One of the most funniest scenes in this film. Maggie tells it like it is (as always). It's has to be boiling water, not something "warm"...or in her case " lukewarm piss" LMFAOOOOO!!!!
I so adore that very scene! I can watch BEMH & SBEMH all day & I'll never get tired of it! Sometimes, I even play them in the background, just hearing (but not watching) it!
Loved it 🤣 Luke warm piss but it is true why are there so many idiots that can’t make tea. Tea has to be made with boiling water. Or other wise you may as well be drinking water. And coffee you make it with hot water but not boiling so you don’t burn the coffee grounds. Simple. And no one can’t beat a lovely pot of nice Yorkshire tea. Brewed in a teapot. Cos I’m Yorkshire born and bred. And tea is what is Yorkshire folk love for
Everybody who has not seen these movies really should. Great story. The movies really have so many messages you can relate too. It's wonderful. And the actors and actresses are some of the finest in this world; Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson and many more. It's acting at it's finest! Both of the movies are really special and the great soundtrack really puts a great finishing touch to them.
THIS! Maggie's great acting aside, as an American tea drinker I feel this way every time I go out. I attempted to make a cup at work today withd the fancy keurig machine. No.
This scene is so good to make us laugh and forget about our worries for a while. Briliiant acting from our Dame and well-done to the witty script writers. I wish more movies are like this. Charming and beautiful choice of words to drive home the points. Damn good!
😢 I'll miss Dame Maggie Smith dearly. Her wit and her sharp tongue. 👍She's truly one of the greatest actors not just in her generation but many more. Rest in peace.
This is so funny, and epitomizes my life in the USA. I love living here, but have never had a decent cup of tea outside of my own home, so just don't bother anymore and learned that years ago. This scene had me rolling with laughter.
As a tea enthusiast, I have never felt so validated. 🤣 Every time I bring this topic up, everyone calls it snobbish but tea is a specific kind of drink, each type with their own steeping instructions to get the best flavor, and that’s how you drink it! 😂😂😂
One of many great scenes from this film I am a action junkie that lives life on the edge and i also likes films with death destruction explosions and gore. My misses got me to watch this film after watching the 1st one and I can say it's one of the heart moving and fantastic films I've ever seen.
Today I literally thought of this scene ex-nihilo whilst I was making my breakfast tea. A few hours later I learned Dame Maggie had died this morning. It’s like the shockwave of her greatness hit us as she passed on. ❤
I mean, I would've thought that everyone would know that you have to put the tea-bag in the cup first THEN pour the water in. If you don't know how strong they like it just ask them.
@@jeremyclark602 That's how I do it too, but if you had to serve it in a tea-bag then it should be common sense to put the bag in the cup first. In any case, it's not that hard, and I can't see how anyone would think putting the water in first and the bag in second is a good idea.
Why is it that Americans can’t understand how to make tea but when it comes to coffee, which is basically bean tea, there’s about are thousands of different recipes.
Film, fiction in general, is a safe space of sorts, one where we acknowledge that we love all facets of the human experience, even those we label as obnoxious in our day to day lives
It would be if it were in that film. But it isn't! This is a clip from, "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel". The clue is (for those who can read) in the caption.
People in other countries and, sadly, quite a few in the UK these days, think that decent tea can be made in a mug. It can't! Boiling water in a warmed teapot and a five-minute mashing period is essential to extract all the best flavours from the leaves, something that dunking a teabag in a mug fails to do. The palaver of the tea 'ceremony' developed over the centuries to produce an exquisite beverage. These days, if it is warm and brown most people accept it. I won't.
Lol yes the tea ceremony developed over centuries and doesn't involve what you call tea leaves or any mashing. There's no teapot and definitely no boiling water
@@helio67 I wasn't referring to the ancient Japanese "tea ceremony". If you look carefully I only gave inverted commas to the word "ceremony". I think it was clear that I was referring to the time-honoured English process of warming the teapot, placing in fresh dried black tea, then adding freshly boiling water and letting it mash (brew, infuse) for five-six minutes before pouring some into a (preferably china) cup and adding milk - or not - before drinking. Perhaps, though, it would be churlish of me to recommend looking carefully at the punctuation, to someone who routinely does not use it on a public forum. To do so would be similar to attempting to baptise a cat.
The irony is that Indians know how to make tea - the best tea - and exactly how it should be made. After all, the famous Darjeeling, Assam tea plantations are in India, not the UK. The Indians seeking to impress the Brit in the room are making tea the way they have seen Americans and Brits make it in the modern age, with tea bags on the saucer not in the cup and with non boiling water. So the lukewarm piss is of British and American making, not Indian. Ha ha ha! Kind of funny this.
Hahaha took me a bit of getting used to as well hahahaha he is just so verbose and hyper! Hahaha there are few moments where i do find it endearing... then the rest, it's just annoying hahaha like, "can you please shut it!!!!"
Karen attitude aside, she is correct. Black tea is meant to be steeped near boiling at 100⁰C (212⁰F) for a maximum of five minutes. When the water is preheated and poured into a cup, it spends five minutes cooling down, weakening the steep. Steep your tea and serve it in a communal pot or pour it from the pot for your guest(s) slightly lower than the steep temperature.
LOL Dev Patel's face watching as Maggie Smith was talking was adorable!
Wow! Profound !
One of the iconic scenes in my mind when I think of her. RIP Maggie
"That is... BOILING water!!!" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 cacking myself. Awww Dame Maggie, you are too much! hooohahahaaaa
One of the most funniest scenes in this film. Maggie tells it like it is (as always). It's has to be boiling water, not something "warm"...or in her case " lukewarm piss" LMFAOOOOO!!!!
DANIEL AFFEN tepid nonsense
BAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! "Tepid nonsense" had me cracking up also!!! :-D
I so adore that very scene! I can watch BEMH & SBEMH all day & I'll never get tired of it!
Sometimes, I even play them in the background, just hearing (but not watching) it!
Loved it 🤣 Luke warm piss but it is true why are there so many idiots that can’t make tea. Tea has to be made with boiling water. Or other wise you may as well be drinking water.
And coffee you make it with hot water but not boiling so you don’t burn the coffee grounds. Simple. And no one can’t beat a lovely pot of nice Yorkshire tea. Brewed in a teapot. Cos I’m Yorkshire born and bred. And tea is what is Yorkshire folk love for
@@hippiebees4520And not in a teapot with tea bags but with loose tea.
Professor McGonagall demonstrates her sharp tongue yet again....
Don’t call her that. It is insulting. She was a great actress EGOT long before she took the trivial role in the sorry child wizard movies.
Id have killed for a uncensored Harry Potter where McGonagall is just throwing swears across the screen just as much as she's throwing spells tbh
RIP Maggie Smith you will be sadly missed xx
Exactly the way I feel when I drink tea out. I love this movie and this scene.
+Jo Guerra I've lived in the States for 22 years and still cannot get a proper cup of tea. What is it with these yanks?
Here in Brazil it happens just the same!
Really? I thought it was only in the US.
+Jo Guerra We're more of a coffee and lemonade people.
I love it too.
You will be greatly missed 💔
Rest in Peace Dame Maggie Smith ❤
Rest in Peace, Dame Maggie Smith! You are a legend
I never get tired of this scene. I watch it every time I make a cup of tea!
1:07 the true struggles on making a proper cup of tea abroad
Ah yes of course, what could those bloody Indians possibly know about Ceylon, Assam or Darjeeling tea, could they now?
SARCASM ALERT
ixlnxs Am sure Indians make a decent cuppa, since as you rightly say, they grow the stuff! It's the Americans that Maggie here has a problem with!
@@ixlnxs It's the Americans who don't know how to make tea.
The British do recognise Indians, Bangladeshis, Pakistanis, Sri Lankans and Burmans are indeed exceptionally skilled at tea-brewing
I suppose the Chinese too
Everybody who has not seen these movies really should. Great story. The movies really have so many messages you can relate too. It's wonderful. And the actors and actresses are some of the finest in this world; Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Celia Imrie, Penelope Wilton, Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson and many more. It's acting at it's finest! Both of the movies are really special and the great soundtrack really puts a great finishing touch to them.
You are so right! I loved it. The first and the second.
Me too! I think everybody wants a third but for some of the actors/actresses it gets a bit to heavy in the hard conditions on set..
two is just good enough I think
THIS!
Maggie's great acting aside, as an American tea drinker I feel this way every time I go out. I attempted to make a cup at work today withd the fancy keurig machine. No.
I'll tell you what, idk what's more infuriating. Tepid water for black tea or essentially boiling water for green tea
I own this movie because of Maggie!! This scene lives rent free in my head. I loved her as the Dowager on Downton Abbey.
Rest Well Maggie!!!!😢😢😢💔
"They slap down a cup of tepid nonsense" xD
It's so true though... pretentious coffee shops are guilty of this ridiculous business too.
Rip to an amazing actor and an even better professor McGonagall
1:44 true that. RIP Dame Maggie Smith, you were beloved in so many roles.
When she says, "-- lukewarm piss!" :D
I die everyone at that part
Maggie Smith is simply the greatest! And Dev Patel is so funny and cute! :D I'm sure in time his name will be well-known throughout the world.
Good lord I love that scene! I've watched it over and over again and posted it to facebook several times.
All hail MAGGIE SMITH!!
Rest in peace, dame
We'll miss this a lot :")
This woman is a QUEEN!
It all comes down to priorities, you see. And within polite society, proper tea is a priority.
ixlnxs anything else is just so uncivilized.
Her delivery of the lines is what makes Maggie Smith so good. She commands your attention. Imagine her going to Starbucks.
RIP great lady 😢🙏❤️
RIP Maggie Smith 27 September 2024 ❤
This scene is so good to make us laugh and forget about our worries for a while. Briliiant acting from our Dame and well-done to the witty script writers. I wish more movies are like this. Charming and beautiful choice of words to drive home the points. Damn good!
😢 I'll miss Dame Maggie Smith dearly. Her wit and her sharp tongue. 👍She's truly one of the greatest actors not just in her generation but many more.
Rest in peace.
Maggie you will be sorely missed
RIP Dame Maggie Smith!
You will be missed, Maggie 😢
RIP Legend ❤
This is so funny, and epitomizes my life in the USA. I love living here, but have never had a decent cup of tea outside of my own home, so just don't bother anymore and learned that years ago. This scene had me rolling with laughter.
That's how I feel about tea as well. You need to use _boiling_ water. Yet almost everywhere I've ordered tea from, the water is never hot.
We salute you Dame Maggie Smith! RIP
As a tea enthusiast, I have never felt so validated. 🤣 Every time I bring this topic up, everyone calls it snobbish but tea is a specific kind of drink, each type with their own steeping instructions to get the best flavor, and that’s how you drink it! 😂😂😂
As a fellow tea enthusiast, I wouldn’t go anywhere near a teabag!!! Only loose leaf for me
Yeah water should be freshly boiled but not boiling
One of many great scenes from this film I am a action junkie that lives life on the edge and i also likes films with death destruction explosions and gore.
My misses got me to watch this film after watching the 1st one and I can say it's one of the heart moving and fantastic films I've ever seen.
Can we all agree that this is one of the most iconic scenes in Maggie Smith's career? I miss her.
RIP to the GOAT
RIP Dame Maggie Smith (December 28, 1934 - September 27, 2024), aged 89
You will be remembered as a legend.
And she is right. if the water isn't boiling you get garbage.
I love this movie and this is my favorite part! Thank you for sharing! That is awesome!
+London Days just the places I see do this....
@@londondays5924 Can you explain the ending of this movie?
The Dowager withstanding with her legacy.... 💓
She is just sooooooo Gooooood!!💕
OMG I LOVE THIS SCENE SHE IS HILARIOUS
Don t forget miss Maggie Smith 27 september 2024
RIP Maggie smith
I love her 😂😂😂😂
All time favourite !!!
1:08
Me: wow, she's actually being a bit kinder in the way she spea-
1:20 oh, never mind, the Sass Queen is back.
RIP
This is literally tea drinkers everywhere. Boiling! Boiling water!
Came here from a link posted in Reddit, found when I was googling a question about tea. And now I desperately want to watch the rest of this movie.
I love it so much that this scene gathers all the tea drinkers, discussing water temperatures 😂
I'd really like to know who the young actor is pouring the water. Non-credited because he did not speak, but a very expressive face in this scene.
Today I literally thought of this scene ex-nihilo whilst I was making my breakfast tea. A few hours later I learned Dame Maggie had died this morning. It’s like the shockwave of her greatness hit us as she passed on. ❤
"tea is a HHhherb..." Lol
Maggie Smith can blow every other actor out of the water.
Love this scene! Rest in Peace Maggie Smith
I mean, I would've thought that everyone would know that you have to put the tea-bag in the cup first THEN pour the water in. If you don't know how strong they like it just ask them.
@@jeremyclark602 That's how I do it too, but if you had to serve it in a tea-bag then it should be common sense to put the bag in the cup first. In any case, it's not that hard, and I can't see how anyone would think putting the water in first and the bag in second is a good idea.
Love this wish I had the guts to say this
Why is it that Americans can’t understand how to make tea but when it comes to coffee, which is basically bean tea, there’s about are thousands of different recipes.
"luke-warm piss!" 😂😂😂😂😂😂
What would mrs doubtfire think ?
Génialissime !
Me having to explain myself to Americans who serve me Lipton black tea on a string.
Se puede ver esta escena en español? Me encantaría 🙏
It's interesting how in films we often find behaviours that we would (rightfully) consider unnacceptable and obnoxious to be "iconic"
Film, fiction in general, is a safe space of sorts, one where we acknowledge that we love all facets of the human experience, even those we label as obnoxious in our day to day lives
1:34 LUKE WARM PISS !!
Miss Brodie is still in her prime.
Why won't this video play? Lately I keep getting error messages from UA-cam, this is way past annoying. Memo to Google - Fix UA-cam!
Shall learn the local translation of Boiling Water for whatever country l visit, AND take a pocket full of Yorkshire Tea bags. No more Lipton's Piss.
That waiter looks REALLY like young Keanu Reeves from the shooting angle.
Who plays the Buttler/waiter?
not a patch on first film
This is my favourite scene in Harry Potter
It would be if it were in that film. But it isn't! This is a clip from, "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel". The clue is (for those who can read) in the caption.
People in other countries and, sadly, quite a few in the UK these days, think that decent tea can be made in a mug. It can't! Boiling water in a warmed teapot and a five-minute mashing period is essential to extract all the best flavours from the leaves, something that dunking a teabag in a mug fails to do. The palaver of the tea 'ceremony' developed over the centuries to produce an exquisite beverage. These days, if it is warm and brown most people accept it. I won't.
Lol yes the tea ceremony developed over centuries and doesn't involve what you call tea leaves or any mashing. There's no teapot and definitely no boiling water
@@helio67 I wasn't referring to the ancient Japanese "tea ceremony". If you look carefully I only gave inverted commas to the word "ceremony". I think it was clear that I was referring to the time-honoured English process of warming the teapot, placing in fresh dried black tea, then adding freshly boiling water and letting it mash (brew, infuse) for five-six minutes before pouring some into a (preferably china) cup and adding milk - or not - before drinking. Perhaps, though, it would be churlish of me to recommend looking carefully at the punctuation, to someone who routinely does not use it on a public forum. To do so would be similar to attempting to baptise a cat.
Anyone in the UK that hasnt heard the statement cup of warm piss about a crappy brew i question your britishness 🤣🤣🤣🤣
....somebody please do another video of this by deleting the redundant first half of the video and start from 1:05 ...
Hilarious 😂🙏🏼✨
DAMMIT! You could have cut the first 1:05! AND you forgot the rest of it!
Oh please do give us a link to the rest then, please Miss? We should be ever so grateful indeed ;)
Dev Patel is so hammy…
To be honest, Is that really how you are supposed to drink tea? What is the proper way to have tea?
for a start, the teabag is an insult to the tea..... hope you can visit China or Japan someday to have a proper experience of tea culture
Spot on. Yanks can't make tea either.
1:08
1:26
💔
Dev Patel is DADDY.
LOL!
Tea is a herb? 🙄
Omg
lisent and learn.....son
It's so weird hearing Maggie do a cockney accent.
39 views
The irony is that Indians know how to make tea - the best tea - and exactly how it should be made. After all, the famous Darjeeling, Assam tea plantations are in India, not the UK.
The Indians seeking to impress the Brit in the room are making tea the way they have seen Americans and Brits make it in the modern age, with tea bags on the saucer not in the cup and with non boiling water. So the lukewarm piss is of British and American making, not Indian. Ha ha ha! Kind of funny this.
🤣
Sunny's character is so annoying
Hahaha took me a bit of getting used to as well hahahaha he is just so verbose and hyper! Hahaha there are few moments where i do find it endearing... then the rest, it's just annoying hahaha like, "can you please shut it!!!!"
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Karen attitude aside, she is correct. Black tea is meant to be steeped near boiling at 100⁰C (212⁰F) for a maximum of five minutes. When the water is preheated and poured into a cup, it spends five minutes cooling down, weakening the steep. Steep your tea and serve it in a communal pot or pour it from the pot for your guest(s) slightly lower than the steep temperature.