![]() It's their third time here with us, we can't keep you away can we? Ha, ha, and over here is Mr Hilter. In the lounge are sitting another bourgeois couple Mr and Mrs Phillips.Ĭome on in, Mr and Mrs Johnson, oh this is Mr and Mrs Phillips. (following her into the lounge) Very nice. Well come on in the lounge, I'm just going to serve afternoon tea. Well, wouldn't say no, not if it's warm and wet. Then we took the coast road through Williton and got all the Taunton traffic on the A358 from Crowcombe and Stogumber. They could get another six feet.knock down that hospital. Yes well just by the intersection, there where the A372 joins up, there's plenty of room to widen it there, there's only grass verges. Ye, but this time we decided to risk it because they're always saying they're going to widen it there. We usually come round on the B3339 just before Bridgewater, you see. Then there was a three mile queue just before Bridgewater on the A38. Well, we usually reckon on five and a half hours and it took us six hours and fifty-three minutes, with the twenty-five minute stop at Frampton Cottrell to stretch our legs, only we had to wait half an hour to get onto the M5 at Droitwich. ![]() Well you must be tired, it's a long way from Coventry, isn't it? Well come on in, excuse me not shaking hands, I've just been putting a bit of lard on the cat's boil. Inside the boarding house, the landlady goes up to the front door and opens it. Mr and Mrs Johnson, a typical holidaying bourgeois couple walk up to the front door and ring the bell. SUPERIMPOSED CAPTION: 'A SMALL BOARDING HOUSE IN MINEHEAD, SOMERSET' Cut to signalbox as before.Ĭut to a small, tatty, little boarding house. After a few seconds the train goes into a tunnel. Mix to stock film of London-Brighton train journey in two minutes. where do we stand? Where do we stand? Where do we sit? Where do we come? Where do we go? What do we do? What do we say? What do we eat? What do we drink? What do we think? What do we do? Pull out to reveal professor still next to him. What is the solution, if any, to this problem? What can we do? What am I saying? Why am I sitting in this chair? Why am I on this programme? And what am I going to say next? Here to answer this is a professional cricketer. (he holds up signs saying 'so there') But the real question remains. It's an identical situation, we have with 'ship' and 'boat' (holds up signs saying 'ship' and 'boat') but not the same as we have with 'bow' and 'bough' (holds up signs), they're spelt differently, mean different things but sound the same. They're not spelt the same, but they mean the same. The word 'say' is the same as the word 'tell'. Professor, you've spent many years researching into things, what do you think?Ĭut to presenter, he talks even faster now. Pull out to reveal bearded professor sitting next to presenter. Telling figures indeed, but what do they mean to you, what do they mean to me, what do they mean to the average man in the street? With me now is Professor Tiddles of Leeds University. This column represents 28% of the population, and this column represents 43% of the population. In this graph, this column represents 23% of the population. Is there still time to confront it, let alone solve it, or is it too late? What are the figures, what are the facts, what do people mean when they talk about things? Alexander Hardacre of the Economic Affairs Bureau.Ĭut to equally intense pundit in front of a graph with three different coloured columns with percentages at the top. Tonight 'Spectrum' looks at one of the major problems in the world today - that old vexed question of what is going on. First Man has hands in the air jubilantly.ĪNIMATION (possibly incorporating falling) which leads us ingeniously into: A presenter at a desk. arrgghhh (splat)Ĭut to film of man falling out of window.Ĭut back to set. I have worked all my life in such a building and have never once. (shakes they look at the window) Come on Parky.ĭear Sir, I am writing to complain about that sketch about people failing out of a high building. He was a good, good, er, golfer, Wilkins. Look! Two people (another falls) three people have just fallen past that window. Two people have just fallen out of that window to their almost certain death. As he starts to work again another body goes hurtling past the window. They are both working busily.Īfter a pause a body drops past the window. Every so often a body falls past the window. It appears that they are quite high up in a large office building. Two people seated opposite each other at a desk. He wrestles it for 3.48 seconds.ĬAPTION: 'BUT IN AN OFFICE OFF THE GOSWELL ROAD' A signalman (Terry J) stands by the signal levers. Monty Python's Flying Circus: Just the Words - Episode 12 Episode TwelveĬolour code: John Cleese - Michael Palin - Eric Idle - Graham Chapman - Terry Jones - Terry Gilliam - Carol ClevelandĬAPTION: 'A SIGNALBOX SOMEWHERE NEAR HOVE'
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