Rowley Birkin was based on WWII fighter and test pilot, Roland Beamont, who Paul said he met while on vacation in the Swiss Alps, sitting and talking just the way Paul presents him.
great vid far i know only lacks the sketch where hes in a mortuary and 1 where he is in the changing room of the Brazilian woman synchronized swimming team :D
Me? A privately educated, ex-Cambridge, privileged, son of a wealthy landowner, cabinet minister - with my reputation, standing for parliament in a red wall constituency? What were they thinking of?
@@djpduffy910 Indeed, as in Cholmondeley = Chumley, St. John = Sinjun and Magdelen College = Maudlin College. Just a small selection of our lexical quirks.
Belvoir = “beaver” Mainwaring = “mannering” Leicester = “lessta” It’s to do with the often ancient origins of place names, in Britain, to which aristocratic titles are frequently bound: as the centuries passed their pronunciation became more simplified while the spellings largely stayed original. With “-bourne” just being one of the many Saxon words for ‘river,’ like _Bournemouth,_ the mouth of the river, or _Marylebone,_ (Marli-bon, today) the _bourne_ by the Church of St Mary, originally: even though this one’s made up obviously - _there is an authentic Wimbourne in Dorset though_ - “Wymbourne” at some distant moment past would genuinely have been voiced “waim-bo-urne” just becoming “wim’bum” by the time of the Thirteenth Duke; though 13 generations for a dukedom would mark it as very old indeed. *So as the centuries gushed through the hourglass, all while ordinary people just strove to make themselves understood, St Mary-le-Bourne, became St Marylebourne, itself becoming Marylebourne, and now Marylebone (often just voiced Marl’bun).* Lots of European languages had this spelling/pronunciation disparity due to their advanced ages, but often went through deliberate government reforms, especially in the 19th century, to bring the two back in line with some sort of passing resemblance with each other (the history of the English *lives* in their language, though, and it never underwent such a deliberately centralised enterprise of codification; which makes it both a challenge to learn, at times, and somewhat of a quirky treasure trove too).
All the ways the YT auto-generated subs heard his title: - 13th doing them - 13th joke wimba - 13th Duke of wimba - 13th joke rim boom - Thirteen's Duke of Windham - legends to come - a second stupid believe Alesha - too women Looks like it got as close as it could on the 5th one, then just gave up.
When there is a British peer they will always be involved in some sleazy scandal. Twice as likely if that peer is politician as well. 13th Duke of Wimbun is very British peer indeed.
He always seems to say Wymbourne not Wybourne so it's how I pronounce it when I quote. It seems to be Wybourne on every title of every video to be fair.
It's what makes it all the more observational and funnier, as it's a fact the aristocrats and toffs have a habit of doing this. Many of their estates are pronounced very differently to the phonetic pronunciation. Names, too. See Harry Enfield's Mr. Cholmondley-Warner skits... they pronounce it "Mr Chumley-Warner".
You re talking out of your arse. It got cancelled cos its run its course. They finished it on a high. Nothing to do with politics you little troll ye. Paul Whitehouse once said that ' if its funny once, it's funny a thousand times ', and Fast Show followed that philosophy. But I guess it just got the the one thousandth and one times and they moved on to other things
@@bfc3057 wrong, the show even today, continues to garner , huge viewer numbers, just look at the constant BBC Two repeats. Subsequently, it was nothing to do with a lack of interest from the public.
It was always meant to be creepy; but it’s also incredibly funny, in a dark, creepy kind of way; that certainly seems to have been the tone Paul Whitehouse was aiming for: what with his delivery, facial expressions, etc. And he pulls it off quite magnificently...as it were haha. All the best. 👍😀
Not much comedy around these days. If you go back to pre 1980 UK comedy was as diverse as it gets as nothing was sacred. Tody its strained through the sieve of left wing politics, political correctness and SJW's screechers. Some is very funny but its all far too limited. In comedy there is always a victim because you laugh at them/it and you cant arbitrarily draw lines to what is acceptable and what is not that should be decided by the on off switch and the paying customer at the door
Can you children stop associating everything you hate with liberals? It's just misdirection so people do see you for what you are, attention starved right wing wankers.
"Me? The Duke of York? Here?? On the private jet of Jeffery Epstein? With an underage girl named Virginia? With MY reputation? No sweat"
Facts are Facts... lol
This one aged like a fine wine
I couldnt possibly have been… I was at Pizza Express in Woking.
BINGO!!
and yet no evidence of a crime?
How on earth he kept a straight face doing these sketches!
Most likely so many takes that it simply stops being funny to him.
Has no-one thought of the consequences has to be the funniest punchline 😂😂
The Duke, Rowley Birkin and Swiss Tony all resemble stalwarts of my 80’s officer’s mess. I guess Paul Whitehouse must have been there taking notes.
They are all people I was at school, college or work with. And my wife can back me up!
Dont forget « the surgeons » and the two old farts in the gents club « is he a quare? ».
Rowley Birkin was based on WWII fighter and test pilot, Roland Beamont, who Paul said he met while on vacation in the Swiss Alps, sitting and talking just the way Paul presents him.
there is a bit of Terry Thomas in here somewhere
Me? john terry captain of Chelsea, at home with my best friends wife, with my reputation? Bingo!
Me, Ryan giggs, in bed with my brothers wife.?
Hahaha brilliant
Hahahahaahah. Awesome 👌
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Genius
On a farm? With my reputation?
These jokes most of gone right over my head as a kid. XD
"With an OWEL!"
I'm coming in dryyyyy...
Me??? Sir Jimmy Savile???? Here, at Chequers as the guest of the Thatchers.....for the tenth time....
ows about that then
Poor Carol😢
A homage to Leslie Philips.
Terry-Thomas..
great vid far i know only lacks the sketch where hes in a mortuary and 1 where he is in the changing room of the Brazilian woman synchronized swimming team :D
Artur S great shout
I'm coming in dryyy
@@thatoneguychad420😂
one of the best!
“Penal correctitude it is then.”
Even funnier that Wybourn is the worst estate in sheffield
Brilliant!
I have to say, a lot of British comedy doesn't register with me, but this one just kept getting better and better!
It's based on an old classic British comedian/actor Terry-Thomas.
I think you'll find it's spelled Wymondhambim.
Me? A privately educated, ex-Cambridge, privileged, son of a wealthy landowner, cabinet minister - with my reputation, standing for parliament in a red wall constituency? What were they thinking of?
Always sounds like he says "me?...the 13th duke of wimbum here?"
yes it is one of those daft place names that is pronounced differently to how it is spelt.
@@djpduffy910 Indeed, as in Cholmondeley = Chumley, St. John = Sinjun and Magdelen College = Maudlin College. Just a small selection of our lexical quirks.
@@TheVickersDoorter
Featherstonehaugh = "Fanshaw"
Belvoir = “beaver”
Mainwaring = “mannering”
Leicester = “lessta”
It’s to do with the often ancient origins of place names, in Britain, to which aristocratic titles are frequently bound: as the centuries passed their pronunciation became more simplified while the spellings largely stayed original.
With “-bourne” just being one of the many Saxon words for ‘river,’ like _Bournemouth,_ the mouth of the river, or _Marylebone,_ (Marli-bon, today) the _bourne_ by the Church of St Mary, originally: even though this one’s made up obviously - _there is an authentic Wimbourne in Dorset though_ - “Wymbourne” at some distant moment past would genuinely have been voiced “waim-bo-urne” just becoming “wim’bum” by the time of the Thirteenth Duke; though 13 generations for a dukedom would mark it as very old indeed.
*So as the centuries gushed through the hourglass, all while ordinary people just strove to make themselves understood, St Mary-le-Bourne, became St Marylebourne, itself becoming Marylebourne, and now Marylebone (often just voiced Marl’bun).*
Lots of European languages had this spelling/pronunciation disparity due to their advanced ages, but often went through deliberate government reforms, especially in the 19th century, to bring the two back in line with some sort of passing resemblance with each other (the history of the English *lives* in their language, though, and it never underwent such a deliberately centralised enterprise of codification; which makes it both a challenge to learn, at times, and somewhat of a quirky treasure trove too).
always heard it as wynburn
Love it
I do this to this day, never fails t bend ppl up, all about timing🎉😂😂
Johnny Depp to part of the inspiration for Jack Sparrow from these sketches!
Didn't he appear in one sketch of the fast show??
@@ambehak4744he did. HR was in one of the Suits You Sir sketches.
"Haven't no one thought of the consequences,oh well"!
Rowley Birkin's son.
I didn't know Jeffery Epstein was the 13th Duke of Wybourne.
😂😂😂😂😂😂👍
Bingo!!!!!
I'm wetting myself laughing at this! Could be Leslie Phillips! LOL
I bet he drive's a jagggggggg
E type
I’m coming in dry....
😂😂😂😂😂😂👍
Ding Dong...
Class 🤣
Classic.
All the ways the YT auto-generated subs heard his title:
- 13th doing them
- 13th joke wimba
- 13th Duke of wimba
- 13th joke rim boom
- Thirteen's Duke of Windham
- legends to come
- a second stupid believe Alesha
- too women
Looks like it got as close as it could on the 5th one, then just gave up.
Hahaha !! 🤣
Definitely based on Prince Andrew, I reckon 🤔
God how I miss proper comedy
David Niven by another name
Penal correctitude it is then…
Sadly, the 90s was the last decade in which you could have a character like this.
We are Indeed going backwards due to sensitive types who take offence at everything and offer nothing to culture.
"Im sure Bunny wouldnt mind" ....."would you mind Bunny?"
@@1220b wtf r u talking about?
@@Mezworld You by the sound of it!
@@the13thdukeofwybourne77 alright nonce
I think this influenced Johnny Depp!
#me too
Wimbim
Mordecai
Me a geordie out side the sdaiam of light at 3oclock in the morning with my reputation, oh well
When there is a British peer they will always be involved in some sleazy scandal. Twice as likely if that peer is politician as well. 13th Duke of Wimbun is very British peer indeed.
Comedy ☝🏻
Imagine been the 14th Duke of York and saying this 🤣
Jimmy Saville ?
I enjoyed P Whitehouse most when he was...ver..ver.very drunk
He was our favourite fictional sex offender.
Jimmy saville
He always seems to say Wymbourne not Wybourne so it's how I pronounce it when I quote. It seems to be Wybourne on every title of every video to be fair.
It's what makes it all the more observational and funnier, as it's a fact the aristocrats and toffs have a habit of doing this. Many of their estates are pronounced very differently to the phonetic pronunciation. Names, too. See Harry Enfield's Mr. Cholmondley-Warner skits... they pronounce it "Mr Chumley-Warner".
Lol quality
Conrad its not. Look here
www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/fastshow/characters/13th_duke.shtml
Me Prince Andrew with Jeffrey EpStein it must be a Conspiracy.
Wimborne innit?
The right of wrong
With a telescope with my reputation
Wimbume.
No. Wybourne.
Watch it again... and listen.
Sinjin? No Saint-John ;-)
ME.. The 13th Duke of York .? Alone? At the house of a convicted paedophile..With My Reputation...
James Hewitt should sue.
Roflmfao
Such a shame that comedy has become so PC. Wish for the old days.
As funny as this is, they wouldn’t get away with it now.
David Śteel Comedy like this I can’t seem to find these days
@bofursgun Shamally dak dak
@bofursgun Ikr
@bofursgun 🎂
@bofursgun Pachanga
I’ve never understood why the BBC cancelled this show, probably wasn’t left-wing enough. 🙄
You re talking out of your arse. It got cancelled cos its run its course. They finished it on a high. Nothing to do with politics you little troll ye. Paul Whitehouse once said that ' if its funny once, it's funny a thousand times ', and Fast Show followed that philosophy. But I guess it just got the the one thousandth and one times and they moved on to other things
@@bfc3057 wrong, the show even today, continues to garner , huge viewer numbers, just look at the constant BBC Two repeats. Subsequently, it was nothing to do with a lack of interest from the public.
Bit creepy in 2020.
It was always meant to be creepy; but it’s also incredibly funny, in a dark, creepy kind of way; that certainly seems to have been the tone Paul Whitehouse was aiming for: what with his delivery, facial expressions, etc.
And he pulls it off quite magnificently...as it were haha.
All the best. 👍😀
Satire mate.
Not much comedy around these days. If you go back to pre 1980 UK comedy was as diverse as it gets as nothing was sacred. Tody its strained through the sieve of left wing politics, political correctness and SJW's screechers. Some is very funny but its all far too limited. In comedy there is always a victim because you laugh at them/it and you cant arbitrarily draw lines to what is acceptable and what is not that should be decided by the on off switch and the paying customer at the door
Can you children stop associating everything you hate with liberals? It's just misdirection so people do see you for what you are, attention starved right wing wankers.
If you like this try Rob Newmans Jarvis...
. m.czcams.com/video/O8WhP49UCfc/video.html
Legendary period of great British comedy