Don't Say This At A Wedding! - Mock The Week - Americans React
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- Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2021
- In this video, my wife and I check out what should not be said at a wedding from the comedy panel show Mock the Week. Comment down below what is the worst thing you have heard said at a wedding.
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#Weddings #MocktheWeek #AmericansReact - Приколы
A skip is what you'd call a dumpster. A skiff is a small boat.
A skip is also a small boat, from the Dutch word for ship. The captain is the Schip Herr - the skipper.
@@neuralwarp On this show it's a dumpster. Also the joke makes no sense if it is a boat.
@@donepearce They just don`t understand the humor . Everything has to be logical, they do not understand innuendo.
Skips don't float, unless they're made in Holland.
@@neuralwarp Schipper has multiple meanings, one is the owner/captain, but a very common other one is just for anyone who works on a ship/boat (or in Dutch schip). It has both these meanings because it comes from in-land sailing small boats, and a lot of those had anywhere from one to a handful of people working on them. So yeah, it's not a Dutch name for captain (that's kapitein). And Herr is very much German, not Dutch. Dunno about the validity of the rest though, but considering you're combining languages and got context wrong, it wouldn't surprise me if the rest is misguided as well.
A skip is not a boat, its our name for a dumpster.
You are right, but A skip is an old Danish word for ship and the phrase Skip it, means send it elsewhere in old Norse, Danish. Ship is just a mispronunciation of the original word SKIP .
The tattoo joke referenced a film called Memento, not Prison Break.
also the name he mentioned - Dara was here- Dara o Briain is the host
Its also used in the tv series blindspot
The tall guy is Hugh Dennis, a comedian/actor/writer...he stars in a fabulous comedy called Outnumbered which features three kids and lots of ad-libbing...you'd love it :)
He has also had a bit part in the latest James Bond movie
Yeh huge dennis is great and a permanent contestant on mock the week. His compilation of scenes we'd like to see is great fun to watch.
Hugh also does arguably the best Prince Phillip impersonation ever too lol
‘Whose line is it anyway?’ was originally created by Dan Paterson in the UK. So it was a British show back in the 80s/90s. The show then went onto America. When it finished it’s run in the UK I think Dan Paterson then created ‘Mock the week’ which is probably why it’s similar 👍🏻
also QI
5:20
That is a reference to a film called 'memento' the hero is trying to solve his wife's murder. The hero also has a condition where he can't make new memories after a five minute time span so he has tattoos to keep track of the clues.
Mock the week is pretty much what the title suggests. They mock the weeks news, the end section, things we'd like to see, is one of the best bits of the show.
Whose Line is It Anyway? was a UK show that went to the US but there were American and Canadian guest comics in the Uk version. Those same comics then went on to be in the US version as they knew the show so could provide the basis for it. It made the US version just as funny especially as the producers had the sense not to alter the show's format. Also, like in all UK comedy panel shows, in Mock the Week the points do not matter it is just a chance to be funny - nobody cares who wins or loses
Ryan Styles (American-Canadian) and Colin Mochrie (Scottish-Canadian), two of the greatest improv comics ever
I saw a revamp of the UK at the Edinburgh Fringe a few years back, still funny.
@@Charlieb82 I think it was Ryan that brought it to US TV.
The Americans / Canadian definitely did it better, I wasn't a big fan of the UK version.
@@Charlieb82 Without a doubt!
A skip is a dumpster.
Skips a large trash can (dumpster)
“Skip” he’s referring to in context is a like a big metal container for waste (think you call it dumpster) that gets dropped off on your land for construction waste and trash, then gets picked up by a truck and taken away for disposal or recycling. British don’t really associate Skip with a boat - you might be thinking about Skiff which is a boat.
My brother said at a wedding "See you at the next wedding she has!" It was the brides 4th and the grooms 6th. His wife was not happy that he said that.
The host is called Dara that's why the camera panned to him when Russell did the tattoo joke. Also skip means dumpster in England.
I've love mock of the week and whoes line is it for years it's so nice seeing clips on here.
Skip is what the UK call a dumpster.
Whos Line is It ? was originally a UK show (1988) that preceeded the US version .
However the US performers often appeared in it as their improv was really great and worked both sides of the pond.
It's one of the few cases of the American version being better than the British
two were Canadian I believe
@@lillired857 Yeah Ryan Stiles is Canadian and Colin Mochrie is Scottish-Canadian. They (and Greg Proops) have been in both versions.
skipper is also a term for a boat or person that works on a boat, i can remember which but can see where they got confused
Actually, Whose Line is it Anyway? was originally a BBC Radio 4 programme, then snapped up by Channel 4.
8:07 ..he starts with unwarranted confidence
The Host of Mock The Week is called Dara O Briain
Tall guy in the suit is Hugh Dennis. He has been on every episode of mock the week with the host Dara. He also appears in sitcoms and satirical radio shows that poke fun at the weeks news.
Ethan, the boat is a skiff. A skip is an open top dumpster.
Mock the Week is a topical news show, so many of the jokes in other segments at (not so much in Scenes We’d Like to See) are based on the past week’s news. So if you watch a full episode, please research when it was first broadcast, otherwise some of it might not make sense. Re-runs are still funny though.
A skip is a massive metal open top dumpster which you hire from a refuse company when you have an unreasonable amount of things you need to throw out.
There is a specialised truck that carries that bad boy around.
Sometimes there are times in your life you need a bin the size of a large car. It is pretty much a mahooooosive bin.
My nan used to rescue furniture from other people's skips.
The common language tripped you up on the last joke: the chap who spent the night in a ‘skip’ is a ‘dumpster’, the punchline being the Vicar/Minister spent the previous night in a drunken stupor.
The tall man you didn't know is called Hugh Dennis. The presenter is called Dara which is why he reacted the way he did to Russell's joke.
Who's line is it anyway started in the UK and some of the American performers were on it, most notably Colin and Ryan. I always liked Greg Proops appearences because the the back and forth he had with the host.
I having a feeling that ‘Whose line’ first started as a radio show, on BBC Radio 4, before ultimately transitioning into the TV version on Channel 4
@@patriciaburke6639 yep it was on R4
As a fellow Midwesterner who loves UK comedy, I highly recommend Taskmaster. With two caveats. One, watch a full episode, clips don't do it justice. Two, it's a season long competition, so watch the first episode of a season.
A skip is what I think you call a dumpster as used by builders et cetera a big rectangular metal box with no lid typically about 10 x 6 ft and 5 ft high. You can hire one to throw away rubbish
I think you guys would love taskmaster it's a great show and has some of our top comedians on there.
05:28 Yes. Russell just told you half of it 😂
A skip is NOT the same as a dumpster. A dumpster would just be called a large wheelie bin or something to that effect.
It's more like a dumpster than a boat, though.
Congratulations on 30k subs. This is a great programme actually new one tonight.
Mock the Week is only partly like Whose Line is it Anyway - the "Scenes We'd Like to See" round, which you've just reacted to, is very like it, and is usually the best bit of the show. They also have a stand-up challenge round, where a couple of the contestants are given a vague topic and have to do some stand-up about it, and they also have some satirical quiz rounds about things in the news.
If you want to try some other panel shows, QI would be a good one, especially when Stephen Fry was the host (Sandi Toksvig does it now). There's also a fantastic radio panel show called I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, which was best when Humphrey Lyttelton was the host (Jack Dee does it now). There are full episodes of that on RUclips, but if you want to try snippets, One Song to the Tune of Another is usually very funny.
'Whose Line is it Anyway?' Was developed & aired in the UK (firstly on Radio) before being a BBC TV program in 1988, after which the American adaptation was first aired in 1998 by ABC.
Mock the week is a comedy panel show
Whose line is a comedy improv show
You guys in the US don't really have comedy panel shows in the US
A skip is a huge thing you use for trash, when clearing out a house or having work done.
A skiff is a shallow flat bottom boat with sharpe bow and square stern (that you go skiffing in - eg. rowing the Thames), but a skip is a large industrial size metal bin so big it fills the back of a lorry.
A skip is a dumpster
We used to have 'Whose Line is it Anyway?' over here too with quite a few of the same regulars like Gregg Proops and Ryan Stiles.
Mock the week has some similar aspects such as the 'Things not to say' round, but also a lot of satirical jokes based on recent events in the news.
Actually whose line is it anyway started in Britain, America copied it, Stephen Fry was on the panel.
@@righthandofdoom1656 I couldn't remember if it started here or over the pond. I think it had been going for a while before Stephen Fry went on it. The main host was Clive Anderson and John Sessions and Josie Lawrence were regulars.
My wife cut my hair once and only once and that was during lockdown when the barbers and hairdressers were all closed. She is a brilliant woman, a brilliant journalist, a superb cook, the best wife to me and mother to our daughter that we could ever want. She is not a trained hairdresser - nuff said!
Ryan Stiles, Colin Mocherie, Greg Proops and Michael McShane had all been in the British version of “Whoose Line Is It Anyway?” (from 1988-1999) before going back to the States to create the American version. The British version was presented by Clive Anderson, while the American version was presented by Drew Carey.
A Skip is a large garbage container, a bit like a dumpster in the US. It is usually used on construction sites or when houses are being renovated/cleared. A truck drops it off, you fill it with stuff that is being thrown out and then the truck collects it again.
A skip is like a large metal container for when you need to throw away a large amount of trash. A truck delivers it to your door, you fill it with whatever needs to be thrown away, call them and they pick it up and dispose of it. Can hold maybe 20 -40 large bin-bags. Usually ordered for house-clearing/ stripping a kitchen, bathroom, or garden
A skip is not a boat! A skip is a metal rubbish or garbage container. 🤣🤣
In Norfolk, England, the marriage guidance and family planning service is called: Related.
It's only a couple of rounds that are like Whose line, "Scenes we'd like to see" (similar to Scenes from a hat) and another one whose name i don't recall where selected guests are invited to perform short standup routines based on a random prompt. The rest of Mock the Week is more akin to Have I Got News For You but played even more for laughs.
I'm just here for the discussion regarding the seaworthiness of skips. :-))
LOL - at 5:30 he says "what is his name" - his name is Dara and he was literally the subject of the ad-lib.
A skip is a dumpster. A skiff is a ship
5:02 Dara is the bald guy looking at the screen
a popular saying in my neck of the oods is "who done yer yud,do you wants us to get em back".Have a look at "would i lie to you".
There's a program called "Have I got News for you" that you may want to have a look at. A skip is what Americans call a dumpster and comes in all kinds of sizes, when you called it a boat I think you were thinking of a Skiff a very similar sounding word.
*programme
@@danielgardecki1046 that's the British spelling, I used the American spelling.
The host is Dara Ó Briain.... thats why the joke was "Dara was here"
Yay! Someone here spelled his name correctly!
Norfolk is an English county which is the butt of many jokes about in-breeding. Hence the "father of the bride and groom" joke.
Alabama is the state of in-breeding jokes here.
The movie Russell references with tattoos is Momento, one of my all time favourite films
The host's name is Dara, which is why he was pulling that face at the "Dara was here" tattoo joke from Russell.
Whose line (is it anyway) and this show were created by the same producer (Dan Patterson). You may not know that Whose line was a British show (with Ryan Stiles and Colin Mockerie as regulars) before it was bought by a US network.
A Skiff is a Boat loooool.
The comedian was talking about a Skip which is also known as a Dumpster
A skip is a very large trash bin usually put at the front of a property being renovated.
was anyone else shouting 'its not a boat!' at them or was it just me lol
Mock the Week is a comedy panel show which a group of comedians have rounds to talk and make light of the news and topical events that happened that week. Hence the name Mock the week.
"Scenes we'd like to see" is the light hearted final stand up round in the same format as "Who's line is it anyway", however the prompts still mostly related to the weekly headline.
5:23
Russell: Dara was here?
The Comedian host of Mock the Week is called Dara O' Brian.
Love Mock the Week, you should do some more reactions to it if you can. Be careful though, it is a BBC show so you may get a copyright strike. The tall guy you mentioned is Hugh Dennis. He is a comedy actor.
Total agree.
Was in the last Bond.
A skip is a large dumpster type container usually used for building refuse
A skip is a large steel dumpster usually used on construction sites. Usually sized in 8, 16 30 or 40 cubic yards.
The tattoos bit was a referral to the movie "Memento". (The presenter is Dara, so "Dara was here" refers to him)
Russell Howards reference to ‘Dara was here’ refers to Dara O’Brian who is the compère of the show
A “skip” is an industrial dumpster, like you’d put construction waste and rubble in.
No, a skip is like one of those big metal open top containers that you hire to out all your crap in when you need a lot of stuff dumped.
the line about having amnesia and reading the tattoos is based on the movie Momento.
A skip is a open container you put trash in and a guy comes and picks it up when it's full and dumps it
Skip is a large metal container that you can put rubbish or building site rubbish in.
A 'skip' is what we in the UK Call a Dumpster
5:10
it was a reference to Memento, a Christopther Nolan movie.
"Dara was here" Dara is the Bald guy who the camera cuts to and gives a wink, "confirming" that he was indeed there :P
The Fast Show, a classic comedy sketch show from the 90s
A skip is a dumster, not a boat. I have not seen anybody so confidently wrong in a long time xD
Skip is a metal container for putting unwanted waste into into.
A skip is an industrial bin. For example: the kids went skip raiding, the neighbours hired a skip for the renovation.
The payment thing is medieval. That's where the term "honeymoon" came from. the father of the bride would give the groom one moon's worth; ie 28 days worth of mead; which is honey wine.
A skip is a large industrial waste bin. What you'd call a dumpster.
Hugh Dennis is in the new Bond film.
Also, Memento is the thriller where an amnesiac covers himself in tattoos.
I think that Russel Howards referenced the movie "Memento" where the protagonist tattoed his body with messages to himself, on account of a sort of Amnesia.
Writing on the body is from Memento, which is a brilliant thriller
Whilst a skip is indeed a type of boat, in the UK it is also what we call a dumpster.
A skip is a boat? You're thinking of a skiff, pal
A skip is what you'd call a dumpster
Scenes We'd Like To See is a segment at the end of every episode of Mock The Week, it's based on Scenes From A Hat which is from WLIIA?, which was originally a radio show in the UK. The beeping just means that a contestant's time for that particular joke is up, but ocassionally they carry on after the buzzer (it's just a gimmick really and doesn't particularly mean anything)
A skip is a bin guys lol
Skip is where we take our rubbish that won't or can't go in the bin
Pardon?
Skip is a large metal tank that rubbish is put in .
He said it so confidently! But a SKIP is a large container for waste. Not at all a boat!
big difference between this and who's line, is this show actually does discuss news from the week hense "mock the week" but partially turn it into a game
A skip is a dumpster a skiff is a boat
Someone thinks they are too good for a free haircut 😛😂
Saying "I Do" is an extremely common mistake made at Weddings...
.
The tattoo joke is in reference to the movie Memento with a plot as described. 😉
Hugh Dennis is the distinguished guy
Guys,
You really need to change the battery in your smoke alarm! Don't leave it any longer!
agreed , we are all guilty of it , it does it for a reason though , if you don't want to wake up to your family burning it would be a good idea to change them.
Greg Proops has appeared on Mock The Week TWICE
A skip is what you'd refer to as a dump 😅
Skip is an open top metal debris box, usually hired for house renegotiation. From 'Skeppa' old Norse for basket.
A skip is not a boat. It’s a big metal bin for putting waste in often used by builders
A skip is a large receptacle for building waste
David blunkett jokes on mtw 😂😂
a 'skip' is a metal boat shaped rubbish bin
the tattoo'ed man with amnesia is from the film "memento" by christopher nolan
skiff is a boat skip is a large industrial waste disposal bin/dumpster