Sean Connery Joke Thread (Vol 11)

Sean Connery Joke Thread (Vol 11)

Author
Discussion

DoctorX

7,291 posts

167 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Vipers said:
Rayny said:
paua said:
Thanks - That was a fun start to the weekend smile
Classic, good old British humour, before the snowflakes and woke brigade descended upon us, bloody good actors as well, days long gone me thinks.
On the subject of spoonerisms, I used to know a Sally White. Endless amusement.

Avenicus

386 posts

44 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
22 said:
Here is a bar graph of how much door I've painted.
Love that

Bright Halo

2,969 posts

235 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
DoctorX said:
Vipers said:
Rayny said:
paua said:
Thanks - That was a fun start to the weekend smile
Classic, good old British humour, before the snowflakes and woke brigade descended upon us, bloody good actors as well, days long gone me thinks.
On the subject of spoonerisms, I used to know a Sally White. Endless amusement.
Robin Hood and his merry men had a go at spoonerism’s with their names.
Robin Hood - Hobin Rood
Little John - Jittle Lohn
Will Scarlet - Sill Wcarlet
Friar Took didn’t want to play!

CanAm

9,220 posts

272 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Bright Halo said:
Robin Hood and his merry men had a go at spoonerism’s with their names.
Robin Hood - Hobin Rood
Little John - Jittle Lohn
Will Scarlet - Sill Wcarlet
Friar Took didn’t want to play!
Friar Tuck is the only one that actually works as a Spoonerism.

Jim1064

345 posts

205 months

Saturday 13th April
quotequote all
Superb example of real life (live!) spoonerism on the BBC.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0yeX1sc6AE

Heard while driving on the M40, still makes me laugh.

AW111

9,674 posts

133 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Vipers said:
Classic, good old British humour, before the snowflakes and woke brigade descended upon us, bloody good actors as well, days long gone me thinks.
Sadly, I think you posted this seriously, when it's actually funny as fk!

Vipers

32,890 posts

228 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
We are currently accepting applications for 10 mathematics students, 8 have already been filled and we have 4 spots left.

havoc

30,073 posts

235 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Jim1064 said:
Superb example of real life (live!) spoonerism on the BBC.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0yeX1sc6AE

Heard while driving on the M40, still makes me laugh.
I love how he's clearly trying not to laugh.



Oh, and as for comedy / humour...whilst I don't agree with the 'snowflake' comment, I do think modern on-TV humour has been largely neutered by nervous executives and an overly-strong desire "not to give offence".
There's very little that's genuinely funny anymore, and even less that'll stand the test of time and be quoted in the future the way stuff like Monty Python, NTNOCN, Blackadder, Red Dwarf and The Office (not a fan, but can see why it's successful) are. Let's not forget Fawlty Towers and Only Fools & Horses, but please can someone burn all the masters of Mrs Brown's Boys!!!
Moving to film what about the perfect parody that is Tropic Thunder, most things by Mel Brooks (who would be hounded out of Hollywood in seconds nowadays, possibly just for being "too Jewish"* wink ) and Zucker/Abrams/Zucker?
...and in terms of stand-up - would Richard Pryor, Bill Hicks or Robin Williams be allowed to strut their stuff now?!?
(I do think stuff like Chubby Brown and his ilk are rightly condemned to the past though - there's a line between humour and plain bigotry, and some trample all over it)


* quote from one of his films, BTW.

MartG

20,683 posts

204 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Vipers said:
We are currently accepting applications for 10 mathematics students, 8 have already been filled and we have 4 spots left.
I remember seeing a sign at Uni - "Will the conference on Modern Mathematics please use the larger half of the hall"

Rayny

1,181 posts

201 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Vipers said:
Rayny said:
paua said:
Thanks - That was a fun start to the weekend smile
Classic, good old British humour, before the snowflakes and woke brigade descended upon us, bloody good actors as well, days long gone me thinks.
I must be hard of thinking as regards to modern times:

Two old shows from my younger days which I considered to be perfectly acceptable.
I had the television on in the background the other day. It was a repeat of that old program 'Goodnight Sweetheart' where Nicholas Lyndhurst plays the part of a time traveller (travelling between the 1980's and the wartime 1940's). I kept hearing a strange beeping noise, It took me a moment to realise that certain words being used to describe people from Japan were being censored out.
Not that long ago they showed repeats of that old classic 'Happy Days' - Before the show they had to broadcast a warning about the attitiudes of the time.

Yet modern programmes seem to allow constant swearing and verbal confrontations, completely unrealistic violence, and graphic intimacy between people of the same gender.

Vipers

32,890 posts

228 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Rayny said:
Vipers said:
Rayny said:
paua said:
Thanks - That was a fun start to the weekend smile
Classic, good old British humour, before the snowflakes and woke brigade descended upon us, bloody good actors as well, days long gone me thinks.
I must be hard of thinking as regards to modern times:

Two old shows from my younger days which I considered to be perfectly acceptable.
I had the television on in the background the other day. It was a repeat of that old program 'Goodnight Sweetheart' where Nicholas Lyndhurst plays the part of a time traveller (travelling between the 1980's and the wartime 1940's). I kept hearing a strange beeping noise, It took me a moment to realise that certain words being used to describe people from Japan were being censored out.
Not that long ago they showed repeats of that old classic 'Happy Days' - Before the show they had to broadcast a warning about the attitiudes of the time.

Yet modern programmes seem to allow constant swearing and verbal confrontations, completely unrealistic violence, and graphic intimacy between people of the same gender.
With all the censorship I always have a chuckle when Radio 2 plays Lou Reid’s Take a walk on the wild side, line “She never lost her head even giving head”, seems to have avoided censorship all the years laugh

Vipers

32,890 posts

228 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all

Rayny

1,181 posts

201 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Vipers said:
In my mind comedy died decades ago It started to die when shouty and sweary people became accepted as 'comedy' .

Simmos

64 posts

146 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Vipers said:
With all the censorship I always have a chuckle when Radio 2 plays Lou Reid’s Take a walk on the wild side, line “She never lost her head even giving head”, seems to have avoided censorship all the years laugh
I always smile at Squeeze 'Cool for cats'...

"I'm invited in for coffee and I give the dog a bone" hehe

Skyedriver

17,868 posts

282 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Vipers said:
So true.

And yes agree about the Squeeze & Lou Reid songs but listen to a lot of the current songs, there's some risky lyrics in there too but they're so inaudible/mumbled/rapped by people who struggle to enunciate .......

NoddyonNitrous

2,122 posts

232 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Skyedriver said:
Vipers said:
So true.

And yes agree about the Squeeze & Lou Reid songs but listen to a lot of the current songs, there's some risky lyrics in there too but they're so inaudible/mumbled/rapped by people who struggle to enunciate .......
Two Ronnies in the golf club:
"Are you a town member or a country member?"
"I'm a country member."
"Ah yes, I do remember."

Amazed they got away with that in the 70s or 80s.

Super Sonic

4,846 posts

54 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Simmos said:
Vipers said:
With all the censorship I always have a chuckle when Radio 2 plays Lou Reid’s Take a walk on the wild side, line “She never lost her head even giving head”, seems to have avoided censorship all the years laugh
I always smile at Squeeze 'Cool for cats'...

"I'm invited in for coffee and I give the dog a bone" hehe
Olivia Newton John, 'Summer Nights'
"He ran by me, got my suit damp"!

CharlesdeGaulle

26,276 posts

180 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
NoddyonNitrous said:
Two Ronnies in the golf club:
"Are you a town member or a country member?"
"I'm a country member."
"Ah yes, I do remember."

Amazed they got away with that in the 70s or 80s.
There were some not-so-hidden classics.

Still Mulling

12,464 posts

177 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
NoddyonNitrous said:
Two Ronnies in the golf club:
"Are you a town member or a country member?"
"I'm a country member."
"Ah yes, I do remember."

Amazed they got away with that in the 70s or 80s.
laugh

peter tdci

1,770 posts

150 months

Sunday 14th April
quotequote all
Super Sonic said:
Olivia Newton John, 'Summer Nights'
"He ran by me, got my suit damp"!
Tatiana Romanova in 'From Russia With Love' - in bed and wearing nothing but a pair of stockings and a ribbon round her neck:
Tatiana: "I think my mouth is too big..."
Bond: "No, it's the right size. For me, that is."