Billy Bunter Of Greyfriars School [1956] 1/4

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  • Опубліковано 19 жов 2024
  • S03E01 1956-09-09 Backing Up Bunter, from VHS 2000

КОМЕНТАРІ • 175

  • @gohboy56
    @gohboy56 2 роки тому +15

    Eons ago, in a small country that was a colony of Britain and eventually member of the Commonwealth, I discovered comics. The only bookstore in the city had lots of them n that was how I was entranced by Billy Bunter. Another comic for girls featured Bessie Bunter, food addict but really funny. In between there was the Beano, and a bad boy we all loved..Denis the Menace and his scruffy dog Gnasher. Ah yes, those were good days I felt...a child's point of view.
    Thank you for the uploads of Bunter that briefly helped me think of happiness 😊

  • @MuchWhittering
    @MuchWhittering Рік тому +10

    The Celestial Toymaker sent my down a rabbit hole researching Billy Bunter. That was enjoyable. Wish I could watch the whole thing, but I'd need a time machine!

  • @bonnie43uk
    @bonnie43uk 9 місяців тому +4

    Surprisingly watchable, interesting to see 1950's comedy.

  • @kevinmcmahon2491
    @kevinmcmahon2491 3 роки тому +16

    Wonderful. Thanks for posting. I loved this programme when I was a child.

  • @jnuttso1
    @jnuttso1 Рік тому +8

    You can't beat a bit of classic british television 👍

  • @aneeeesa
    @aneeeesa Рік тому +19

    As someone born in 2000 I’m pretty sure I’m the youngest one here to have read Billy Bunter. Had no idea there had been a TV show for it too!

    • @sambutler269
      @sambutler269 9 місяців тому +4

      And there was me born in 1989 thinking the same thing 😆

    • @joflynn999
      @joflynn999 8 місяців тому +2

      Born 1989 love it mum massive fan

    • @Saltybuher
      @Saltybuher 5 місяців тому

      I love the Bunter where he goes to the haunted house.

  • @adrianawest3337
    @adrianawest3337 7 років тому +21

    Surprisingly enjoyable. Of its time, but so well done. I was around for the original viewings but cannot remember how much I did or didn't like them. A definite part of my childhood.

  • @johnfellows2867
    @johnfellows2867 Рік тому +12

    The marvelous theme tune has always stuck in my mind over the years !

    • @johnsmith-rs2vk
      @johnsmith-rs2vk Рік тому +1

      Yep , just before you get six of the best !

    • @Richard-hv5hh
      @Richard-hv5hh Рік тому +4

      I am sure you know it's called Portsmouth. I think this is the only orchestral version. Of course, the Mike Oldfield version is wildly popular.
      I assume you know this but on the off chance you did not I thought I would mention it. I do remember loving this version as a child.

    • @accordionlovers
      @accordionlovers 11 місяців тому

      ua-cam.com/video/Mu70EwvHxvQ/v-deo.htmlsi=ZlOrczAQLLfbpAnW

    • @johnsmith-rs2vk
      @johnsmith-rs2vk 9 місяців тому +2

      Ralph Vaughan Williams .Sea songs .

    • @Afro3461
      @Afro3461 День тому

      I remember watching the originals in the mid fifties! Very evocative and actually very reminiscent of the school I went to where I remember three of the masters actually wore mortar boards and gowns! Happy reminder and fond memories of a past and much kinder era!

  • @angiestock-christie2848
    @angiestock-christie2848 Рік тому +5

    I loved Billy Bunter and never missed it as a child. The smashing Anthony Valentine was in it.

  • @douglangley4228
    @douglangley4228 3 роки тому +6

    Excellent. Thank you for sharing

  • @AlexManMe
    @AlexManMe 5 років тому +15

    i'm almost 27, and I read this during my childhood probably one of the younger readers 😃

    • @paulblatch01
      @paulblatch01 3 роки тому

      That’s very interesting, I didn’t know the books were available today, I watched the TV series in the 50’s. Hope the books didn’t offend you!😀

    • @AlexManMe
      @AlexManMe 3 роки тому +2

      @@paulblatch01 read by good old Martin Jarvis :-)

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 3 роки тому +2

      I'm 37 and thought I was the youngest person in the world who knew what The Magnet was! Been on Friardale? They've got everything!

  • @ianbentley7276
    @ianbentley7276 6 років тому +10

    I used to absolutely love this prpgramme, the books were fantastic too.

    • @AndrewWilliams-zc1hf
      @AndrewWilliams-zc1hf 5 років тому +3

      I used to watch the show & found it funny as a kid.

    • @paulblatch01
      @paulblatch01 3 роки тому +1

      @@AndrewWilliams-zc1hf Yes, it was the TV for me .

  • @brownfulk
    @brownfulk 2 роки тому +7

    So nostalgic. Of course the cane was a REAL threat in those/my day. Bunter would have been given more than the bumps!

  • @betaman7988
    @betaman7988 5 років тому +9

    ‘The congratfulness is terrific’ is an amazing statement

  • @noelt8895
    @noelt8895 9 років тому +14

    I was at this sort of school at this sort of time. How true it all is/was. Although 'bumps' consisted of being thrown into the air then allowed to drop - repeated 6, 9 or 12 times. Seems centuries ago !

  • @exgunrunner
    @exgunrunner 10 років тому +16

    I was brought up on this --my school was just the same

  • @suziemorgan-stewart918
    @suziemorgan-stewart918 Місяць тому

    Memories abound, wonderful trip back into tv history.

  • @alangiles2763
    @alangiles2763 Рік тому +3

    The days when schoolboys were in their late 20s, but dear old Kynaston Reeves was the archtypal headmaster.

  • @derekstocker6661
    @derekstocker6661 7 років тому +33

    I seem to remember watching this on a 7ins TV screen made by a company named PYE.
    The TV was about 3ft tall and had a wooden cabinet.
    As mentioned here by others, there was no PC Brigade in those days but people seemed happier and there was no worry about what was said, it was all just part of life and we just got on with it and laughed.

    • @davidbaber5445
      @davidbaber5445 6 років тому +2

      Derek Stocker watched on the old Pyle Continental..........

    • @peterw4338
      @peterw4338 4 роки тому +5

      I remember having to switch the television on about 15 minutes before hand so it warms up and time to adjust the frame sync.

    • @DennisBloodnokPhotographyVideo
      @DennisBloodnokPhotographyVideo 4 роки тому +2

      Watching this now, I must say that the writing , directing, production and acting do look very amateur. TV Was very much in its' infancy in the 1950s.
      It would be interesting to see a modern day adaptation of Billy Bunter. Using modern writing, production, acting , directing and lighting !! This all looks very dark.

    • @peterw4338
      @peterw4338 4 роки тому +2

      @@DennisBloodnokPhotographyVideo The recording is not the best but at least someone did it. I did few recordings using a Bolex 8mm cine camera that had variable shutter and variable frame. It worked out rather well. In those days, studio lighting was very intense and brighter that these days, it was like an oven in the studio. Unfortunately, ten years ago my house was bugled had trashed with films and slides scattered, and equipment stolen.

    • @DennisBloodnokPhotographyVideo
      @DennisBloodnokPhotographyVideo 4 роки тому +1

      @@peterw4338 Very sad that you were burgled. Yes, it is great that at least there is a recording of this programme (so sad that the BBC erased so much of their early TV archive).
      But either way, this Billy Bunter series does look very dated. It would be interesting to see a modern adaptation of this series using up-to-date production, writing, editing, lighting, direction and acting.

  • @TheShotenZenjin
    @TheShotenZenjin 3 роки тому +3

    Gerald Campion, playing Billy Bunter, was 35 years old in 1956!

  • @richardduplessis1090
    @richardduplessis1090 4 роки тому +7

    A young Anthony Valentine as Wharton

  • @52memor
    @52memor 6 років тому +12

    Gerald Campion who played "Bunter," gave up acting and became a Cordon Bleu Chef and had his own Restaurant.

    • @richardduplessis1090
      @richardduplessis1090 4 роки тому +1

      I though he was torured to death in the basement of a gay bar in the West End, in that dreadful News of the World story.

  • @Scorpiogregpen
    @Scorpiogregpen 8 років тому +3

    Thankyou for this little gem!!!! gary170459

  • @pauldg837
    @pauldg837 3 роки тому +3

    I can remember having to write lines at school. The school prefects handed out lines to the lower years for minor infractitons and our teachers handed out the leather strap in abundance, when they belted our hands for the most trivial of reasons.

    • @paulblatch01
      @paulblatch01 3 роки тому +2

      “Lines” Yes, we were made to copy pages from the bible!😀

    • @paulgarnham2770
      @paulgarnham2770 2 роки тому +1

      @@paulblatch01 Yes we had to write lines, normally promising not to repeat again, the offence for which you received the punishment of writing lines. When I became a prefect we still could tell those pupils under us to write lines, and also could issue 'order marks' written on a wall chart. If they gained four 'order' marks within that week, they had to do an hours detention after school on Friday night. Halcyon days LOL!

    • @xzox
      @xzox 2 роки тому +1

      Ahhh..the Good Old Days!

  • @thrippleton
    @thrippleton 9 років тому +20

    Campion was the perfect Bunter. Kynaston Reeves the perfect Quelch.

    • @FrankieParadiso4evah
      @FrankieParadiso4evah 6 років тому

      In the Dutch version Headmaster Quelch is called Kwel, which means Vex.

  • @FrankieParadiso4evah
    @FrankieParadiso4evah 6 років тому +6

    Quite an impressive performance by the young Reg Dwight, who couldn't have realized he'd be Elton John one fine day, I say.

    • @robertallen2832
      @robertallen2832 5 років тому

      Reg Dwight wasn't in it!

    • @rowley1950
      @rowley1950 4 роки тому +1

      @John Saunders Good one hahaha, bet he thought it was jolly good fun

  • @Dogtagnan
    @Dogtagnan 17 днів тому

    The first boy to stand up in class was the actor Anthony Valentine. Another character was played by a very young Conrad Philips (who as an adult played William Teller)

  • @AlbertH99
    @AlbertH99 5 місяців тому

    I was 9 when this was on the only tv channel in existence.

  • @davidwolstenholme1136
    @davidwolstenholme1136 7 років тому +22

    I was born in 1944 to a dickensian childhood but better then than today

    • @jimmycrosby
      @jimmycrosby Рік тому

      This is a very subjective opinion.

  • @davepayne586
    @davepayne586 9 місяців тому

    used love seeing this on our black and white tv.

  • @dvdextras-byvincentcorani9136
    @dvdextras-byvincentcorani9136 3 роки тому +2

    I used to walk past the home where the writer lived.

  • @kevinsimpson8686
    @kevinsimpson8686 Рік тому

    OK, so the TV sets were really tiny and no colour except black and white, but those days were brilliant! Only a couple of channels to choose from but there were some classy kids programmes and I was just like all the rest and glued to every second of these great series. Today we literally have hundreds of channels to select our tv tastes and we’re spoiled for choice. I’m definitely not complaining about todays tv, I’m just making a comparison of the different emotions we got then and what we get today. More innocent and happier days when we kids weren’t so knowledgable about the world we lived in. Innocence was bliss and life was pretty good.

  • @davemidgley7974
    @davemidgley7974 7 років тому +12

    What I want to know is this: considering Greyfriars is such a strict public school and the boys must wear a uniform, how is it that Bunter was able to get away with wearing check trousers and a bow tie?

    •  5 років тому +1

      That was the uniform.

    • @richardduplessis1090
      @richardduplessis1090 4 роки тому +1

      That meant you had been buggered by the head boy.

    • @colinwebb2063
      @colinwebb2063 Рік тому

      The check trousers were an invention of the artist C. H. Chapman - Magnet artist.

  • @scotsexile1
    @scotsexile1 7 років тому +3

    I laughed at the reference to Bunter as a "fat ass" which had a different connotation in those days and the pronunciation of the Latin obviously has an obscene undertone. No doubt the scriptwriters were playing a little joke of their own.

  • @athenasword1
    @athenasword1 6 років тому +3

    The first boy to stand up I think was Antony Valentine! Where on earth did you get these from!? I was 3 yrs old
    When these were about 1956

  • @raymondfunnel6856
    @raymondfunnel6856 Рік тому +1

    With the brilliant actor Gerald Campion

  • @alberttatlock5237
    @alberttatlock5237 5 років тому +8

    Billy Bunter was older than half the teacher's, looks like he'd been held back 20 year's

    • @alphalunamare
      @alphalunamare 4 роки тому +2

      That's how he became the UK's Prime Minister to get brexit done .... silly arse!

  • @GetToDaChoppa-k5r
    @GetToDaChoppa-k5r 7 років тому +5

    Those are really old looking little boys ha ha

  • @apilgrimsprogress7688
    @apilgrimsprogress7688 5 років тому +2

    Brilliant!

  • @krodgerson
    @krodgerson 3 роки тому +2

    Is that Anthony Valentine as the first schoolboy to reply to the teacher?

  • @johnsmith-rs2vk
    @johnsmith-rs2vk 2 роки тому +1

    Oh lord . It's Quelch !

  • @finncullen
    @finncullen 6 місяців тому

    Billy Bunter - the Body Positive Owl of the Remove!

  • @fadikhoory5350
    @fadikhoory5350 3 роки тому +4

    This makes me think: What if Billy Bunter was affected by PC? Damn.

  • @DRAINPIPE57
    @DRAINPIPE57 4 роки тому +1

    The kids in the class were actors in there late teens or 20s compared to the later school dramas like Grange hill.or Tuckers Luck.

  • @TallSilentGuy
    @TallSilentGuy 11 місяців тому +1

    Eric Cartman's great grandfather.

  • @cliffordadams8353
    @cliffordadams8353 3 роки тому +1

    Gerald campion was perfect
    All schoolboys in their 30s

  • @Jaye_The_Gaye
    @Jaye_The_Gaye 2 місяці тому

    this is my 2nd most wanted series to see episodes come back(Doctor Who being the first and "holy grail") but the chances of more billy bunter are pretty much impossible due to it being pre 60s tv. I would love to see any more of this come back, Bunter is such a little shit and amuses me greatly

  • @OofusTwillip
    @OofusTwillip 8 місяців тому

    Tony Hart ("Vision On") did the cartoons in the opening titles!

  • @montyzumazoom1337
    @montyzumazoom1337 3 роки тому +2

    Read the stories often.
    Billy Bunter, the heavyweight chump of Greyfriars remove.
    If fact the secondary school I went to in the 1970’s actually had a “remove”, they call it a special needs class now.

  • @brianmorton4989
    @brianmorton4989 5 років тому +5

    It's striking that Bunter was labelled as "The Fat OWL" but today he would only be classed as moderately obese.

    • @alberttatlock5237
      @alberttatlock5237 5 років тому +6

      Today they'd be more concerned that a 35 year old was still in high school haha

    • @allegra0
      @allegra0 4 роки тому

      Albert Tatlock ....wouldn’t learn anything anyway.

    • @routeman680
      @routeman680 Рік тому +1

      @@alberttatlock5237 Not if he had arrived in Kent by dinghy.

  • @Thinkwit
    @Thinkwit Рік тому +1

    I always thought (in this production) the 'Famous Five' (who surely predated Enid Blyton's 'Five' now always referred to as 'famous', but maybe not), in particular, were poorly cast. E.g. Cherry had flaxen hair, not Nugent, Bull was a Yourkshire lad and Wharton didn't come across as the serious captain of the Remove, Henry Samual Quelch wasn't right. I remember later castings as being better (Caven Kendall as Cherry for example). Coker was awful. But I didn't mind much as a kid. Mostly I loved the Cassells book series, fell on them at the public library branch. Fond (but attenuated-with-age) memories.
    I wonderfully met Gerald Campion years later (mid Seventies) at his restaurant in Brighton/Hove, 'The Seagull' I think. Got his autograph on a photo of him as William George. Still have it, it's special.

  • @nicholasroberts6954
    @nicholasroberts6954 4 роки тому +5

    Lots of 40 year old half-witted public school men in short-trousers and school caps . . . . location shooting in today's cabinet room ?

    • @alangiles2763
      @alangiles2763 4 роки тому +1

      Or the current opposition given their idea of economics?

  • @davidwolstenholme1136
    @davidwolstenholme1136 7 років тому +3

    imagine the different handwriting lines quelch must have had bad eyesight

  • @blahasdirtysock3657
    @blahasdirtysock3657 4 роки тому +6

    I read all the original Bunter books from my local library when I was a kid; no doubt none available now due to the triggering it would cause for today’s delicate snow flakes...

  • @taxpayer_revolt
    @taxpayer_revolt 5 місяців тому

    Brilliant author Frank Richards, made a fortune writing about Grayfriers and the "fat owl of the Remove" & Co.for over forty years.😂👍

  • @ohmeowzer1
    @ohmeowzer1 4 роки тому

    Very cute show

  • @derekbrown7892
    @derekbrown7892 2 роки тому

    Very good

  • @AlexAlexon3897
    @AlexAlexon3897 Рік тому

    Hilarious when the Famous Five rough up grown-up baddies!

  • @AndrewWilliams-zc1hf
    @AndrewWilliams-zc1hf 5 років тому +2

    Billy Bunter went on a cruise drank too much booze, ate too many cakes & on deck slipped on a Danish pastry & along came a shark who found him really tasty. written by Andrew Williams on the 22/9/19/.

  • @HarvestHome2000
    @HarvestHome2000 4 роки тому

    It's hard to believe that the first couple of minutes used to represent a "good education" which people actually paid large sums of money for!

  • @mikeymike3240
    @mikeymike3240 4 роки тому +3

    1:36 a very young Raffles, the gentleman thief.

  • @alisonwunderland9900
    @alisonwunderland9900 3 роки тому

    Why was Bunter allowed to deviate from the school uniform with his check pants and bow tie?

  • @muirhouseterrace
    @muirhouseterrace 6 років тому +1

    Crikey! I didn't expect to see Che Guevara.

  • @tadhgwalsh342
    @tadhgwalsh342 3 роки тому

    oof a kids book character turned tv show turned chippers

  • @peterw4338
    @peterw4338 4 роки тому +7

    I though this is a documentary about Boris Johnson

  • @signcrash
    @signcrash 9 років тому +2

    All right, who is worse, Billy Bunter or George from Seinfeld?

  • @cliffordadams8353
    @cliffordadams8353 3 роки тому +3

    Bunter Boris

  • @PAULLONDEN
    @PAULLONDEN 6 років тому +4

    Ok...we shouldn't be too harsh on children's program acting...that 50's acting was too often very stunted...
    All that fruit munching going on couldn't be very fatning....Billy came over decidedly gay also......
    Thankfully around 1956 rock'n roll came along to lighten things up a bit.....

  • @stevebuckley2429
    @stevebuckley2429 2 роки тому

    Is that Anthony Valentine?

  • @williamjarrell8475
    @williamjarrell8475 10 місяців тому

    George Orwell brought me here.

  • @yeahcat7509
    @yeahcat7509 Рік тому

    Who is here thanks to Mark Bowden

  • @GirGir183
    @GirGir183 Рік тому

    23:22 Jolly good, Inky. Ha, ha, ha.

  • @georgemiser
    @georgemiser 7 років тому

    1:32 So that's the shrimp that Alan Moore chose to be Big Brother.

  • @CATCARDOZO
    @CATCARDOZO 5 років тому

    In Holland he is known as Billy Turf .........

    • @PaulSaether
      @PaulSaether Рік тому

      I wrote dozens - if not hundreds-of Billy Turf cartoon strips.
      Actually, they wrote themselves!

  • @factorylad5071
    @factorylad5071 3 роки тому

    Mccarthy lock out period when all card holding actors were blacklisted in Hollywood so came over to pinewood England. I think most of the pupils are American. Robin Hood was another example of English TV at that time.

  • @Kidraver555
    @Kidraver555 5 років тому

    Mike Oldfield used the opening riff.

  • @WelshRabbit
    @WelshRabbit 9 років тому +6

    Egads! As an American, I have to confess that Billy Bunter evokes in me an almost irresistible urge to smack him about the head with the back of my hand. What a detestable worm he is! I definitely prefer the characters and their adventures in the GA Henty novels.

    • @alancadwallender
      @alancadwallender 9 років тому

      Henty? The Bunter books were written by Frank Richards.

    • @WelshRabbit
      @WelshRabbit 9 років тому +3

      I did not mean to suggest that G.A. Henty wrote the Billy Bunter series of books. My point was that B. Bunter (by Chas. Hamilton, aka Frank Richards) is a loathsome character, while those created by Henty are admirable. Henty's characters are worthy roll models for young people. Billy Bunter is not and he evokes a visceral dislike in me. There is one Bunter I do like -- i.e., that one created by Dorothy L. Sayers, viz., the gentleman's gentleman to Lord Peter.

    • @GEricG
      @GEricG 9 років тому +10

      ***** most of the other characters (Wharton, Cherry, Bull and the remove in general were all decent chaps though). The point is that Bunter was intended to display less than admirable characteristics so as to serve as a comic foil to the other characters. He did occasionally display redeeming features but they were very few and far between.

  • @kevinmaylam1680
    @kevinmaylam1680 3 роки тому

    Money money money

  • @brianriley5383
    @brianriley5383 5 років тому

    why was Bunter allowed to wear a bow tie and check trousers ? No doubt you could have a special exemption -- for a small financial consideration. would nt be allowed to day of course.

  • @grahamwatson6612
    @grahamwatson6612 2 роки тому +1

    reminds me of boris

  • @Stiffd1
    @Stiffd1 4 роки тому +2

    Is it Christopher Biggins as Bunter?

  • @stephenwilliams1269
    @stephenwilliams1269 2 роки тому

    Grown men acting as school boys of its time I suppose.

  • @kevinmaylam1680
    @kevinmaylam1680 3 роки тому

    Shunty woo woos

  • @michaelmartin9022
    @michaelmartin9022 9 років тому

    I'll, er, stick to the story papers. Even the Howard Baker reprints are getting thin on the ground and expensive these days, though!

    • @jumbosilverette
      @jumbosilverette 7 років тому

      thank you for the link

    • @PaulSaether
      @PaulSaether Рік тому

      Yes, a few of the Howard Baker books are in the £50 - £100 price range but can be found much cheaper if, say, you just want a reading copy.
      There are approximately 200 Baker reprint books and about half of these are limited (400) De-luxe editions.
      If you are a fan of Greyfriars stories and don't mind a bit of plot repetition ('Frank Richards' wrote for The Magnet from 1908 to 1940) some of these books are truly a joy to read.
      If you started reading the yellow jacketed Bunter books and loved them as I did, and have never read these Magnet stories you may get a bit of a surprise to discover what you've been missing.
      If anyone donates one of these Baker books to your local charity shop it will almost certainly be sold the day it goes on sale. It will, in all likelyhood be from the estate of a deceased old gentleman who treasured it.
      Just 3 recommendations from a dozens of the really good books are:
      The rebellion of Harry Wharton.
      Billy Bunter and the Courtfield Cracksman.
      Billy Bunter and the Greyfriars mutiny.
      If you know nothing about these stories don't let the name Billy Bunter put you off.
      The real stars of these stories are Wharton and co (The original 'Famous Five'), and a massive cast of other characters.
      To my mind the greatest 'character' of all is...
      Greyfriars School itself.

    • @michaelmartin9022
      @michaelmartin9022 Рік тому +1

      @@PaulSaether Matter 'o fact, you've caught me on a Greyfriars binge. I've been haunting Friardale a fair bit lately, just finished the 1990 biography of "Frank Richards", and have started to more consciously imitate his style for a story tentatively called Bluebird Cove, set at a clifftop school just as World War 2 breaks out.
      I was introduced to these stories by Howard Baker, but not by the Magnet. It was D'Arcy the Runaway that got me. As soon as I was done with it, my mum took of with it, she loves Just William!

    • @PaulSaether
      @PaulSaether Рік тому

      Oh, and you will be surprised by some of the storylines in those Magnet tales:
      In a 1913 issue, for instance, one of Bunter's classmates was found in a drugged stupor in a back room of a nearby pub which was used as an OPIUM DEN!
      That pupil was Chinese - so that explains that!

    • @bahoonies
      @bahoonies Рік тому

      ​@user-zo7mr3op8i Very well said. I absolutely haunted my local library when I was a boy in the 1950s and 60s and read every Billy Bunter on the shelves. At first, you were allowed to borrow two books at a time. But then they increased it to three and I'd trot home with three of the yellow hardbacks on each visit. They are wonderful stories. Recently I picked up a book called Yarooh! which is a collection of Bunter short stories edited by Giles Brandreth published in 1976. It has lots of Charles Chapman's evocative illustrations in it. I was delighted to find it.

  • @colinp2238
    @colinp2238 5 років тому

    I say chaps what a jolly old jpe, what?

  • @seanflewin9803
    @seanflewin9803 Місяць тому

    Love the fat shaming brilliant

  • @mountainmantararua8824
    @mountainmantararua8824 Рік тому +1

    When school masters were well spoken and had a good command of the English language. No woke people there. I remember our teachers wearing black gowns and being very stern also after wiping down the chalk board, they had chalk dust all down their gowns, Happy days.

  • @AlexManMe
    @AlexManMe 5 років тому

    Martin Jarvis does a way better job than all of these actors put together