1st rule of acting, stay in character until the yell cut. 2nd rule of filmography, everything is a useful material. 3rd rule of stunt work, if anyone gets hurt, use the footage. It looks better, because it is real.
Movie instead of TV but Viggo kicking that helmet in Two Towers for the last time fits the 3rd one. Take after take didn't quite make the scene. Then on the last take it was one too many kicks...it broke his big toe. Where others would might double over or otherwise call it there & the take ends there to redo later he just "ran" with it by using the pain to feed the emotion of the scene. Was only AFTER the take did he inform the others of what happened. It was so thoroughly convincing it made the final cut.
For rule 3. In The Punisher (2004). Thomas Jane was supposed to stab Kevin Nash during a fight. But the prop guy forgot to swap out the knife for the collapsible one. So he acutally stabbed him in the sholder/chest. Kevin, stays in chacracter and continues the fight. That is the take they use in the film.
@@lgolem09l Apparently he wasn't. And Kevin also forgave him as he was distracted flirting with a girl and Kevin could appreciate that. Kevin also got back at Thomas as there was a later stunt where he had to throw Thomas through a wall. It was done very forcefully. As he goes through the wall, across the hall and into the brick wall on the other side. It's actually rather impressive.
That prank with Ross and Rachel is one of my favorite ones in the entire show because of that reaction was so real, now I know it was actually real haha
"Does an old bear shit in the woods?" Is also a line from Band of brothers when Cpt. Sobel aka. David Swimmer fucks up with their location and Luz says this line when asked if he can do an impression of the colonel.
The GoT one is hard to believe. I don't see that Diana Rigg hadn't met Gwendoline Christie before everyone was in costume, in make up, and the cameras are rolling.
I'd say its possible, since Lena Headey (Cersei) and Jerome Flynn (Bronn) didn't have a single scene together in the series due to Headey hating him(according to some news article, dont quote me)
Most shows and movies are shot cross-boarded, which means scenes are completely out of sequence compared to what ends up in the final production, eg. day 1 of shooting could be the last scene in the whole thing. So 100% possible and probably true. Actors are usually in makeup or their trailer until called to the set.
The $100k ship is destroyed, but fortunately they had insurance. OK great, here's a bag of crumbled sticks and a $100k, you can still display that, right?
Yeah that line "fortunately it was insured" was like ultimate cynical capitalism vibes.... Who cares about a tangible museum-worthy piece of history? Its value in dollar bills is all that matters!
I don't even understand why would the crew go to such lengths and rent a real model. Couldn't the prop department create something that looks similar but breakable?
@@Dabaka93 Well it wasn't meant to be broken. That said, I do agree that it'd have been better to make a prop or at the very least make sure the actor knows, "Hey, this is a genuine historical artifact, treat it with care."
one genuine shock reaction is in the first die hard film the final scene where Hans Gruber falls, the director tells Alan Rickman they will let him go on the count of 3 but the director instructed the crew to let him go earlier hence his reaction is film legend.
Betty White was one of the funniest people ever. What a great talent she was. Always made me smile and laugh. She played it straight and funny like no other.
Well, the story HAS been repeated frequently on the internet... so it MUST be completely true. ;) I did find this quote indicating that the $100,000 is exaggerated: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maelstrom_(Battlestar_Galactica) "According to Ron Moore, it was a very expensive museum-quality model worth several hundred dollars that was being rented for the production. It was insured, according to Moore."
Except if you pause the video. The guy's fist is fully extended past her face before she reacts. He might have gotten closer than expected, but he clearly didn't hit her. Bogus story - like most of these.
There's a scene in The Mentalist S4 E15 when Rigsby squeezes the top off a baby's bottle and it flicks and hits the camera, with Sarah behind doing a jolted laugh. I'm 99% sure that's a blooper where it wasn't supposed to happen but he played it off so smoothly.
Unfortunately things didn't work out well for the actress Lisa Robin Kelly and well, Danny Masterson, there are no words. I don't think I could watch it again with him in it.
2:18 Jeans Guy had the most important job of the squad, he was protecting the fried chicken! (literally! in an interview it turns out he was only there holding a bucket of KFC for one of the actors XD)
The one with Betty White really doesn't surprise me. She was really good friends with Carol Burnett who's vaudeville style show was famous for exactly that kind of interaction.
It didn't. It was a common way servants would announce their arrival after they'd been summoned by their employer "ringing" for them. It was a catchphrase for Bob Denver as Maynard G. Krebs on the Dobie Gillis show a few years before The Addams Family (where the gag was that such a bizarre character said something so normal in such a scary voice.) ua-cam.com/video/FpOYuCn95dY/v-deo.html
How do you know these? Where is your source of information for what you are stating? The Arrested Development fall seems scripted, not a blooper. Also the Game of Thrones one doesn't seem like a blooper either.
I always wondered about the Friends line about a bear shitting in the woods. I had watched that episode at least 3 times before I realized what he actually said. I had hoped they had somehow slipped it past the censors.
young people may not understand; back then "shit" was never allowed on tv.The FCC had full control of censorship and didnt allow "shit" until around 2000. "shit" happened before that but producers were fined extravagant amounts per violation.
@@drengr2759 it's still not allowed. So I don't know why you're talking about it in the past tense. It's the same in every country, if the show is broadcast before 9pm or 10pm, depending on the country, then swear words aren't allowed and have to be bleeped out. And other things, like nudity, aren't allowed before that time either. Because children are supposed to be asleep in bed by 9 or 10 in the evening (if you're a good parent, anyway; there's a lot of terrible parents out there who don't have a curfew time for their kids, and it makes their kids suffer in the long run).
BSG and that model ship... It's something Katee Sackhoff told (SPOILER for almost 20 year old show: it was about dead of her character). Only true is that E.J. Olmos didn't suppose to smash it, but it was model worth couple of hundreds of dollars. Just regular shipment from internet or whatever... Sadly, this video is one of many spreading the myth. Sry, but check your sources better next time...
With some of these (the Glee slap and Tuco putting out the cigarette, etc.), it'd be interesting to know which shot was the actual ad-libbed one, as they would've been single-camera productions
Well done video. That was and probably still is Kutcher's ultimate genius among many. Slapstick. Every awkward moment looks as if it naturally part of the scene. Seriously, how far back to have to go to find another in film or television who is at his level?
i dont believe 90% of these, they just do this (say it was by accident) as a way to promote their show or movie, maybe a accidental fall, yes, but the rest.. no!..
You're incorrect, because none of these were known to be bloopers at the time and they were never used to promote the shows. It was only years and years later, after the show had already finished and wasn't even on the air anymore, that the stories came out that these were actually bloopers that were kept in the show. And in all the DVD commentaries for each of these shows, the actors revealed that they were bloopers, so that's a direct source, from the actors who were literally in the scene, and the directors who directed these episodes, and they revealed this information on the DVD commentary, which means they revealed it to people who had _ALREADY_ bought the DVD boxset, and therefore didn't need to be marketed to, because they'd already bought the product. Do you see? I guess you might argue that all these actors and directors were all lying when they revealed these bloopers, but why would they lie? That's not a rhetorical question, please give an answer as to why they'd lie about it in the DVD commentaries?
The model was insured for "a dude randomly smashing it with his hands"? I would love to see the insurance agent who signed it for some insuring of my own.
Yeah, one could say that the character in the show knew that he was already dead, and the announcement in 2011 was inaccurate. You could almost write anything to defend your show's/movie's scene, lol.
@@Andres33AU That's how Breaking Bad and its ilk works. It's dollar-store paperback plot-lines scattered across an exponentially longer than necessary view time, strung together with anything that looks or sounds edgy, for which they can just make up the most unnatural out-of-character, lazily implausible and coincidental bare and uncreative threads, to have a basic excuse for having something 'cool' happen. And then they get cinematography and editing students to use all their skills, to streeeeetch and milk 10x the minutes out of a scene that it was worth. With stuff like actors looking dramatically just off camera while it slowly zooms in, and they're waiting for someone to yell cut already.
Insurance will not bring an intricate model of possibly historical value back. I hope it was just the labour and time that was lost and that another copy could be made.
Are you literally 13? "OMG a woman's boobs, I must click on the video!" It's pathetic to be completely controlled by your hormones like that instead of using your brain. 13 year old kids just going through puberty don't know how to control it, but then 99.99% of people grow up by the time they turn 18 and learn how to control it. Sadly, a tiny few people never grow up and mature, and so never learn to control it. They often go on to become rapists, who are then themselves raped in prison because other criminals live by a certain code, that includes not harming women or children, so the rapists get raped as a sort of eye for an eye punishment by the other prisoners. So think carefully before you live your life this way, unless you want to end up being in prison and having to deal with all of that.
Yeah it happens. If you've ever had any experience on a set you'd know. Because it's utter chaos with dozens or even hundreds of people all running about for hours and hours and hours and everyone is doing (or trying to do) multiple things at once, in a very quick time, and so they forget to tell the actors certain things because they've got 4 or 5 other things to do and they're running about through a set that's completely chaotic. The same thing happened in a Quentin Tarantino film. In his film The Hateful Eight, Kurt Russell picked up a priceless antique Martin guitar (if you're not a guitarist and so you aren't aware, Martin acoustic guitars are regarded as the best guitars you can buy, and their long history of existence is part of that, they've been making guitars for a long long time) that was 150 years old and smashed it, because he thought it was just a prop. So he completely broke this priceless irreplaceable antique guitar, because nobody told him what it was, nobody told him it wasn't just a prop. Because film sets and TV show sets are places of complete and utter chaos where something like forgetting to tell the actors that a prop is real and priceless and not just a cheap thing made by the props department, is something that can very easily happen, and does, and that's why there's quite a few stories like this of the actors mistakenly destroying a priceless antique because the crew members forgot to tell them it was real and highly valuable and so they shouldn't damage it.
Yeah it happens. If you've ever had any experience on a set you'd know. Because it's utter chaos with dozens or even hundreds of people all running about for hours and hours and hours and everyone is doing (or trying to do) multiple things at once, in a very quick time, and so they forget to tell the actors certain things because they've got 4 or 5 other things to do and they're running about through a set that's completely chaotic. The same thing happened in a Quentin Tarantino film. In his film The Hateful Eight, Kurt Russell picked up a priceless antique Martin guitar (if you're not a guitarist and so you aren't aware, Martin acoustic guitars are regarded as the best guitars you can buy, and their long history of existence is part of that, they've been making guitars for a long long time) that was 150 years old and smashed it, because he thought it was just a prop. So he completely broke this priceless irreplaceable antique guitar, because nobody told him what it was, nobody told him it wasn't just a prop. Because film sets and TV show sets are places of complete and utter chaos where something like forgetting to tell the actors that a prop is real and priceless and not just a cheap thing made by the props department, is something that can very easily happen, and does, and that's why there's quite a few stories like this of the actors mistakenly destroying a priceless antique because the crew members forgot to tell them it was real and highly valuable and so they shouldn't damage it.
The wooden ship thing is incorrect. They were not that expensive. The two models broken in the series were mail order models and were auctioned off after the series completed
You really think they would use a $100,000 antique from a museum for a prop when you could just as easily buy a similar looking model from a hobby shop? Use some common sense man. Don't believe every rumor
145-year-old Martin acoustic guitar was accidentally smashed instead of the prop on Quentin Taratinos Hateful 8. It was said to be priceless. Accidents happen.
The actors and the director for this episode revealed in the DVD commentary that this was indeed a highly expensive rare model from a museum. Don't believe everything you hear on the Internet, like when you hear that this scene just used an inexpensive prop and not a museum piece. You just read that somewhere, with no evidence whatsoever, and just believed it 100% without giving any critical thought to it whatsoever, because you're gullible. The actors and directors and showrunners of the show revealed that this was indeed a very expensive museum piece that he destroyed, and they're a primary source of information here. Meanwhile some idiot on the Internet makes up a lie claiming it wasn't expensive at all and posts this lie on Facebook or TikTok or wherever, and you're gullible enough to actually believe them. Use your brain. Think critically.
ashton kutcher....a very good actor(you might not think that he is it by the way he looks,but actually much better then many thinks)If this clip didnt tell us all this soooo....
@@duffman18 I suspect swede7581 said that because Kutcher is unusually good-looking -- to the point of being sort of a "pretty boy" (he started his career as a fashion model) -- so it may be easy for some people to assume that he's only an actor because of his looks, and that he doesn't have any talent.
i think there's one in er in the episode where ming na's character gives birth. and probably why they dont' do this nomrallly in most birth scenes. where i'm confused is was the actress still pregnant when they shot this or had she given birth and still doing this as part of the story. the reason i think there's a blooper is the beginning of the first scene with ming na's character and the lady playing the doctor. the nurse get's off the phones says the anesthesiologist is on his way and will be here in a few minutes. the doctor puts sometihng on her glove and then reaches up under ming na's gown. ming na grimaces and the doc says somethign like i know sympathetically but then ming looks right over at the camera and rolls her eyes. now realistically i'm sure that when a doctor does thatfor a lady in labor to check her progress i'm assuming that's not very comfortable, and i'm assuming that she wasn't supposd to reach that far up, but with the gown and how far away she was it was likely ana ccident they left in. thoughts?
The friends 'prank' scene is just a myth, one of the producers was asked about it and they said the entire scene was 100% scripted. If Aniston is seen 'genuinely' scared it's only because she's just a good actress.
@@reneebroskiLet's talk realistically, what would have been the end of that scene if it wasn't scripted? Just Rachel running after Ben and Ross? The entire POINT of the scene was them pranking her to even the score for the pranks she taught Ben. Also, It's a SET, there are no actual stairs where they ran off to (there's like one or two steps that you can see for the cameras, but that's it), and the actors obviously know this, so why would she think that David really 'fell' down? Not to mention that the dummy is so OBVIOUSLY fake that no one would actually think it's a real person. I bet when you saw the scene for the first time you weren't fooled by it even for a second, so why would she?
Not a bad video, though some of these aren't really 'bloopers'. Like that Osama line, that was written and included intentionally, but they later realized it clashed with the time that the show was set in.
It is great to see Lurch - Ted Cassidy, as my Dad and Ted both started their careers at radio station WCOA in Pensacola Florida. They were great friends. They both were reporting on JFK in Dallas when he was assassinated. Real trivia is Ted Cassidy was the very first reporter to report on air that JFK had been shot.
Are you daft? That clip isn't the clip they're talking about. That clip you mentioned is an entire season later, when the character of Bob was already an established character by that point, and so yes in that scene his appearance in it was completely intentional. The scene they're actually talking about is the one after the one you linked to, with the woman screaming. In the scene she gets a sort of psychic vision of her missing daughter being killed and so screams at that vision. But as you can see in the upper right hand corner of the shot, there's a man's face in the mirror. He was just one of the crew members and he wasn't supposed to be visible in the shot, it was a complete accident. But David Lynch noticed it and decided to make that crew member an actor, and invent a character he plays that ended up being the main villain of the entire show, when originally he wasn't even supposed to _BE_ in the show. Do you understand now? Or do you require further explanation? You can go check it out here if you want: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_(Twin_Peaks)
Insurance pays out when it concerns purposeful, brutal destruction... ? (Caught on tape in Full HD - properly lit, no less..) I need the name of that insurance agency... I have some... actinggg... to do... 😶🎥🔥
1st rule of acting, stay in character until the yell cut.
2nd rule of filmography, everything is a useful material.
3rd rule of stunt work, if anyone gets hurt, use the footage. It looks better, because it is real.
Movie instead of TV but Viggo kicking that helmet in Two Towers for the last time fits the 3rd one. Take after take didn't quite make the scene. Then on the last take it was one too many kicks...it broke his big toe. Where others would might double over or otherwise call it there & the take ends there to redo later he just "ran" with it by using the pain to feed the emotion of the scene. Was only AFTER the take did he inform the others of what happened. It was so thoroughly convincing it made the final cut.
For rule 3. In The Punisher (2004). Thomas Jane was supposed to stab Kevin Nash during a fight. But the prop guy forgot to swap out the knife for the collapsible one. So he acutally stabbed him in the sholder/chest. Kevin, stays in chacracter and continues the fight. That is the take they use in the film.
@@Dysan72 That is one happy editor, and one fired prop guy.
@@lgolem09l Apparently he wasn't. And Kevin also forgave him as he was distracted flirting with a girl and Kevin could appreciate that.
Kevin also got back at Thomas as there was a later stunt where he had to throw Thomas through a wall. It was done very forcefully. As he goes through the wall, across the hall and into the brick wall on the other side. It's actually rather impressive.
whats the 1st rule of filmography?
whats the 2nd and 1st rule of stunt work?
That prank with Ross and Rachel is one of my favorite ones in the entire show because of that reaction was so real, now I know it was actually real haha
That Superman punch was legit you could hear it hit her chin 😂😂
I'm skeptical. Watch it in slow motion. Very suspicious cut away.
"Does an old bear shit in the woods?" Is also a line from Band of brothers when Cpt. Sobel aka. David Swimmer fucks up with their location and Luz says this line when asked if he can do an impression of the colonel.
The GoT one is hard to believe. I don't see that Diana Rigg hadn't met Gwendoline Christie before everyone was in costume, in make up, and the cameras are rolling.
I'd say its possible, since Lena Headey (Cersei) and Jerome Flynn (Bronn) didn't have a single scene together in the series due to Headey hating him(according to some news article, dont quote me)
Most shows and movies are shot cross-boarded, which means scenes are completely out of sequence compared to what ends up in the final production, eg. day 1 of shooting could be the last scene in the whole thing. So 100% possible and probably true. Actors are usually in makeup or their trailer until called to the set.
It's in the script. It's a lie. They had clearly rehearsed the scene.
Agree, it's a BS claim. No way those two actors hadn't done a script read together prior to the scene, or met each other on set.
@@KaplanRobert Unless you know, circumstances came up which prevented that from going as planned, which is reality.
"The character's reaction to the blue blazer black was so good that they kept it"
*proceeds to not show any of those reactions*
The $100k ship is destroyed, but fortunately they had insurance. OK great, here's a bag of crumbled sticks and a $100k, you can still display that, right?
Bs
Yeah that line "fortunately it was insured" was like ultimate cynical capitalism vibes.... Who cares about a tangible museum-worthy piece of history? Its value in dollar bills is all that matters!
Yeah maybe they could have like, I dunno, let him know? Lol
I don't even understand why would the crew go to such lengths and rent a real model. Couldn't the prop department create something that looks similar but breakable?
@@Dabaka93 Well it wasn't meant to be broken. That said, I do agree that it'd have been better to make a prop or at the very least make sure the actor knows, "Hey, this is a genuine historical artifact, treat it with care."
The Chandler handcuffs one really surprises me. It's just so perfect, it's so Friends. The perfect blooper for the show.
My favorite nickname for Gus on Psych will forever be Galileo Humpkins. I still use it as an alias to this day.
Ghee Buttersnaps takes the cake for me. Lavender Gooms is a runner up.
Psych is the most comfy show ever.
one genuine shock reaction is in the first die hard film the final scene where Hans Gruber falls, the director tells Alan Rickman they will let him go on the count of 3 but the director instructed the crew to let him go earlier hence his reaction is film legend.
Betty White was one of the funniest people ever.
What a great talent she was.
Always made me smile and laugh.
She played it straight and funny like no other.
If she and Tim Conway ever played off each other, they would've gone critical and exploded the studio.
Some of her jokes are extemporaneous.
I could never be a comedic actor. I can't keep a straight face for the life of me.
@@Amtcboy She was extraordinarily smart and quick-witted. 😊
4:42 that punch was insane, I feel so bad for her 😢
I call BS.... who puts a 100.000$ prop without telling the actors to be careful
Not to mention that I’d be surprised if the insurance paid out a claim when the object was destroyed on purpose.
Happens more often than you think.
Well, the story HAS been repeated frequently on the internet... so it MUST be completely true. ;) I did find this quote indicating that the $100,000 is exaggerated: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maelstrom_(Battlestar_Galactica) "According to Ron Moore, it was a very expensive museum-quality model worth several hundred dollars that was being rented for the production. It was insured, according to Moore."
Could have been that now, cronicly unemployed guy 😅
It happened in the hateful eight with the guitar, estimated to be more than $40k of a 1930 Martin guitar that Kurt Russell smashed
Lois Lane being knocked unconscious for real 😥.
That won this video.
Except if you pause the video. The guy's fist is fully extended past her face before she reacts. He might have gotten closer than expected, but he clearly didn't hit her. Bogus story - like most of these.
5:32 you can see her eyes laughing and without her hands, that wouldn't have been kept
There's a scene in The Mentalist S4 E15 when Rigsby squeezes the top off a baby's bottle and it flicks and hits the camera, with Sarah behind doing a jolted laugh. I'm 99% sure that's a blooper where it wasn't supposed to happen but he played it off so smoothly.
Thumbnail guy knows what he’s doing.
Somebody probably should have told Olmos that it was a museum piece.
it was a 'museum quality' piece worth a few hundred according to an interview not $100,000
It wasn't. It was a prop and it was auctioned off later with other props from the show.
5:37 This is the single most funny scene in all Friends. Makes me laugh everytime. Great guy Mathew Perry. He was priceless.
Betty White was an absolute treasure!
Indeed she was! ❤ 👍
RIP both Corey and Nia..
0:57 I have built wooden scale models, I knew that was expensive when that episode aired......
But not that expensive. It was a mail order prop that did NOT belong to a museum. You could have bought it with the prop auction a few years ago.
And it immediately starts with a Friends clip that didn't make the final cut. It was in the blooper reel.
0:43 - whoa... imagine the heart attack they must have had. Blood pressure 9000.
I remember Kelso tripping over the table. It didn't even register as a blooper to me. It is exactly what I would have done. (Lori is hot.)
Unfortunately things didn't work out well for the actress Lisa Robin Kelly and well, Danny Masterson, there are no words. I don't think I could watch it again with him in it.
RIP Santana from Glee. You died a damn hero.
2:18 Jeans Guy had the most important job of the squad, he was protecting the fried chicken!
(literally! in an interview it turns out he was only there holding a bucket of KFC for one of the actors XD)
2:00 You're really trying to make us believe that was the first time these people saw each other?
7:13 whoa it's the Crypt Fiend from Warcraft III, "You rang?"
The one with Betty White really doesn't surprise me. She was really good friends with Carol Burnett who's vaudeville style show was famous for exactly that kind of interaction.
I like how you used the 'Laura Prepon flashing her boobs' scene as a thumbnail even though it's not a blooper
Yes, and by "like" we mean...
"You rang?"
I didn't know that the phrase came from that show!
It didn't. It was a common way servants would announce their arrival after they'd been summoned by their employer "ringing" for them. It was a catchphrase for Bob Denver as Maynard G. Krebs on the Dobie Gillis show a few years before The Addams Family (where the gag was that such a bizarre character said something so normal in such a scary voice.)
ua-cam.com/video/FpOYuCn95dY/v-deo.html
Notice how when Kelso hurts himself, Mrs. Foreman looks at him for a moment to make sure he's ok because she's a nurse.
Because, as we all know, only nurses care about other people's well being lol
This is so hilarious. Thanks for making this.
I didn't know the scene with Matthew Perry hitting his head wasn't scripted. That episode is one of my all time favorites.
Video: "In 'The Nanny' the blooper was funnier than what they wrote."
Me: Yeah I can believe that...
How do you know these? Where is your source of information for what you are stating? The Arrested Development fall seems scripted, not a blooper. Also the Game of Thrones one doesn't seem like a blooper either.
It was mentioned on the dvd commentary of each tv series
@@tlaughplanet ty 🙏
These videos are always enjoyable. Good speaking voice too
that scene in "that 70's show" blooper really worked well since Kelso being careless character in the show lol
I always wondered about the Friends line about a bear shitting in the woods. I had watched that episode at least 3 times before I realized what he actually said. I had hoped they had somehow slipped it past the censors.
young people may not understand; back then "shit" was never allowed on tv.The FCC had full control of censorship and didnt allow "shit" until around 2000. "shit" happened before that but producers were fined extravagant amounts per violation.
@@drengr2759 It still isn't allowed, at least not on broadcast TV before 10 pm.
@@drengr2759 it's still not allowed. So I don't know why you're talking about it in the past tense. It's the same in every country, if the show is broadcast before 9pm or 10pm, depending on the country, then swear words aren't allowed and have to be bleeped out. And other things, like nudity, aren't allowed before that time either. Because children are supposed to be asleep in bed by 9 or 10 in the evening (if you're a good parent, anyway; there's a lot of terrible parents out there who don't have a curfew time for their kids, and it makes their kids suffer in the long run).
There were some GREAT improvised bits in Parks & Recreation. Too bad they werent considered here. Chris Pratt is a comical genius.
Someone rly should dig into Tall Stormtrooper's case, because he is the one left behind with the droids.
Friends would honestly feel incomplete without the Chandler file cabinet blopper!
Tge actor from Battlestar Galactica is Edward James Olmos, Not "Edward James".
BSG and that model ship... It's something Katee Sackhoff told (SPOILER for almost 20 year old show: it was about dead of her character). Only true is that E.J. Olmos didn't suppose to smash it, but it was model worth couple of hundreds of dollars. Just regular shipment from internet or whatever... Sadly, this video is one of many spreading the myth. Sry, but check your sources better next time...
Ron D Moore talks about it in the episode commentaries he did for almost every commentary.
wtf does 'dead of her character' mean?
Fun fact: When I was in US army basic training in 2008, my (Special Forces) Drill Sergeant told us that Bin Laden had been killed years ago.
5:37 RIP Matthew Perry, may the Ancestors welcome you home.
With some of these (the Glee slap and Tuco putting out the cigarette, etc.), it'd be interesting to know which shot was the actual ad-libbed one, as they would've been single-camera productions
Oh man, that hit on Phyllis Coates was rough i would feel absolutely terrible too. 😥
4:45 I don't know if people have really seen people ragdolling when lights go out. She falls like in movies lol
My favorite: Tim Conway’s Elephant Story.
It is Edward James OLMOS, not Edward James (0:36).
The nanny😂😂😂
Well done video. That was and probably still is Kutcher's ultimate genius among many. Slapstick. Every awkward moment looks as if it naturally part of the scene. Seriously, how far back to have to go to find another in film or television who is at his level?
buddy punching out lois lane was wild.
I'm gonna make my UA-cam channel and make a load of shit up like this.
i dont believe 90% of these, they just do this (say it was by accident) as a way to promote their show or movie,
maybe a accidental fall, yes, but the rest.. no!..
You're incorrect, because none of these were known to be bloopers at the time and they were never used to promote the shows. It was only years and years later, after the show had already finished and wasn't even on the air anymore, that the stories came out that these were actually bloopers that were kept in the show.
And in all the DVD commentaries for each of these shows, the actors revealed that they were bloopers, so that's a direct source, from the actors who were literally in the scene, and the directors who directed these episodes, and they revealed this information on the DVD commentary, which means they revealed it to people who had _ALREADY_ bought the DVD boxset, and therefore didn't need to be marketed to, because they'd already bought the product. Do you see?
I guess you might argue that all these actors and directors were all lying when they revealed these bloopers, but why would they lie? That's not a rhetorical question, please give an answer as to why they'd lie about it in the DVD commentaries?
4:50 the punch was clearly on the side of her if u freeze frame, is that whole story BS?
6:29 the 5th season was in 2012
The model was insured for "a dude randomly smashing it with his hands"? I would love to see the insurance agent who signed it for some insuring of my own.
"Are you hungry?" "Does a bear shit in the woods?" So, is that what you're hungry for?
She just always wanted to slap him. Intrusive thoughts won!
Except that Bin Laden probably died years before the year the narrator mentioned.
Yeah, one could say that the character in the show knew that he was already dead, and the announcement in 2011 was inaccurate.
You could almost write anything to defend your show's/movie's scene, lol.
@@Andres33AU That's how Breaking Bad and its ilk works. It's dollar-store paperback plot-lines scattered across an exponentially longer than necessary view time, strung together with anything that looks or sounds edgy, for which they can just make up the most unnatural out-of-character, lazily implausible and coincidental bare and uncreative threads, to have a basic excuse for having something 'cool' happen. And then they get cinematography and editing students to use all their skills, to streeeeetch and milk 10x the minutes out of a scene that it was worth. With stuff like actors looking dramatically just off camera while it slowly zooms in, and they're waiting for someone to yell cut already.
@@JohnnyNatrium You coulda just said you didn't like the show, lol.
I'm horrified that you think that insurance makes destroying museum pieces ok. But perhaps you know the story isn't true?
The Glee one is sad, cos both the actress and the actor in that scene are now dead 🙁
Insurance will not bring an intricate model of possibly historical value back. I hope it was just the labour and time that was lost and that another copy could be made.
Anyone else come here because of the thumbnail
I came here to laugh, and then I also saw a woman getting genuinely beaten and knocked out and I got really depressed.
@@Hadouken9000They didn’t use the cut of her actually losing consciousness. Only the thrown punch. The jump cut of her falling is acted.
Are you literally 13? "OMG a woman's boobs, I must click on the video!"
It's pathetic to be completely controlled by your hormones like that instead of using your brain. 13 year old kids just going through puberty don't know how to control it, but then 99.99% of people grow up by the time they turn 18 and learn how to control it. Sadly, a tiny few people never grow up and mature, and so never learn to control it. They often go on to become rapists, who are then themselves raped in prison because other criminals live by a certain code, that includes not harming women or children, so the rapists get raped as a sort of eye for an eye punishment by the other prisoners.
So think carefully before you live your life this way, unless you want to end up being in prison and having to deal with all of that.
"the office is the best comedy television show to be produced on television"
me == facepalm
ah, this was great. Well done, good commentary..mostly. You probably don' tneed to put stuff in when it's obvious.
i really thought you would mention the breaking bad pizza on the roof
Oh it was a prop worth 100k
AND YOU DIDN"T BOTHER TO TELL THAT TO THE MAN!?
Yeah it happens. If you've ever had any experience on a set you'd know. Because it's utter chaos with dozens or even hundreds of people all running about for hours and hours and hours and everyone is doing (or trying to do) multiple things at once, in a very quick time, and so they forget to tell the actors certain things because they've got 4 or 5 other things to do and they're running about through a set that's completely chaotic.
The same thing happened in a Quentin Tarantino film. In his film The Hateful Eight, Kurt Russell picked up a priceless antique Martin guitar (if you're not a guitarist and so you aren't aware, Martin acoustic guitars are regarded as the best guitars you can buy, and their long history of existence is part of that, they've been making guitars for a long long time) that was 150 years old and smashed it, because he thought it was just a prop. So he completely broke this priceless irreplaceable antique guitar, because nobody told him what it was, nobody told him it wasn't just a prop. Because film sets and TV show sets are places of complete and utter chaos where something like forgetting to tell the actors that a prop is real and priceless and not just a cheap thing made by the props department, is something that can very easily happen, and does, and that's why there's quite a few stories like this of the actors mistakenly destroying a priceless antique because the crew members forgot to tell them it was real and highly valuable and so they shouldn't damage it.
Yeah it happens. If you've ever had any experience on a set you'd know. Because it's utter chaos with dozens or even hundreds of people all running about for hours and hours and hours and everyone is doing (or trying to do) multiple things at once, in a very quick time, and so they forget to tell the actors certain things because they've got 4 or 5 other things to do and they're running about through a set that's completely chaotic.
The same thing happened in a Quentin Tarantino film. In his film The Hateful Eight, Kurt Russell picked up a priceless antique Martin guitar (if you're not a guitarist and so you aren't aware, Martin acoustic guitars are regarded as the best guitars you can buy, and their long history of existence is part of that, they've been making guitars for a long long time) that was 150 years old and smashed it, because he thought it was just a prop. So he completely broke this priceless irreplaceable antique guitar, because nobody told him what it was, nobody told him it wasn't just a prop. Because film sets and TV show sets are places of complete and utter chaos where something like forgetting to tell the actors that a prop is real and priceless and not just a cheap thing made by the props department, is something that can very easily happen, and does, and that's why there's quite a few stories like this of the actors mistakenly destroying a priceless antique because the crew members forgot to tell them it was real and highly valuable and so they shouldn't damage it.
Oh Betty White. Always will be near and dear to America’s heart!
@3:50; I completely disagree with that. The Office is boring with a few funny parts, here and there.
I tried an episode and couldn’t make it 5 minutes without getting bored. At least the show made for some nice memes.
@@baahcusegamer4530 I agree
Is the helmet kick here?
The wooden ship thing is incorrect. They were not that expensive. The two models broken in the series were mail order models and were auctioned off after the series completed
You really think they would use a $100,000 antique from a museum for a prop when you could just as easily buy a similar looking model from a hobby shop? Use some common sense man. Don't believe every rumor
145-year-old Martin acoustic guitar was accidentally smashed instead of the prop on Quentin Taratinos Hateful 8. It was said to be priceless. Accidents happen.
The actors and the director for this episode revealed in the DVD commentary that this was indeed a highly expensive rare model from a museum.
Don't believe everything you hear on the Internet, like when you hear that this scene just used an inexpensive prop and not a museum piece. You just read that somewhere, with no evidence whatsoever, and just believed it 100% without giving any critical thought to it whatsoever, because you're gullible.
The actors and directors and showrunners of the show revealed that this was indeed a very expensive museum piece that he destroyed, and they're a primary source of information here. Meanwhile some idiot on the Internet makes up a lie claiming it wasn't expensive at all and posts this lie on Facebook or TikTok or wherever, and you're gullible enough to actually believe them.
Use your brain. Think critically.
ashton kutcher....a very good actor(you might not think that he is it by the way he looks,but actually much better then many thinks)If this clip didnt tell us all this soooo....
Yeah, Ashton is unfairly underrated as an actor.
Why would you think he looks like a bad actor? He just looks like a normal guy. What on earth are you on about?
@@duffman18 I suspect swede7581 said that because Kutcher is unusually good-looking -- to the point of being sort of a "pretty boy" (he started his career as a fashion model) -- so it may be easy for some people to assume that he's only an actor because of his looks, and that he doesn't have any talent.
A four and a half minute commercial in the middle of this???? WTF????
i think there's one in er in the episode where ming na's character gives birth. and probably why they dont' do this nomrallly in most birth scenes. where i'm confused is was the actress still pregnant when they shot this or had she given birth and still doing this as part of the story. the reason i think there's a blooper is the beginning of the first scene with ming na's character and the lady playing the doctor. the nurse get's off the phones says the anesthesiologist is on his way and will be here in a few minutes. the doctor puts sometihng on her glove and then reaches up under ming na's gown. ming na grimaces and the doc says somethign like i know sympathetically but then ming looks right over at the camera and rolls her eyes. now realistically i'm sure that when a doctor does thatfor a lady in labor to check her progress i'm assuming that's not very comfortable, and i'm assuming that she wasn't supposd to reach that far up, but with the gown and how far away she was it was likely ana ccident they left in. thoughts?
If the Friends blooper only made it to the DVD cut, it didn’t make it to the Final Cut, did it?
The DVD cut was the final cut they ever made, the last cut, the final cut.
There’s a difference between improving and bloopers
It's Edward James Olmos. Not Edward James. Just saying.
The friends 'prank' scene is just a myth, one of the producers was asked about it and they said the entire scene was 100% scripted. If Aniston is seen 'genuinely' scared it's only because she's just a good actress.
so why was jennifers voice muted when she spins around. if you look very closely you can see that she says "david"
@@reneebroskiLet's talk realistically, what would have been the end of that scene if it wasn't scripted? Just Rachel running after Ben and Ross? The entire POINT of the scene was them pranking her to even the score for the pranks she taught Ben. Also, It's a SET, there are no actual stairs where they ran off to (there's like one or two steps that you can see for the cameras, but that's it), and the actors obviously know this, so why would she think that David really 'fell' down? Not to mention that the dummy is so OBVIOUSLY fake that no one would actually think it's a real person. I bet when you saw the scene for the first time you weren't fooled by it even for a second, so why would she?
no wonder it's the only funny scene in "friends"
@@echolot what a stupid, ignorant thing to say.
Not a bad video, though some of these aren't really 'bloopers'. Like that Osama line, that was written and included intentionally, but they later realized it clashed with the time that the show was set in.
It is great to see Lurch - Ted Cassidy, as my Dad and Ted both started their careers at radio station WCOA in Pensacola Florida. They were great friends. They both were reporting on JFK in Dallas when he was assassinated. Real trivia is Ted Cassidy was the very first reporter to report on air that JFK had been shot.
Has anyone else never heard of Psyched?
3:19 IT WASNT??
4:16 You cannot see John's real reaction.
Are you often wrong?
5:30 I laughed and immediately cried. Gone far too soon.
Dude smashed a 100k ship modelXD
i thought that 70s show crash into the table was ment to happen that way
Wasn't the Donna flash on That 70s Show also a prank to Ashton because Laurie really was topless?
00:25 his hair doesn't match the reflection. That's no accident.
Are you daft? That clip isn't the clip they're talking about. That clip you mentioned is an entire season later, when the character of Bob was already an established character by that point, and so yes in that scene his appearance in it was completely intentional.
The scene they're actually talking about is the one after the one you linked to, with the woman screaming. In the scene she gets a sort of psychic vision of her missing daughter being killed and so screams at that vision. But as you can see in the upper right hand corner of the shot, there's a man's face in the mirror. He was just one of the crew members and he wasn't supposed to be visible in the shot, it was a complete accident. But David Lynch noticed it and decided to make that crew member an actor, and invent a character he plays that ended up being the main villain of the entire show, when originally he wasn't even supposed to _BE_ in the show.
Do you understand now? Or do you require further explanation? You can go check it out here if you want: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_(Twin_Peaks)
@@duffman18 wow, do you always write essay responses to one line posts? How much of your life to you waste over pointless shit like this?
adlibs are not bloopers 🤦♂
3:12 The slap is still assault, wtf was she thinking. I would have immediatly pressed charges
The jean guy figurine is so funny
Insurance pays out when it concerns purposeful, brutal destruction... ?
(Caught on tape in Full HD - properly lit, no less..)
I need the name of that insurance agency...
I have some... actinggg... to do... 😶🎥🔥
The Golden Girls one is not breaking character, it is entirely scripted.
I'm not convinced any of the St. Olaf stories were actually scripted.
my friend is also called ctrl alt delete lmao