Cancelling Trident | Yes, Prime Minister | Comedy Greats

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 464

  • @egtaha
    @egtaha 3 года назад +1984

    2020 was indeed "sooner than you think", Sir Humphrey.

    • @ViguLiviu
      @ViguLiviu 3 года назад +29

      And it happen a couple of years before that.

    • @edsmith2535
      @edsmith2535 2 года назад +25

      I got goosebumps when he said that.

    • @DavidLee-lq5lz
      @DavidLee-lq5lz 2 года назад +36

      2020, what a year.
      And I don't mean that in a good way.

    • @mikhailangel3258
      @mikhailangel3258 2 года назад +28

      indeed S-400 missile system

    • @AskAkseli
      @AskAkseli 2 года назад +1

      Underrated comment.

  • @AlexWard94
    @AlexWard94 7 месяцев назад +169

    "We should always tell the press freely and frankly anything... that they could easily find out some other way!"
    Comedy gold.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 6 месяцев назад +4

      'Many a true word is spoken in jest": Shakespeare.

  • @samvincent2181
    @samvincent2181 3 года назад +552

    That entire segment of “probably” seems like a nightmare to learn, but they absolutely nailed it

    • @Macron87
      @Macron87 2 года назад

      It’s just talking

    • @DavidLee-lq5lz
      @DavidLee-lq5lz 2 года назад +21

      @@Macron87 Memorizing lines.
      Whether it's for a 5 minute scene or a 30 minutes episode, it still take effort, hence all of the takes and retakes actors have to do.
      Personally, I once created a mere 5 minute PowerPoint slideshow for class presentation.
      Spent 1 hour memorizing all of the lines I needed to say for each slide (had to be talking for 5 minutes straight without pause for the presentation), just because the professor was going to dock points off if I needed to read off the slides or use notecards. We were being graded on our presentation as a whole, not just for talking off something we wrote.
      My respects to any actors who can nail facial expression, emotional tone of voice, body language and their lines all at the same time.

    • @peterweatherley7669
      @peterweatherley7669 2 года назад +6

      Listen to the rhythm; that’s how they memorised it. Groups of six :)

    • @Fightladsnet
      @Fightladsnet 2 года назад +24

      It's a well known fact that (Sir) Nigel Hawthorn used to do his tongue twisting speeches in one take. A most marvellous actor who always knew his lines perfectly, no matter how complex they may have been.

    • @yashathebelgianmalinois348
      @yashathebelgianmalinois348 2 года назад +2

      You’re probably right

  • @noluckst2
    @noluckst2 3 года назад +2066

    Hope the Soviets are celebrating the first anniversary of their Polaris interception platform.

    • @privateer2584
      @privateer2584 3 года назад +72

      I was coming down here to the comments to say this...

    • @lauterunvollkommenheit4344
      @lauterunvollkommenheit4344 3 года назад +70

      They probably would.

    • @YuriyNasretdinov
      @YuriyNasretdinov 3 года назад +9

      Well yeah, except for a tiny minor issue not even worth mentioning to be honest

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 3 года назад +27

      @mwfp1987 "can shoot down" yea, and WW2 era AA cannon also can shoot down stuff but i would not bet on that just like i would not bet that S400 can be effective against balistic missles that are moving more than twice as fast as S400 top speed...

    • @adamsvoboda9753
      @adamsvoboda9753 3 года назад +15

      A-135 around Moscow is able to shoot it down, but no in large numbers. If I remember correctly it went operational in late 90s.

  • @LordZontar
    @LordZontar 3 года назад +576

    The clip cuts off before the equally brilliant exchange in which Sir Humphrey is trying to convince the PM about the virtues of Trident, calling Polaris "a ramshackle old system" while arguing that Britain deserves the best, that Trident is "the nuclear missile Harrod's would sell you" which has to be the single most hilarious line about nuclear weapons ever.

    • @princeire7486
      @princeire7486 3 года назад +122

      "It costs 15 billion pounds and we don't need it."
      --"Well you can say that about anything you buy at Harrod's!"

    • @Mourtzouphlos240
      @Mourtzouphlos240 3 года назад +14

      And for just a moment they brush up against the real reason for nuclear weapons. They haven't been used since the 40s, and though there was a chance of using them against Vietnam in the 50s and Cuba in the 60s, they haven't come that close to being used. You know what they have been repeatedly? Bought. The purpose of almost any weapon NATO countries use isn't to use them in battle, it's to buy them from defense contractors.
      The Manhattan Project was the most expensive thing in WWII and nothing costs more than Nukes, their systems, and where to house them.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar 3 года назад +53

      ​@@Mourtzouphlos240 Nuclear weapons are used as a deterrent. The whole idea is for them NOT to be used in war (since they can only be used once for very obvious reasons) by making potential enemies afraid to try anything that would lead to their use. At that task, they have proven most effective. There hasn't been a general global superpowers war or even a major regional powers war for the last 75 years. Nobody wants to risk touching off the Big Firework.
      Also, nuclear weapons are not purchased from defence contractors. There is no "market" for them. They are produced either directly by the governments of the nuclear states or by public non-profit corporations set up specifically for the purpose of building nuclear weapons, such as Sandia Labs, which have no other function and only one client, which means effectively it's still the state that's manufacturing the bombs.
      You also evidently missed the point of the previous scene at the nuclear command centre. The General argues that the UK government haven't put money into the conventional forces because they're too expensive to equip and maintain at presumably World War II troop strength levels for the indefinite future, to which Sir Humphrey observes that the nukes are a lot less expensive on balance: "Much cheaper just to press a button" as he says so dryly.

    • @babboon5764
      @babboon5764 3 года назад +16

      @@Mourtzouphlos240 Indeed.
      And given they have *prevented* conventional war between NATO and others from Warsaw Pact to Russia, *excellent* *value* they have been.
      But as logic seems not quite your forte, you can have that set to music by listening to Groundhogs 'Thank Christ for the Bomb' ~ One of the most anti-trend, utterly rational pop songs of all time.

    • @RvEijndhoven
      @RvEijndhoven 3 года назад +2

      @@babboon5764 excellent value, my arse. The thing that prevented open conventional war between the two blocs of the Cold War has always been the absolute certainty that any such war would lead to the mutualy assured destruction of both blocs even without nukes. Because the loser of that war would be eradicated and the winner would be bankrupted by the expense.
      Nukes have only ever been a posturing tool.

  • @RideAcrossTheRiver
    @RideAcrossTheRiver 3 года назад +329

    "Have you considered masterful inactivity?" Oh, I LIVE THAT

    • @Ozymandias83
      @Ozymandias83 3 года назад +19

      Sometimes the wisest course of action is to do nothing.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 3 года назад +4

      @@Ozymandias83 Can't stand meddlers

    • @engg84
      @engg84 2 года назад +1

      Truss should've listened

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 6 месяцев назад +1

      He actually said "masterly inactivity". I know it's difficult for some people, but do at least try to pay attention to detail - it is rather an important life-skill, after all. 🙄

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@sunnyjim1355 The number of likes suggest I am fine with my hearing and paraphrasing, Sir Humphrey.

  • @generalblack5556
    @generalblack5556 3 года назад +486

    The greatest British sitcom of all time!
    No debate!

    • @redrackham6812
      @redrackham6812 3 года назад +28

      I submit that you have overqualified that statement. I would suggest that it was the greatest sitcom of all time from any country, and one of the greatest shows of all time, from any genre.

    • @babboon5764
      @babboon5764 3 года назад +4

      @@redrackham6812 Good luck advancing any sort of logical contention with Johnny Boy
      You may as well try and staple fog as try and reason with a poseur of such irrationality..

    • @redrackham6812
      @redrackham6812 3 года назад +2

      @@babboon5764 I was just ignoring him.

    • @Macron87
      @Macron87 2 года назад +2

      You mean it was your favourite? That could not be challenged, as it would be your choice to make.

    • @fathertedcrilley3988
      @fathertedcrilley3988 2 года назад +12

      I think we should setup an interdepartmental committee into the possibility of determining what the facts might be. In the fullness of time of course.

  • @albear972
    @albear972 2 года назад +122

    It's amazing how this BBC show got so many geopolitical occurrences so right. Brilliant writers.

  • @stinglp1198
    @stinglp1198 3 года назад +55

    " Humpery, I have been thinking "
    " Goood ". Still hilarious!

  • @richardmattocks
    @richardmattocks 3 года назад +251

    A rare 2-hander of complex lines. Not just Humphrey but Hacker in there too, perfectly delivered with a rhythm that you can feel. 2 actors working their socks off.
    Timeless brilliance from both Eddington and Hawthorne.

    • @dizzyology7514
      @dizzyology7514 3 года назад +8

      Beyond awesome -- and lines delivered straight-faced, at a lightning pace and without breaking character in the tiniest degree. I wonder whether the cheering audience reaction might indicate that this was about the sixth take, after numerous others went wrong. This is pure speculation, but such things have been known to happen.

    • @Noobsaibot21
      @Noobsaibot21 3 года назад +2

      @@dizzyology7514 I've only ever been able to find three - perhaps four bloopers for this show.

    • @markwilliams7461
      @markwilliams7461 3 года назад +1

      1 coud not agree more

    • @Keyswiz71
      @Keyswiz71 3 года назад +3

      You have to ask how long it took them to get their lines right for this segment; the delivery is just sublime!

  • @Mediatech492
    @Mediatech492 3 года назад +260

    Perfect political satire in its day, and still amazingly relevant four decades later

    • @MLaak86
      @MLaak86 3 года назад +13

      The more things change the more they stay the same.

    • @markwilliams7461
      @markwilliams7461 3 года назад

      Dont u start grey is the magnolia

    • @pauls478
      @pauls478 3 года назад +4

      Yup. Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minster are two series that never get old no matter when you watch them.

    • @merlith4650
      @merlith4650 Год назад +3

      only shows that human nature seems to never truly change. it just takes on new clothes. the faces might be different, the flags are not the same and there are new voices to be heard.. yet in the end, it all feels so familiar

  • @colindowd9756
    @colindowd9756 3 года назад +192

    The most intelligent, hilarious and relevant comedy of all time!

    • @markwilliams7461
      @markwilliams7461 3 года назад +2

      Its up there in the top 2 I forgot how funny and satirical its was and relivent even today more so now

    • @uncommon_niagara1581
      @uncommon_niagara1581 2 года назад +4

      The entire point of the series is how resistant to change the permanent bureaucracy is. That makes this series relevant in the 1980s, today, going forward into the 2080s as well as back in the 1880s, 1780s, etc.

  • @potterpotty01
    @potterpotty01 3 года назад +110

    Humphrey gets the best lines
    Hacker gets the best laughs, by just saying "what?"

    • @royfearn4345
      @royfearn4345 2 года назад

      Then why don't I get all the laughs? "What?" Seems to be my most common response in this modern age...

  • @davidodonovan1699
    @davidodonovan1699 3 года назад +69

    "By 2020"
    Hello from 2021...this joke really was a great potential for the apocalypse memes.

  • @wightangel
    @wightangel 3 года назад +224

    This was so close to the reality of how the government back then and even now work it is scary. If anyone needs to see how devious our governments are just watch a season of these fantastic comedies. Great actors and great convincing acting.

    • @kennykerr3930
      @kennykerr3930 3 года назад +9

      The Australians regarded this series as a docu-drama rather than comedy.

    • @garryberman894
      @garryberman894 3 года назад +7

      The writers had anonymous sources who often let them in on "secret" information regarding the inner workings of the government, which became the storylines of many episodes.

    • @babboon5764
      @babboon5764 3 года назад +5

      Government was indeed like that back then.
      But its gone a long way downhill since.

    • @samroberts7404
      @samroberts7404 3 года назад +3

      This and the thick of it are both scarily accurate...

    • @ariavachier-lagravech.6910
      @ariavachier-lagravech.6910 3 года назад +4

      Back when the series first air David Cameron who was then just a university student criticised the show heavily for being unrealistic and demonised the government too much. Only after he join politics and eventually claw his way to become prime minister he realised how painfully realistic the show is.

  • @grahamblack1961
    @grahamblack1961 7 месяцев назад +14

    Just a perfect summary of the absurdity of the deterrent argument

  • @CathyKitson
    @CathyKitson 3 года назад +40

    "Have you considered masterly inactivity?" Humphrey's such a blast!

  • @beaconterraoneonline
    @beaconterraoneonline 3 года назад +55

    This is one of the best TV shows in human history.

    • @renejean2523
      @renejean2523 3 года назад +3

      In any animal's history, in fact.

    • @Farweasel
      @Farweasel 3 года назад +3

      @@renejean2523 Pah! Mear supposition. How much non-human TV have you watched? Come on, confess.

    • @renejean2523
      @renejean2523 3 года назад +3

      @@Farweasel - lol Almost none. Am I prejudging do you think?

    • @danieldickson8591
      @danieldickson8591 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@Farweasel I have cats, so I've watched plenty of videos of squirrels and birds. I've also watched The Lion King, The Land Before Time, Ice Age, and Happy Feet. This beats any of them.

  • @StrahilMinev
    @StrahilMinev 3 года назад +76

    "Yes, but even then they probably certainly know that you probably wouldn't, they don't certainly know that although you probably wouldn't there's no probability that you certainly would!"

    • @Gretchluver1
      @Gretchluver1 3 года назад +17

      "...what?"

    • @lightsuplighto4226
      @lightsuplighto4226 2 года назад +8

      An explanation of how nuclear deterrent works

    • @lirenxin5472
      @lirenxin5472 4 месяца назад +2

      Thank you. That makes much more sense in writing.

  • @JKH133
    @JKH133 3 года назад +355

    Did Humphrey predict that 2020 would be an appalling year? Cuz it was….

    • @jkolorath
      @jkolorath 3 года назад +21

      Appalling.. isn't it?
      I can't think of another word! Can u Bernard?

    • @ilyatsukanov8707
      @ilyatsukanov8707 3 года назад +15

      @@jkolorath I'm appalled.

    • @Hannodb1961
      @Hannodb1961 3 года назад +6

      @@jkolorath How about..... Ghastly?

    • @babboon5764
      @babboon5764 3 года назад +3

      Have I missed something?

    • @Ndlanding
      @Ndlanding 3 года назад

      @@babboon5764 Yeah! Jut like the above contributors, you missed 2021, by the looks of it.

  • @karstenburger9031
    @karstenburger9031 3 года назад +17

    So brilliant, and still absolutely up to date...

  • @redsquare8256
    @redsquare8256 2 года назад +9

    The acting and the dialogue in Yes Minister is just superb!

  • @meusha846
    @meusha846 3 года назад +52

    I always found Jim's "what?" at the end far funnier than Humphrey's long vehement speech full of circumlocutions.

    • @Farweasel
      @Farweasel 3 года назад +1

      So take it apart and work out how & why that worked.
      Seems to me you're arguing in favour of the handlebars but not wheels on a bicycle.

    • @meusha846
      @meusha846 3 года назад +7

      @@Farweasel That is a fairly condescending comment indeed. It is the delivery of "what?" by Eddington that made it comically poignant. The script-writer had simply written the word "what?" and it was up to the actor as to how he decided to deliver it. And he did it superbly. Notice how he acts with his entire face first and then his entire body, with his glance darting here and there, to let the confusion manifest in his person. He could have simply sat there and said "what?". People would have still laughed perhaps. But it would have hardly been the same. Your bicycle metaphor does not fit here simply because I do not see Eddington's delivery's success being entirely dependent on Hawthorne's earlier speech. Hawthorne, in my opinoin, did poorly in this anyway. He looks way too animated - eyes bulging, body moving awkwardly - which takes away the realism altogether. I do not mind the realism being absent altogether as it can still be quite funny. The only problem is that then it would be inconsistent because in other places Appleby is very realistic and serious.

    • @Farweasel
      @Farweasel 3 года назад +1

      @@meusha846 WHAT?

    • @danieldickson8591
      @danieldickson8591 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@meusha846 I concur as to Paul Eddington's brilliance, but the degree of payoff came from Nigel Hawthorne's setup. A comic dialogue is a dance of partners, and in the best ones the partners make each other better.

  • @bryanpotter9724
    @bryanpotter9724 10 месяцев назад +9

    I love that he says "Two thousand and twenty", rather than "twenty twenty"

  • @jm15xy
    @jm15xy 3 года назад +77

    Sir Humphrey is all for _activity_ as long as it's not the _politicians_ who are active.

    • @embreis2257
      @embreis2257 2 года назад

      firm _masterly inactivity_ ; think he would be fine with that for the rest of his career

  • @twilightroach4274
    @twilightroach4274 3 года назад +32

    2020 is sooner than you think! I’d almost forgotten how worried we all were back then of the USSR

    • @GoldenSunAlex
      @GoldenSunAlex 3 года назад +1

      Eh, they're about to invade The Ukraine, so it looks like we're going back to the 70's.

    • @sampuatisamuel9785
      @sampuatisamuel9785 2 года назад +3

      Well they were right to be worried

    • @danieldickson8591
      @danieldickson8591 6 месяцев назад +3

      Turns out they were just as scared of us as we were of them.

  • @kennethdrewary1094
    @kennethdrewary1094 10 месяцев назад +10

    As of this week, trident doesn't work anyway. Lol

  • @tommymckeown1699
    @tommymckeown1699 Год назад +6

    Paul Eddington is a legend, the guy doesn't even have to say anything that funny and he still makes you laugh, he makes you chuckle just thinking of him. May he rest in peace.

  • @AnthonyMute
    @AnthonyMute 3 года назад +9

    Always a joy to see it pop on my feed! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @harishnunkoo509
    @harishnunkoo509 2 года назад +20

    I just love it when Jim Hacker reacts with a confused WHAT after Sir Humphrey has intellectually and verbosely rambled on and on. He just defeats that purpose altogether.

  • @yashathebelgianmalinois348
    @yashathebelgianmalinois348 2 года назад +2

    This is one of my top moments of the entire series. Brilliant.

  • @Boystarx
    @Boystarx 3 года назад +85

    Sooner thank 2020, Russian S400 was ready by 2015. This show is timeless, kudos to the legendary writers... 🙏

    • @mikhailangel3258
      @mikhailangel3258 2 года назад +4

      S-500 system is rolling out to operational battalions now

    • @dchil15
      @dchil15 2 года назад +10

      Not working too well for them at the moment.

    • @MightyJosh1985
      @MightyJosh1985 2 года назад +2

      it can't stop Soviet Era Ukraine fighters

    • @frog382
      @frog382 2 года назад

      @@MightyJosh1985 Ukraine cannot win the war and the longer the nazi clown comedian puppet actor is in power, the west will prolong it for the causalities to maximize and to buy more time for the later acts. If you believe what you see on news, you've been fooled.

    • @SB-mg1wy
      @SB-mg1wy 2 года назад

      @@MightyJosh1985 When's the last time the Ukrs flew a sortie?

  • @TheBanditKingKir
    @TheBanditKingKir 3 года назад +21

    How they managed to keep straight faces the entire time is beyond me

    • @Baekstrom
      @Baekstrom 3 года назад +3

      I think they edited out the parts where they cracked up.

  • @Weegie2
    @Weegie2 2 месяца назад +1

    It's incredible and humbling to think that by this time, Paul Eddington was suffering acute cancer and yet he was so selfless, he didn't give away an inch to deliver wonderful comedy.
    Now, that's what you call, a legend!

  • @jimcy1318
    @jimcy1318 3 года назад +78

    So good 🤣 British comedy at its best, pity there's bugger all to match it nowadays.

  • @ForzaDeMullet
    @ForzaDeMullet 3 года назад +22

    "Stuff the affairs of the nation, I want a cook." - Jim Hacker

  • @julietpiris3832
    @julietpiris3832 Год назад +4

    Fabulous series. So cleverly written.

  • @nicolajohnson1887
    @nicolajohnson1887 3 года назад +7

    I remember watching that back in the day, I probably appreciate it more now though.

  • @cataraxis
    @cataraxis Месяц назад +1

    “But it’s not FAIR! With trident we could obliterate all of eastern Europe!” 😂

  • @GE0attack
    @GE0attack 3 года назад +41

    They have developed it before 2021 to be fair

    • @baardkopperud
      @baardkopperud 3 года назад +5

      On the other hand, where is the Soviet Union?

    • @spamuraigranatabru1149
      @spamuraigranatabru1149 3 года назад +4

      With Lenin and Stalin.

    • @dclark142002
      @dclark142002 3 года назад +1

      So it was 'sooner than you think'...

    • @spamuraigranatabru1149
      @spamuraigranatabru1149 3 года назад +1

      @@dclark142002 Minister, one must always assume the deadline shall be broken. But you have to always ensure said deadline be before the end of one's term, less you do not make it in the relection.

  • @stevescott1929
    @stevescott1929 3 года назад +30

    2:28 - "Yes, but that's about all!!" Humphrey's mask slips to reveal that he is actually quite mad. A facet that Hawthorne brought rather brilliantly to the character.

    • @K9TheFirst1
      @K9TheFirst1 3 года назад +6

      Well, with MAD Doctrine - mutually assured destruction - 5 nuclear weapons is utterly laughable as a deterrent, especially against a state that spans a continent like the USSR, as the response - that being the entire Soviet arsenal - would have utterly glassed all of the UK, while the soviets by comparison had at worst a flesh wound.
      So in this context, Humphrey is s indeed correct. You are either in the nuclear game, or you aren't. Hacker is wanting it both ways, which won't work.

    • @AFGuidesHD
      @AFGuidesHD 3 года назад +1

      to be fair destroying a few cities is nothing compared to destroying most cities.
      conventional bombs during WW2 probably did far far more damage to Germany than 5 nukes would have.

    • @K9TheFirst1
      @K9TheFirst1 3 года назад +1

      @@AFGuidesHD Perhaps. But that also took at the very best months to achieve. And that was assuming that the bombs hit anywhere close to their intended targets. An 'on target's bomb during WWII would still likely land as much as 500 feet from where it should have. Hence one of the reasons bombing raids required hundreds of planes dropping thousands of bombs, to make sure enough of them hit their mark. Put simply, WWII Bombing campaigns were an exercise in "throw enough shit at the wall and some of it is going to stick."
      In a nuclear exchange, the 'fighting' is over and done with Ina few hours, and the area of effect means you only need to go off inside the city limits to take out the whole city. Then the radioactive fallout denies the enemy access to the location for years after before they can rebuild.

    • @darreng745
      @darreng745 2 года назад

      @@K9TheFirst1 The reality is that most Bomber Command raids in World War II were area raids as the average bomb aimer would be lucky to be within 100 to 300 yards when some bomber crews bombed the wrong city.
      They relied on using large bombs such as the 12,000 lb blast bomb to dehouse and also increased the number of incendiary devices carried on the raids to start large fires that would overwhelm the local fire services.
      Yet for all of the waste involved in that campaign, the cost and the number of lives lost the Allied bombing campaign against Germany consumed some 1,415,745 tons of bombs and if you take into account the divison of bombing and assume a roughly 85% average share for the RAF that accounts to 1,203,383 tonnes of bombs. yet explosive power is not related to bomb weight as the casing has to be taken into account so if you are generous and take a factor of 90% explosive content which is dreadfully inaccurate for the early bombs like the 500lb bomb and closer to the 12,000 lb blast bomb then you are left with a figure of just over 1.08 million tonnes of explosive dropped.
      Against which you have to quantify bombs that did not explode due to fuse failure, were disarmed by the Germans or which entered the ground too deeply to detonate so takinge a 10% failure rate off of that and you are sub 1 million tonnes of effective explosive power.
      Little Boy detonated at a figure of around 16 kilotonnes of TNT which suggests that terms of nuclear bombing a saturated bombing campaign using conventional weapons was more suitable in terms of a visible and permanent result as Little Boy achieved an efficiency that was a very low 1.7% of the fissionable material contained within the bomb, had the bomb reached around 20% efficiency then the yield could have reached a figure closer to 34 kilotonnes of TNT.
      Although Little Boy exploded with the energy equivalent of 16,000 tons of TNT, the Strategic Bombing Survey estimated that the same blast and fire effect could have been caused by 2,100 tons of conventional bombs: "220 B-29s carrying 1,200 tons of incendiary bombs, 400 tons of high-explosive bombs, and 500 tons of anti-personnel fragmentation bombs."
      The bottom line is that to have reached the amount of TNT equivalent dropped on Germany you would have needed 61 atomic devices the size of Little Boy and that would have irradiated most of Western Europe in the process.

  • @2490debrick
    @2490debrick 3 года назад +36

    It's aged very well because it proves politics hasn't changed lol 😆

    • @rncmv
      @rncmv 2 месяца назад

      why should it change at all?

  • @theparticularist5373
    @theparticularist5373 6 месяцев назад +2

    That 2020 joke aged like a very fine wine.

  • @chowdhurysakib-uz-zaman1246
    @chowdhurysakib-uz-zaman1246 2 года назад +3

    Why is this show so effing brilliant!!!

  • @AlainHubert
    @AlainHubert 3 года назад +2

    "Yes, but even though they probably certainly know that you probably wouldn't, they don't certainly know that, although you probably wouldn't, there's no probability that you certainly would!"........"What?" - brilliant! 🤣

  • @THINKincessantly
    @THINKincessantly 2 года назад +2

    So much golden cinema in one show, hard to believe this was made in the early 1980s....

  • @Clem_Fandango11
    @Clem_Fandango11 3 месяца назад +1

    Missed the end when they talk about Trident and Harrods analogy.

  • @simarjeetnagpal
    @simarjeetnagpal 3 года назад +13

    2020 was indeed sooner than we thought

    • @trollop_7
      @trollop_7 3 года назад

      It was a year ago, if that's what you mean.

  • @tamirj.b.n9814
    @tamirj.b.n9814 2 года назад +7

    2:09
    "The soviets will develop it by 2020"
    Really makes you think about the time this show was actually aired

  • @owen5524
    @owen5524 Год назад +2

    This is better than any comedy TV I've seen in years. No idea this even existed

  • @jkolorath
    @jkolorath 3 года назад +23

    "How about masterly inactivity?"
    Interestingly it was British India's Afghan policy after the debacle of 1st Anglo-Afghan War in 19th century.
    Make one wonder what would south Asian security situation look like, if the west had continued that policy, while the current Afghan debacle still unfolding.🤔

  • @DavidHalfordsLane
    @DavidHalfordsLane 3 года назад +23

    Brilliant acting and scriptwriting.

  • @DonJuanMarco1994
    @DonJuanMarco1994 7 месяцев назад +1

    This is such an intelligent comedy.
    I hope intelligent comedies like this return.

  • @marsillinkow
    @marsillinkow 6 месяцев назад +3

    Rishi Sunak trying to reinstate national service be like:

  • @jbtv7955
    @jbtv7955 3 года назад +4

    What another amazing funny yes Prime mister clip

  • @Ndlanding
    @Ndlanding 3 года назад +1

    Excellent! Both script and acting are superb.

  • @Ralpho123
    @Ralpho123 2 месяца назад +1

    What great actors

  • @husainm.7537
    @husainm.7537 3 года назад +4

    Man, this is brilliant!!

  • @andreashaynes3346
    @andreashaynes3346 3 года назад +2

    Absolute GEM!!! ⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @OtisAdonisChad
    @OtisAdonisChad 3 года назад +20

    Sir Humphrey was prophetic. S400s and now S500s. No Soviets though, just Russia. And hypersonics also.

    • @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry
      @Grimenoughtomaketherobotcry 3 года назад

      The S systems are non-nuclear anti-aircraft missiles. The hypersonics are still in development, and the US has been developing their own version as well as counter-measures. Putin's hypersonics are a load of sonic-hype, intended to frighten the western public in the hopes that it will help him get his way with Ukraine as well as the other former Soviet republics. Maybe not entirely bluff, but certainly 100% bluster.

    • @MightyJosh1985
      @MightyJosh1985 2 года назад +5

      How well are they working in Ukraine?

    • @MrJimheeren
      @MrJimheeren 2 года назад +4

      We now all know Russia is just a paper tiger. And the few hypersonic missiles they did have we gone before you knew it

    • @Blake4014
      @Blake4014 2 года назад +1

      @@MightyJosh1985 they are working well actually.

    • @MightyJosh1985
      @MightyJosh1985 2 года назад +1

      @@Blake4014 tell that to the Russian losses families

  • @xToxicNinjax
    @xToxicNinjax 6 месяцев назад +1

    Lol Rishi here trying to institute conscription? Perfect timing this gets recommended to me

  • @wedgeantillies66
    @wedgeantillies66 8 месяцев назад

    great comic acting from two of the greats of British tv

  • @nigelrg1
    @nigelrg1 2 года назад +3

    I love the occasional scenes when Sir Humphrey loses his cool!

  • @adhi_r
    @adhi_r 3 года назад +4

    2020 that's sooner than you think

  • @PaulCashman
    @PaulCashman 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant scene from a brilliant show.

  • @michaelsummerell8618
    @michaelsummerell8618 10 месяцев назад

    Superb writing - I wonder how many takes were needed to get that!

  • @peter.a.langan5872
    @peter.a.langan5872 3 года назад +3

    Sir Humphreys prophecy was very good only one year early!

  • @EdgyShooter
    @EdgyShooter 3 года назад +2

    "2020, but that's sooner than you think"
    God you're telling me

  • @macnewman2588
    @macnewman2588 2 года назад

    excellent banter

  • @florinivan6907
    @florinivan6907 2 года назад +2

    'enough to obliterate Moscow Leningrad Minsk' not sure if the writers were aware but the actual discussions about targeting were similar. The UK had a so called 'Moscow criterion' at the time ie at a minimum Moscow had to go. In fact talks constantly revised the proposed target list '10,20, 30, options with or without Moscow'. There was also a lot of discussion about megadeaths. It was generally agreed a minimum of 20 million ie Moscow Leningrad Minsk might just about cover it or close enough.

  • @fahmad7194
    @fahmad7194 2 года назад +2

    Simply genius 👏

  • @0w784g
    @0w784g Год назад +1

    This classic shares the "Comedy Great" mantle with Citizen Khan, according to this RUclips channel. It'd take more than a whole ministry of Sir Humphreys to convince me of that.

  • @daa2608
    @daa2608 3 года назад +3

    Never gets old, as relevant now as it was then...

  • @kitpesec1536
    @kitpesec1536 3 года назад +5

    Best ever!!!

  • @carloscampo9119
    @carloscampo9119 2 года назад +1

    This is legendary

  • @finnellwilliam
    @finnellwilliam 9 месяцев назад +1

    They bring up 2020 and it was the year of hell

  • @markriser1
    @markriser1 2 года назад

    One of television's greatest exchanges.

  • @siriusindustriesllc238
    @siriusindustriesllc238 2 года назад +1

    This hits different in april 2022

  • @richardelson3261
    @richardelson3261 10 месяцев назад

    Incredible writing and acting.

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela 3 года назад +2

    An absolute classic.

  • @tachikomakusanagi3744
    @tachikomakusanagi3744 2 года назад +2

    How on Earth did they learn these lines? In the same way that people ask what was the good of the moon landings, i used to ask what is the good of puting on Shakespears plays - but now i see.

  • @vikingengineeringandrepowe4781
    @vikingengineeringandrepowe4781 3 года назад +3

    Make that man PM NOW he talks total sense 🙋‍♂️🙋‍♂️🙋‍♂️🙋‍♂️

  • @steveross8364
    @steveross8364 3 года назад +8

    This was the vastly superior predecessor to "The Thick of It" which looks like it was written by morons by comparison as great works often do when other try to imitate them.

  • @christopherkerr1693
    @christopherkerr1693 2 года назад +3

    The nuclear weapons that Harrods would sell! 🤣

  • @walterfielding9079
    @walterfielding9079 Год назад +4

    Apparently Maggie Thatcher thought this show was hilarious and even said it was more realistic than viewers realized.

  • @nathangriffiths6218
    @nathangriffiths6218 5 месяцев назад

    Those last few lines are brilliant, a level of comedy writing we just don't see any more.

  • @henghistbluetooth7882
    @henghistbluetooth7882 3 года назад +3

    2020. It’s sooner than you think.

  • @williamewing5509
    @williamewing5509 3 года назад +2

    I have got movie DVDS of Paul Uddingston with Christopher Lee and Charles Gray in The Devil Rides Out and Nigel Hawthorn with Clint Eastwood and Freddy Jones in Firefox as I am dedicating this movie DVDS to my old school friends who are both sisters as I hope to see them again very soon
    to Chris and Hester from Billyxxxxx

  • @logosofgame4273
    @logosofgame4273 3 года назад +2

    "By 2020, but that is sooner than you think" That was last year by my reckoning.

  • @kimphilby7999
    @kimphilby7999 2 года назад

    Now,this "what?",Prime Minister,is stollen right from my mouth!!!

  • @TigerofRobare
    @TigerofRobare 11 месяцев назад +1

    "The nuclear missle Harrod's would sell you."

  • @oldskool4572
    @oldskool4572 3 года назад +6

    Utter genius. They don't write stuff like this anymore.

    • @trollop_7
      @trollop_7 3 года назад

      Well, it's rather difficult to understand.

    • @merlith4650
      @merlith4650 Год назад

      this is from an era when our culture still had intellectual values and cherished the integrity of being intelligent and educated. whereas in modern day, it's nearly as if everything is just lowbrow and trashy. quick and primal stimulations through the internet, social media and shortform content (tiktok, etc), perfectly thoughtless for quick sensory triggers and easy consumption. like the rats in Olds-Milner chamber waisting their lives compulsively pressing that lever over, and over, and over again for those quick serotonin releases.
      comedy is a spectrum, on one end you have the clowns, on the other end intelligent and elegant satire. yet, in this day and age itseems as most of entertainment media has gone full pedal into the circus

    • @hippymad1
      @hippymad1 Год назад

      @@merlith4650 ....this show aired the same years that the US soap opera Dallas was the most watched tv show in the UK and the biggest broadcast was reshowing Live and Let Live. Very intellectual, not low brow at all. The Rick and Morty of intellectual consumerism of its day.

  • @stopher101
    @stopher101 Год назад

    Masterly inactivity is my new favourite phrase

  • @billiehaoneohaokip8140
    @billiehaoneohaokip8140 2 года назад +1

    Humphrey had already asked " you're not a secret unilateralist?" To the PM Back when the PM was a minister

  • @Stephen_Lafferty
    @Stephen_Lafferty Год назад +3

    2:09 - here in December 2023 and thinking about Russia's abject failiure in Crimera and the Ukraine!

    • @An-lv9vw
      @An-lv9vw 9 месяцев назад

      Russia is winnig though 😂

  • @aaquibaqn
    @aaquibaqn 2 года назад +1

    How about masterly inactivity? No Humphrey, I have decided to be firm. Ok. How about firm masterly inacitivity?

  • @SweHall
    @SweHall 3 года назад +4

    The whole sham of the Cold War explained in less 2 min.

  • @Ianskogberg
    @Ianskogberg 3 года назад +1

    What did he say at 0:35?

    • @xn85d2
      @xn85d2 3 года назад +2

      "There must be some solution."
      "There hasn't been for 2 and a half centuries."

  • @Leonf123
    @Leonf123 3 года назад +2

    I shall be firm !!

  • @overworlder
    @overworlder 6 месяцев назад +1

    Who would have thought things were better in the days of permanent secretaries.