first showing of Grail was the night before this interview :O
@2000jago10 күн бұрын
How does one get the job as TV presenter without being able to pronounce the letter "r"...?
@jamesrowden30311 күн бұрын
Pissed as a fart. Just shows how unfunny alcoholics are when they are pissed.
@johnm.wenitongpemulwuyweeatung11 күн бұрын
"Life" #101 Propa deadly this fella & his mind... :)
@jaycee33011 күн бұрын
9:15 Ah, yes, the venerable pub game of "Shitties".
@user-pg7my9xn9i14 күн бұрын
I was at this concert back in 1976. They played The City Center in New York for about a week. Had front row seats. It was hysterical. So many Python fans came dressed in character. The Pythons and Neil Innes (who also performed with them at the shows they did) were all extremely friendly and signed autographs , took pictures and talked with fans at the stage door before and after the shows.
@thomasd473816 күн бұрын
good lord the audience is so distracting
@johnjoestar436616 күн бұрын
1:33 lol you can hear terrys real voice slip through here
@johnjoestar436616 күн бұрын
What year are these animations from?
@BaiiGandu16 күн бұрын
Jake paul
@HerrSchytt16 күн бұрын
A sit down philosopher, and a mighty interesting one, he could have been working for the ministry of unsilly opinions, I would have vote for him.
@bobbydazzler178020 күн бұрын
Rare moments where Graham, although perpetually pissed, didn’t have a lit pipe glued to his gob.
@chadstingray553622 күн бұрын
Graham Chapman was a “regular” on “The Big Show”, largely performing 2 man sketches with fellow Brit Joe Brown. Most of the material was from “At Last The 1948 Show”. There is also a version of the Bookshop Sketch featuring John Cleese & Connie Booth, found on the album “The Mermaid Frolics”. ( An early Amnesty International stage show.)
@watermelonineasterhay22 күн бұрын
Would you like to ask me if im a lesbian? 😂😂
@SageWon-1aussie26 күн бұрын
Is this a Molly interview?
@Bananabomb-ww5hvАй бұрын
8:57 its been a while since Duran Duran were associated with under 25s LOL
@dancingdan1994Ай бұрын
How he is just smiling
@tomlewis7898Ай бұрын
what a beautiful person inside and out
@Ingens_ScherzАй бұрын
This is obviously before GC gave up the booze in the late 70s. At this point, he was drinking three bottles of gin a day, or more. So the possibility that he wasn't much more than completely wasted in this interview is low. I very much doubt he even remembered it. Melly is very nice though. But that's probably unsurprising because he is the man who admitted that during his time at Stowe School, when he was a new and small the senior boys (and I think I'm quoting), "buggered me senseless...taught me a thing or two about life." Ideal interviewer for this GC incarnation.
@johnbarroll1120Ай бұрын
clever, but Norwegians are NOT lightweights.
@jorgefiguerola12392 ай бұрын
There was a time some 40 years ago as a boy gradually absorbing all that PBS had to offer. Seems to have gone from beyond to understood to irritating to watch because of lack of preparation and research. So much praise in these comments for a Nebraska boy that seemed so desperate to be respected by the New England intelligentsia.
@ukpeacheater2 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this when it was first broadcast on TV, it must have been in the 80s I suspect as dear old Graham passed in 1989, very happy to have found it here. It seems that Ant and Dec have resurrected the "Grunties" game (at 9:00min here) on their Saturday Night show, calling it "in for a pound" and using a 1-pound coin.
@misterrea8612 ай бұрын
the opening skit is just the Four Welshman
@TheAlmightyAss2 ай бұрын
As always, the issue is with over-processing and greed, not overpopulation, but he is obviously spot on with most of this. Still depressingly relevant now. Spending life reading and playing snooker sounds quite right.
@chrisguitarpiano13482 ай бұрын
I have a Python rarity - on the Contractual album cassettes, there's an announcement for a tiresome gap at the end of side A. Not very exciting, but a rarity nonetheless. Is there a way I can send it to you to upload? Otherwise I can just upload it.
@garetcrossman66262 ай бұрын
I almost never looked at these comments because i thought most of them would make reference to the height difference, which i find cheap and pathetic. (I'm talking about the difference of well over a foot, perhaps a foot and a half.) You get that sort of thing so often-the moment the host shakes hands with the guest eclipses the hour-long talk that follows. Surprisingly, there's no mention whatsoever of the diminutive Cavett looking like a boy being taken to his first day at school by his dad. My faith in humanity has been restored.
@victorpatrick28122 ай бұрын
Ben Elton Dad was a science teacher use to Teach mi mate mum Ruth maney year ago she 80years old strang she became a science teacher to
@scarpin802 ай бұрын
He died of AIDS
@w8m4n16 күн бұрын
No, he didn't
@ArdentePatience2 ай бұрын
Well we all know where all this social engineering manifesto led us to. Denouncing opinions to impose opinions.
@bkm11042 ай бұрын
테리 길리엄
@ChristopherLightfoot-zu3kb2 ай бұрын
This looks like the jacket he wore in the Sir Edward Ross (Eddy Baby) Sketch 😂😂😂
@stejer2112 ай бұрын
Can we all agree that not everything John Cleese has produced is hilariously funny? And that Norwegians have a rather lame sense of humor? Well, in 1979 anyway...
@adrianc12642 ай бұрын
something tragic about this
@Stephen_Strange2 ай бұрын
Many a true word, spoken in jest...
@johnbarroll11202 ай бұрын
absolutely stark raving loonies tunes
@Stephen_Strange2 ай бұрын
We thank the late Graham Chapman for being himself, and for keeping a copy of this One off GEM.
@andressolo3 ай бұрын
I have hardly ever heard someone talking so much just as I would (and do) in so many aspects. But I was born in 1978, which makes it an even more amazing event for me to watch this.
@jimmaughan18983 ай бұрын
Death sucks.
@user-hf4uz8tk3k3 ай бұрын
3:15 😂😂😂
@user-hf4uz8tk3k3 ай бұрын
4:44
@christopheraaron82993 ай бұрын
Interesting that it has the Douglas Adams connection AND Simon Jones. Jones is one of my favorite British actors.
@Livinglife5953 ай бұрын
I don’t know what year this was but he was very courageous to speak out like he did about his homosexuality
@vickistokes45452 ай бұрын
1972
@andressolo3 ай бұрын
I lived in London for 10 years. Fortunately, I was living in Hackney and there were few pure-bred-Brits, who are usually hard to stand (not their fault, it's just a cultural thing, this with hypocrisy brought to the highest level). But one thing I always enjoyed and admired was English humour. And not just professionals', it's also cultural. Most Brits are great actors (needed for the hypocrisy bit) and comedians (needed in order to put up with the way they interact). I am a comedian myself, but I don't like almost any comedians... apart from Monty Python, Fry & Lawrie, Eddie Izzard (his early years)... and myself. Cheers and thanks for this gem!
@TheMontyPythonMuseumOnline3 ай бұрын
This is at least an interesting reply. But I don't quite know what to make of it. Is there a country with the perfect inhabitants, anywhere on earth? The longer you live there the more you start to notice the downside of anybody and anything.
@andressolo3 ай бұрын
@@TheMontyPythonMuseumOnline Swedish people smile too much. Fins just the opposite. Italians are sexist and eat pasta every day. Germans speak German far too often. French people say "hate" the same way they say "ate", so they've eaten so much hate that I hate them. Spaniards live mostly in Spain, which makes it more difficult to go around without seeing people. The Portuguese try to speak Galician, but they can't, and it's hard to understand them. They all deserve a slap in the wrist, I mean just to say the least (just because it rhymes). But the Brits... ouch! I guess it's just because that British culture collides abruptly with my personality. They consider me rude because I'm too honest. I consider them a bunch of hypocritical, britocentric, ignorant , supremacist, xenophobic, classist and somethingelsish phucs. I actually call them Britophackas (the white Brit stereotype). However, generalising is always a mistake. I had two good English friends. One died some weeks ago. I have an English friend. And he is probably the least British Briton on earth (the dead one was kind of the same). So I may have some kind of allergy or something, that doesn't allow me to enjoy the "excuse meeeee" in a very harsh tone, with a smile and, as we see, very polite words. Just taking the piece, in case it's not obvious. Thanks for the upload, mate!
@andressolo3 ай бұрын
@@TheMontyPythonMuseumOnline Swedish people smile too much. Fins just the opposite. Italians are sexist and eat pasta every day. Germans speak German far too often. French people say "hate" the same way they say "ate", so they've eaten so much hate that I hate them. Spaniards live mostly in Spain, which makes it more difficult to go around without seeing people. The Portuguese try to speak Galician, but they can't, and it's hard to understand them. They all deserve a slap in the wrist, I mean, just to say the least (only because it rhymes). But the Brits... ouch! I guess it's just because that British culture collides abruptly with my personality. They consider me rude because I'm too honest. I consider them a bunch of hypocritical, britocentric , supremacist, xenophobic, classist and somethingelsish celery bunches . However, generalising is always a mistake. I had two good English friends. One died some weeks ago. So I have an English friend. And he is probably the least British Briton on earth (the dead one was kind of the same). So I may have some kind of allergy or something, that doesn't allow me to enjoy the "excuse meeeee" in a very harsh tone, with a smile and, as we see, very polite words. Just taking the piece, in case it's not obvious. Thanks for the upload, mate!
@briefbrief3 ай бұрын
thanks so much for this ❤ dear Graham my fave of all them loonies
@cookster10013 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this. This was better than some of the latter Python episodes
@nigelsouthworth55774 ай бұрын
Merci beaucoup. Vachement, je ne savais pas qu'il existait une version française
@Peteroranje4 ай бұрын
"When you've got a government in crisis they desperately seek around for populist issues to avoid the wider issues like the economy"....sounds familiar.