Classic: Americans React to the Two Ronnies Four Candles Comedy Sketch

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2024
  • Hey guys! We're taking up your suggestions one by one and reacting to your beloved British comedies. This is The Two Ronnies "Four Candles" Sketch and we hope you enjoy our reactions!
    If you're new to our channel, we are Americans living in the UK. We make three new videos a week and would love it if you subscribed to our channel and hit that notification bell!
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Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @synaesthesia2010
    @synaesthesia2010 Před 5 lety +119

    i've seen 4 Candles a million times, never fails to make me laugh

    • @andrearon7034
      @andrearon7034 Před 2 lety

      you prolly dont care at all but does someone know a way to get back into an Instagram account??
      I was stupid lost the password. I love any tips you can give me

    • @xanderkristopher1412
      @xanderkristopher1412 Před 2 lety

      @Andre Aron instablaster :)

    • @geraldinemaher8637
      @geraldinemaher8637 Před rokem

      Watch the two Ronnie's in a sketch about a British shopkeeper and a sheik!!!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @jonpaddick1295
    @jonpaddick1295 Před 5 lety +151

    My sister-in-law worked in a hardware store. A customer once asked her for buntin'. She pointed him to a box full of little flags on a string. "No, buntin'," he said, "for cookin' buns in."

    • @jonpaddick1295
      @jonpaddick1295 Před 5 lety +6

      @@baylessnow That's a true story.

    • @bahadurdehar5048
      @bahadurdehar5048 Před 5 lety +3

      Ha, ha, ha, aha how did the Ronnie's miss that one. Bunting, bun tin, hahahahahaha it would have made a excellent yoke. Get it joke

    • @SebDangerfield-yu7cm
      @SebDangerfield-yu7cm Před 4 lety +6

      When I was a young man, in my early twenties, I worked in a Department Store. One day, an extremely attractive lass in skin-tight jeans and a short crop-top came up to me and said "Excuse me. Please can you tell me where I should go to get felt?" (I assumed she was referring to the material)
      I nearly choked and turned my head away, only to spy a couple of her friends cracking-up laughing, near the exit.
      When I turned back, she was already half way across the store, laughing her socks off. Still makes me chuckle, forty years later.

    • @cliffcrabtree4359
      @cliffcrabtree4359 Před 4 lety +1

      Was in Morrisons a someweeks ago, similar thing. An old couple asking one of the staff (this was not long into lockdown). Staff member, checking what they asked for " Big roll?? we're sold out sorry". "NO !, Bovril..!!". My favourite covid moment.🤓

  • @Chris_GY1
    @Chris_GY1 Před 3 lety +6

    This sketch was about accents and pronunciation of words, it still makes me laugh years later after first seeing the sketch.

  • @bmphillips15
    @bmphillips15 Před 4 lety +86

    Ronnie Barker the writer is a wordsmith, he uses the English language to crest the joke

    • @bikeymikey7408
      @bikeymikey7408 Před 4 lety +3

      Everybody knows gerald Wiley wrote that sketch 🤣🤣🤣

    • @flapjackboy
      @flapjackboy Před 4 lety +3

      @@bikeymikey7408
      Not sure if you know that Gerald Wiley was a pseudonym that Barker used when writing his sketches.

    • @bikeymikey7408
      @bikeymikey7408 Před 4 lety +1

      @@flapjackboy hence the smiley faces my friend 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @michaeljames4904
      @michaeljames4904 Před 3 lety

      Barker was always dissatisfied with the final gag he’d written in, under his pseudonymous authorship of the sketch. It was too obscure a word-association and the implied word was vulgar rather than cheeky rude.
      Years later the perfect ending occurred to him: Corbett exits in a huff just as before, handing the shopping list to a lady assistant with an ample chest, instead, who reading it says to Barker, _”Certainly, sir, what kind of knockers are you looking for?”_

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye Před 5 lety +128

    Ronnie Barker was one of the greatest wordsmiths Britain has ever produced. Watch The "Mastermind" sketch where his current answers are to the question before the current one with great effect. lolthe question

    • @hughtube5154
      @hughtube5154 Před 5 lety +5

      Amazing suggestion! czcams.com/video/y0C59pI_ypQ/video.html

    • @lozzylols
      @lozzylols Před 5 lety +1

      Great sketch, but needs concentration to get it all though, I prefer watching alone as others always laugh over the good bits lol

    • @locusmortis
      @locusmortis Před 5 lety +2

      Excellent sketch, the mispronunciation society sketch is a great one for wordplay as well czcams.com/video/aJ0nFQgRApY/video.html

    • @loafersheffield
      @loafersheffield Před 5 lety +8

      He was an absolutely appealing wordsmith. Could not firm a corrosive sentence, even if he plied.
      czcams.com/video/aJ0nFQgRApY/video.html

    • @wilsjane
      @wilsjane Před 5 lety

      +EdmundoKentwell. People tend to focus on the actors and forget the talent of the scriptwriters. My favorite is Roy Clarke who wrote open all hours, last if the summer wine and keeping up appearances.
      The only person who I have worked with that fills both roles is Mel Brooks. In real life his conversations are just like the script of one of his films.

  • @NavaNix
    @NavaNix Před 4 lety +150

    its not a hardware store its a general store they have everything in the old days

    • @markywellsboy2182
      @markywellsboy2182 Před 4 lety +9

      We have one still. You can buy screws, washers, nuts, bolts individually.
      "Got any screws this size?"
      After scrutiny, out comes the little drawer
      "How many would you like?"
      "Four, please"
      "How much do I owe you?"
      "That will be 8 pence, please."
      You can go in there, buy a trolley jack, rat poison, furniture polish, a kettle, cutlery, electrical cable and a bread bin all in one visit.

    • @lehanedermot
      @lehanedermot Před 4 lety

      Needle to an anchor

  • @neilburns8869
    @neilburns8869 Před 3 lety +7

    To think that this sketch was made in 1968 and its still as funny now as it was then, speaks volumes for Ronnie Barker's talent as a writer.

    • @simonrich3811
      @simonrich3811 Před rokem +3

      It was made in 1976. 'The Two Ronnies' was first broadcast in 1971.

  • @cbierman17
    @cbierman17 Před 3 lety +7

    Both Ronnies always said they wish that the sketch had a better ending, still amazing.

    • @allingtonmarakan1436
      @allingtonmarakan1436 Před 3 lety +1

      Mr. Barker wrote a much better ending but it wouldn't get past the censor so he had to change it to that rather crap one. Sad really.

  • @TagmakersCoUk
    @TagmakersCoUk Před 5 lety +46

    In the days this sketch was made, towns had a "general dealer" who stocked practically everything. You could go in there and in most cases, the dealer would have what you were after. So tins of peas would sit alongside a box of plastic letter "p" ' s... There are still some remote towns in the UK where the general dealer is still trading - but they will all soon go as the internet dominates our shopping habits.
    Ronnie Barker was a genius with the English language and its nuances - particularly when playing with various English dialects and regional accents. Many of his sketches are pure gold, and remain exceptionally funny - no matter how often you watch them. Both now deceased, they are icons of UK comedy.

    • @derekcolman
      @derekcolman Před 5 lety +3

      That's true. I used to live near such a shop. There was so much stuff in there you could hardly get in the door. It was a newsagent and tobacconist shop, but it sold almost anything you could think of. I used to ask for things I was sure they would not have, and the woman would produce one from some dark cubbyhole. However I think in this sketch the unlikely items were included because they were needed for the comedy wordplay.

    • @dambuster6387
      @dambuster6387 Před 5 lety +1

      Better none has corner shops. I remember one such place selling selling salted herring from a wooden barrel stuck out side on the pavement the smell was quite pungent and buying lose sugar by the pound in the 1960,s

    • @ianjacques-keen5945
      @ianjacques-keen5945 Před 5 lety

      Tag Makers Pet Tags k

    • @cockertoo8920
      @cockertoo8920 Před 4 lety

      We had a shop just like this in our town, was there for years and years, only closed down in the 1990s

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 4 lety

      I don't think 'dealer'' is the right title. 'Trader' maybe, But most such places were known locally by the family name, that owned it, as a--'General store''.

  • @redsquirrel1086
    @redsquirrel1086 Před 5 lety +260

    In answer to the question about peas, I think this is supposed to be one of the old fashioned General Stores that sold virtually everything in limited quantities.
    As regards the sketch itself, it can't always be easy for Lillian and Felipe to grasp British humour when strong regional accents and alien terms for certain items are used.
    It was a nice touch at the relatively recent funeral of Ronnie Corbett when a large freestanding candle was positioned at all 4 corners of the coffin. I think he would have liked that.

    • @yasminsawar4762
      @yasminsawar4762 Před 5 lety +6

      And Lancashire, of course!

    • @BoingBB
      @BoingBB Před 5 lety +6

      And pretty much everywhere in England!

    • @SuperBungle74
      @SuperBungle74 Před 5 lety +9

      I remember our local hardware shop was exactly like that n sold absolutely everything in the world. Always takes me back. Defo check out the two Ronnie's. They're legends. Ronnie Corbett n Ronnie Barker

    • @ianblack7934
      @ianblack7934 Před 5 lety +7

      I remember a small shop near the Trent where you could buy food items, newspapers, fishing tackle & maggots, all over the same counter. And we lived to tell the tale 😂

    • @stevezpj
      @stevezpj Před 5 lety +9

      supermarket chains are killing off all the old general stores - as a kid I was fascinated looking around them due to the massive random variety of stuff :)

  • @knumbugs
    @knumbugs Před 5 lety +295

    They didn't get it because they have no idea what bollocks means haha

    • @Medic6666
      @Medic6666 Před 5 lety +13

      I always thought it was Pillocks :)

    • @hughjanus900
      @hughjanus900 Před 5 lety +3

      Medic6666 same thing

    • @TheRichardGHP
      @TheRichardGHP Před 5 lety +7

      It's sort of obtuse, and not just an American thing. I'm from New Zealand, saw this sketch plenty of times growing up and never understood the ending until I looked it up a few years ago. I got every other joke but that one.

    • @solosam9
      @solosam9 Před 5 lety +14

      @@hughjanus900 since when has pillocks and bollocks been the same thing

    • @hughjanus900
      @hughjanus900 Před 5 lety +6

      miss B here in Shropshire we say you stupid pillock

  • @fabiamoon2827
    @fabiamoon2827 Před 5 lety +7

    The "four candles" sketch is my absolute favorite piece from the Two Ronnies.

  • @markpowell3514
    @markpowell3514 Před 5 lety +101

    In rural England, even today, we have shops which sell everything from food to hardware to newspapers! It's the only way some villages can survive.
    The Two Ronnie's are Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett (real names) who had their comedy duo their entire career. There are many famous sketches on CZcams for you to look at.
    Also, going back to your Fred Dibnah video, in the early 2000 he made a number of informative series on TV which were much better than his early steeplejack stuff. I think you will enjoy his "Magnificent Monuments" which is very informal and informative of how Britain was constructed throughout the centuries with building techniques explained and even shown.

    • @RVREVO
      @RVREVO Před 5 lety +3

      Not just in England. In New Zealand we call them Dairies.
      America have Walmart.

    • @markpowell3514
      @markpowell3514 Před 5 lety +3

      @@RVREVO a dairy in Britain is the place where dairy products are produced 😋
      Agreed, America have Walmart but they will have had equivalent small 'stores' in inaccessible towns too

    • @woody816
      @woody816 Před 5 lety +3

      Mark Powell well up here in the highlands on the outer Hebridean islands u get yesterday’s paper today lol

    • @BrazierBear
      @BrazierBear Před 5 lety +3

      These shops still survive in rural, remote parts of Ireland. Where you can get absolutely anything .

    • @chatteyj
      @chatteyj Před 5 lety +4

      I went into a hardware shop in a town on the east devon coast not too long ago and the two shop assistants were wearing brown coats like this.

  • @keegan773
    @keegan773 Před 5 lety +5

    This is an absolute classic. Lillian's face was a study as the joke expanded.
    I've watched this sketch many times, I know what's coming and still laugh out loud.

  • @daveturner6006
    @daveturner6006 Před 4 lety +29

    Once upon a time there did used to be shops like this where you could buy almost anything!

    • @NavaNix
      @NavaNix Před 4 lety +2

      yup called a general store

    • @jaybatsford
      @jaybatsford Před 4 lety +2

      Got one just up the road, Allan's of Netherton, quite famous and his slogan is "If we ay got it, yow dow need it"

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 4 lety

      And they had bare wooden floors, a trap-door to the basement, in the middle of the shop, they'd sell paraffin by the gallon, for peoples Valor stoves etc, and the place would always smell of it.

    • @rogueriderhood1862
      @rogueriderhood1862 Před 4 lety +1

      @@MrDaiseymay And if the shop was shut you could knock on the back door and they would sell you what you wanted.

    • @soundcreeps5371
      @soundcreeps5371 Před 3 lety

      @@jaybatsford we had one around the block for a while until the guy retired, it was called Frosties, he run it like Arkwrights, you'd go and ask what you wanted and he'd go around the shop getting it all for you, then price it all up, if you went in often he'd learn your surname and call you Mr. Whatever, the shop is still there but its been shut since 2007.

  • @ElwoodShort
    @ElwoodShort Před 4 lety +5

    i have seen this sketch so many times... always makes me laugh. The dropped H is typical of southern English regional accents. Also the Two Ronnies (Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett) were a long standing double act that were huge in the UK for decades.

  • @Captally
    @Captally Před 5 lety +88

    We used to have shops called Ironmongers which were privately owned and smaller versions of Woolworth in which you could buy almost anything from apricots to zips.

    • @andystoker6961
      @andystoker6961 Před 5 lety +3

      Still do - fewer than before but still some

    • @andyfield3614
      @andyfield3614 Před 5 lety

      Boone in Poole high street is still like this and sell an extraordinary amount of different stuff
      English comedy - Garth Ferenghis Dark Place or the Mighty Noisy series 1

    • @andyfield3614
      @andyfield3614 Před 5 lety

      Mighty Boosh I meant

    • @nedneedles7253
      @nedneedles7253 Před 5 lety +2

      I remember my dad buying nails from the ironmongers by the lb and they would wrap them like they do chip's

    • @dnmurphy48
      @dnmurphy48 Před 5 lety +1

      Still do here in Norfolk

  • @worthalook4870
    @worthalook4870 Před 5 lety +8

    RIP to both of them, true legends. Ronnie barker was amazing, two ronnies, open all hours, porridge and many more

  • @hazelkinvig-paul8231
    @hazelkinvig-paul8231 Před 5 lety +8

    This was my favourite Two Ronnies sketch of all time, so clever! TFS 👍❤

  • @pauliewalnuts3040
    @pauliewalnuts3040 Před 5 lety +23

    I LOVE how much you guys immerse yourself fully in the British culture and go out of your way to understand and be part of it. If your heart is in Britain, you’re British! Keep the great content coming!

  • @dereknicoll9695
    @dereknicoll9695 Před 5 lety +48

    Ronnies Corbett (the short one) and Barker , now both sadly deceased.

    • @TyMarshall007
      @TyMarshall007 Před 5 lety

      yea and Ronnie Corbett and I shear the same Birthday

  • @johnukey
    @johnukey Před 5 lety +18

    The Two Ronnies employed a wide variety of accents and dialects in their comedy as a lot of it used plays on words and misunderstandings.
    If you watch more of their work it will certainly give you a good work-out in recognising and understanding the large variety used in the UK.

    • @loafersheffield
      @loafersheffield Před 5 lety +2

      czcams.com/video/aJ0nFQgRApY/video.html
      Pisspronounciation.

  • @climbtherainbow
    @climbtherainbow Před 5 lety +10

    3:33 Ronnie Corbett says, "What do you want, Ointment or something like that?"

  • @alanwhite7912
    @alanwhite7912 Před 4 lety +11

    Ronnie Corbett is the mastermind in this sketch. His timing is excellent.

    • @davidabercrombie5427
      @davidabercrombie5427 Před 4 lety +1

      But it was probably written by Ronnie Barker (or Gerald Wiley)

    • @charmawow
      @charmawow Před 4 lety

      Still my all time favourite comedy sketch.....and yep Ronnie Corbett’s reactions makes this friggin hilarious.

  • @beefsuprem0241
    @beefsuprem0241 Před 5 lety +92

    It's a 1970s shop that sells everything pre-supermarkets

    • @HA1LILPALAZZO
      @HA1LILPALAZZO Před 5 lety +4

      a general store I think is the name of the shop ;)

    • @MoviesNGames007uk
      @MoviesNGames007uk Před 5 lety +3

      Open All Hours is the same it features a corner shop that has anything from bread to flowers

    • @michaeljenkinson7099
      @michaeljenkinson7099 Před 5 lety

      Sorry but these stores were around before i became a person in the 1950s.

    • @meditationmusicbyalexjackson
      @meditationmusicbyalexjackson Před 5 lety

      Still one in my village. Hardware shop that sells everything

    • @ZebeddiDooDah
      @ZebeddiDooDah Před 5 lety

      @@crackpot148 You´ve got to love the Welsh x

  • @royburston8120
    @royburston8120 Před 5 lety +5

    Ronnie Corbet was a stand up comedian and Ronnie barker was a comedy character actor - they met on a couple of other shows and became a double act (but only on the 2 Ronnies ).
    They continued to work solo on their own stuff.
    Until probably the end of the seventies shops like that which sold almost everything and resembled and junk yard still existed in small towns.

  • @awakeningcry
    @awakeningcry Před 4 lety +6

    "Saw tips"
    "You want some ointment for that?"
    hehehehehehehehehe

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 Před 5 lety +4

    Old sketch to two of our finest comedians as a team with wordplay
    Both gone now but not forgotten and their type of humour is much missed...

  • @jaygilllan7574
    @jaygilllan7574 Před 5 lety +24

    The big guy is Ronnie Barker, you know the little one. I think the first time they did anything really popular was in a sketch with John Cleese about the class system.
    Ronnie Barker is widely regarded as one of the greatest comedy writers and actors that has ever appeared on british television. He starred in Porridge, you need to check that out if you can, and the original Open all hours. Both huge hits at the time.
    Ronnie Corbett was a minor comic and actor at the time they met but he was blessed with perfect timing and also an incredible warmth which seemed to shine through everything he did, both of them are seen as National Treasures. Corbett used to do a rambling monologue, that would be written by Barker, at the end of the two Ronnie show. These perfectly capture their brand of humour.

    • @hughtube5154
      @hughtube5154 Před 5 lety +4

      And Ronnie Corbett's monologue was the inspiration behind Graham Norton's red chair.

    • @Tom_YouTube_stole_my_handle
      @Tom_YouTube_stole_my_handle Před 5 lety +5

      I spent an hour with Ronnie Corbett once, the warmth was genuine.

    • @MrJoshua1875
      @MrJoshua1875 Před 5 lety +1

      I met him in north berwick at the golf club. A naturally nice warm person with time for everyone,

    • @jaygilllan7574
      @jaygilllan7574 Před 5 lety

      @@NGT-eb2oy thanks for putting me right. I'd been wrong about that for years.

  • @waldenhouse
    @waldenhouse Před 5 lety +19

    “Open All Hours” is a comedy show also starring Ronnie Barker as a corner shop keeper.....now you will have to listen carefully as it’s a border Yorkshire/Lancashire area so the accents are very different. Also, his Prison comedy called “Porridge” ( porridge is a term given to one being in prison doing porridge - meaning if you were in a vat of thick gloopy porridge, it’s easy to get in, but then it’s hard to get out)!

    • @markywellsboy2182
      @markywellsboy2182 Před 5 lety +3

      I thought that the porridge term came from the fact that porridge was served at every breakfast?

    • @lovewalsall
      @lovewalsall Před 5 lety

      Markywellsboy - Me too. But I quite like Bobby D's explanation.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 5 lety +1

      Also known as Stir. (as in what you do to Porridge).

    • @3122tan
      @3122tan Před 5 lety +1

      Dont mean to pick, but isnt Open All Hours set in Doncaster? Therefore very strong yorkshire accent, not very close to the Lancashire border, but close to the Nottingham border (this is the only part of british geography i know very well). When i was visiting my husbands home, I stumpled upon Still Open All Hours being filmed in a street in Balby, Doncaster.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 5 lety

      @@3122tan That is certainly true that the outside of a hairdressers shop their was used for the external shots, the insides are studio sets, and the programme a north of the midlands south of newcastle generality for geographical prototype

  • @rubberdc
    @rubberdc Před 5 lety +10

    its amazing isnt it , we speak alike ( sometimes) but dialects are a challenge to someone who doesnt know them. This show was addictive to all of us here in the UK in the 1970s and 80s.This scene is famous as the 4candles , and is used many times on a daily basis . Ronnie Barker is dressed like that because in those years builders DID dress like that . The shop that Ronnie Corbett worked in is a corner shop that sold everything , and in later life Ronnie Barker owned a shop in a comedy show titled "open all Hours" . if you look that show up you will see as a local shop ( and corner shops were on practically every street corner ) they DID sell everything that someone might need , saving them from going into town .In the States, they call them 711 stores. or something like a Walgreens.

  • @edwardstabletoparmies955
    @edwardstabletoparmies955 Před 5 lety +4

    I love the sketch but it was even funnier watching and hearing you both! My gf is American and we often discuss the way we both talk...and spell.

  • @ChefEarthenware
    @ChefEarthenware Před 5 lety +20

    I once asked a guy in a hardware store if he had any "O's". He wasn't amused and told me that this Two Ronnies sketch had made his life a misery with people coming in and asking for "four candles" etc :)

    • @sextonblake1505
      @sextonblake1505 Před 5 lety +6

      Our local hardware store put up a picture of Four candles as a tribute when Ronnie Barker died.

  • @underwaterbubbles
    @underwaterbubbles Před 5 lety +78

    British comedy at it's finest.

    • @harrismiller1948
      @harrismiller1948 Před 4 lety +4

      The best comedy sketch ever put on British television

    • @melcomepay6668
      @melcomepay6668 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes.

    •  Před 4 lety +1

      @@harrismiller1948 There's some *strong* competition for that claim, and a lot of that competition comes from these two. ;-)

    • @harrismiller1948
      @harrismiller1948 Před 4 lety

      @ absolutely

    • @pistonbroke0461
      @pistonbroke0461 Před 4 lety +1

      It's most definitely up there.. along with Monty Python's 'Parrot Sketch'

  • @vincenthandley6390
    @vincenthandley6390 Před 4 lety +2

    Your reactions are priceless. Especially the bits that you 'don't get'. Love it. Thankyou both.

  • @georgiaraynes1421
    @georgiaraynes1421 Před 4 lety +2

    They are both called Ronnie. The writer was Ronnie Barker, the bigger one. He specialized in word play and there are many examples in their shows. Glad you liked the episode even though you didn't understand it. Yes, it was seventies and took place in a general store which sells everything (or did in those days). I grew up in one.

  • @michaelwhite6498
    @michaelwhite6498 Před 5 lety +28

    The original, hand written script for that sketch recently sold for £28,000 at auction. It was written by Gerald Riley. The name Ronnie Barker used to submit scketch's for the show.

    • @Tilion462
      @Tilion462 Před 5 lety +9

      Wiley, not Riley...

    • @PeterPanMan
      @PeterPanMan Před 5 lety

      Tilion462, is that a joke?

    • @michaelwhite6498
      @michaelwhite6498 Před 5 lety +2

      No it was my typo error.

    • @loafersheffield
      @loafersheffield Před 5 lety +1

      +michael white... could be worse. You could be a sufferer of pisspronounciation.
      czcams.com/video/aJ0nFQgRApY/video.html

    • @100666666
      @100666666 Před 5 lety +1

      Gerald WILEY not Riley was his pseudonym

  • @dareallan9236
    @dareallan9236 Před 4 lety +4

    Fork Handles is literally the British version of Who's on First.

  • @SamauraiRippeR
    @SamauraiRippeR Před 5 lety +17

    You should do The Mastermind Sketch by the Two Ronnies. Total genius.

    • @BLUEsurf63
      @BLUEsurf63 Před 3 lety +2

      Answering the question before last, brilliant writing.

  • @infesticon
    @infesticon Před 4 lety +4

    To this day when Im asking for stuff in hardware stores and there is confusion I say "oh christ it's four candles in real life"

  • @natalieanne2595
    @natalieanne2595 Před 5 lety +8

    Benny hill is another British classic you should check out. Love you guys and welcome to the uk. ❤️

    • @GeoffB2072
      @GeoffB2072 Před 5 lety +1

      dylan allan I’m sure Benny Hill was very popular in America.

  • @adunreathcooper
    @adunreathcooper Před 5 lety +13

    Ronnie Barker, imo, greatest comedian of all time.

  • @annoldham3018
    @annoldham3018 Před 2 lety

    I recently made reference to 4 candles when giving a eulogy at my mum's funeral last month. She loved it so much.

  • @tirconnell8265
    @tirconnell8265 Před 5 lety

    I've seen this sketch more times than I can count and it never ceases to reduce me to tears but watching the reaction of two people to whom it's entirely new brought a whole new level of joy. I grew up in rural ireland in the 1970's and we had stores like that boasted you could buy "anything from a needle to an anchor".

  • @BlueShadow777
    @BlueShadow777 Před 5 lety +16

    These old-time shops were called “Ironmongers”, selling mostly a mish-mash of general hardware but also other odds and ends... including (minimal) foodstuffs. There are still a few around, but very sparse to almost extinction.
    Most were put out of business by the large corporate chains like B&Q etc. (Just as the corner grocery shop suffered from the advent of the large supermarkets).

    • @kailashpatel1706
      @kailashpatel1706 Před 5 lety +1

      amazing how shops like that have fallen away..

    • @BlueShadow777
      @BlueShadow777 Před 5 lety +4

      Kailash Patel
      I grew up with Ironmonger shops. They were/are exactly as in the Two Ronnie sketch. I’ve just done an images Google search on “Ironmongery Shops”... seems there are still quite a few around, after all.

    • @MarineAqua45
      @MarineAqua45 Před 5 lety

      Daniele Iannarelli The last of those was Robert Dyers ( years before Rymans owner Theo bought it up)

    • @paulsmith-ib3nx
      @paulsmith-ib3nx Před 5 lety

      @John 'Sepp' Schiltz - I live in a suburb of Nottingham. Despite having a plethora of big DIY stores nearby, our local hardware shop is thriving. We had a new tram extension built 3-4 years ago and the road network was a nightmare during the work. For a lot of people, it was easier to shop locally, the hardware shop, Hickings, seemed to win many new customers and they've remained loyal after the roads reopened.

    • @pyeltd.5457
      @pyeltd.5457 Před 5 lety

      Focus and Whicks

  • @richodude2679
    @richodude2679 Před 3 lety +4

    Many years later Ronnie Barker said he wasn’t happy with the end of the sketch and instead should have replaced the ending, with a joke about knockers .

  • @donsharpe5786
    @donsharpe5786 Před 4 lety

    Ronnie Barker was a straight character actor who did comedy. He wrote a number of sketches under a pseudonym. He often wrote using the similarity of the sound of words or the same spelling of a word with two different meanings common in the English language.

  • @lediabolique5822
    @lediabolique5822 Před 5 lety

    Grew up watching this. I must have seem this sketch dozens of times and it still makes me laugh out loud.

  • @Tilion462
    @Tilion462 Před 5 lety +37

    Ronnie C was a great comedic personality... but Ronnie B was pure genius. You should watch Crossed Lines, Mispronunciation and some musical sketches from the two Ronnies show, then check out episodes each of Barker's series Open All Hours and Porridge (his best work).

    • @Sarah-nd2gy
      @Sarah-nd2gy Před 5 lety +3

      Porridge is still one of my all time favourite comedy's

    • @willrichardson519
      @willrichardson519 Před 5 lety +2

      Porridge and Open All Hours are 2 of Ronnie Barkers classic sitcoms.

    • @WallaseyanTube
      @WallaseyanTube Před 5 lety +1

      ... The Navy Lark, The Frost Report (where he first met Ronnie Corbett), etc, etc ...

    • @jagdpanther1944
      @jagdpanther1944 Před 5 lety +3

      "Sorry" is pure Ronnie Corbett...a true comic, I loved his monologues on two ronnies

    • @Julia-hs7vh
      @Julia-hs7vh Před 5 lety +1

      WallaseyanTube
      Left hand down a bit...oh lummey it's old thunder guts!!

  • @williamlogan1203
    @williamlogan1203 Před 4 lety +5

    These shops were more commonly known as Ironmongers, they sold pretty much everything, i remember (yes I'm that old) going in for milk, firelighters and paraffin...

    • @andrewmccormack4295
      @andrewmccormack4295 Před 3 lety

      Yes,there were lots of these little shops that sold just about every thing,esp" in the country areas.I was born in the early 50s and can still remember going in with a tin container and getting it filled with fresh milk.My weekly pocket money was two shillings and sixpence and in those days that was a small fortune for a young kid in England after the war.

  • @jenniferdevlin2805
    @jenniferdevlin2805 Před 4 lety

    The Four Candles sketch was voted the best British sketch ever a few years back and it was funny to me. I was born in the early 1970's and I have no memory of seeing this clip first time round until I watched the best British comedy sketches.

  • @blackmore4
    @blackmore4 Před 5 lety +1

    Great to see their smiles. Even though they often didn't understand the English expressions and pronunciation, Barker and Corbett's genius with just their body language and expressions makes for great watching.

  • @jackrainbow560
    @jackrainbow560 Před 5 lety +5

    Its not hardware shop. Its a general store, last seen in the UK circa 1960. They sold everything, from boot polish to porridge oats.

    • @tweetiepie551
      @tweetiepie551 Před 5 lety

      No it's a hardware shop.. this kind of shop was always called that.we never ever called any shop a general store - that's a backroom storage area.and they were still in operation well into the 1980s.

  • @EmptyGlass99
    @EmptyGlass99 Před 5 lety +77

    Dissecting comedy is like dissecting a frog - it kills it.

    • @S1RD2
      @S1RD2 Před 4 lety +1

      Not really, if your dissecting a frog then its already dead, vivisection would be more appropriate

    • @danoshannon340
      @danoshannon340 Před 4 lety

      you don't dissect comedy to keep it funny, you dissect it to understand it.

    • @johnnndoeee674
      @johnnndoeee674 Před 4 lety

      EmptyGlass99 there not thry are giving there thoughts and still trying to grasp the many accents that are hard

    • @taihavard549
      @taihavard549 Před 4 lety

      Stewart Lee would disagree.

  • @ronmorris5739
    @ronmorris5739 Před 5 lety +2

    There's a beautiful ending to this story... As one viewer has kindly pointed out, neither of the Ronnie's are still with us. When Ronnie Barker passed away, his funeral was attended by anyone who was anyone in the media. In a standard funeral service, the procession is traditionally headed up by three candle bearers. For those who looked closely, Ronnie B had four... A masterpiece.

  • @mossie1954
    @mossie1954 Před 5 lety +8

    It's suppose to be set in the 1950's & 60's in England , when the corner shop would have to carry all these things. Long before supermarkets & malls. People like myself lived in a small village...so hence the reason 'why' they had to have a great deal of peoples needs.

  • @cubinoid
    @cubinoid Před 5 lety +3

    "Saw tips..." "What do you want, an ointment or something?"

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 Před 5 lety +3

    Billhooks=Bollocks=Testicles
    Still my favourite sketch of all time
    Ronnie Barker was very clever and wrote the sketches and Ronnie played his small stooge superbly both gone now but not forgotten !!!

    • @Person01234
      @Person01234 Před rokem

      A billhook is an agricultural implement, but yeah the potential misunderstanding is "bollocks"

  • @Blighty4eva
    @Blighty4eva Před 5 lety +1

    One of the greatest British comedy sketches of all time. Absolute comic legends they were

  • @michaelgilchrist6743
    @michaelgilchrist6743 Před 3 lety +1

    What you are seeing is an old traditional 'Iron Mongers' shop. The precursor to the modern day department store. Unfortunately, there are very few of them left nowadays...

  • @dannydorko7075
    @dannydorko7075 Před 5 lety +35

    Like others have said billhooks sounds and looks like the british swear word- 'bollocks'. Ronnie barker, the guy playing the customer wrote a lot of their sketches including this one but wasn't happy with the end joke. He wanted it to instead end with a "big slovenly girl" coming out and saying "Right then sir, what kind of knockers (as in door knockers but 'knockers' is also slang for breasts) are you looking for?
    I love wordplay so I'm a big fan of the Two Ronnies. There's loads of similar wordplay centric sketches including my favourite one- 'crossed lines'

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 Před 5 lety +5

      That's a much better ending.

    • @catsintheattic5973
      @catsintheattic5973 Před 5 lety

      The Crossed Lines sketch is one of my absolute favourites.

    • @ronaldobrien6870
      @ronaldobrien6870 Před 5 lety +1

      The 'billhooks' line didn't really work and was a lame end to the sketch. Ronnie was right to be annoyed with himself for not coming up with a stronger line like 'knockers'

    • @glenbe4026
      @glenbe4026 Před 5 lety

      @@Smegma Poppins It wasn't used because the Billhooks ending was the original ending. He wasn't happy with it but only thought of the knockers ending at a later date.

  • @randybobandy3840
    @randybobandy3840 Před 5 lety +3

    wow never been this early before, just finished their 11,000 sub video, this is a great channel.

  • @beestonbump1106
    @beestonbump1106 Před 5 lety

    They were both much loved comedians. Theirs was a gentle humour, as you can see in the famous four candles sketch

  • @Andyp12
    @Andyp12 Před 4 lety

    That intro where you go from laughing to staring seriously. What did I do?!

  • @ottohardwick5323
    @ottohardwick5323 Před 5 lety +7

    "We know nothing about the Two Ronnies..." WHAT?????!!!!!! I love the way it takes you 30 seconds to understand half of what they say....

  • @twotone3070
    @twotone3070 Před 5 lety +6

    That's the first time I've seen you both laugh uncontrollably, made me smile.
    The Two Ronnies was Saturday night prime time television in the 70's when we only had 3 channels and they all went off at night.
    My suggestions would be the Parrot Sketch by Monty Python or the Morecambe and Wise Show with Andre' Previn. (Google Andre' Previn first if you don't know who he is) also Morecambe and Wise with Shirley Bassey.

  • @lemsdarkapprentice2535

    the bill hooks reference at the end is meaning "bollocks" (as in "load of old bollocks") meaning ronnie corbett feels barker is taking the p155 out of him). They couldn't swear on tv, so they had to use things like euphemisms + rhyming slang etc. the 4 candles / fork handles sketch is one of the best in british comedy as it's all about these plays on words + richness of the english language.

  • @williamwebb8908
    @williamwebb8908 Před 6 měsíci

    Congratulations. You're the first Americans I've seen who got the ''tins of peas'' line.

  • @blueyorks6884
    @blueyorks6884 Před 4 lety +5

    Even the great Ronnie Barker said he wasnt happy with the ending.

    • @davidabercrombie5427
      @davidabercrombie5427 Před 4 lety

      At the time it was made there were probably people who knew what a bill hook was and what it was used for... now we have to look it up. Its a really funny sketch but that line really dates it.

    • @mistofoles
      @mistofoles Před 4 lety

      @@davidabercrombie5427 A bill hook hand held implement used to pull a small boat flush with the side of the dock.

    • @samleigh7817
      @samleigh7817 Před 3 lety

      @@mistofolesbill hook is a small machete for clearing undergrowth, you’re thinking of a boat hook.

    • @samleigh7817
      @samleigh7817 Před 3 lety

      He changed it tho a female assistant and asked for knockers.

  • @alaninsoflo
    @alaninsoflo Před 5 lety +73

    Billhooks might be pronounced by Ronnie Barker as "Bill 'ucks" which sounds like "Bollocks" = Testicles

    • @willhunt6897
      @willhunt6897 Před 4 lety +2

      Alan Stevens I always thought it was meant to be “Pillocks”

    • @EvilSnowVO
      @EvilSnowVO Před 4 lety +4

      Just before it got filmed, Ronnie B came up with a different ending, but didn't have time to change it.
      Instead of Mr Jones, a young female employee would come out and look at the list, then to Ronnie, then to the list, then back to Ronnie.
      "Alright sir, what sort of knockers are you looking for?"

    • @grahamd5418
      @grahamd5418 Před 3 lety +1

      That's why he was asked if he wanted one or two!

    • @Celtic2Realms
      @Celtic2Realms Před 3 lety

      Or ballcocks

  • @anthonyhemphill5569
    @anthonyhemphill5569 Před 5 lety

    The 2 Ronnies was great! it was on tv on a sat night and the whole family used to watch it, so yes get a DVD I see them in charity shops all the time

  • @ya00007
    @ya00007 Před 5 lety +2

    British comedy at its finest. You have to be British to truly capture the essence of this comedy.

    • @joshsheffsagain4662
      @joshsheffsagain4662 Před 2 lety

      Don't have to be British. Just need to understand that the words can sound the same as others, or be totally different yet sounding the exact same way.
      We don't have a monopoly on that you know. 🤦

  • @lintonkenneally7954
    @lintonkenneally7954 Před 5 lety +23

    Try watching “My Blackberry Is Not Working” by “The One Ronnie”.

  • @muninraven3327
    @muninraven3327 Před 5 lety +3

    I have found that the Abbott and Costello "who's on first" skit works very well over here in the UK, but I'm speaking as someone who is middle aged. The best oldschool British humour almost always plays with language or normal conventions in some way or another. American comics like the late Bill Hicks and George Carling fit in perfectly. It was about the use of language and the class system.

    • @geoffwales8646
      @geoffwales8646 Před 5 lety

      I never found that skit funny, maybe because it laboured the point too much.

  • @MARKSTRINGFELLOW1
    @MARKSTRINGFELLOW1 Před 4 lety

    The two Ronnie's was a sketch show with a comedy musical number tacked on the end One of the most popular acts on TV in the 70's

  • @ZXC5000
    @ZXC5000 Před 5 lety

    This is probably the best TV sketch ever created

  • @TheEulerID
    @TheEulerID Před 4 lety +4

    In Oxford, Ronnie Barker's home town, there's a Wetherspoons named after that sketch.

    • @stephenlarkin3690
      @stephenlarkin3690 Před 4 lety

      At Barker"s funeral, on his coffin , was a candelabra holding..........four candles.

    • @patrickgraham4794
      @patrickgraham4794 Před 3 lety

      True, everyone I know calls it the fork handles

  • @redmanchester2659
    @redmanchester2659 Před 5 lety +36

    The phantom raspberry blower of old London Town...…………….

    • @iangreely8528
      @iangreely8528 Před 5 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/2fZ75lhaGT8/video.html for the full serial of Phamtom Raspberry Blower - of old London Town

    • @shirleyswaine4701
      @shirleyswaine4701 Před 5 lety

      Loved most of what these two did, but I never understood why the phantom raspberry blower was regarded as funny and, sexist as it sounds, I think this was one that appealed almost uniquely to the male psyche.

    • @alanharrison5070
      @alanharrison5070 Před 5 lety

      Fantastic 👍👍👍👍

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 5 lety +5

      Written By Spike Milligan

    • @ianchapman5733
      @ianchapman5733 Před 5 lety

      @@highpath4776 and a gentleman!

  • @NELLIE-gs7zl
    @NELLIE-gs7zl Před 5 lety +1

    Fork handles,brilliant,a classic sketch

  • @iandovey7893
    @iandovey7893 Před 3 lety

    Based on hardwear store in Broadstairs Kent. Ronnie C lived round the corner and suggested it to Ronnie B. His house is now Dickens Museum in Broadstairs.

  • @David-sk9vv
    @David-sk9vv Před 5 lety +6

    You both are so amazing! Your reaction to our British Humour and language is wonderful... thank you for living here! :-)

  • @martinbell3302
    @martinbell3302 Před 5 lety +19

    Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett. At Corbett's memorial service 4 candle were carried in the procession.

  • @leemendham4788
    @leemendham4788 Před 5 lety

    In reference to plugs, British electrical appliances used to come without plugs (the big 3-pin British 220-volt variety). The user had to buy them separately, insert an appropriate fuse (2,3,5 or 13-amp depending on the appliance), wire them up to the appliance, and then close them up and tighten the cable grip at the rear. Nowadays manufacturers sell appliances with the plugs attached, and the fuses are inserted via a slot in the bottom of the plug.

  • @timothygraham4304
    @timothygraham4304 Před 5 lety

    I have been watching reaction videos for the last few days and this is the first one I've seen that had actual reactions! New subscriber here.

  • @amanda-janekiell2514
    @amanda-janekiell2514 Před 3 lety +4

    Back in the day shops in England would send a variety of products

  • @SuperReasonable
    @SuperReasonable Před 5 lety +30

    Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett. Very good individually, but exceptional together.
    The English language is very confusing. There are over 3,000 French words in active use in the language and a great mix of Anglo Saxon and French concerning many similar subjects. For instance, we talk about the Anglo Saxon beast, but eat the French version of the meat. Cow becomes beef, sheep becomes mutton, pig becomes pork etc. The Germans follow the Saxon version and eat the beast. For example what we would call beef, in German is Rindfleisch literally translated meaning cow meat, the same as lamfleisch, or lamb meat. Other interesting examples of French is that virtually everything military comes from there. Ranks such as Lieutenant, Sergeant, Captain, Major etc. are all French words as are the weapons such as cannon, pistol, bayonet.... I could go on and add the Latin, Chinese, Arabic and Indian words we use everyday into the mix, but you'll get bored, I will however mention one last thing. Just to confuse further we can add the words that sound exactly the same, but have very different meanings - Poor, Pore, Pour etc!
    All in all, it's the perfect language for comedians like the 2 Ronnie's to exploit!

    • @lilacfloyd
      @lilacfloyd Před 5 lety +4

      The reason why cow becomes beef, sheep becomes mutton in food terms is because when the Normans arrived they became the ruling class.
      They had all the high living whilst the local aristocracy were stripped of their land and wealth and became their peasant labour force to tend to the livestock.
      Therefore for the peasants, the animals became associated with livestock not food and they used their own language.
      The Normans on the other hand associated these things with food. So once the animals were put on a plate French was used.

    • @lovewalsall
      @lovewalsall Před 5 lety +1

      'Poor' doesn't rhyme with 'pore' where I'm from.

    • @BoingBB
      @BoingBB Před 5 lety

      Scotland?

    • @MrJoshua1875
      @MrJoshua1875 Před 5 lety

      strangely enough in northern england and most of scotland pore and poor would not sound similiar, however go further north, and you would be asked If you wanted poored a wee dram oh whisky! and go way down south, they sound similar also,

    • @BoingBB
      @BoingBB Před 5 lety +1

      Poor, pore and pour are all pronounced the same where I live (Bedfordshire).

  • @andrewsmith74
    @andrewsmith74 Před 5 lety

    Despite being dead, The Two Ronnies are easily Britain's most popular comedy duo. They're on TV most weeks - most often on Yesterday, which, despite being a history channel, often shows comedy.

  • @009MSP
    @009MSP Před 4 lety +2

    If one say's 'BILL HOOKS' quickly it can sound like a slang term for testicles, Ronnie Corbett & Ronnie Barker were friends who performed sketches together

  • @matthewmaus
    @matthewmaus Před 5 lety +4

    Apparently this was voted most popular/beloved sketch of the British people, the last time they were asked... another 'brilliant' sketch (I like it, anyway) from the Two Ronnies is the 'Mastermind' sketch. BTW, Ronnie Barker - the larger one, wrote the Fork 'Andles sketch, submitting it to the show under the pseudonym Gerard Wiley, in order that it succeed or fail purely on the quality of the writing. Check out Porridge, as well, xxx

  • @ianprince1698
    @ianprince1698 Před 4 lety +3

    in another ending, he calls in a well-endowed lady assistant. the list had said KNOCKERS!!

  • @Hugofreddie
    @Hugofreddie Před 5 lety

    Classic wordsmith comedy . You hit the nail on the head saying you think you know someone like that . Most towns had a old fashioned ironmonger where you could get almost anything . We used to get nails by the pound wrapped in newspaper .

  • @wleon4068
    @wleon4068 Před 5 lety +1

    They were friends. Both great comedy actors.

  • @KeithGadget
    @KeithGadget Před 5 lety +4

    "Pumps" type shoes are an old sports type of shoe, also called plimsole

  • @kartel8844
    @kartel8844 Před 5 lety +7

    You should watch Ronnie Corbet when he sits in his chair and tells one of his long winded stories.
    He would get lost in the telling of the story, going off on multiple tangents, which reminds me I never got algebra.
    For Ronnie Barker try Porridge.

  • @stevethompson1421
    @stevethompson1421 Před 5 lety +1

    Great watching you two enjoy something like this. This is my favourite sketch of The Two Ronnies. It's a very famous sketch over here. We tend to drop our H' ers (aichers) over here. So garden Hoe, becomes, "got any oe's", Hose becomes, "got any ose" and that's where the comic confusion comes from. Great play on words.
    The "Billhooks" ( ...Bollocks ?) thing at the end ... bit too vague and gets about the same reaction over here, but the sketch as a whole is brilliant. The Tins of Peas moment is inspired. Little Ronnie C as the shopkeeper makes it, because he plays it straight. Classic!

  • @silvermane9370
    @silvermane9370 Před 4 lety

    Ronnie Corbett was a stand up comic and Ronnie Barker was a comic actor. They first appeared together on either That was the week that was or the Frost Report in the 1960s. Many of the sketches were written by Gerald Wiley who was actually Barker using a pseudonym. Many of the sketches used clever wordplay. Each series had a running story often private eyes Charlie Farley and Piggy Malone. They also had one called the Phantom Raspberry Blower of old London Town. Each episode was ‘book-ended’ by spoof news items, had a sort of music hall number and Ronnie Corbett doing a funny story sat in a chair. They were massively popular in the 1970s and early eighties. They both also worked separately with Ronnie Barker starring in iconic sit coms like Porridge and Open All Hours. They also made a couple of comedy specials for tv where there was no scripted dialogue. I recall one being about a picnic. They were my absolute favourites.

  • @lee5150
    @lee5150 Před 4 lety +50

    It still gets me how much Americans just don’t get sarcasm.

  • @woody816
    @woody816 Před 5 lety +8

    U guys are amazing.
    The difference in accents in uk is unbelievable for the size of the place. Even England has more than a dozen accents alone. In Scotland it’s the same. Wales I’m not sure but I’d imagine there the same. I’m not sure if any other country is the same. Yeah I’m the states u can tell if someone’s from New York or the south but here u can go a matter of miles and the accents are different. Just found u guys and truly love how u are so open and really try to understand us. For that I thank you and hope to enjoy many more of your vids ✌️&❤️ fae Bonnie Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @Greenwood4727
      @Greenwood4727 Před 5 lety +1

      it can in some places go down to street level..like in my home town you can tell within a few streets where a person lived or grew up.. but thats a special case as we had a lot of industry and people would live in a specific area for a specific job.. like glass makers lived in one section, coal workers in another, chemical workers in another.. and because of the industry the chemicals and noises in those jobs the accents changed a little.so hot jobs would dry their throats out, chemicals would make the a little more gruff/gravelly in the accent as the chemicals burned their throats and so on Like the Scouse accent, many different types.. but the more common now is the broad, which is affected by weather its cold so scousers had more colds and the irish immigrants and so that affected the next generation and so on.. Once you start looking at accents and dialects.. its astounding

    • @Greenwood4727
      @Greenwood4727 Před 5 lety

      then if you add geographic, the geordie accent has more in common with dutch due to the distance to the country, (vikings) the tones the voice modulation the singing of the accent some people from the netherlands can understand geordies evenif they are speaking another language. its about tonal modalities and it gets complicated

    • @Greenwood4727
      @Greenwood4727 Před 5 lety +1

      i lived in america for a while and my accent was "normal", everyone could understand me but i met someone from near my home town in the UK.. and our accents got broader and faster, until the people we were with thought we were speaking another language they totally lost their comprehension.. i am Northern you have manchester and liverpool about 30 miles apart and the accent is so different..

    • @stumpypetros2685
      @stumpypetros2685 Před 5 lety +1

      It's because English nearly died out. see "The Story of English" CD.
      England was 3 or 4 bits, formal Latin, and Kingly French were a major sourse of words. And confusion as french Castille became Castle etc. changes in languages and descriptions. Evenin Australia, theres been shift in English use. I live in Sydney and have some very early maps of it.
      In the Sydney CBD, there's Castlereagh St. Its first name was "Church Row" (St James Church is at one end of the street.) and it's second name was Castle Row before becoming Castlereagh. So 'reagh' must mean row or street.
      Someone please correct me, You had to have a licence to convert your manor, church and / or castille to have crenelations, beacuse that allowed archers to defend from the roof, a MAJOR defensive upgrade that would seriously inconvienience the king's troops. Anyway anything with crenelations could be called 'castling' which is why Church and Castle were interchangable names. --- am I right?

    • @ZebeddiDooDah
      @ZebeddiDooDah Před 5 lety

      @John 'Sepp' Schiltz Do it, John. It sounds such fun

  • @npr1300A8
    @npr1300A8 Před 5 lety +1

    Fabulous! The key to classic comedy like this is not to analyse it too much and because it's mostly visual comedy, it has to be viewed without talking. Glad you enjoyed it. Did you see the updated version with Ronnie Corbett and Harry Enfield? It's centred around BlackBerrys.

  • @Mezame9
    @Mezame9 Před 5 lety +2

    The Sweetshop sketch from the Two Ronnie is one of my favourites.