As a fellow disabled young woman I salute Rosie on her new programme. A funny take on accessibility makes much more of an impact than a boring documentary of it. People absorb humour, they don't absorb boring documentaries, that are usually hosted by people that aren't disabled.
Some people in the comments have said they struggle to make out what she's saying, because English isn't their first language, or they're hard of hearing, so here's a transcript of everything Rosie said (except the shots of her inside the glider, because I couldn't make those out): 0:08 _"I'm disabled, I'm gay, and I'm a prick. The BBC _*_loves_*_ me."_ 0:44 _"Hello!"_ 0:47 _"I'm good! I'm sad that we can't--"_ 1:14 _"Yeah! But, basically, I wake up every day, I make people laugh, and then get paid for it. Of _*_course_*_ I'm happy! Honestly, I feel like I say it too much, but I am living my dream, um, and I never brought it on. I'm genuinely so happy, so yay!"_ 2:06 _"Yeah! So, it's a travel show, where I go around the country, seeing how accessible places are, and I'm pretty much, like, a tour guide for disabled people. So, it's called Mission: Accessible, but I'm very unhappy about that, because I wanted to call it Crip Advisor."_ 3:10 _"So, I think what they _*_did_*_ say was 'disabled,' 'holiday', 'accessible'. It sounds a bit dry. It sounds like_ "We're talking to Margaret, who's 80, in a wheelchair, and she wants to go on holiday to Banga." _It's like, wElL dOnE fOr YoU, mArGaReT, but I don't care."_ 3:53 _"Yeah! But you're _*_all_*_ thinking it!"_ 4:02 _"Yeah, yeah! oH, wAiT! And I always do!"_ 4:27 _"So, what _*_I_*_ wanted to do was tailor-make a holiday for a person's needs, and for their disability."_ 5:21 _"Before today, if you showed me a glider, and gone_ "Can a disabled person do that?", _absolutely not. It was _*_truly_*_ incredible."_ 6:02 _"Right. Okay. For the show, I would say_ "This is amazing," _because we did it with regard for cerebral palsy. We wanted to do something incredible, and it was, _*_but_*_ not for me. They assured me, said_ "Do you want to fly a glider, or do you want to stay on Earth and drink eight pints in the pub?" _Pub!"_ 6:59 _"So, it _*_was_*_ amazing, and what you didn't see there was it was dual controls. So, the pilot was in the back, but yet, sometimes she would say_ "It's over to you now, Rosie," _and I drove it... But I've got cerebral palsy! So, when _*_I_*_ drove it, the glider went like _*_that!_*_ And it was a windy day, so I went like _*_that!_*_ And, cos of Covid, we had to wear face masks. Um. Yeah, I was sick in my own face."_ 8:21 _"I am a professional!"_ 8:38 _"Sex Education is brilliant, because the on-screen talent is so diverse, and being an awkward, disabled teenager who secretly was a raging lesbian, I couldn't process all those ideas, especially because when I turned on the telly, there was nobody like me. So, for _*_years,_*_ I honestly thought_ "I'm not gay, I'm disabled." _Like, I could only fit one dIfFeReNt thing in my life. Um, and I hope that now we’re getting to a stage where you _*_do_*_ turn on telly and you _*_do_*_ see people of colour who are also gay, or disabled people who are also trans."_ 10:29 _"Yeah. So, I got cerebral palsy, which happened because when I was born, I didn't breathe for _*_fifteen minutes_*_ - which is a _*_long_*_ time not to breathe! Just-- Don't try it! But really, if you time it, it's such a small time for your _*_whole life_*_ to change. Because if those fifteen minutes had gone differently, I could be able-bodied, and I think the able-bodied version of me would be _*_completely_*_ different."_ 11:32 _"Yeah, yeah, and in the sitcom, we use that idea, but in my _*_real_*_ life, I've thought about her a lot, especially in my teenage life, where, yeah, sometimes I thought_ "It'd be *so* much easier. I wouldn't be judged. I could do this, I could do that." _But where I am right now, the only time I think about able-bodied Rosie is when I go_ "I'm so glad I'm not her." _Because I wouldn't be _*_here,_*_ I could be doing all the _*_exciting_*_ things I'm doing, and I don't think I'd be as happy. And I'm not religious, but I really, honestly think everything happens for a reason, and I'm meant to be disabled, and I'm proud of it."_
Hey - I just wanted to thank you and applaud you for making this transcript. I didn't have a hard time understanding Rosie, but, dang, that was some work you put in.
I'm so glad I finally found a video of Rosie with plenty of positive comments. I come from other clips of her and I was getting so sad and angry with the amount of people who will click on her videos just to hate on her. The hatred a disabled woman generates for simply *existing* is so heartbreaking and infuriating. Humanity should be better than this by now. Sorry, I needed to vent, lol.
Most the comments I come across on other videos don't "hate on her", but rather comment that they don't find her funny. That's a fair comment as she is a comedian.
I love Rosie, her stand-up is really raunchy and definitely intended to shock but you know she's doing it on purpose to challenge people's ideas of disabled ppl who are supposed to be naive and inspiring. And disabled people have a WAY better sense of humour than channel 4, I love Crip Advisor!!
Being a young, disabled lesbian, seeing Rosie has been absolutely life changing for me. My disability, while definitely sad and awful like disabilities usually are, isn’t something to always be sad about. Sure, I mourn the things I can’t do, but I wouldn’t be me as I am today without EDS and neurodivergence. And at times, yeah, it can be funny. Dislocating a shoulder on a bus is really painful, but it’s also HILARIOUS to think about, and Rosie’s sense of humor regarding disability has made me more conscious and comfortable with that. Shit happens, and what happens after that you have some element of control over, and laughing about it is always an option.
I completely agree with everything you said there. It's made me feel similarly about my disability. My best friend has EDS and I know you have to be superhuman to deal with it. I hope you continue to find peace with it x
I DO NOT consider this a problem for her, it will only illuminate people who cannot communicate with members of their own species, which my food does. ✌
Thank you so much Rosie you are brilliant. That remark about only feeling like you can one fit one difference in to your life, just helped me rebuild mine. I'm still new to my disability.
She reminds me of Geri on The Facts of Life (Geri was a female stand up comedian, with cerebral palsy... And she slayed!). You have to pay attention and be patient to get to the punchline... But what a payoff!!! 😂😂😂
Rosie jones is the most inspirational lady that i have ever seen and she teaches all of us that you should never judge anyone and that you can always overcome a disability and be one of the most inspirational people on earth thank you for that
I first seen her on. 8 out of 10 cats. And found her really great to listen to Yeah sometimes it can be a little hard to understand what she says but if you just pay a little bit more attention she is really funny
Fantastic, this looks like a great show I’ll have to look for it (I’m in Canada) you got to get a crip advisory app up and running we sooooo need it. 😋 thanks Rosy thanks Russell
I see people saying things like, "Should we feel sorry for Rosie as a young woman with a disability"? In the 21st Century, that's not the issue at hand. It's absolutely not patronizing to say that young people with disabilities are still, even in this day and age, trying to find acceptance in the world. Whatever our situation is, it is our job in life to be an ambassador for whatever tools we are given - no matter what makes us different, that's what every one of us wants.
Never mind Crip Advisor. I want to know more about the robot policy sex cult! Gotta love auto subtitles eh! Keep smashing it Rosie! She’s hilarious and such a ray of sunshine
Has anybody switched the subtitles on? I'm a bit hard of hearing so always have them on but these ones were a whole new level of comedy, reading about sex cults, rebels, robo policy and able bodied roses surprised me (I didn't hear Rosie mention any of those). Glad I'm not completely deaf or I might have been very confused. Hilarious though.
0:08 _"I'm disabled, I'm gay, and I'm a prick. The BBC _*_loves_*_ me."_ 0:44 _"Hello!"_ 0:47 _"I'm good! I'm sad that we can't--"_ 1:14 _"Yeah! But, basically, I wake up every day, I make people laugh, and then get paid for it. Of _*_course_*_ I'm happy! Honestly, I feel like I say it too much, but I am living my dream, um, and I never brought it on. I'm genuinely so happy, so yay!"_ 2:06 _"Yeah! So, it's a travel show, where I go around the country, seeing how accessible places are, and I'm pretty much, like, a tour guide for disabled people. So, it's called Mission: Accessible, but I'm very unhappy about that, because I wanted to call it Crip Advisor."_ 3:10 _"So, I think what they _*_did_*_ say was 'disabled,' 'holiday', 'accessible'. It sounds a bit dry. It sounds like_ "We're talking to Margaret, who's 80, in a wheelchair, and she wants to go on holiday to Banga." _It's like, wElL dOnE fOr YoU, mArGaReT, but I don't care."_ 3:53 _"Yeah! But you're _*_all_*_ thinking it!"_ 4:02 _"Yeah, yeah! oH, wAiT! And I always do!"_ 4:27 _"So, what _*_I_*_ wanted to do was tailor-make a holiday for a person's needs, and for their disability."_ 5:21 _"Before today, if you showed me a glider, and gone_ "Can a disabled person do that?", _absolutely not. It was _*_truly_*_ incredible."_ 6:02 _"Right. Okay. For the show, I would say_ "This is amazing," _because we did it with regard for cerebral palsy. We wanted to do something incredible, and it was, _*_but_*_ not for me. They assured me, said_ "Do you want to fly a glider, or do you want to stay on Earth and drink eight pints in the pub?" _Pub!"_ 6:59 _"So, it _*_was_*_ amazing, and what you didn't see there was it was dual controls. So, the pilot was in the back, but yet, sometimes she would say_ "It's over to you now, Rosie," _and I drove it... But I've got cerebral palsy! So, when _*_I_*_ drove it, the glider went like _*_that!_*_ And it was a windy day, so I went like _*_that!_*_ And, cos of Covid, we had to wear face masks. Um. Yeah, I was sick in my own face."_ 8:21 _"I am a professional!"_ 8:38 _"Sex Education is brilliant, because the on-screen talent is so diverse, and being an awkward, disabled teenager who secretly was a raging lesbian, I couldn't process all those ideas, especially because when I turned on the telly, there was nobody like me. So, for _*_years,_*_ I honestly thought_ "I'm not gay, I'm disabled." _Like, I could only fit one dIfFeReNt thing in my life. Um, and I hope that now we’re getting to a stage where you _*_do_*_ turn on telly and you _*_do_*_ see people of colour who are also gay, or disabled people who are also trans."_ 10:29 _"Yeah. So, I got cerebral palsy, which happened because when I was born, I didn't breathe for _*_fifteen minutes_*_ - which is a _*_long_*_ time not to breathe! Just-- Don't try it! But really, if you time it, it's such a small time for your _*_whole life_*_ to change. Because if those fifteen minutes had gone differently, I could be able-bodied, and I think the able-bodied version of me would be _*_completely_*_ different."_ 11:32 _"Yeah, yeah, and in the sitcom, we use that idea, but in my _*_real_*_ life, I've thought about her a lot, especially in my teenage life, where, yeah, sometimes I thought_ "It'd be *so* much easier. I wouldn't be judged. I could do this, I could do that." _But where I am right now, the only time I think about able-bodied Rosie is when I go_ "I'm so glad I'm not her." _Because I wouldn't be _*_here,_*_ I could be doing all the _*_exciting_*_ things I'm doing, and I don't think I'd be as happy. And I'm not religious, but I really, honestly think everything happens for a reason, and I'm meant to be disabled, and I'm proud of it."_
I feel quite ashamed because I truly have a difficult time understanding her speak, and "English is my second language" is just not a good enough excuse anymore. Is there anyway to see a transcript of this interview?
0:08 _"I'm disabled, I'm gay, and I'm a prick. The BBC _*_loves_*_ me."_ 0:44 _"Hello!"_ 0:47 _"I'm good! I'm sad that we can't--"_ 1:14 _"Yeah! But, basically, I wake up every day, I make people laugh, and then get paid for it. Of _*_course_*_ I'm happy! Honestly, I feel like I say it too much, but I am living my dream, um, and I never brought it on. I'm genuinely so happy, so yay!"_ 2:06 _"Yeah! So, it's a travel show, where I go around the country, seeing how accessible places are, and I'm pretty much, like, a tour guide for disabled people. So, it's called Mission: Accessible, but I'm very unhappy about that, because I wanted to call it Crip Advisor."_ 3:10 _"So, I think what they _*_did_*_ say was 'disabled,' 'holiday', 'accessible'. It sounds a bit dry. It sounds like_ "We're talking to Margaret, who's 80, in a wheelchair, and she wants to go on holiday to Banga." _It's like, wElL dOnE fOr YoU, mArGaReT, but I don't care."_ 3:53 _"Yeah! But you're _*_all_*_ thinking it!"_ 4:02 _"Yeah, yeah! oH, wAiT! And I always do!"_ 4:27 _"So, what _*_I_*_ wanted to do was tailor-make a holiday for a person's needs, and for their disability."_ 5:21 _"Before today, if you showed me a glider, and gone_ "Can a disabled person do that?", _absolutely not. It was _*_truly_*_ incredible."_ 6:02 _"Right. Okay. For the show, I would say_ "This is amazing," _because we did it with regard for cerebral palsy. We wanted to do something incredible, and it was, _*_but_*_ not for me. They assured me, said_ "Do you want to fly a glider, or do you want to stay on Earth and drink eight pints in the pub?" _Pub!"_ 6:59 _"So, it _*_was_*_ amazing, and what you didn't see there was it was dual controls. So, the pilot was in the back, but yet, sometimes she would say_ "It's over to you now, Rosie," _and I drove it... But I've got cerebral palsy! So, when _*_I_*_ drove it, the glider went like _*_that!_*_ And it was a windy day, so I went like _*_that!_*_ And, cos of Covid, we had to wear face masks. Um. Yeah, I was sick in my own face."_ 8:21 _"I am a professional!"_ 8:38 _"Sex Education is brilliant, because the on-screen talent is so diverse, and being an awkward, disabled teenager who secretly was a raging lesbian, I couldn't process all those ideas, especially because when I turned on the telly, there was nobody like me. So, for _*_years,_*_ I honestly thought_ "I'm not gay, I'm disabled." _Like, I could only fit one dIfFeReNt thing in my life. Um, and I hope that now we’re getting to a stage where you _*_do_*_ turn on telly and you _*_do_*_ see people of colour who are also gay, or disabled people who are also trans."_ 10:29 _"Yeah. So, I got cerebral palsy, which happened because when I was born, I didn't breathe for _*_fifteen minutes_*_ - which is a _*_long_*_ time not to breathe! Just-- Don't try it! But really, if you time it, it's such a small time for your _*_whole life_*_ to change. Because if those fifteen minutes had gone differently, I could be able-bodied, and I think the able-bodied version of me would be _*_completely_*_ different."_ 11:32 _"Yeah, yeah, and in the sitcom, we use that idea, but in my _*_real_*_ life, I've thought about her a lot, especially in my teenage life, where, yeah, sometimes I thought_ "It'd be *so* much easier. I wouldn't be judged. I could do this, I could do that." _But where I am right now, the only time I think about able-bodied Rosie is when I go_ "I'm so glad I'm not her." _Because I wouldn't be _*_here,_*_ I could be doing all the _*_exciting_*_ things I'm doing, and I don't think I'd be as happy. And I'm not religious, but I really, honestly think everything happens for a reason, and I'm meant to be disabled, and I'm proud of it."_
watching her comedy and others with cerebral palsy helps develop your understanding, but you have to be willing to learn to understand and have a good ear :)
Rosie Jones, Love u soo much as u simply inspire me to simply just B. Thank you for you life-song that fills me with smiles & joy. You're a "GOD" among us self sabotaging lot.
This needs subtitles. I'm American and not used to people who talk so slow and in a British accent. Then again, She might not be talking to me so it doesn't matter.
I don't like her comedy. Good on her. She is an amazing woman. But I don't dig her vibe. She is doing great things and opening conversations for us mobility challenged. Eps with accessibility. Her stand up isn't my thing.
Bots Every video that is either heartwarming or serious or even a commemoration has bots disliking it I remember a video on Antoine Hubert and so many bots disliked it and it’s sad they exist I can’t think of anyone who would dislike this Except keyboard warriors
Just coming back from the studio. Waited with my tickets with a number of other people in the rain for hours, only to be told we weren't getting in. Been left at white city by my plus one, who threw a wobbly and stomped off, so now I'm on a bus heading back to east London alone, deeply unimpressed. A total shit show.
Why? And like, please don't. I have cerebral palsy just like her. And there's no reason to pity us. Pity and ignorance from others are often bigger challenges than our actual disability
@@mariannafigueiredo9835 even with her disability she seems happier than most people You can tell from how she acts and talks that she seems happy in herself
As a fellow disabled young woman I salute Rosie on her new programme. A funny take on accessibility makes much more of an impact than a boring documentary of it. People absorb humour, they don't absorb boring documentaries, that are usually hosted by people that aren't disabled.
Same
My daughter is disabled and she adores Rosie. That is a heroic young woman who is bright and clever, and my daughter just drinks it all in.
Amazing
💖💖Rosie
Some people in the comments have said they struggle to make out what she's saying, because English isn't their first language, or they're hard of hearing, so here's a transcript of everything Rosie said (except the shots of her inside the glider, because I couldn't make those out):
0:08
_"I'm disabled, I'm gay, and I'm a prick. The BBC _*_loves_*_ me."_
0:44
_"Hello!"_
0:47
_"I'm good! I'm sad that we can't--"_
1:14
_"Yeah! But, basically, I wake up every day, I make people laugh, and then get paid for it. Of _*_course_*_ I'm happy! Honestly, I feel like I say it too much, but I am living my dream, um, and I never brought it on. I'm genuinely so happy, so yay!"_
2:06
_"Yeah! So, it's a travel show, where I go around the country, seeing how accessible places are, and I'm pretty much, like, a tour guide for disabled people. So, it's called Mission: Accessible, but I'm very unhappy about that, because I wanted to call it Crip Advisor."_
3:10
_"So, I think what they _*_did_*_ say was 'disabled,' 'holiday', 'accessible'. It sounds a bit dry. It sounds like_ "We're talking to Margaret, who's 80, in a wheelchair, and she wants to go on holiday to Banga." _It's like, wElL dOnE fOr YoU, mArGaReT, but I don't care."_
3:53
_"Yeah! But you're _*_all_*_ thinking it!"_
4:02
_"Yeah, yeah! oH, wAiT! And I always do!"_
4:27
_"So, what _*_I_*_ wanted to do was tailor-make a holiday for a person's needs, and for their disability."_
5:21
_"Before today, if you showed me a glider, and gone_ "Can a disabled person do that?", _absolutely not. It was _*_truly_*_ incredible."_
6:02
_"Right. Okay. For the show, I would say_ "This is amazing," _because we did it with regard for cerebral palsy. We wanted to do something incredible, and it was, _*_but_*_ not for me. They assured me, said_ "Do you want to fly a glider, or do you want to stay on Earth and drink eight pints in the pub?" _Pub!"_
6:59
_"So, it _*_was_*_ amazing, and what you didn't see there was it was dual controls. So, the pilot was in the back, but yet, sometimes she would say_ "It's over to you now, Rosie," _and I drove it... But I've got cerebral palsy! So, when _*_I_*_ drove it, the glider went like _*_that!_*_ And it was a windy day, so I went like _*_that!_*_ And, cos of Covid, we had to wear face masks. Um. Yeah, I was sick in my own face."_
8:21
_"I am a professional!"_
8:38
_"Sex Education is brilliant, because the on-screen talent is so diverse, and being an awkward, disabled teenager who secretly was a raging lesbian, I couldn't process all those ideas, especially because when I turned on the telly, there was nobody like me. So, for _*_years,_*_ I honestly thought_ "I'm not gay, I'm disabled." _Like, I could only fit one dIfFeReNt thing in my life. Um, and I hope that now we’re getting to a stage where you _*_do_*_ turn on telly and you _*_do_*_ see people of colour who are also gay, or disabled people who are also trans."_
10:29
_"Yeah. So, I got cerebral palsy, which happened because when I was born, I didn't breathe for _*_fifteen minutes_*_ - which is a _*_long_*_ time not to breathe! Just-- Don't try it! But really, if you time it, it's such a small time for your _*_whole life_*_ to change. Because if those fifteen minutes had gone differently, I could be able-bodied, and I think the able-bodied version of me would be _*_completely_*_ different."_
11:32
_"Yeah, yeah, and in the sitcom, we use that idea, but in my _*_real_*_ life, I've thought about her a lot, especially in my teenage life, where, yeah, sometimes I thought_ "It'd be *so* much easier. I wouldn't be judged. I could do this, I could do that." _But where I am right now, the only time I think about able-bodied Rosie is when I go_ "I'm so glad I'm not her." _Because I wouldn't be _*_here,_*_ I could be doing all the _*_exciting_*_ things I'm doing, and I don't think I'd be as happy. And I'm not religious, but I really, honestly think everything happens for a reason, and I'm meant to be disabled, and I'm proud of it."_
You are amazing, thank you!
you are a good samaritan helping bring her message to us
You sir, are a hero
Hey - I just wanted to thank you and applaud you for making this transcript. I didn't have a hard time understanding Rosie, but, dang, that was some work you put in.
You legend!
Literally adore Rosie... She is just the sweetest ever :D
Her "pub." delivery was hilarious 🤣 she's a hoot!
Power to Rosie.
I'm so glad I finally found a video of Rosie with plenty of positive comments.
I come from other clips of her and I was getting so sad and angry with the amount of people who will click on her videos just to hate on her. The hatred a disabled woman generates for simply *existing* is so heartbreaking and infuriating. Humanity should be better than this by now.
Sorry, I needed to vent, lol.
same here! i was also baffled by the negativity, thank you for formulating exactly how i feel
Good vent and totally understandable.
Most the comments I come across on other videos don't "hate on her", but rather comment that they don't find her funny. That's a fair comment as she is a comedian.
OR maybe they just don't find her funny.
Criticism isn't necessarily hate.
I love Rosie, her stand-up is really raunchy and definitely intended to shock but you know she's doing it on purpose to challenge people's ideas of disabled ppl who are supposed to be naive and inspiring. And disabled people have a WAY better sense of humour than channel 4, I love Crip Advisor!!
She's so awesome, it makes me proud of my disability
Being a young, disabled lesbian, seeing Rosie has been absolutely life changing for me. My disability, while definitely sad and awful like disabilities usually are, isn’t something to always be sad about. Sure, I mourn the things I can’t do, but I wouldn’t be me as I am today without EDS and neurodivergence. And at times, yeah, it can be funny. Dislocating a shoulder on a bus is really painful, but it’s also HILARIOUS to think about, and Rosie’s sense of humor regarding disability has made me more conscious and comfortable with that. Shit happens, and what happens after that you have some element of control over, and laughing about it is always an option.
I completely agree with everything you said there. It's made me feel similarly about my disability. My best friend has EDS and I know you have to be superhuman to deal with it. I hope you continue to find peace with it x
Rosie is an awesome human being, I'm also disabled and we need more positive role models like her
I would ignore covid rules to hug her, she so wholesome fam
I DO NOT consider this a problem for her, it will only illuminate people who cannot communicate with members of their own species, which my food does. ✌
@@jasonjacoby wtf u on about
@@jasonjacoby sorry I just dont understand what ur saying 🤣
@@edcrew4391 i am thinking ahead based on what I have learned about social media, in hopes that an AI delivers humanity from the dumbness.
@@jasonjacoby ah I get you know brother
Thank you so much Rosie you are brilliant. That remark about only feeling like you can one fit one difference in to your life, just helped me rebuild mine. I'm still new to my disability.
Rosie is so amazing. First time I saw the interview I got a little emotional. People like this are a real inspiration to me. :)
She reminds me of Geri on The Facts of Life (Geri was a female stand up comedian, with cerebral palsy... And she slayed!). You have to pay attention and be patient to get to the punchline... But what a payoff!!! 😂😂😂
This young lady is a treasure. ☺
I have to remember where the like button is, I have been corrupted by twitter.
I’m really Glad we got to meet Rosie! Thanks again for this special treat!
Scary to think this interview is less time than she didn't breath when she was born 😮😮😮😮
Her demeanor and comedy makes me genuinely makes me so happy.
This is really inspiring, as a fellow disabled individual I’m so impressed.
love that she is out there doing it, glad that more people with disabilities are getting more opportunities
Rosie jones is the most inspirational lady that i have ever seen and she teaches all of us that you should never judge anyone and that you can always overcome a disability and be one of the most inspirational people on earth thank you for that
You know you're an interesting person when everyone stops to listen to you. Yes she talks a bit slowly, but its always worthwhile!
I first seen her on. 8 out of 10 cats. And found her really great to listen to
Yeah sometimes it can be a little hard to understand what she says but if you just pay a little bit more attention she is really funny
I, and every one of my mates who are also disabled, would’ve LOVED a programme called Crip Advisor!
Idgaf if she’s 10 years older than me I have the biggest crush on her. She is the funniest and sweetest angel I have ever seen 💖
Made me cry! I love her!!!!!
Crip Advisor 😂
They missed a trick not naming the show crip adviser as it would have suited rosie's humour.
I really hope Rosie finds love, she has so much to give and is very deserving of it. :)
Rosie is wonderful. I love her attitude, her humour and her honest bluntness.
She’s ace, I love Rosie 💗 funny as fuck and laughs at herself, god bless her
I first saw her in a clip a week or two ago... didn't know who she was. Wow! She's just the most upbeat, adorable person!
Fantastic, this looks like a great show I’ll have to look for it (I’m in Canada) you got to get a crip advisory app up and running we sooooo need it. 😋 thanks Rosy thanks Russell
Rosie is effing hilarious; I've watched Mission Accessible and Trip Hazard and howled throughout all of the episodes 🤣
I see people saying things like, "Should we feel sorry for Rosie as a young woman with a disability"? In the 21st Century, that's not the issue at hand. It's absolutely not patronizing to say that young people with disabilities are still, even in this day and age, trying to find acceptance in the world. Whatever our situation is, it is our job in life to be an ambassador for whatever tools we are given - no matter what makes us different, that's what every one of us wants.
Yes! Definitely
Great interview, genuine insight from a person who took life and put it on her terms. Inspiring. K
Rosie is like a little bit of sunshine in your veins. I love her.
love her 😊💕
Makes my day 😂😂
So excited for this show - thanks for the heads up!
Up there with some real outstanding people , incredible person , thanks for the insights 💐🌹🌺
Rosie is a Great British Treasure, she makes me laugh my arse off...Love ya Rosie xx
Someone should really fix the subtitles on this video
They are really bad
'i can't be gay, i'm disabled' - literally what i thought as a teenager when i realised i like girls
Never mind Crip Advisor. I want to know more about the robot policy sex cult! Gotta love auto subtitles eh! Keep smashing it Rosie! She’s hilarious and such a ray of sunshine
Rosie is the BEST
Has anybody switched the subtitles on? I'm a bit hard of hearing so always have them on but these ones were a whole new level of comedy, reading about sex cults, rebels, robo policy and able bodied roses surprised me (I didn't hear Rosie mention any of those). Glad I'm not completely deaf or I might have been very confused. Hilarious though.
0:08
_"I'm disabled, I'm gay, and I'm a prick. The BBC _*_loves_*_ me."_
0:44
_"Hello!"_
0:47
_"I'm good! I'm sad that we can't--"_
1:14
_"Yeah! But, basically, I wake up every day, I make people laugh, and then get paid for it. Of _*_course_*_ I'm happy! Honestly, I feel like I say it too much, but I am living my dream, um, and I never brought it on. I'm genuinely so happy, so yay!"_
2:06
_"Yeah! So, it's a travel show, where I go around the country, seeing how accessible places are, and I'm pretty much, like, a tour guide for disabled people. So, it's called Mission: Accessible, but I'm very unhappy about that, because I wanted to call it Crip Advisor."_
3:10
_"So, I think what they _*_did_*_ say was 'disabled,' 'holiday', 'accessible'. It sounds a bit dry. It sounds like_ "We're talking to Margaret, who's 80, in a wheelchair, and she wants to go on holiday to Banga." _It's like, wElL dOnE fOr YoU, mArGaReT, but I don't care."_
3:53
_"Yeah! But you're _*_all_*_ thinking it!"_
4:02
_"Yeah, yeah! oH, wAiT! And I always do!"_
4:27
_"So, what _*_I_*_ wanted to do was tailor-make a holiday for a person's needs, and for their disability."_
5:21
_"Before today, if you showed me a glider, and gone_ "Can a disabled person do that?", _absolutely not. It was _*_truly_*_ incredible."_
6:02
_"Right. Okay. For the show, I would say_ "This is amazing," _because we did it with regard for cerebral palsy. We wanted to do something incredible, and it was, _*_but_*_ not for me. They assured me, said_ "Do you want to fly a glider, or do you want to stay on Earth and drink eight pints in the pub?" _Pub!"_
6:59
_"So, it _*_was_*_ amazing, and what you didn't see there was it was dual controls. So, the pilot was in the back, but yet, sometimes she would say_ "It's over to you now, Rosie," _and I drove it... But I've got cerebral palsy! So, when _*_I_*_ drove it, the glider went like _*_that!_*_ And it was a windy day, so I went like _*_that!_*_ And, cos of Covid, we had to wear face masks. Um. Yeah, I was sick in my own face."_
8:21
_"I am a professional!"_
8:38
_"Sex Education is brilliant, because the on-screen talent is so diverse, and being an awkward, disabled teenager who secretly was a raging lesbian, I couldn't process all those ideas, especially because when I turned on the telly, there was nobody like me. So, for _*_years,_*_ I honestly thought_ "I'm not gay, I'm disabled." _Like, I could only fit one dIfFeReNt thing in my life. Um, and I hope that now we’re getting to a stage where you _*_do_*_ turn on telly and you _*_do_*_ see people of colour who are also gay, or disabled people who are also trans."_
10:29
_"Yeah. So, I got cerebral palsy, which happened because when I was born, I didn't breathe for _*_fifteen minutes_*_ - which is a _*_long_*_ time not to breathe! Just-- Don't try it! But really, if you time it, it's such a small time for your _*_whole life_*_ to change. Because if those fifteen minutes had gone differently, I could be able-bodied, and I think the able-bodied version of me would be _*_completely_*_ different."_
11:32
_"Yeah, yeah, and in the sitcom, we use that idea, but in my _*_real_*_ life, I've thought about her a lot, especially in my teenage life, where, yeah, sometimes I thought_ "It'd be *so* much easier. I wouldn't be judged. I could do this, I could do that." _But where I am right now, the only time I think about able-bodied Rosie is when I go_ "I'm so glad I'm not her." _Because I wouldn't be _*_here,_*_ I could be doing all the _*_exciting_*_ things I'm doing, and I don't think I'd be as happy. And I'm not religious, but I really, honestly think everything happens for a reason, and I'm meant to be disabled, and I'm proud of it."_
Rosie Jones.... just... WOW!!!
I love Rosie Jones
Love where we are headed....
The subtitles were doing well for a while but they do go quite wayward sometimes. Hey Rosie check it out and use it as more material 😀.
The opening comment about the box-ticking BBC is spot on, unfortunately.
I have MS as my disability and I find this toe-curling.
She's brilliant
She’s brilliant 😁👌
I feel quite ashamed because I truly have a difficult time understanding her speak, and "English is my second language" is just not a good enough excuse anymore. Is there anyway to see a transcript of this interview?
Unfortunately I couldn't find a transcript either, but if you put the video on 1.5 speed, it may help
I use closed captions and they help me cos they're accurate most of the time
0:08
_"I'm disabled, I'm gay, and I'm a prick. The BBC _*_loves_*_ me."_
0:44
_"Hello!"_
0:47
_"I'm good! I'm sad that we can't--"_
1:14
_"Yeah! But, basically, I wake up every day, I make people laugh, and then get paid for it. Of _*_course_*_ I'm happy! Honestly, I feel like I say it too much, but I am living my dream, um, and I never brought it on. I'm genuinely so happy, so yay!"_
2:06
_"Yeah! So, it's a travel show, where I go around the country, seeing how accessible places are, and I'm pretty much, like, a tour guide for disabled people. So, it's called Mission: Accessible, but I'm very unhappy about that, because I wanted to call it Crip Advisor."_
3:10
_"So, I think what they _*_did_*_ say was 'disabled,' 'holiday', 'accessible'. It sounds a bit dry. It sounds like_ "We're talking to Margaret, who's 80, in a wheelchair, and she wants to go on holiday to Banga." _It's like, wElL dOnE fOr YoU, mArGaReT, but I don't care."_
3:53
_"Yeah! But you're _*_all_*_ thinking it!"_
4:02
_"Yeah, yeah! oH, wAiT! And I always do!"_
4:27
_"So, what _*_I_*_ wanted to do was tailor-make a holiday for a person's needs, and for their disability."_
5:21
_"Before today, if you showed me a glider, and gone_ "Can a disabled person do that?", _absolutely not. It was _*_truly_*_ incredible."_
6:02
_"Right. Okay. For the show, I would say_ "This is amazing," _because we did it with regard for cerebral palsy. We wanted to do something incredible, and it was, _*_but_*_ not for me. They assured me, said_ "Do you want to fly a glider, or do you want to stay on Earth and drink eight pints in the pub?" _Pub!"_
6:59
_"So, it _*_was_*_ amazing, and what you didn't see there was it was dual controls. So, the pilot was in the back, but yet, sometimes she would say_ "It's over to you now, Rosie," _and I drove it... But I've got cerebral palsy! So, when _*_I_*_ drove it, the glider went like _*_that!_*_ And it was a windy day, so I went like _*_that!_*_ And, cos of Covid, we had to wear face masks. Um. Yeah, I was sick in my own face."_
8:21
_"I am a professional!"_
8:38
_"Sex Education is brilliant, because the on-screen talent is so diverse, and being an awkward, disabled teenager who secretly was a raging lesbian, I couldn't process all those ideas, especially because when I turned on the telly, there was nobody like me. So, for _*_years,_*_ I honestly thought_ "I'm not gay, I'm disabled." _Like, I could only fit one dIfFeReNt thing in my life. Um, and I hope that now we’re getting to a stage where you _*_do_*_ turn on telly and you _*_do_*_ see people of colour who are also gay, or disabled people who are also trans."_
10:29
_"Yeah. So, I got cerebral palsy, which happened because when I was born, I didn't breathe for _*_fifteen minutes_*_ - which is a _*_long_*_ time not to breathe! Just-- Don't try it! But really, if you time it, it's such a small time for your _*_whole life_*_ to change. Because if those fifteen minutes had gone differently, I could be able-bodied, and I think the able-bodied version of me would be _*_completely_*_ different."_
11:32
_"Yeah, yeah, and in the sitcom, we use that idea, but in my _*_real_*_ life, I've thought about her a lot, especially in my teenage life, where, yeah, sometimes I thought_ "It'd be *so* much easier. I wouldn't be judged. I could do this, I could do that." _But where I am right now, the only time I think about able-bodied Rosie is when I go_ "I'm so glad I'm not her." _Because I wouldn't be _*_here,_*_ I could be doing all the _*_exciting_*_ things I'm doing, and I don't think I'd be as happy. And I'm not religious, but I really, honestly think everything happens for a reason, and I'm meant to be disabled, and I'm proud of it."_
@@PerovNigma thank you dearly!
watching her comedy and others with cerebral palsy helps develop your understanding, but you have to be willing to learn to understand and have a good ear :)
Lol, that's brilliant! 😂👍🏻
Absolute fucking legend. Rosie is awesome!
What a queen. Love
aaaand she just got a new fan..amazing person :D
someone needs to fix the interlacing for this its horrible.
however that doesnt stop how great she is. how can anyone not love her
wdym?
@@isaac592 its more noticeable at 1:06 especially on a large screen. The lines on the video.
@@youngbutretro4228 I’m sorry I don’t understand what you mean, but I’m sure you make s great point!
Love Rosie, Love Russell 🤩...but the person writing the closed captions for this piece is taking the piss!!🤨
Best show
I live next-door to our City's hall here, in America. I am voting with this lady in mind.
i love how the close-captioning translates cerebal palsy to robot policy.
Rosie Jones, Love u soo much as u simply inspire me to simply just B. Thank you for you life-song that fills me with smiles & joy. You're a "GOD" among us self sabotaging lot.
💖💖💖
Representation 🤎
I love her😍
I like rosie, but my interest was peaked to watch her show when I found out acaster was in it
Genuine question here, what is it that Rosie Jones has?
Cerebral Palsy, she mentions it in the interview :)
7:30
A great comic talent
❤️❤️
She is as funny as a burned down orphanage. People only laugh because they have to.
Aww I’ve got cerebral palsy
Please don’t hate me. But my ADHD couldn’t stand Rosie talking so slow so I put it on double speed
I think Rosie would say go for it - that's another form of accessibility!
This needs subtitles. I'm American and not used to people who talk so slow and in a British accent. Then again, She might not be talking to me so it doesn't matter.
The irony of wanting to call the show Crip Advisor and Rosie is wearing a Blue Top...
🖤💜💙
Lady's rad!
Rosies fookin amazing proper funny disability or not
I don't like her comedy. Good on her. She is an amazing woman. But I don't dig her vibe. She is doing great things and opening conversations for us mobility challenged. Eps with accessibility. Her stand up isn't my thing.
Same but I respect her
And I love her story
How long will we have to pretend she is funny?
@Alle Warten Auf Das Licht How typically woke. Plead for tolerance but immediately.resorts to unnecessary hateful abuse. I feel sad for you.
@Alle Warten Auf Das Licht reported . Please do not contact me again in any way
Who dislikes this??
Bots
Every video that is either heartwarming or serious or even a commemoration has bots disliking it
I remember a video on Antoine Hubert and so many bots disliked it and it’s sad they exist
I can’t think of anyone who would dislike this
Except keyboard warriors
Great but as funny as not slipping on a banana skin.
why are they like hollograms
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
45 year old man crying alert! 45 year old man crying alert! 45 year old man crying alert! 45 year old man crying alert!
Why is she funny?
I feel sick
Nearly first idk
I watched this live 😄 much love, Love.
Shes clearly a lovely person but I find her as funny as a burning orphanage.Inspiring tho!
Third I think idl
Where's her carer hiding? She need to go back to her care home?
Don't be so insensitive.
You’re being cruel. Delete this please
Just coming back from the studio. Waited with my tickets with a number of other people in the rain for hours, only to be told we weren't getting in. Been left at white city by my plus one, who threw a wobbly and stomped off, so now I'm on a bus heading back to east London alone, deeply unimpressed. A total shit show.
I don't like you and I can't even specify as to the reason.
I feel sorry for her
Look how happy she looks
Why mate?
Why? And like, please don't. I have cerebral palsy just like her. And there's no reason to pity us. Pity and ignorance from others are often bigger challenges than our actual disability
@@mariannafigueiredo9835 even with her disability she seems happier than most people
You can tell from how she acts and talks that she seems happy in herself
@@jonathanguinan8248 I get your point and appreciate the sentiment, but I'd encourage you to rethink your wording
Crip Advisor? Like Snoop?