts...
Well it did go down. Quite literally. The kilt, that is.
It must have been a ''bring your child to work day'' at the BBC. 😏
Hold on a minute whilst I phone Social Services 🤣
Another mom ime on the telly moment by the kid on the phone. 😅
I think a lot of the problems arise when BBC News insist on having loads of screens and newsreaders wandering about from story to story rather than using the tried and trusted method of a guy sitting behind a desk just reading the news in a way that has worked well since television first existed.
7:50 - those things can't be real
LOL BBC News moved to a new studio in 2013, they had a few teething problems in the beginning.
Why would a Brittish studio crew drink Jack Daniels? They probably have access to real whiskey.
Or whisky. Depending on its origin.
Off topic, but how long has he had that Ghastly on the desk next to him on the left (his right)? That’s so cool btw!
We have a politician called Jeremy Hunt. On one occasion the BBC announcer got a bit confused and, live on air, introduced him as Jeremy Cu..ouldn't make it up.
They did laugh.
Didn't do his career any harm, he's now Chancellor if the Exchequer!
This is what happens when the IT crowd convince the bosses that a computer can make everything more predictable and reliable. A lot of the chair cock-ups were clearly on a pre-programmed scheme that wasn't adapting to what was actually going on.
BBC bringing new meaning to 'Breaking news'
Why would you think the BBC production team at their London HQ would be sitting in a truck?
What about when the BBC reported live that Building 7 of the WTC had collapsed but you could see it still standing in the background.
My favourites, not included here was the presenter Vick Derbyshire talking about the (now) Chancellor Jeremy Hunt and calling him Jeremy C**t! (Got it right, the first time!)
And, a woman presenter, at the beginning of Covid giving a run down of the obvious symptoms to look out for, including a "continuous cough."
She then proceeded to cough, uncontrollably and was at pains to point out that it was just a "frog in her throat!"
Talk about timing. It was like something out of a horror movie! 😉😉
And the bbc make us pay mandatory fee for this bollocks
The irony this video being released the week of the Geeta Guru-Murphy fiasco
When they pan to the empty chair rather than the standing presenter it is made more funny by the fact it's computer driven and the wrong panning shot is precisely the same wrong panning shot as previously, to the inch.
Be great when the cameraman zoomed back out nobody was anywhere,it was just him left in the world and he lived a few more years untill dying from food poisoning because everything was out of date
Jeremy Cxxt is the best blooper
It’s not a blooper
@@louisbeerreviews8964 Freudian slip then!
6:53 Ant was in court for crashing his car while drunk...
Almost at 100k🎉🎉
The BBC loves breaking news, by breaking the news
Btw your intro…That was no skip my friend ,That was a Jaunty March at best ..😂😜
Dude can't even skip.
That's the kind of skip you go to the Ministry of Silly Walks to try to get a grant to improve it with.
@@BillyRockets-dn8ov “An attempt was made” lol
Oh you watch Jaunty March videos as well eh? :)
@@andymerrett lmao It was sarcasm /Banter btw I actually find the intro funny.
This must be an old reel.
Around a year ago one of the newsreaders was caught flipping the bird directly at the camera.
The funny thing about the car shunt is that the presenter was talking about Ant Mcpartlin who was in court for drink driving, he happens to be the presenter for I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here
BBC News 24 channel launched they had difficulty with the new computerized cameras system went on for about three months to the actually got it working perfectly
Best one was “sex will be charged at the usual rate” instead of texts will be charged at the usual rate
Great to see Huw Edwards with his clothes on for a change...
Have you seen the Guy Goma interview? This man turned up for a job as a driver, and they accidentally put him on the air, and started asking him questions about Apple computers. Apparently their tech correspondent had the same first name. After all that, he didn't get the driver's job!
ruclips.net/video/e6Y2uQn_wvc/видео.htmlsi=HwJoL1Ui4LsytcRc
These clips are all spread over the last 20 years. When you're on air 24/7 its inevitable something goes wrong I suppose!
9:23
All the Brit viewers sniggering when Huw Edwards came on, knowing King Boomer won't know what's happened since.
He was found innocent. the accusations sound like they destroyed his life too unfortunately
@Howlerss What do you mean he was found innocent? He came out and admitted it! Lol. He said he would be seeking counselling for his behaviour. He also resigned from the BBC shortly after; not something you would do if you was innocent.
@@SpartasEdge he didn't admit anything he was just accused and everyone jumped on him. The police found no evidence that it was him. Then because of the media and public hounding the poor bloke he became suicidal. He resigned because his doctors advised him to.
It's a big problem with the UK public hounding on people with no proof or throwing out false accusations
@Howlerss There is absolutely no question that he did it Lol He himself said he was seeking help for it and reigned over it, wake up..
The police didn't charge him because he hasn't technically done anything illegal or criminal, but is it a bit morally questionable and dubious
what he was doing? Yes.
On not one occasion has he denied that he did it, and the BBC itself has since apologised to the family of the other person onvolved; open your eyes. Everyone (including Huw) accepts that he did it, apart from you Lol.
@@SpartasEdge even if he did which there is no evidence, like you said he did nothing illegal. Yeah maybe the guy has some weird kinks but people acting like he's a criminal for that is ridiculous. The police investigated it and there was no issue with what he was doing. Instead the media and public just made up stories and destroyed the guy's career.
The Sun were the one who came up with all the bullshit and made a big story over it. If you really believe The Sun of all things in 2024 then I don't know what else I can say to you my guy
There's a few of these your american news bloopers reel is every bit as funny
👏👏nearly there 99k subs👏👏🇬🇧
Mike also fell off a galloping horse at a training centre. It was ace.