Sir Humphrey's Trick for Pay Raise | Yes Prime Minister

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 133

  • @pauljd8
    @pauljd8 4 года назад +579

    According to the book of the series this actually became real government policy regarding museums.

    • @dudius3743
      @dudius3743 4 года назад +29

      Lmao

    • @petergreen5337
      @petergreen5337 Год назад +11

      Most IMPRESSIVE

    • @draconianTL
      @draconianTL Год назад +43

      The policy has mutated further since YM/YPM: there are quasi or adopted civil service departments nowadays, e.g. the Environment Agency, which is "sponsored" by DEFRA. Funnily enough, it doesn't stop the EA being subject to the tiny pay increases awarded to lowly civil service ranks.

    • @glynquigley4364
      @glynquigley4364 Год назад +6

      It is how British Museums now work yes.

    • @silgen
      @silgen Год назад +21

      To the rest of us this was a comedy, to the government it was a How To manual.

  • @simonm7133
    @simonm7133 Год назад +322

    RIP John Nettleton (d.July 12th 2023) who played Arnold. Terrific actor who played the part so brilliantly.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +11

      Oh dear, so said but he lived a long life, 94 years.

    • @geordiejones2
      @geordiejones2 Год назад +4

      Oh no really i had no idea, how sad.
      Chris

    • @marcghiggeri4965
      @marcghiggeri4965 Год назад +2

      Sad to hear - as said played this part so amazingly.....

    • @gordonchard6243
      @gordonchard6243 Год назад +7

      Are they not all dead now? Such a shame as all the actors play the parts so brilliantly but he's one of my favourites. No scene ever has filler and every joke is detailed and well written.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +3

      @@gordonchard6243 Yes, all the main cast members have died. I think only the actress who played Hacker's wife is still alive

  • @padmanabhaprasannasimha5385
    @padmanabhaprasannasimha5385 3 года назад +310

    The Prime Minister was professionally guided by an expert.

    • @assessmentincharge
      @assessmentincharge 2 года назад +17

      Manipulated (in laymans term)

    • @wkcia
      @wkcia Год назад +20

      In fairness, he was very much in on it at the end… you can sense the horror when they work together on something 🤣

    • @blazypika2
      @blazypika2 3 дня назад

      @@wkcia yeah, at the end it's not the pay raise itself jim had issue with, he just needed something that he could pass through cabinet without it reflecting badly on him. he could've easily let dorothy look into the proposal and find the faults in it but then the civil service will keep fighting him on it, so it was easier for him to accept the partnership with humphrey so both of them can benefit.

  • @MoeLaneIII
    @MoeLaneIII 2 года назад +219

    The mass bribe at the end is simultaneously hysterical and aggravating.

  • @hruaiachawngthu507
    @hruaiachawngthu507 3 года назад +306

    "A second at Oxford counts as an upper second" Brilliant!

    • @readsomebooks666
      @readsomebooks666 3 года назад +18

      At least!

    • @qichen85
      @qichen85 2 года назад +4

      What does that mean actually?

    • @ihathtelekinesis
      @ihathtelekinesis 2 года назад +45

      @@qichen85 Oxford used to have 4 degree classes instead of the usual 3, so a 2nd from Oxford was the same as a "normal" 2.i, a 3rd was the same as a 2.ii and a 4th was the same as a 3rd. These days they just use the same classification as everyone else.

  • @RM-we7px
    @RM-we7px Год назад +55

    Thin end of the wedge. As he’s slicing cheese….perfect.

  • @johnking5174
    @johnking5174 2 года назад +161

    At 4:32 this line from Sir Humphrey is true today as it was back in 1986 when this aired. The current Cabinet Secretary pockets around £205,000 a year, whereas the current Prime Minister (Rishi Sunak as of Jan 4th 2023) pockets £157,000 (even though he and his wife are currently worth £730 million).

    • @ilcorvo9559
      @ilcorvo9559 Год назад +25

      So they should. They are required to be far more competent.

    • @Uthedudeful
      @Uthedudeful Год назад +8

      @@ilcorvo9559 They're not, though...

    • @basillah7650
      @basillah7650 Год назад +11

      The current pm should get zero no one elected him

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +3

      @@basillah7650 Considering he is married to a billionaire and is a multi millionaire himself, I fully 100% agree.

    • @DisorderedArray
      @DisorderedArray Год назад +16

      ​@@basillah7650 He got elected by the members of his political party, same as every other PM ever.

  • @DreamteamCarlo
    @DreamteamCarlo 3 года назад +172

    Arnold can make Humphrey look innocent. Brrrr....

    • @danieldickson8591
      @danieldickson8591 2 года назад +59

      Sir Arnold gives the impression of a man who has not only played the game for a long time, but who wrote many of the rules.

    • @MLaak86
      @MLaak86 Год назад +14

      @@danieldickson8591 not wrong, he knows exactly how the game is played and thus how to get what he wants out of it

    • @herrguru4264
      @herrguru4264 Год назад +3

      Sir Arnold, please!

  • @genildomiranda1690
    @genildomiranda1690 3 года назад +106

    Arnold is a powerhouse

  • @williamdrijver4141
    @williamdrijver4141 Год назад +13

    Sir Humphrey was brilliant, but Sir Arnold was the true master of the game 🙂

  • @gregdeandrea1450
    @gregdeandrea1450 Год назад +225

    You know what I love about this? No one's the "Good Guy."
    Humphrey isn't trying to screw Hacker, Hacker isn't trying to best Humphrey. Hacker KNOWS that Humphrey is doing this for himself, and gets something out of it in rerurn. In the worst possible way, everybody wins. Except, you know, the British public.😂

    • @stanalvares6888
      @stanalvares6888 Год назад +4

      After all 'this is a partnership'

    • @fd8934
      @fd8934 Год назад +7

      And really, isn't that what good governance is all about? 😂

  • @aritragupta4182
    @aritragupta4182 Год назад +23

    RIP, Sir Arnold. John Nettleton, 1929 - 2023.

  • @adelucas4824
    @adelucas4824 Год назад +28

    One of the best fly-on-the-wall documentaries ever filmed

  • @petehall1985
    @petehall1985 3 года назад +70

    6%?!!!! Currently as a local government oue pay rise is 2% which isn't even inflation. Therefore where pay isnt in line with the civil service (usually 20% below) they have to rewrite the job specification....civil service is a very well paid.

    • @essenceofsuchness
      @essenceofsuchness 3 года назад +27

      "Inflation in the UK averaged 4.7% in the 1960s, 14.0 % in the 1970s, and 5.6% in the 1980s."
      This series started in 1980. So this is probably around inflation expectations, I'd say even somewhat below, based on the above.

    • @banksterkid5930
      @banksterkid5930 3 года назад +13

      My mother is retired civil servant. Her pension is more than my IT expert cousins.
      But that's b4 tax

    • @melkorlapich802
      @melkorlapich802 2 года назад

      I believe the 6% was already taking into account the inflation

  • @staffie1uk
    @staffie1uk 5 месяцев назад +1

    Sir Arnold - my favourite character. Fabulous acting.

  • @MLaak86
    @MLaak86 Год назад +23

    “Correcting for inflation, that should do it.”

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +2

      A big correcting needed now in 2023

  • @chantawatchantarapanya8479
    @chantawatchantarapanya8479 3 года назад +87

    Damn, those cheese plate with red wine looks pretty nice.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 3 года назад +14

      I have ate in a few London clubs which people like Sir Arnold and Sir Humphrey ate at, and their food was always superb. Thankfully I was not the one paying for it - as the menu was hugely expensive. Bowl of Parsnip Soup came to £20.

    • @readsomebooks666
      @readsomebooks666 3 года назад +2

      @John King Any particular recommendations?

    • @jalpat2272
      @jalpat2272 Год назад

      @@johnking5174 it should counts as robbery, but then i remember who was their regulars were.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад

      @@jalpat2272 You are right. These are not the type of places I would eat often in. I was taken there by a friend of a friend, who paid.

  • @mohitgfxindia
    @mohitgfxindia 2 года назад +35

    Wait, the best part is ministers only get pay rises while civil servants get rises in allowances. Hacker got fooled again.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +4

      I think that was part of the script which the writers Jonathan Lynn and Antony Jay thought they could slip in, and the viewers and audience wouldn't understand.

  • @johnking5174
    @johnking5174 Год назад +10

    Sad to read John Nettleton has died - great actor.

  • @VHMMP
    @VHMMP Год назад +13

    Such incredible writing.

    • @maqboolfida786
      @maqboolfida786 Год назад

      The series practically wrote itself based on reality. 😅

  • @olefredrikskjegstad5972
    @olefredrikskjegstad5972 2 года назад +77

    _"Then you double the Outstanding Merit Awards. I take it that people still get them?"_
    _"Oh yes, everyone"_
    If everyone gets an outstanding merit award it's not very outstanding, is it? Just like Hacker said about Honors in the Civil Service, they just "come up with the rations"

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 2 года назад +7

      Sad thing is it is nearly 100% true.

    • @lightyagami1752
      @lightyagami1752 Год назад +6

      You can find this sort of idiocy in pretty much any corporate environment. For example, a common high grade in staff performance appraisals is "Exceeds Expectations". HR would expect bosses to discuss with their employees how to achieve higher grades for the next period. But the point is, if those are the expectations to get an "Exceeds Expectations", how can those expectations have been exceeded in the first place (rather than merely having been met)?
      You only have to open your eyes a little to see the insanity behind what we call modern life.

    • @olefredrikskjegstad5972
      @olefredrikskjegstad5972 Год назад +2

      ​@@lightyagami1752Doesn't seem like a particularly modern extravagance to me. It's not like giving people titles and honors for doing next to nothing is a particularly new practice. Consider the existence of Noble titles with attached salaries but zero formal duties, for example.

  • @lightyagami1752
    @lightyagami1752 Год назад +7

    Sir Arnold was the true GOAT.

  • @paul68z
    @paul68z Год назад +3

    Also according to the book of the series the idea of linking MP pay to civil service pay and the index linked pensions was also a real one introduced in the Thatcher era and announced just as Parliament rose for the summer recess/ holiday so got no publicity.

  • @jonnnyren6245
    @jonnnyren6245 2 года назад +35

    "No my dear Humphrey." That's actually really funny and cute from Sir Arnold.
    Sir Arnold is Plagueis, Sir Humphrey is Palpatine and Hacker is Vader who will then be dropped under the bus every single time. 🤣

    • @SamvedIyer
      @SamvedIyer Год назад

      Except, Palpatine slayed Plagueis. Here, Arnold has retired, but Humphrey still needs his advice and give him honours in return. The late stage of their lives will feature comfortable retirement, possibly drinking to how they fooled their respective ministers time and again, and chuckling good-naturedly on the only occasional victory by the politicians.

    • @RM-we7px
      @RM-we7px Год назад +1

      Plagueis and Palpatine are amateurs compared Sir Arnold and Sir Humphrey.

  • @CaptainGrimes1
    @CaptainGrimes1 Год назад +10

    Can't stop looking at that delicious cheese

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +1

      BBC canteen did well for them - real cheese, real wine, all from the BBC Television Centre canteen

    • @c2757
      @c2757 2 месяца назад

      lots 'n lots of calories and mainly fat. Mind you, looking at it isn't a problem; just eating it.

  • @terencej72
    @terencej72 7 месяцев назад +2

    Sir Arnold and Sir Humphrey really are the most conniving snobs aren't they?. All joking aside true civil servants like these guys and their underlings are literally untouchable in terms of accountability or competency. They've got very good salaries, a crown guaranteed, inflation linked, defined benefit pension and if they are high enough up the chain - they can guarantee a directorship or two at a number of companies when they "retire" at 60.

  • @cradle652
    @cradle652 Год назад +4

    Mycroft and Sherlock at it.

  • @davidrobertson5700
    @davidrobertson5700 Год назад +4

    Hey it's the guy from Demolition man

  • @patnor7354
    @patnor7354 Год назад +1

    Amazing how something can be this funny and depressing at the same time...

  • @mitchellcorona8
    @mitchellcorona8 3 года назад +16

    Jeez i don't think I've ever received a pay raise just a different job.

  • @iammattc1
    @iammattc1 Год назад +5

    Note that at the end he's sitting next to the PM, when he usually sits opposite him...

  • @adinameissner2271
    @adinameissner2271 4 года назад +69

    Wow 6% was a "small" raise...

    • @lookihaveausernametoo4231
      @lookihaveausernametoo4231 4 года назад +9

      @@_Ekaros rarely is inflation and raises even marginally linked

    • @yyylhhh6879
      @yyylhhh6879 4 года назад +9

      @@_Ekaros well the 6% includes the inflarion already

    • @anniebygrave9300
      @anniebygrave9300 Год назад +2

      The MPs last 'raise' in the UK was 10%, but that was only on the surface of it....

  • @NuurAbdiMahamud-rr1vu
    @NuurAbdiMahamud-rr1vu Год назад +2

    A masterpiece

  • @johnking5174
    @johnking5174 6 месяцев назад

    The dining rooms where Sir Humphrey and Sir Arnold ate at would probably cost regular people in the 1980s about most of their weekly wage if they wanted to eat in them.

  • @robinmyman
    @robinmyman Год назад +2

    RIP Sir Arnold.

  • @Dirk-van-den-Berg
    @Dirk-van-den-Berg 2 года назад +9

    So, there was someone advising Sir Humphrey Appleby? I always thought HE was the irritating know-it-all.

    • @SamvedIyer
      @SamvedIyer Год назад +7

      This is from _Yes, Prime Minister._ In its previous avatar as _Yes, Minister,_ it was Sir Arnold Robinson who was Cabinet Secretary. Sir Humphrey became Cabinet Secretary after Sir Arnold retired. It is thus that he seeks advice from his predecessor. The eighth episode of the third season, called "Party Games", marks the transition of Jim Hacker from a cabinet minister to prime minister.

  • @RM-we7px
    @RM-we7px Год назад +3

    Rip Mr. Nettleton.

  • @trollmeistergeneral3467
    @trollmeistergeneral3467 Год назад +2

    RIP John Nettleton

  • @peterkroger7112
    @peterkroger7112 Год назад +4

    I love that posh accent.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +1

      RP - received pronunciation - an English accent without a trace of where it could be from in England.

    • @peterkroger7112
      @peterkroger7112 Год назад +1

      @@johnking5174 I know. Formerly also known as BBC-English.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад

      @@peterkroger7112 I have been told by family and friends that I speak a version of this. Not quite as posh as Sir Arnold, but more like Sir Humphrey here.

  • @lizaluk
    @lizaluk 2 года назад +1

    If a pressure comes for pay raise interprets somewhere needs to repair hole into the water tanks.

  • @markneedham752
    @markneedham752 Год назад +4

    Love the size of that cheese plate. Enough there to blow the Dutch Budget for cheese for centuries.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад

      Their private members club would be the best place for lunch - I was lucky to actually dine in one or two clubs as a friend of a member some years before the pandemic

  • @jstalk1
    @jstalk1 Год назад +5

    Is it just me or are they having cheese and wine in this scene? If so that's hilarious

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +2

      Yes they are - however the wine is left over from the main meal - this happens a lot in high class private dining rooms, where you can request the wine to be left on the table right until the end. Happens in The Lansdowne Club often in London

    • @jstalk1
      @jstalk1 Год назад +2

      @@johnking5174 That may be true, but I find it hilarious because they're having cheese and wine while Humphrey is whining to Sir Arnold. Lol

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Год назад +1

      @@jstalk1 True - also begs the question why didn't they speak about this at the start of their meal? We join them at the end of their meal with the cheese and biscuits served after dessert - so why did Sir Humphrey not speak about this when they were getting their soup for starters? In fact in Yes Minister, in a similar lunch meeting, we saw Sir Arnold and Sir Humphrey eating their starters, which for them was melons.

    • @jstalk1
      @jstalk1 Год назад +3

      @@johnking5174 i think the logic is twofold. 1: the start of the meal was Humphrey explaining everything to Arnold, which we the audience had already seen and didn't need a refresher, so they just cut to the part that was relevant to the plot. 2: The writers were really proud of subtly working in a "would you like some cheese with that whine?" into the scene and didn't want to waste time.

  • @shaxter
    @shaxter 2 года назад

    Holy

  • @peterteagleteagle9958
    @peterteagleteagle9958 Год назад

    A whole lot of fiddling going on, just like real life

  • @andrewholdaway813
    @andrewholdaway813 Год назад

    Rise not raise

  • @1995martire
    @1995martire 2 года назад +10

    These types of parasites exist in real life.

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 2 года назад +5

      Yes, I have met them in the civil service. People think these characters are fictional. Sadly they are not.

    • @ilcorvo9559
      @ilcorvo9559 Год назад +2

      ⁠@@johnking5174this kind of financial chicanery occurs all across major business both public and private. you don’t climb to the level these characters are in society (both the civil servants and elected officials) without understanding the game.