Oh for the glory days of television if only one could turn back the clocks of time.❤
@deborahrobertson86069 ай бұрын
Patrick Campbell, Frank Muir...I could cry with the happy memories.I should dearly love to see thec omplete series from the 60/70's. I LOVED this as a child.
@johnmason96553 ай бұрын
Thanks for these. Great memories watching this as a family many years ago.
@dreamer4593 ай бұрын
You're very welcome! 🥰
@muff-puff.5 ай бұрын
Nostalgia ❤, my heart bleeds for those days.
@tango22ah3 ай бұрын
I remember this program as a child but I think it might have been a little bit too highbrow for our family so didn’t get to see it, so 50 years later it’s very enjoyable to finally watch this great show. Frank and Patrick were great as were all their delightful guests
@Squizz754 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for uploading these. A great bit of fun to just unwind with when I get home after a tedious day at work; one or two just hits the spot. Truly appreciated.
@dreamer4594 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the lovely comment!
@AnthonyFairweather1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you again :-)
@dreamer459 Жыл бұрын
You are very welcome, thank you for watching. 🥰
@MrDavey2010 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful nostalgia! Thank you so much for sourcing & uploading.
@dreamer459 Жыл бұрын
@@MrDavey2010 You're most welcome, thank you for watching. 🥰
@danielwoodhouse5531 Жыл бұрын
These Bluff videos should come with a disclaimer...... "Any resemblance to Would I lie to you will be totally frowned upon"😊
@PetroicaRodinogaster264 Жыл бұрын
Disclaimer…what are you on about? Apart from the fact these were made decades before WILTY…the similarity is very tenuous, as the format of 3 people x two teams is the only commonality. You need to brush up on your attempt at humour…it is deplorable.
@markandresen19 ай бұрын
Ron Goodwin - the great tv and film composer.
@gerrynicol39513 ай бұрын
Is that pauline collins.
@charlesdudgeon632614 күн бұрын
Interesting that no one knew what Zinfandel was. I watched another show where the word was "sasquatch". Seems that some obscure words become more well-known over time. Great TV.
@Pythagoras_was_right3 ай бұрын
I love that none of these cultured people knew what Zinfandel was in 1974 :)
@adam_meek9 ай бұрын
RIP Patricia Brake
@paulsawtell39919 ай бұрын
Really lovely to see these again which I saw back in the early 1970s. This isn't a criticism at all but it is a pity the quality is not a little better? Am I allowed to ask the source of these? I will understand if such details are sensitive!
@dreamer4599 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, unfortunately the quality is because these programmes have never been on DVD or VHS, I've been having them in my collection for some time. 🥰
@danmcdaid3 ай бұрын
Ron Goodwin has the look of a doomed scientist in a Pertwee Doctor Who
@papalaz44442443 ай бұрын
No idea who Nina is but I am now huge fan lol
@PetroicaRodinogaster264 Жыл бұрын
*Hoon* has another meaning (at least in Australia) …it means a young man or men (usually teens in a group) who drive their cars up and down streets in a loud and obnoxious manner, annoying residents but amusing their friends. eg: *He’s just a hoon* … *or they had an accident because they were hooning around.* Occasionally the term can be applied to just the unsociable behaviour of teen boys in a group even without cars. *They came into the shop and began hooning around and being a nuisance.*
@dimitargueorguiev9088 Жыл бұрын
That is not Henrietta Tiarks -> it is Beryl Gray
@dreamer459 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. I just checked. IMDB was wrong here. Henrietta Tiarks is in the following episode. Made the corrections.
@dimitargueorguiev9088 Жыл бұрын
Glad to be of help.@@dreamer459
@flowerbedmusic2674Ай бұрын
I have fond memories of this like all the others but, having revisited this for a few hours now, I'm also gasping to hear an accent from anyone outside of the Home Counties. Everyone is so frightfully, awfully and terribly posh. Of course this is how the BBC was for many decades with 95% of the UK not represented. I thought the BBC was fantastic in the 1970s but actually it did do a disservice by creating an impression to the rest of the world that this is how anyone from Britain talks...simply because there's no variety to what we're hearing. On reflection this was a huge mistake. I'm also conscious of this as currently I'm watching a lot of documentaries from the 1950s made by a movement who called themselves 'Free Cinema". Lindsay Anderson was extremely vocal at the time about how the dominance of South East-centric locations, people and events in British cinema during the post-war period (prior to 1961, of course) was a complete misrepresentation of how life was for most of Britain. They tried to re-address it by making documentaries in Edinburgh, Yorkshire and Ireland....budget-allowing, of course. As we can see with Call By Bluff, by 1974, we STILL had a long way to go!!
@dreamer459Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the interesting feedback! Not being a native English speaker, I can't have an opinion on this, but I just love the posh accents and I believe many actors weren't posh at all, they were working class, like Michael Jayston or Tom Baker, for example, only their voices and accents were patrician and posh, after so many years in the theatre. ❤
@fkd1963Ай бұрын
Boy do you love to criticize.
@exaudi33Ай бұрын
"With 95% of the UK not represented?" You know that for a fact, do you? The Beeb, and life, were so much better back then. I'll take this lot over today's woke morons, with indecipherable English.