The British version is more engaging and far more natural. Like w conversation between 2 people the American version imitates the format but not the quality of participants or presentation.
Yeah, that one raised my eyebrows. It would NOT be described that way nowadays. Shockingly sad and awful, while being beautifully rendered. No one would call it "naughty" these days.
Wish the expert with Mr. Wheeldin (tortoise shell pipe) would hush up and let him speak. I fear we missed an interesting story! Wedgwood was his ancestor’s apprentice, for heaven’s sake.
I totally agree with you. I have been trying to come up with something similar to the "stiff upper Lip" moniker to describe the lack of enthusiasm most of these people display. All I have so far come up with is "stiff upper eyebrow" which unfortunately is not correct speaking anatomically since there are no lower eyebrows whereas there are lower lips.
love the mistakes of the Asian heraldic plates! LOL! Mistakes my ass, Engravers do the same thing even now-on purpose. Write exactly what you want engraved. So exact you get-even with misspellings or obvious notes never meant to be engraved.
Ahahaha. Can confirm. I worked at a large format printing company. I was told that once the client had approved a proof, we were to set their art up EXACTLY as proofed, no matter HOW obvious the mistakes were. Personally, I would reach out to our customer service reps to point them out, and let them decide if they wanted to alert the client with my suggested fix. Most of the times the clients were like, "Oh shit. YES FIX THAT!" But most of my coworkers just plowed ahead with the typos or whatever, saying, that's what they sent, that's what they get.
What strikes me, watching these old shows from the UK is the reactions of people being told their stuff is worth gob-smacking HUGE amounts of money. Their faces don't change expression. They just nod sagely at 30-50 THOUSAND POUNDS. While in America, they burst into tears, ask to have it repeated, or literally fall down. haha
Did that appraiser actually say, that little bronze statue which opened, represented "the white slave trade"...?!?? .. "it's quite naughty"... you've got to be kidding me !!!! ...😮 .
Wrong, and not the first time you've made erroneous comments about his Japanese pronunciation, which isn't the same as a grammatical error. I lived in Japan for 10 years, have a Japanese wife and have been associated with the country for 20 years. 'San' is an honorific term. 'Yama' means mountain. Japanese people do say Fuji Yama. It isn't so common nowadays but is perfectly acceptable. Also, you should have said 'An expert' and not 'A expert'.
The miniature cabinet is stunning
Thanks for the uploading
I have come to prefer the UK versions of the Roadshow. The people are very special.
Most are snobs
Agreed, they are MUCH better than the US.
@@neonskyline1 No they are not, they have a quiet reserved way that's quite attractive.
The British version is more engaging and far more natural. Like w conversation between 2 people the American version imitates the format but not the quality of participants or presentation.
@@malcolmjawohowelll2892nor the quality of the objects!
Very interesting video!!
Very interesting video
10:31 Isn't it wonderful? It's hilarious. Different times.
Yeah. The fact that this trade is STILL denied as reality even though it still goes on is "hilarious" too.
Yeah, that one raised my eyebrows. It would NOT be described that way nowadays. Shockingly sad and awful, while being beautifully rendered. No one would call it "naughty" these days.
Wish the expert with Mr. Wheeldin (tortoise shell pipe) would hush up and let him speak. I fear we missed an interesting story! Wedgwood was his ancestor’s apprentice, for heaven’s sake.
What's the answer to the quiz question about the rug?
37:10 that is amazing!
37:00 the original instafilter!!
What is it with the English and clocks?
19:10...funny how the legend turned a brutal man into a "lover", isn't it?
@Logan Jonah yea, I've been watching on flixzone} for since november myself :D
Omg. Yeah. He was horrifying. Ugh.
Yay! Farnham!!
Beautiful fellowship afterwards and lots of food . Send you address I’ll forward you the memorial brochure
How come in the old version of the antiques roadshow no one seems really happy or excited when they find out the value of their item?
because people weren't assholes back then.
I totally agree with you. I have been trying to come up with something similar to the "stiff upper Lip" moniker to describe the lack of enthusiasm most of these people display. All I have so far come up with is "stiff upper eyebrow" which unfortunately is not correct speaking anatomically since there are no lower eyebrows whereas there are lower lips.
Their reactions are so VERY British.
love the mistakes of the Asian heraldic plates! LOL! Mistakes my ass, Engravers do the same thing even now-on purpose. Write exactly what you want engraved. So exact you get-even with misspellings or obvious notes never meant to be engraved.
Beware the birthday cake.
Ahahaha. Can confirm. I worked at a large format printing company. I was told that once the client had approved a proof, we were to set their art up EXACTLY as proofed, no matter HOW obvious the mistakes were. Personally, I would reach out to our customer service reps to point them out, and let them decide if they wanted to alert the client with my suggested fix. Most of the times the clients were like, "Oh shit. YES FIX THAT!"
But most of my coworkers just plowed ahead with the typos or whatever, saying, that's what they sent, that's what they get.
That's the second episode i've seen with the same item
A woman depicted as being sold into slavery "look its hilarious"........?????........wtf
9:23 fit for a horror movie! yikes
aren't those pipes a dime a dozen?
What strikes me, watching these old shows from the UK is the reactions of people being told their stuff is worth gob-smacking HUGE amounts of money. Their faces don't change expression. They just nod sagely at 30-50 THOUSAND POUNDS.
While in America, they burst into tears, ask to have it repeated, or literally fall down. haha
Yes me too
Variety is the spice of life
We Americans are not afraid to show our emotions.
@@Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus Or perhaps you're just more in love with money.
And you thought Chucky was a scary doll.
Did that appraiser actually say, that little bronze statue which opened, represented "the white slave trade"...?!?? .. "it's quite naughty"... you've got to be kidding me !!!! ...😮 .
✔️
I'd go crazy in the UK with people saying "Yes, Yes" constantly. What's up with that?
Americans say 'uhuh' it's basically the same
I don't know anyone who says "uhuh "
You've never met anyone that says 'uh huh'?
Americans do not say "uh huh" like the UK says "yes".
Uh huh.
Nazi gold.
thats what I was wondering, was there a "follow up" as Hugh promised ?
There was - 'absolutely confirmed' and a correct valuation at £30-50k.
Interesting theory. The owner had an obvious Farnham accent.
The presenter looks like Susan Boyle :-)
A expert in Japanese art, should be able to pronounce Japanese words. Fuji-yama is not even a word. Fuji-san is the way it is said.
Wrong, and not the first time you've made erroneous comments about his Japanese pronunciation, which isn't the same as a grammatical error. I lived in Japan for 10 years, have a Japanese wife and have been associated with the country for 20 years. 'San' is an honorific term. 'Yama' means mountain. Japanese people do say Fuji Yama. It isn't so common nowadays but is perfectly acceptable. Also, you should have said 'An expert' and not 'A expert'.
@@TomokoMurakami how do you know they're boys? twat