American Reacts A Bit of Fry & Laurie Concerning Language REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 156

  • @dogbot555
    @dogbot555 16 часов назад +11

    As a resident of Dorset born and bred I would have to say. "Not especially"🤣

  • @jamesdignanmusic2765
    @jamesdignanmusic2765 4 часа назад +2

    That first part is one of my all-time favourite sketches. The amazing thing about it is that from a lingustics point of view it makes perfect sense, but it's presented in such a way as to be hilarious.

  • @philrob1978
    @philrob1978 17 часов назад +23

    It would be easy to dismiss this as an ex-University English MA posho discussion at the exclusion of everyone else, but it's clearly taking the piss out of that. Pricking the pomposity of it all. Look, I didn't go to University, I left school at 16 and moved straight into an apprenticeship to forge the career I still have to this day at the age of 46 - but I understood this. And it's funny. (Which, of course, is always subjective).
    Also KB, I too have a few issues with short term memory, but that is not a measure of intelligence. You are clearly a smart guy with a curious nature about the world and its history that will always serve you well. Never change, my man.

    • @stewartmackay
      @stewartmackay 14 часов назад

      Pickling, or prickling? Those are two different charges, it seems.

    • @philrob1978
      @philrob1978 12 часов назад

      @@stewartmackay You've misread. Dunno where you got pickling from. Pricking, as in popping a balloon. Exploding it for the nonsense it is, thus nullifying it. That sort of Pricking.
      Oh, unless you are continuing the sketch, in which case - bravo, otherwise. well original comment stands (?)
      I do believe the great poet William Smuthers once wrote about such, and there was a great prickling going on. His ideas would make apples cry, which disavowed all around him. He hated apples forever more, but because horrible knickers that surrounded his poor writhing body he would need nothing more than a frenetic apparition around him that would, and I think you may agree, completely spooked him. Via many authoritarians , thrustly, and wherefore, mighty, his backside was destroyed yet equally validated. He was whole. And so was his...

  • @jimdaw65
    @jimdaw65 15 часов назад +14

    Why this is funny is that at the time there really were shows like this on the telly in which two people would just talk about a subject and give the audience credit for a bit of intelligence; it's parodying that. Yes, just talking ... not baking cakes or dancing and being voted off one by one, just talking.

    • @Kraakesolv
      @Kraakesolv 10 часов назад

      Had those in Norway too, it really is on point

  • @andymerrett
    @andymerrett 17 часов назад +14

    The irony of not having seen Fry looking so young is that A Bit of Fry and Laurie didn't air until most of the Blackadder series had aired. Except in Blackadder Fry often looked older because he was made up with beards and moustaches and so on. :)

    • @alpine_newt
      @alpine_newt 13 часов назад

      I think the main cast of Blackadder, with the exeption of Tony Robinson, were all still under 30 while filming Blackadder Goes Fourth.

    • @daniellowenna3342
      @daniellowenna3342 11 часов назад

      Not quite. Rowan Atkinson, Stephen Fry and Tim McInnerny were over 30 whilst filming. Rowan was the oldest of the three.

  • @GeraldH-ln4dv
    @GeraldH-ln4dv Час назад

    Stephen Fry displayed his very deep English education unintentionally once on an episode of Whose Line Is It Anyway. One of the improv skits involved "talking like a Roman" and instead of talking about things Roman in English, Fry started it right off by asking a question of his teammate in Latin. Funny and erudite.

  • @anitahargreaves9526
    @anitahargreaves9526 14 часов назад +4

    Mum in her 90s, bought me a new kindle. 🇬🇧🎄😅

  • @SimonRobertElder
    @SimonRobertElder 17 часов назад +8

    The weird thing is we used to have odd little discussion shows like this on British T, often late in the evening just before broadcasts for the day ended.

    • @Ace42x
      @Ace42x 17 часов назад +1

      Yep. The Open University using terrestrial TV for broadcasting helped matters a lot, before it was scaled back in the mid-2000s.
      I can't help but feel that documentary programming has very much been dumbed down in the years since on the main UK channels.

    • @pauljohnson1664
      @pauljohnson1664 16 часов назад +6

      Do you remember the time Oliver Reed was inebriated and on a late-night talk show with a bunch of feminists and academics? That was the funniest thing that was ever on TV. Bet it’s on RUclips somewhere.

    • @gojiramonkey2112
      @gojiramonkey2112 13 часов назад +2

      ​@pauljohnson1664 yep, it was magnificent. Ollie ran rings around them anyway, but when he returned from having a piss and climbed over the sofa and kissed that feminist, I frakking died laughing. I believe the show was called After Dark and to this day, Oliie is my hero and I'm so glad I never used to go to bed before the wee hours!!

  • @JackNap1er14
    @JackNap1er14 10 часов назад +1

    Oh the philosophy, I guess it's like something me & my mother used to say about things, like colours, she would point at the sofa and ask "is that sofa red?" when I agreed she would then go on to say "I say it's red, you say it's red, but how do we know that you are seeing the same colour I am seeing?"

  • @timranachan3224
    @timranachan3224 15 часов назад +25

    Yeah it's amazing how Hitler's rhetoric sounds so ridiculous in English.
    Right. Who's going to tell Trump.

    • @stewartmackay
      @stewartmackay 14 часов назад

      Trump is too stupid to understand that.

    • @vinsgraphics
      @vinsgraphics Час назад

      lol. Thinking Trump is Hitler is like thinking Uranus is a body part.

    • @timranachan3224
      @timranachan3224 Час назад

      @vinsgraphics I simply said his rhetoric is ridiculous. As was Hitler's. And Mussolini's.
      All wannabe dictators are ridiculous and deserving of our contempt.

  • @yzolakitchi
    @yzolakitchi 17 часов назад +4

    Just wonderful whimsy! You MUST check out The Hedge Sketch they performed live. "Secret Policeman's Ball: Stephen Fry introduces his favourite clip 'The Hedge' with Hugh Laurie"

  • @jamesrowe3606
    @jamesrowe3606 14 часов назад +8

    America just elected a demogogue who uses nothing but inflammatory rhetoric, so the short answer is YES.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 13 часов назад

      I think these are more your own ideological preoccupations than anything else.

    • @jamesrowe3606
      @jamesrowe3606 13 часов назад +5

      @eadweard. Do you? Despite not knowing a single thing about me? Well thanks for your input anyway.

    • @medievalladybird394
      @medievalladybird394 13 часов назад +1

      ​@@jamesrowe3606
      I had a similar friendly comment from someone who thought he knew me on LBC. 😅
      Have a great day and all the best for 2025 from Germany.

    • @jamesrowe3606
      @jamesrowe3606 12 часов назад +1

      @@medievalladybird394 Some people believe it's OK to make smart-arse comments to strangers, although they never do it in person for some reason. 😏
      Frohes neues Jahr!

    • @medievalladybird394
      @medievalladybird394 12 часов назад +1

      @jamesrowe3606 dankeschön

  • @uniauther13
    @uniauther13 17 часов назад +10

    He's the spitting image of Michael Jackson.

  • @kernowchris
    @kernowchris 11 часов назад +1

    You would certainly enjoy your fellow American Rich Hall. He's the funniest cleverest most watchable American on TV and his Documentaries (mostly about your beloved US of A) are all excellent.

  • @ib9rt
    @ib9rt 16 часов назад +1

    Dorset is associated with cream teas, which is curious, since cream teas were mentioned later in the monologue.

  • @anitahargreaves9526
    @anitahargreaves9526 14 часов назад +2

    My Dorset Uncle went away his favourite dog.died, they didn't know how to tell him? The budgie said as he went through the door, Tinas dead! 👵🙏😂🇬🇧🎄

  • @ChloeAndBetty
    @ChloeAndBetty 17 часов назад +7

    I live in Dorset a county on the South coast of England with about 800k people, I don't think that it is particularly associated with piano compositions.

    • @langermain
      @langermain 6 часов назад +1

      So you've *really* never heard the fourth piano concerto, in A major, of Wurzel Giles?

    • @ChloeAndBetty
      @ChloeAndBetty 5 часов назад +1

      @@langermain Yes it is a masterpiece but sadly it is a Somerset classic. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @paddyl0
    @paddyl0 17 часов назад +1

    My wife loves this show, obsessed. She showed me a few episodes and I’ll be honest I didn’t really think much of it but it grew on me after a while

  • @bertalach
    @bertalach 9 часов назад

    I have the most cutting edge way to keep all my books in one place it’s called a “shelf” I have ten of them!

  • @MarkMcLT
    @MarkMcLT 14 часов назад +1

    This is one of my favorite F&L bits, along with Berwhale the Destroyer. :)

  • @Cleow33
    @Cleow33 13 часов назад +1

    A lifetime ago I read Theoretical Linguistics at university. I can’t tell you how many of these completely unfathomable conversations I was party to.

  • @alisonlinnell8943
    @alisonlinnell8943 7 часов назад

    Language definitely shapes outlooks. Just consider those occasions in any language where a concept expressed in a single word requires an entire sentence and/or explanation in another language.

  • @joelippl3
    @joelippl3 7 часов назад

    I can't decide whether I think Fry is reciting a script from memory, or improvising it as he goes along, or which would impress me more if I knew.

  • @BigAlCapwn
    @BigAlCapwn 17 часов назад +3

    A Bit of Fry & Laurie - Michael Jackson

  • @matthewbutson1061
    @matthewbutson1061 11 часов назад

    Hugh Laurie had some solo sketches on ABOFAL: one about his ex girlfriends and another about his previous jobs and they are both hilarious

  • @nathanakers45
    @nathanakers45 13 часов назад

    I think you'd love their police station sketch ("Derek Nipple"). Especially after watching this it shows how varied (but hilarious) their humor could be. The whole show is just brilliant.

  • @rlawrence9838
    @rlawrence9838 10 часов назад

    I think people are forgetting that if not many people are using a kindles its because people are reading on tablets which is the exact same experience. I read on a tablet occasionally though I prefer a real book....but people were surprised someone could read on a phone very easily I think that's why it became a bit of a discussion.

  • @mkrmkr3805
    @mkrmkr3805 17 часов назад +5

    In my view Fry was taking the piss out of himself perhaps?

  • @informedchoice2249
    @informedchoice2249 16 часов назад

    It's a beautiful composition and it's underpinned by a really serious and quite dark concept but also really interesting one about the nature of language and the nature of the British language in itself. It's really interesting as I was being quite funny.

  • @HeeBeeGeeBee392
    @HeeBeeGeeBee392 17 часов назад +4

    Ah, young mister Fry is, I believe, alluding to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis - aka linguistic relativity - the notion that a language has a big influence on the speaker's experience and comprehension of the world.

    • @langermain
      @langermain 6 часов назад

      I would rather tend to say that one's comprehension of the world is what develops the vulva of the development of one's language.

  • @samgeller1967
    @samgeller1967 10 часов назад

    Stephen Fry is like a professor of words

  • @seijika46
    @seijika46 14 часов назад

    I always loved their 'Bishop and the Warlord' sketches - particularly the US court one.

  • @jamesmatthews291
    @jamesmatthews291 14 часов назад +1

    I can recommend 'Rutland Weekend Television - Gibberish'. Truly insane 😅

  • @enchantededition6879
    @enchantededition6879 10 часов назад

    Fry is playing the brains behind Laurie. Your right though Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie and Rowan Atkinson are all up there on the smartOmeter hence why Slack Bladder was so brilliant. Comedy geniuses all of them.

  • @ivarvanderheijden
    @ivarvanderheijden 14 часов назад

    Correctly correctington...
    Oh, this is pure genius, thank you for reacting. 😂

  • @suzanking5625
    @suzanking5625 16 часов назад +5

    Boomer, you would really enjoy reviewing Fry and Laurie in the British television show: Jeeves and Wooster. Three seasons of the Wodehouse books . Devilishly clever !!!

  • @leedsalex
    @leedsalex 17 часов назад +4

    Ever thought about reacting to all the short Wallace & Gromit films?

  • @Hogsfoot44
    @Hogsfoot44 14 часов назад +2

    Have you seen any episodes of the British sitcom Bottom, with Rik Mayall? I would strongly recommend it. Absolute genius.

  • @PHILD0
    @PHILD0 13 часов назад

    Listen to me lovelet, I can't exaggerate enough how much this sketch inspired in me a love for what can be done with the English language.

  • @danielking6950
    @danielking6950 21 минуту назад

    Hale and pace.you have to look 😂

  • @johnloony68
    @johnloony68 15 часов назад +1

    The whale is not actually a fish at all. It’s an insect. Bananas are marsupials. Salmon live in trees and eat pencils.

  • @medievalladybird394
    @medievalladybird394 13 часов назад +1

    Well, I'm sitting here in Germany, wondering not only how anyone could follow AH but also how anyone could follow DT.😅

  • @AgentOccam
    @AgentOccam 7 минут назад

    Hope you had a great Christmas as well, Boomer. Really enjoying your videos. Cheers.

  • @Payne2view
    @Payne2view 16 часов назад

    I can only imagine there was an eccentric English Literature Professor in a University Mr Fry attended.

  • @Paul_1971
    @Paul_1971 17 часов назад

    This one F&L sketch that I always remember, so funny.

  • @vinnycochrane5139
    @vinnycochrane5139 14 часов назад

    The funny thing is - in Oxford there are people who talk like this in the pub, and ESPECIALLY in the Union Bar. But they tend to be unaffiliated to the University. The properly brainy people I knew were anarchic libertines with warped and twisted appetites, and wouldn’t be caught dead having a twee, effete salon like this, when they could be running around a garden naked, shouting sonnets in pursuit of some boy or other. I loved Oxford.

  • @FrancesThompson-e3m
    @FrancesThompson-e3m 16 часов назад

    Don’t put yourself down, these two gentlemen are extremely talented and highly educated and would probably run rings around most people. As you so rightly say Rosen Atkinson is another one. The previous generation produced the likes of John Cleese and Michael Paylin and likes Peter Cooke.

  • @johnloony68
    @johnloony68 15 часов назад

    11:27 Kate Adie was a journalist who often reported from war zones

  • @livb6945
    @livb6945 16 часов назад

    Yay!! Was gonna suggest this very one 😁😁😁

  • @col4022
    @col4022 11 часов назад

    Love George Carling, but I never thought his vocabulary was particularly intricate or sophisticated.

  • @davidedwards504
    @davidedwards504 15 часов назад +1

    We made up a song about him only having one ball so we wouldn't have let him become our dictator.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 15 часов назад

      I think the song only came about because we were at war with him, didn't it?

    • @Steve.M
      @Steve.M 10 часов назад

      Armstrong and Miller (the WWII pilots, etc.) do a fine sketch about how the song came to be written.

  • @SirHilaryManfat
    @SirHilaryManfat 16 часов назад

    I visited a pub in Oxford (near the university colleges) a few years ago, and overheard a conversation between students that was a perfect representation of this type of pompous intellectualistic discussion. Considering both Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie attended Cambridge University, I'm sure they've been witness to many of these types of conversation.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 16 часов назад

      Well... what did they say?

    • @SirHilaryManfat
      @SirHilaryManfat 15 часов назад

      @@eadweard. 🤣

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 15 часов назад

      ​@@SirHilaryManfatNot sure what you mean.

  • @enchantededition6879
    @enchantededition6879 10 часов назад

    This where Ricky Gervais got the idea from!

  • @R3ED3R
    @R3ED3R 10 часов назад

    Wasn't Laurie, Fry's room mate in University or something? sure i heard that somewhere?

  • @Digginjim
    @Digginjim 14 часов назад

    I still use ‘correctly correctington’ to this day…

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 9 часов назад

    Oh dear, how positively primordial you make me feel if Kindle is viewed as ancient. I still read from things once called books. 👴🤔

  • @wesbanderson664
    @wesbanderson664 17 часов назад +2

    stephen is an extremely capabububolorator.

  • @mikemoore4033
    @mikemoore4033 15 часов назад

    He only went and introduced a leveret! Bloody nerve.

  • @danpearce4547
    @danpearce4547 16 часов назад

    05:55 No, Dorset is famous for being the home of Legends!

  • @ondrejvasak1054
    @ondrejvasak1054 7 часов назад +1

    If you like Rowan Atkinson and John Cleese, you should react to the beekeeping sketch. It's brilliant.

  • @paulknox505
    @paulknox505 16 часов назад

    How on earth did he memorise this, lol

  • @chrishall7915
    @chrishall7915 8 часов назад

    0:52 - If you do a lot of reading then a Kindle is much better for your eyes

  • @brianmcdonald1776
    @brianmcdonald1776 16 часов назад +1

    Stephen Fry.....one of our National Treasures here in UK......
    If you want to see a very serious side of Stephen then check out his debates with Christopher Hitchens on some very controversial issues

    • @SirHilaryManfat
      @SirHilaryManfat 15 часов назад +1

      The debate on Catholicism with Fry and Hitchens was brilliant.

  • @jakedee4117
    @jakedee4117 16 часов назад

    This is the sort of sketch that happens when you stay in university for too long.
    Monty Python were often the same. Check out Monty Python's "The constitutional peasant" from The Holy Grail to see what I mean.

  • @mariuscheek
    @mariuscheek 17 часов назад +1

    The Kindle was a bit rubbish, needing some other light source and the page never looked like white paper, always a bit dull. That is until the first 'Paperwhite' came along, which I still have now. It's the best thing to read to go to sleep, as it looks pretty natural, an turns itself off after a couple of minutes if you fall asleep.
    The new Kindle Paperwhites are really superb, much better than my original paperwhite in terms of just looking like printed text in a book. The technology has come so far! And always remember, if you read on a phone screen, you're depleting your phone battery markedly, but a Kindle can have several weeks of intensive reading on one charge. My 12 yr old one does about 2 hrs/day for me, and still only needs charging once a fortnight.

  • @bloodyliar
    @bloodyliar 15 часов назад

    He does look so young, and yet he'd already been in Prison at this point

  • @ParanormalFun-i1i
    @ParanormalFun-i1i 16 часов назад

    You need to look at their Dammit John sketches on the show

  • @billyboy123ish
    @billyboy123ish 14 часов назад

    Unfortunately we had Moseley

  • @misolgit69
    @misolgit69 16 часов назад

    don't forget in 1938 in American cities there were uniformed American Nazis marching in the streets here in UK we had Oswald Mosley part of the upper class es organising his 'Blackshirts' but here there were riots and punch ups in the street whenever they appeared

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 15 часов назад

      Not sure of your point.

    • @misolgit69
      @misolgit69 15 часов назад

      Boomer talked about Hitler's speech in English would it sway anyone, well it did

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 15 часов назад +1

      @@misolgit69 Oh yes thank you.

  • @James-md8ph
    @James-md8ph 9 часов назад

    Hey, check out Fry & Laurie in "Dinner With Digby" 😄

  • @ilesalmo7724
    @ilesalmo7724 16 часов назад

    Fry is bipolar, and I can see him having a bit of a manic episode in this

  • @jonathanjeffreys3007
    @jonathanjeffreys3007 11 часов назад +1

    "Just a muppet in a chair"? I don't think so. You are obviously very well informed and much better educated than you pretend to be, and (thank goodness) you know a lot more about many out-of-the-way subjects than most of your fellow American commentators, some of whose birdbrained remarks and lack of elementary knowledge leave me gasping in disbelief. If this was not the case, you wouldn't find Fry and Lauries' kind of esoteric humour funny. You would look puzzled and mutter something like "I missed that", or "Help me out in the comments" - neither of which you ever do.

  • @johnloony68
    @johnloony68 15 часов назад

    Invisible green sheep sleep furiously.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 13 часов назад

      Colourless green ideas...

    • @johnloony68
      @johnloony68 13 часов назад

      …warble decadently in the wabe

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 5 часов назад

      @@johnloony68 I mean it's "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously".

  • @informedchoice2249
    @informedchoice2249 16 часов назад

    Please watch the Michael Jackson sketch and the in the police station giving his name sketch and many others the The Vox Pop Street interviews are brilliant as well there are collections of those. Some really crazy stuff on Fry and Laurie and but yeah a lot of really grey stuff. The American songs are quite good the kicking ass song is quite good as well i'm sure you'll appreciate that.

  • @mkrmkr3805
    @mkrmkr3805 17 часов назад +2

    Born again Kindleist eh...

  • @mattwhorlow9900
    @mattwhorlow9900 5 часов назад

    Do you think Stephen Fry scripted all that ... or did the script just say "Fry ad-libs for half an hour"

  • @ParanormalFun-i1i
    @ParanormalFun-i1i 16 часов назад +1

    I read actual books

  • @DenUitvreter
    @DenUitvreter 16 часов назад

    Fry is in his early 30s here. Yes, he is extremely smart and intellectually playfull as so many, he's a great novelist too allthough not consistently imho. As someone who is comfortable in both German and English and native speaker of neither, I don't appreciate the underlying thought of this sketch that mach as it's just British exceptionalism. Yes, language does shape thought, no, English is not special in that.

  • @bristolgareth1
    @bristolgareth1 15 часов назад

    Attraction

  • @AndyCallaway
    @AndyCallaway 16 часов назад

    Have you seen any Ronnie Barker?

  • @donalonzo63
    @donalonzo63 16 часов назад +1

    Your reaction on this - The Two Ronnies, Fork Handles would be great to see. Truley a world class comedy sketch, the bar is set high here.
    ruclips.net/video/0CmaLgxLDE0/видео.htmlsi=JH-ZkMIY-jnAk_-m

  • @rogerlundstrom6926
    @rogerlundstrom6926 11 часов назад

    Btw; I have some thoughts that is probably not relevant for this channel.. but I AM curious about the comment King boomer made around the 4 minute mark (and if you read to the END of my comment I will at least start off such conversation.. Stop reading whenever you feel like).. Where he talked about AI translating Hitler's speech to English and it not resonating with him. This is a conversation I would be glad to partake in, but it is the wrong one for a reaction channel. but.. I will say two things:
    1. I really want to hear that speech (I haven't come across it yet, and since I WILL think of this channel and what he said when I hear it I REALLY want to be sure it is the SAME I hear, so I WANT to ask for a link for the SPECIFIC AI rendering that King Boomer heard).. and..
    2... No.. You WOULDN'T feel enticed by it today.. NOT because of what language it is expressed in but simply because.. history.. You are NOT in a vaccuum.. Knowledge is passed down..Tone of voice, arguments, rhetorical elements, and other things.. alters over time.. more exactly: They may fall out of favoure.. so.. ABSOLUTELY!! because of the very lessons learned back then.. we have altered our socio-cultural conditioning to.. "react negatively" to the very things that people USED to find appealing. So.. BECAUSE!!!! Hitler fell out of favour as strongly as he did.. and about 80 years of rhetorics and people using specific ways to express yourself as negative, and so on.. you WOULDN'T find it appealing.. it's not about the language used (English versus German).. it's about.. historical events/context.. (BEFORE we learned that Hitler was bad so we literally used Hitler's way of expressing himself as a way to define people as bad)..
    ·.... This is why modern world makes people so extremely fearful..
    Because.. if you ACTUALLY know history.. if you learned about propaganda.. what arguments were good or bad.. how specific viewpoints could make you think a certain way.. be more attracted to specific ideas, and reject others.. and so on..
    THEN you'll know that what Trump is sharing is literally the SAME crap as Hitler was saying.. using the SAME flawed logic, the SAME flawed propaganda, the same hatred/fear/selfishness based concepts.. as Hitler did.
    The ONLY difference is that he expresses his views in a different mode.. SAME views.. but in a different tone.

  • @DavidNeal-mf9ky
    @DavidNeal-mf9ky 11 часов назад

    This is what they should have done with Karl Pilkington

  • @harrisonhoulden6752
    @harrisonhoulden6752 11 часов назад

    I’ve been watching ur reactions to Friday Night dinner from last year. Can u react to the last season they made a few years back it’s season 6 if u can

  • @rlawrence9838
    @rlawrence9838 10 часов назад

    The mentioning of Dorset is completely random and means literally nothing.

  • @PurpleHatGames1
    @PurpleHatGames1 9 часов назад

    King boomer can you please react to Vic and Bob - Geordie Astronauts Compilation please? it is so funny

  • @dianapeek6936
    @dianapeek6936 14 часов назад

    Am trying to find someone who is prepared to sell a Kindle. No luck so far? Dec 2024.

  • @benedictnothing
    @benedictnothing 13 часов назад

    Being smart is about logic and working things out for yourself. A lot of people who seem really smart actually only have a good memory, especially for language. A lot of people who seem quite dim only come across like that because they struggle with language, and are actually logically very clever. Sportsmen are often a good example of that. Being smart is about being able to mentally connect things together and using that information to make reliable predictions.

  • @adylevene4318
    @adylevene4318 13 часов назад

    People who still have a bit of class and intellect read real books.

  • @steveb1972
    @steveb1972 15 часов назад +1

    How can anybody follow this guy? Modern example - TRUMP!

  • @michaelclarke5153
    @michaelclarke5153 13 часов назад

    Pretentious brain fart?

  • @marinodagostino6680
    @marinodagostino6680 16 часов назад

    I’m pretty sure this is a pisstake of over educated oxbridge/Ivy League bellends. Also, and I hate to bring this up, but Addie made way more coherent, intelligible, comprehensible, lucid than Donny in any language

  • @KungKokkos
    @KungKokkos 44 минуты назад

    Hitlers speaches sounds less convincing to you than Trumps random babbeling? Stupid appeals to stupid, simple solutions to complex problems and stroking peoples egos.

  • @gusbert
    @gusbert 16 часов назад +1

    Stephen Fry is clever, but he is not clever on everything. Just because he says it is so (and can read the answer cards in QI) does not mean he should be put on a pedestal. I've read/heard some things he has said which were just outright stupid and/or wrong. Keep him on his good subjects (English Language, Literature) and he knows a lot. On other stuff ... he just has opinions. I like him as an actor and comedy performer.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. 15 часов назад

      Like what?

    • @gusbert
      @gusbert 11 часов назад

      @@eadweard. Fry on GPS: "You send a signal from your GPS device. You've got to be at least three, usually four or five satellites - that receive your signal. And the difference in time it takes to get from one satellite to the other to the other, which is milliseconds, allows them to calculate your position to within 10 metres." Fry on TCP/IP: "Any email or transaction on the internet uses what's called packet-switching, which means the information is broken up into packets, and reassembled on the other side. But each side has to be exactly synchronised, otherwise the message is nonsense. So the caesium atomic clocks are necessary to make all this technology work." Need I go on? Fry is a stupid person's idea of a clever person.

  • @paulhooton6261
    @paulhooton6261 17 часов назад +1

    I'm a fan of both Fry & Laurie but I regard this as just self-indulgent nonsense that really only his University chums appreciate. Sure it's clever, but not really that funny.

    • @Jxb9904
      @Jxb9904 16 часов назад

      I agree, it's painfully unfunny.

    • @philrob1978
      @philrob1978 16 часов назад +1

      I'm also a fan of those old F&L shows, I disagree, I think it's actually taking the piss out of the whole pomposity of it. But you know, great how different everyone's mind perceives things, would be boring otherwise!

    • @Jxb9904
      @Jxb9904 15 часов назад

      @philrob1978 It's clever but just painfully unfunny. Maybe I'm old fashioned, but I think comedy should be funny.

    • @philrob1978
      @philrob1978 15 часов назад

      @@Jxb9904 And that's fine. As I say, it's all subjective. Don't worry about it. My best to you.

    • @philrob1978
      @philrob1978 15 часов назад +1

      @@Jxb9904 What's funny to you, might be funny to me too. In fact I'm sure of that. But sometimes, something isn't. It's not a problem, just human nature. I don't understand why some don't get that humour really is subjective sometimes, like we are all in a hive mind or something!

  • @True_Heretic
    @True_Heretic 10 часов назад

    I think George Carlin was a rapper and a poet. The rhythm and speed of some of his quickfire diatribes suggested so.

  • @grahamstubbs4962
    @grahamstubbs4962 13 часов назад

    Thing is, with languages that end the sentence with the verb, as the audience you're hanging on every word.
    It's not until the end of the sentence is fully apparent that you can make final sense of it.
    It's already fully parsed and it's going to arrive in your cognitive centres (technically, thinkly bits) in an instant.
    A decent orator can make hay with that.