American Reacts to Adverts: UK vs. USA!
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- Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
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They used to have adverts that had a story arc in the UK. The Gold Blend Coffee adverts ran for 6 years with 12 adverts showing a romance that started with neighbours borrowing coffee. There was also the OXO family that ran for years. Even Birds Eye Beefburgers had adverts that were like a 45 second soap episode and had continuing stories but, in this case, featuring children.
Annoying that i'm now older than the current Captain Birds eye
Anthony Head, I can't remember her name.
Googled her. Sharon Maughan, married to Trevor Eve (Waking the dead, Shoestring).
Technically the Compare The Meerkat ads have had an ongoing story arc for the past decade or so, and there was a series of BT ads for a while around a family, with Kris Marshall.
But, yeah, definitely was a bigger deal when it happened back with the Gold Blend ads.
That is why Soaps are called Soaps, it was from a Soap advert that had a story arc, that is where actual Soaps (Eastenders, Coronation Street, etc) are derived from, from what I understand anyway.
@@danielreed5199 I heard it was because the sponsors were usually soap companies ( in the USA).
In the UK there are whole TV programmes in the Welsh, Irish and Scottish Celtic languages too.
Yes, Margaret. In fact there's an entire channel in Cymraeg (Welsh). It is called S4C and carries programming from both the BBC and independent production companies.
@Nicky L Sorry Nicky. I'm not sure. I've seen Irish language channels when I've been flicking through when visiting or programmes being advertised but, of course, there's the complication of the Ulster Scots Irish language being slightly different to the Irish Irish language. I'd imagine it's a mix of Scottish Gaelic and Irish Gaelic. I have enough difficulty understanding Derry Girls at times!!! 😀
The best ads of the 80s and 90s were for alcohol and tobacco. Check out Leonard Rossiter and Joan Collins' ads for Cinzano, the Carling Black Label ads and Hemlet cigars. Best ads but never induced me to buy any.
All the above and also the Australian beers Castlemaine 4x and Fosters
Don’t forget the Boddingtons adverts
Oh come on, the Heineken ads beats them all hands down!
Carling Black Label, Heineken,, and Fosters adverts were always good.
Hamlet cigars were hilarious
The Mash get Smash aliens were the best! Them and the PG Tips chimps...lol. 😀
Nobody watches ads any more. You save the shows and fast forward through the ads.
we need to talk about meerkats. So popular are the adverts that ToyRUs (rest in peace) were selling meerkat toys in dressing gowns and everyone knows the one word catchphrase.
Simples! (in squeaky voice)
I think the meerkats adverts are one of the most popular averts ever.
Wait I’m from the uk wtf happened to ToysRUs? Was it the same as Woolworths?
@@nomarxistspls90 yes, it is no more
The Guinness adverts were outstanding, particularly the surfing white horses one, which was once voted the best advert of all time.
i might be wrong, but wasn't there a few different versions of that ad, one with it on its' own, one 'in association with the guiness premier league' for the rugby, and one for non domestic?
@@rogoth01themasterwizard11 - ?? Can you expand? Are you talking specifically about the surfer riding the ‘white horses’ wave?
@@cornishmaid9138 yeah, in the rugby version they replaced the white horses in the water with a rugby scrum, and instead of the guys celebrating on the beach, after the surfing scene was finished it cut to a black background with a load of rugby players of the time, then it cut to the guinness pint and the tag line of the advert.
@@rogoth01themasterwizard11 - ooooh, never saw that one. 👍
@@cornishmaid9138 i'll be honest, you might need to really go digging through archives to find it because while the general advert lasted a long (ish) time, the rugby one was only around for that season of rugby, i never saw it after that, and due to the age of things it might be hard to find, i tried looking to link it before when explaining but couldn't find it on youtube lol.
"Honest Advertising" is like "Military Intelligence", two words that don't belong together.
There are a couple of adverts that were done in series like the Gold Blend Couple for coffee, Papa and Nicole for Renault cars, If you see Sid... Tell him!, and Maureen Lipman's for BT (phone company)
Who can remember the words to 1001, the carpet cleaner?
1001, 1001 gets rid of that workaday frown. 1001 cleans a big big carpet for less than half a crown! For less than half a crown!!
Advertisers certainly knew what they were doing!
I remember it. Most today wouldn't recognize the term 'half a crown'.
I have an amazing system - I record everything I want to watch then zip through the ads - sooo simple!😎
I do exactly the same thing 🤣
This is one reason why, where possible I record every TV programme I want to watch. I refuse to sit through inane adverts. Sometimes I may come across a programme that is live but then I commit it to a memory device or PVR to watch later minus adverts.
That's my Tuppence worth.
On my first visit to the USA in the 90s, I was in a Washington DC hotel and excitedly turned on the TV. I looked at the thick catalogue of TV programmes and could not make sense of it so I chose just a random channel. After ten minutes I realised that it was actually an advert for something. So I turned it off and kept it off I. turned off my UK TV nearly three years ago and haven't watched TV at all since. My brain now feels nearly clean again.
Good on you Alan. I've not had a TV for over 16 years. I'm ignorant to who tv celebrities are and really don't care 😂
Well done you. I'm not as good as you but heading in that direction, being that I only turn the TV on to watch something specific that is of interest to me. I'm more of a bookworm when I settle down to relax.
@@jaytucker8834 I first went TV-less in the late 90s because TV reception was bad. This time I thought "I've watched about 30 hours of TV max in the year" so I didn't renew the licence; it was easy as I didn't pay by direct debit. I watch Amazon Prime instead, mainly old programmes such as the Professionals, Sweeney, Red Dwarf....
Best advert ever. Hamlet The Mild Cigar. Guy with combover having four passport photos taken in a booth.
I can't imagine telling a doctor which medication I want, self diagnosis from an ad seems worse than Dr Google! I feel much more secure in the concept that a doctor has spent years learning to know what is appropriate for me as an individual and what I am seeking help with.
Its even worse when you realise Drs in USA are payed by medication companies to sell you drugs. So you could have a drug that is 80% good for you, and your doctor will try and get you to take a drug thats only 70%.
Dr Google! Chuckle ☺
My Fav adsm were PG Tips (when they had the chimps, Smash Potatoes advert with Robo Aliens, and the Hamlet Cigar With Bald Man. Oh I nearly forgot Hamlet Extra Mild Cigar Glow Worm advert - Which was only shown in the cinemas
"Philomena Cunk's Moments of Wonder Ep 1: Time" you'll love this
We have sharing bags of crisps in the UK too. They are popular for parties or movie nights. The multipacks of 6 (or more) small bags, are ideal of lunch boxes.
Yeah, the share bags, that I don't share.. They will all be mine!!! 🤣
But the US ones are huuuuge. Sizewise equivalent to a bag of compost!
Cider is a centuries old staple drink in the UK, particularly in the south-west where the cider apple orchards are; it's not considered 'girly' at all. As for adverts, they used to be really good and they used to be only about 6 mins per hour - not so any more.
American advertisers, especially the health insurance companies, are the equivalent of the child catcher from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang: all smiles until you take the bait and then you're trapped for life. I've been watching the NFL Preseason games on the NFL GamePass app with far too many American ads and not one of them would make me want to buy any of the products if they were available here. They are either the child catcher ads I mentioned or that plainly purile 'humour' that Americans seem to lap up. I'll be glad when the regular NFL season starts so that I can watch it on Sky Sports with British ads made for British adults!
When Star Trek The Next Generation was first broadcast in the early 90s on BBC2 it was on for forty minutes without any ad breaks at all. I went to New York around the same time and watched an episode in my hotel room and it was on for an hour and went like this: Ads, Opening scene, ads, opening credits, ads, first part, ads, second part, ads, third part, ads, closing credits, ads! I'm convinced that tv shows in America are there for the benefit of the advertisers not the other way round.
My name is Adam I'm an ant eater, I eat ant's by the meter, I find them under stones, and i find them under rock's, but I'd rather have a bowl of Coco pops...... never forget xx 😄
Recommended - if you can find them, from the 80s:: 1 the Audi ad, showing a car being tested by being driven through 'glass' (spun sugar); 2 the Heinneken ads parodying art films.
Hi Joel here in Britain we have a wonderful piece of technology called the Mute button, and the Off switch, many people over the years have got so fed up with media in general the we mute adverts and look at one another and have conversions we have also stopped buying newspapers, to be honest not all ads are ignored as you, yourself has shown, some ads are of hi quality entertainment without being in your face, something the American Ad men should take note, is that American Ads are not to the British taste and the products are less likely to be taken notice of and bought in the UK, Hope your recent visit to the UK gave you some insight into British culture, your a good chap and doing an amazing job shining a light on world culture.
So true. If there are adverts on the telly, I just watch something on my phone until it's over. If there's an ad on my phone at the same time then I'll probably just have a quick wank.
Do not watch much TV, really hate when an ad break occurs at a key moment, stop this by recording programmes and skipping over the ads. As for newspapers cannot remember the last time I bought one.
@@rebeccat94 General questions.
Do you think you have the right to use any output from the BBC if, by the sound of it, you don't pay the licence fee? That includes most local radio and hundreds of websites.
Personally I would disallow people being able to access any BBC product unless you type in the number of your valid TV licence.
@@karenblackadder1183 Did you read what Becca wrote? She did not claim to watch BBC. And what are these hundreds of websites? Personally I would make BBC subscription only.
Have always, since childhood, muted adverts (apart from ones that I genuinely enjoyed). I would rather make boring small talk with my family, especially now, than have to listen to Phillip Schofield harp on about Webuyanycar, or Rylan Clark talk about "cinching" it.
I guess another exception I think of in terms of 'all the same TV in the UK' is that there's a Welsh Language channel, S4C, which is in Wales but not the rest of the UK
I remember George Harrison of the Beatles being interviewed and he said he got confused with American TV because he never knew where the program ended and the adverts began where in England we had End of Part one then the adverts would be begin for 5 minutes then part two, I understand now I've seen Fred Flintstone smoking that would never happen in England
You'll also probably find Stephen Fry starring in or voicing half the adverts in the UK....well back in the day at least.
Yes,but Brian Blessed or Tom Baker[4th Dr.Who] were catching up him,fairly recently!😉
David Mitchell did fairly well for himself as well lol
Your reaction after the Edinburgh comment was priceless 😊
I just did the colon cancer screening test at home. I live in the UK, you just follow the directions and sent it back. I got the all clear within a week or two. Thank you the NHS
These guys speak faster than I can listen. Holy cow
BBC, of course, still carries no ads, except for its World News channel. I only worked in the US for a total of ten years, and was initially shocked when patients would ask me to prescribe a particular branded medication. My response was always, "I prescribe what I think best, as I'm your physician. If you want a drug of your own choice, find yourself a dealer." A few grumbled, and a handful left in high dudgeon, but most accepted that my 10 years of university probably meant I knew more than their 30 seconds watching a TV commercial. Also, the two commentators seem unaware that there are two entirely different TV channels in Wales, one in Welsh only. So regional TV is not extinct in the UK.
S4C bbc Cymuru
I've noticed recently, the BBC programmes that used to be an hour long, are now about 45 minutes long, and I'm wondering if that is to allow space for advertising on American channels, that the BBC may be selling content to.
Does BBC America carry advertising ?
@@jonmac3995 quite a few of the BBC nature documentaries would have about 10-15 minutes at the end of how they got the footage for the episode, I believe this was cut from the American/International version so they.could show ads
any carling black label advert with Mark Arden and Stephen Frost. i miss them. bloody hilarious. my favourite being the damn busters one but they where all good
When I worked for a top-40 radio station in San Francisco many years ago, we used to speed-up the music by 10 or 20%. That was make it sound more energetic. That was a thing back then.
Re UK television advertising, the following information is taken from the UK tv and radio listings magazine, The Radio Times, 27 Aug to 2 Sept 2022.... "Currently commercial public service broadcasters, that is ITV, STV, Channel 4, S4C, and Channel 5 are restricted to an average of 7 minutes of advertising per hour with an extra minute in primetime. Other commercial broadcasters are allowed up to 9 minutes per hour or longer in the case of teleshopping channels." That therefore is the current situation regarding commercial breaks on tv in the UK. All BBC channels in the UK, both tv and radio, contain no commercials or paid for advertising of course.
Seinfeld was shown in the UK (20 years ago?) and was quite popular. Same thing with Friends.
Joe pointed out we now have programme sponsorship and product placement. However, there’s a big difference in how they are implemented here. A programme sponsor is forbidden from having any influence or editorial input over the content of the programme. If a sponsor is unhappy with the content, their only option is to stop sponsoring it. Similarly, product placement must be “incidental”, in that it cannot influence the content. For example, the product can appear, but nobody can make any direct reference to it.
Since you’ve been bombarded with Cadbury’s chocolate, you might want to look at some of their older ads. Search for Cadbury’s Smash and you’ll find some very amusing old ads from the 70s and 80s. There was also a whole series of semi-erotic ads for Cadbury’s Flake. You might be baffled by the Cadbury’s gorilla ad too. One of the most imaginative series of ads from decades ago (before tobacco ads were banned), was for Hamlet cigars - “Happiness is a cigar called Hamlet”, which were very amusing.
I think the Marmite ads are also some of the most imaginative in British advertising. So many great ones, but these are some of the best:
ruclips.net/video/RG14sDcaJM0/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/B_191RnWwww/видео.html
"I'm a Cadbury's Fruit and Nut Case"
Frank Muir,
Nutcracker Suite theme
There are a couple of exceptions to that - You very occasionally see gameshows mention the e.g. holiday company that provided a holiday as a prize, and the brief revival of The Krypton Factor was entirely paid for by a single company, had extremely direct transition from their sponsorship into credits, and while there was a break, it was only used to promote programming rather than sell ads.
There are some great UK adverts on this RUclips channel - "Roll Back The Years Classic 70's 80's British Tv Ads"
One big advert I think was in the late 60s - 70s and it was the Cadbury's Flake advert ( I do believe that you and friends have eaten some as gifts ) , the advert got stopped but it was not the product but the way it was eaten . Dare you to eat a flake with friends first and then look at the adverts ( about 5 ) and still eat another one lol
Loved those adverts, absolute classics. 😀
Sexy and suggestive - but in a classy way!
Joel: Whilst you where traveling around the UK you where in the former ITV regions of -
Thames Television/London Weekend Television (London)
HTV /West of England (when you where in Bath )
Yorkshire Television (York)
STV Scottish Television( Edinburgh & Glasgow)
Anglia Television (Stansted Airport)
You could get Tyne Tees Television in York aswel as Yorkshire TV, and don't forget Border TV in The Lake District.
You missed out one of the biggest, Granada (Northwest England) also ATV (Midlands) and Southern TV. Granada probably made the most programmes of any ITV company.
Anglia I think only made 'Sale of the Century', Border TV only made a version of 'Mr and Mrs' (as did several other regional companies).
@@nevillemason6791 You're a man of my own heart.
Cider in the UK is the drink of choice for homeless alcoholics
Those two are great together.
London and Edinburgh. Two cities you got lashed in!
9:30 Cigarettes were advertised everywhere till only a few decades. I’m not even surprised. A major advertiser on ‘I Love Lucy’ was a cigarette brand.
Networks have local ad inserts. There are times in their schedule where they break away from the network and each market plays it's local commercials and other content.
Here in Australia a tv network was bought by CBS America and one of the first things they did was close production of the news and moved it to an east coast state. Using an east coast presenter and weather reports are done from the same east coast studio.
I remember Umbongo they drink it in the congo and tomato ketchup with Mat le blanc.good old days.by the way Joel i think you look great with stubble👍🏻
Whatever happened to Mbongo?It was such a great name.
@@eh-i1841 yes! I still remember that damn tune but can’t remember what i did last week 😄
We DO have local adverts on STV and on ITV in England and Wales.
You even get localised adverts for Glasgow and the West of Scotland and Edinburgh and the east, and it's same for the rest of the UK.
I think Jay actually meant that we have pretty much gotten rid of local programmes
@@RB-747 No he made both those claims that we don't do local adverts or local programming besides news.
@@dicem8977 Oh I see - I'm assuming that must just be for ITV though then because I have never seen a local advert on TV
The drug companies just send branded post-it notes to our GPs instead. There’s a fight back campaign telling GPS to prescribe generics not branded drugs.
18:15 The moment where Joel disintegrated and for very good reason 😂 #IYKYK
Joel getting PTSD when Edinburgh was mentioned made me spit my tea out laughing 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Haha, yes his reaction was very funny 😄!
I laughed too, was the best bit 😁😁😆🤣😂
We don't pronounce them as AdvertISEments
Advert iss ments
🤣
All of us who watched your Scotland video are laughing at the mention of “Edinburgh”,! Edinburgh is now on the map!!
My FREE Adblocker means I have never seen Ads on You Tube!
Thanks JP. I did give you the look, then you said, don't give me that look (Scotland) .... 😄
I dislike ads so much .... the majority of media news in the UK is so biased so we don't watch it, but most stuff we watch we've recorded and if there are adverts we fast-forward.
JPS is the boss. Love your observations.
ITV do have regional adverts. In Wales you get ads for welsh window companies and Trade Center Wales, which you do not get in England and I think they sometimes change the voiceovers to regional accents?
Seinfeld was popular in the UK and was on TV for many years.
Unfortunately in the UK the adverts have taken over the programmes, I record them and delete the adverts! It’s crazy.
The thing I don't think you quite understand with us leaving the EU is that most of our laws are now written in a way that satisfied the EU while we were in it. They are written that way... Yet now we have left, we have the complete sovereign freedom to change these laws to suit our own needs when and however we need it, without needing to get permission from Brussels to change our own laws
This means we can fuck up really badly... Or not. It's in our own hands now.
Law student here. It’s to do with how EU laws are put into force. The EU mandate something, and then all EU nations have to put that mandate into their own laws.
This has meant that all legislation that has come from the EU has remained in our own law, and will continue to do so unless we decide to change it.
@@SimuDan Thank you. Plain ans simple.
@@SimuDan That's basically what I meant you just said it better haha. But yeah, like I said, its in our own hands now. We can change it if we want to, we are not mandated by the EU to have any of those laws anymore if we don't want to have them
He said there 'was' only STV covering Scotland as a region, didn't Border TV, presumably cover the south of Scotland as well as Northumberland and Cumbria? And what did they used to recieve in the IoM? Vaguely remember the name "Grampian" of old too?
Great ads from the past, I'm a secret lemonade drinker, You've been Tangoed, Luton Airport, Watch out there's a Humphrey about, Leonard Rossiter and Dame Joan Collins series of Cinzano ads, all the old PG Tips monkey ads, Boddington and Follow the Bear (Hoffmeister beer) series just to name a few.
you mightve noticed on uk bags of crisps and sweets there was a traffic light chart telling you how much sugar and fat etc in the product your eating national food chains have calorie counts on the menu is now law
There’s a companion video to this about British vs American TV - well worth checking out!
I only watch to public broadcaster. Programs are not interrupted by adverts. Sometimes there are adverts between programs, but not always. German and Dutch public tv do have blocks of adverts between programs, Belgian televion has sponsor messages and public annoucements between shows. BBC mainly public annoucements. So I hardly see any ads at all. I do this on principle, but never felt I missed anything important by not watching commercial stations.
Ads are targeted to specific regions, for example we receive ads for furniture shops around here
At least the UK doesn't advertise prescription medicines.
Check out the red cross "I am a crisis" advert! Chilling 😬
“I'm not going to say it, I'm not going to say it” that part got me!
The first time I saw adverts from the USA was in the early 1990's. One thing that was different back then was the USA ads would directly compare their product with a rival brand (eg Energizer vs Duracell batteries), but in the UK at that time you couldn't directly compare your product with a rival brand name, it would be Energizer batteries last 6 times longer than the "UK's leading brand". It's changed now as there are adverts on UK TV at the moment where the supermarkets name their rivals saying their prices are cheaper etc.
In the 80's Qualcast Concorde mowers had the slogan 'A lot less bother than a hover' And Flymo responded in an advert, then Qualcast company responded to that response, it was a mini war!
Is it just me or does anyone else think that since covid there's more ads for life insurance and funeral plans on tv in the uk
He actually was speaking French lol we get taught it in school, probably similar to how you're taught Spanish
The Haribos sweets adverts are THE BEST I love them
In italy tv is allowed to have 10 minutes of adds every 30/40 minutes of the main program…..In the US there’s adds every 15/20 minutes…Crazy!
Local ads on radio in UK but not on TV as far as I know
Jay Forman, what a star.
One of the things I really didn't like in the States was TV. A lot of the programmes were barely so-so, news was pretty dire too, but advertising was the worst of the whole thing. Like they said, so many and all for meds, cars and lawyers.
I think you've mentioned it before that the UK National Grid (electricity supply) had to be prepared for everyone putting the kettle on during ad breaks. Personally, I'm happy to pay my TV licence to not see adverts on at least a few channels.
As for jingles, my favourite was "A finger of fudge is just enough to give your kids a treat", which my mate turned to "A finger of fudge is just enough to give your kids gastroenteritis". No idea why he did that, but he did.
The kettle surge tended only to occur during major events, and was largely mitigated through liaison with the broadcasters. The advent of streaming and on demand services makes it less severe, but also a lot less predictable.
Localised commercials i think are mainly done on our Radio stations now and not TV in the UK
There are two differences between US and European TV. One is the frame rate, based on the mains power frequency, and the other is the colour system, NTSC vs PAL. It was the latter that caused the colour problems in the early days when showing American shows on British TV. Both of these are ameliorated if the source material is film, since the frame rate is the same worldwide, and each region can encode to their respective colour systems when broadcasting to TV. The colour conversion problem was fixed with the introduction of digital media and software-based conversion.
I no longer watch 'live tv' I record things I want to watch and play them back at a later date (or later that day) and just Fast Forward all the ads!
The jingle for me has to be 'It's all you have to do. Do the shake and vac and put the freshness back' or 'I'm a secret lemonade drinker'!!!
Haha. I think we might be the same age
@@roseadams5362 old... like me. you'll be pushing a bike up a steep hill with a brass band playing in the background next.
@@scottythedawg ah yes, time for some toast me thinks 🤣
"All white's Lemonade" yeah remember that one! lol
The carpet one is good too.
I liked the lemonade one. Elvis Costello did backing vocals, because his dad wrote and sang the jingle, mimed by the actor. The advert won an award.
Fred flintstone got me hooked on smoking, usually when I'm watching TV and averts appear I put the kettle on for a cup of tea or go to the John. I sometimes like a catchy jingle on an ad, sometimes I have watched an advert 30/40 times with out actually knowing what they were advertising. I say to myself one day I will pay attention and see what they are really trying to sell me. But usually my mind goes blank when adverts appear.
The Tennants lager “Caledonia” advert was brilliant back in the day in the UK. Remember watching it growing up. The Scottish guy leaves London to return to Edinburgh. Great tune too.
when I used to watch American films and the news report, I would say on national TV I used to always think all news is national. now I understand why
In Germany, it is prohibited by law to advertise prescription drugs, except to physicians, pharmacists, etc. If OTC products are advertised, this notice must appear at the end: For risks and side effects, ask your doctor or pharmacist. On websites of pharmaceutical companies there are two areas, one of which is public, but the other can only be visited by doctors and pharmacists ("DocCheck"). In No. 1 you can find info about the company etc. and OTC products, in No. 2 about prescription products. - Translation from German by 'deepl'
So funny... just as you paused to talk about how local car dealerships run ads, I was thinking "oh, and mattress stores, too"... then Evan comes in with mattress warehouses... those are the two big ones for sure when it comes to local ads.
On Freeview in the UK some areas have their own channel which has local news and programs. Sheffield has "Sheffield live" Norfolk used to have "mustard TV" (but I don't think that's operating any more). I'm not sure what the other ones are.
My all-time favourite is the 1987 car Ad: Golf Volkswagen with Paula Hamilton. It is a classic!
For anyone wondering I’m pretty sure that’s the number for childline - i memorised it as a child in the 90s
Hi,here in the uk,we get the full add - say for a Car then a couple of small clips of the same add.
Our regional news in Kent used to be called Coast to coast
We do have some local advertising on TV here in the UK but not alot..
Memories of Edinburgh! 😆 Great reaction Joel!👍🏼😎
Favourite adds ever are all the IRN BRU adds, Scotlands other national drink, if you've never seen them,find them on RUclips
Never mind that. In Northern Ireland we had anti-terrorism adverts. Remember this one from when I was a kid: ruclips.net/video/5x-m2YPcIZg/видео.html
I always use too love the Cadburys Milk Tray adverts in the 80's, as a child I couldn't wait to see how he was going to deliver the box in the next advert!
Check out the Guinness adverts. They were the most expensive adverts at one point (may still be).
Also the Hamlet Cigars adverts.
"Carglass repariert, Carglass tauscht aus"^^ "Waschmaschinen leben länger mit Calgon". Nice, did not know that they use the same jingle with just a translation of the text all over europe
Jay was actually speaking French he was just pretending it was gibberish for the purposes of the joke
In Scotland we have our ownTV from BBC or ITV we also have Alba which is Galic speaking TV, they make Scotish shows. Years ago in Scotland when the BBC were closing for the night a Scotish minister he would tell you about God. It was very odd but there were extreamly funny comady stuff taking the piss.
With regard to UK News, we have National News which is major news or political that affects us all but we also have Regional News. Mine is Anglia News because I live in East Anglia and want to know what is happening locally/regionally.
The 70’s and 80’s Flake adverts were like soft porn. Check them out.
What he's saying about regional applies to England. Wales have had their own regional programmes for years and Welsh language programmes. I think Scotland is the same.
"Murray Mints, Murray Mints, too good to hurry mints".