ZATennisFan So funny I had tears in my eyes! 😅😂🤣Almost spot on but not entirely accurate as you think: I read the Times, the ‘I’ and the FT but neither own nor run the country.😜
Zoë Castillo That was a reference to how Hitler seized power permanently. Blamed the actions of a mentally unstable person on the Communists (he tried setting the Reichstag ablaze) and socialists, outlawed their parties - and then was unopposed in parliament where he made everyone confirm him as Führer.
I like how they put some balance into the characters so Hacker wasn't always a bumbling fool and Sir Humphrey the savvy one. Of course a politician knows the newspapers better!
Also, everybody has had a new boss at work with a 100 brilliant ideas for fixing everything that everybody knows isn't broken. I can definitely relate to both of them. That's great writing.
The other day, I saw a Sun article that said "silly millennials argue Frankenstein's monster was not a monster, but a sympathetic character with feelings". Apparently no one told them that this is the actual point of Mary Shelley's book.
Did the article by any chance mention the OSP channel? It's very good and the people who run it actually read the books they discuss, unlike, apparently, the journalists who work at The Sun.
Paul Eddington should have gotten an award just for this scene. He not only nailed the delivery, he also did the best job of staying in character. The other two both nearly lost it. It makes sense that his character would know the most about the press. Hacker was an editor or publisher before going into politics. I believe the fictional publication was "Reform". You know just how timeless and lasting a series is when the humor is still relevant over thirty years after it was produced.
He had cancer throughout most of his career, I believe. He was initially diagnosed in his early 20s. He just carried on regardless without treatment (I think). After all, they do say that sometimes it's the treatment that kills you.
@@mattpollard86 He was starting to lose his hair, because one of the last times I saw him on tv in an interview, he'd lost his hair & his skin was 'patchy' for want of a better word!
I love it when Bernard gets the punch line. Derek Fowlds always pulled that deadpan off brilliantly. This trio are one of the finest comic teams of all time. Never a missed note.
Derek Fowlds will forever line in my memory for two things: One: this great punchline in Yes Minister. Two: Hissing the word ‘Greengrass!’ through gritted teeth in absolute contempt.
IF ONLY the same scriptwriters👏👏 could/WOULD update to a @UKLABOUR GOVERNMENT………..EVEN A ONE-OFF ‘Special’ (if not entire series) might suffice ? 🤔💭💭💭😁😂🤣👍
At 1:35 you can see Nigel Hawthorne containing his laughter because he has the line that sets up Derek Fowlds' punchline and he knows what it is going to be. Lovely stuff.
The professors used to show clips of this series to us when we studied Political Science in University to illustrate concepts taught in the classroom. As relevent and hilarious now as ever. Total gem of a show.
One of the best-written (and delivered) bits in British sitcom history. Nigel Hawthorn obviously enjoyed it - you can see him desperately trying not to corpse after Paul Eddington delivers his lines.
When Fowlds delivers his punchline, you can see the reflection in the brass on the door of Hawthorn tossing his papers away. I guess he couldn't hold it in any longer. 😆
@@RexKarrs No it was scripted, but the lines were just so classic that both of them almost couldn't help themselves. The timing was perfect and they all knew it.
@@Cynwidion I wonder how many times they had to rehearse/shoot that bit before they could get reasonably close to getting through without completely breaking up (I think you're right, that Hawthorne is starting to break in anticipation, probably of both the line itself and what he could predict would be the audience reaction).
What was so good about Yes, Minister and subsequently Yes, Prime Minister was the writing and acting was so spectacularly good. All three actors clearly thoroughly enjoyed working with each other, and also crucially all 3 actors really enjoyed playing their respective given characters.
What writing ✍. What a cast. The 80's. What a decade for British comedy. RIP Paul Eddington, Derek Fowlds and Nigel Hawthorne. 💐. You are missed 😢 but never forgotten.
Wonderful comedy. List still relevant today. You can see Nigel and Derek trying to hold back the laughter. Nigel even says prime twice, before the killer joke by Derek. They don't make this standard of comedy's anymore. May these three legends rest in peace. Never forgotten.
every sitcom always hopes for a moment or episode where a routine is scripted and performed so perfectly that everyone remembers it even 40 years on. This is arguably the funniest and best remembered bit from Yes (Prime) Minister. For good reason.
That right there is pure British humor. Very reserved and understated like its an airplane flying below the radar and then out of nowhere ....amusing, amusing, amusing, bam zinger
The ‘who reads which British newspaper’ joke has been around since the 1960s. It was posted up on a lot of office noticeboards, and when fax machines arrived, it was one of the most-faxed inter-office memos. (Faxed humour was a precursor to social media.) The satirical comment wasn’t written for this show, but it has never been better delivered for a laugh.
Oh, it’s much older than that. Joseph Clayton Clark did a series of cartoons in the late 19th century that was typical readers of various newspapers. The Daily Mail reader, for instance, is a man in a padded cell.
@@cartertheunstoppablefaxmac902 In the early 1500s, the Spanish emperor Carlos Quinto (Carlos V), who lived in the Flemish city of Mechelen, exchanged memes/cartoons/jokes with a friend in the French royal family at the palace in Paris. I know this from a PhD thesis about mail delivery because the fastest mail delivery between Mechelen and Paris (315 kms) took three days in 1518 and longer than that by 2018.
"The Scots are grumbling about their independance". " EVERYONE wants their independance minister.......until they run out of money!" As relevant today as it was then.
The UK has actually always been unstable. For God's sake man, a huge chunk of it doesn't even want to BE in the UK, it's very polarized over Brexit etc. I could go on.
There's half of NI, 23% of wales(according to a uGov poll), at this point over 50% of scots...that must add up to around 5 million yes which is a lot. It's not just people: it's a lot of land and natural resources too.
Whenever I see this show I'm quite fascinated how well the role of Bernard Woolley is written. As a supporting actor his time on this show is limited. But when his time comes, his sentences are the cherry on the cake.
I don't think it's fair to characterize Bernard as a supporting character. Yes, the primary conflict is between Hacker and Humphrey, but Bernard is the their go-between, the one often caught in he middle, and the substitute for the audience in questioning what they say and do. His total screen time rivals the other two.
@@danieldickson8591 I'm actually suspicious that if you tallied it, especially after the first half of the first series where the amount of time Hacker is shown at home is greatly reduced, Bernard might have *the most* screentime, as he typically features in scenes as a duo or a trio, but scenes with only Hacker and Humphrey are relatively uncommon.
The genius that was Hawthorn and Eddington may have done the heavy lifting in YM/YPM but Fowlds held it together with so many beautifully delivered punchlines, some of the best ever in British Comedy . RIP Mr Derek.
@@cisium1184 Either that, or he just remembered that at the time, a woman did run the country - Margaret Thatcher - and that the punchline, which was aimed at the page three stunna could just as well work for her...
"Only a Civil Servant could have made that remark." Priceless! The best comedy/documentary series ever, in the English language (Who knows what other countries have produced? The French have some hilarious series). It's timeless.
I think Bernard is the most relatable, most identifiable, and also the most underrated character of the three. He is the sort of chap who genuinely means well but is also either unable, or unwilling to do something about it. His predicament as exclaimed by him in his own words, the exact line escapes me, but related, to grabbing the bull by its horns. Like someone genuinely stuck between a rock and a har d place.
When I was in law school, an Oxford-educated friend introduced me to this show. It was the highlight of my day to go home with him, grab a ruby and a pint, go to the flat, fire up the box, and watch Yes PM on the telly. Well, this is how he put it. I discovered that this show is perhaps the best written show I ever saw. It hold so true to the US, as well. Thank you, UK, for giving the world this show.
This episode aired on December 31, 1987. 37 years later, we still come back periodically to watch this particular scene. The writing (as well as delivery) truly has stood the test of time.
I love the way Nigel Hawthorne stops from laughing (just) but repeats the word "Prime" twice near the end before crossing it for Derek Fowlds to bang the punchline joyously into the net.
Decades later, this show teaches all of us the understanding of government dealings without boring us to sleep. May Sir humphrey and PM Hacker Rest In Peace
My late father's favourite show. He knew people in politics and they said the series was spot on about pretty much everything from the characters to the situations.
Notice in the last few seconds there’s a reflective pushbar on the door behind Bernard. See the script falling after his punchline? That’s one of the other two laughing his rear end off because that’s the first time he’s heard it delivered - they always did things in one take
@Shahid Khan Bit like Guardian and Daily Mirror then , bigger morons they are Love the Sun and they were right about Sniverpool Anything that winds lefties and Labour voters up is good with me #thesun
@@jesseberg3271 Absolutely it's aged. A modern comedy series couldn't get away with telling the truth *and* poking fun at people the way this show does. All of the best comedy was made between the 60s and 90s, everyone becomes too precious after that.
The daily Star is read by people who can't understand what the EU is and The metro is neither read by anyone but by people who do the crossword bored on a Bus or Train
SIMPLY ONE OF THE VERY BEST SATIRE/COMEDY SERIES EVER MADE. MY FAVOURITE SCENE IS WHEN THE PM IS MADE TO CHOOSE A BISHOP AND MEETS A VERY CYNICAL ANGLICAN ADVISER.
To find the vocabulary to describe the greatness of this show I would undoubtedly have to employ the services of Sir Humphrey. 😀 I believe the writers must have had within their possession a crystal ball that showed the future of politics. It is uncanny to say the least how politically relevant this Brit masterpiece is in today's world of politics.Thank you for the laughs but more importantly the education.Cheers.🙂
Brilliant and still relevant after so many years! I love how towards the end their all trying not to ruin the take by laughing. I doubt I'd be able to.
@TheSmithersy I don't think there are many of them. Most elites in this country own amounts of wealth you couldn't imagine. And the disparity is too high. There are many rich people in London. But those people aren't Liberal left voters. They're conservatives. I have a privately educated friend, he's a working class guy got in on a scholarship - all his rich friends are conservative. In short - You've been lied to by the Murdoch press/ Right-wing media.
@TheSmithersy "metropolitan liberal elites" is such a meaningless phrase now, it gets thrown around as a buzzphrase to make a point which doesn't exist...
TheSmithersy anyway, that’s wonderfully ironic, since the Tory mantra seems to be wealthy upper middle class (conservative) elites forcing the more left wing working class to do what they want
TheSmithersy oh god, ‘SJW’ another meaningless buzzword. Can you point out how vicious Tory austerity was ‘shouted down’? Or are these ‘left leaning SJWs’ the UN, when they criticised the thousands of poor and disabled people who died on Universal Credit due to Tory cuts? I’m not sure if you think criticising human rights abuses is a bit lefty...
As a 14 year old I had a crush on Bernard. As a 19 year old I had a crush on Humphrey. As a 25 year old I can only hope that I have acquired some sense. But it seems unlikely.
I always felt that was most unfair - what does his sexuality matter? He was paid to act, not sleep with anyone in particular. He was a great actor and played a blinding role in things such as "The Madness of King George", as well as Yes, Minister. And Demolition man, of course.
The reason why this joke works so well is because this show was G-rated, family-friendly viewing for the most part, so when you hear something that makes you do a double-take it works incredibly well. Same goes for the episode about the English channel tunnel where Hacker says "The president is not to bring that bitch with him!" It's actually a trick more tv writers should be aware of while they're writing scripts with overt crude humour.
Yes Minister/Prime Minister was always a sitcom with 3 main characters. Bernard was essential as the buffer between Jim and Sir Humphrey as well as a conduit of knowledge, whether received or given. Derek had so many good lines, and this may be the best of them. And to think, he used to work with his hand up a foxes arse!
Outstanding actors all. I remember an interview with Derek Fowlds where he talked about what a thrill it was to be able to sit in between Nigel Hawthorne and Paul Eddington while they tossed out these great lines. YM and YPM are wonderful shows. I wish American TV was half this clever.
This has to be one of the best comedies ever made. Whatever your political views, you've got to love the word play, the innuendos, and the pure simplicity of role acting. This show is definitely on my top ten ...
YM & YPM - the days when phones had cords & people read newspapers. Brilliantly written by Antony Jay & Jonathan Lynn, & superbly portrayed by Paul Eddington, Nigel Hawthorne, & Derek Fowlds, et alia.
Don't think its entirely "in character" on this occasion. Either they're improvising a bit here and Nigel's getting the giggles or he simply knows what's coming !
+Eugene Morice Then again Sir Humphrey was always fond of wit, his position made him have to conceal it but he would acknowledge it a little bit. A wry smile etc
Sir Humphrey stifles a smile and laugh as the PM describes the readership of various newspapers. Whether it’s planned or extemporaneous on Nigel Hawthorne’s part, I’m glad it remains.
I think Bernard's punchline is possibly the single funniest one-liner in the series.
ArcaneAzmadi You’ll get no argument from me on that!
And maybe the most accurate...
It was funny becouse this is such an uncharacteristic joke to the series. It was so surprising.
And some time we can see Sir.Humphrey with Sun in his hand make it even funnier XDDD
ZATennisFan So funny I had tears in my eyes! 😅😂🤣Almost spot on but not entirely accurate as you think: I read the Times, the ‘I’ and the FT but neither own nor run the country.😜
Still relevant decades later. Painfully, painfully, painfully relevant.
Yes... I'd even add scarefully and hideously relevant...
+AFGuidesHD Wait... Did the communists burn down the Reichstag again?
+GardEngebretsen I hope not, the Reichstag is a fantastic piece architecture.
Zoë Castillo That was a reference to how Hitler seized power permanently. Blamed the actions of a mentally unstable person on the Communists (he tried setting the Reichstag ablaze) and socialists, outlawed their parties - and then was unopposed in parliament where he made everyone confirm him as Führer.
GardEngebretsen I know :> I was just joking.
I learned so much about British society from this 108 second clip.
Admittedly I already knew that Sun readers were, well, like that.
Sun Reader's
is that an oxymoron
I like how they put some balance into the characters so Hacker wasn't always a bumbling fool and Sir Humphrey the savvy one. Of course a politician knows the newspapers better!
Indeed, one episode has Sir Humphrey say something unwise to a journalist --- and then Hacker has to pull him out of it.
Hacker was a journalist himself, before his political career.
Humphrey's home field was the bureaucracy, Hacker's was the media. Challenging either of them there rarely went well for the challenger.
Also, everybody has had a new boss at work with a 100 brilliant ideas for fixing everything that everybody knows isn't broken. I can definitely relate to both of them. That's great writing.
@@ThomasHenryHoran I'm pretty sure Humphrey knows everything is broken and wrong but just "frightfully well carried out"
The other day, I saw a Sun article that said "silly millennials argue Frankenstein's monster was not a monster, but a sympathetic character with feelings". Apparently no one told them that this is the actual point of Mary Shelley's book.
TheRenaissanceman65 I think
They just watched van helsing and got simpsthy offence
Did the article by any chance mention the OSP channel? It's very good and the people who run it actually read the books they discuss, unlike, apparently, the journalists who work at The Sun.
@Scooby Doo That's because it has big tits...
Dont't forget the big tits.
If I made Frankensteins monster I'd give it big tits.
But does the monster have big tits?
Paul Eddington should have gotten an award just for this scene. He not only nailed the delivery, he also did the best job of staying in character. The other two both nearly lost it. It makes sense that his character would know the most about the press. Hacker was an editor or publisher before going into politics. I believe the fictional publication was "Reform".
You know just how timeless and lasting a series is when the humor is still relevant over thirty years after it was produced.
And he had advanced cancer at the time - hence the layers of make up. Incredible.
He had cancer throughout most of his career, I believe. He was initially diagnosed in his early 20s. He just carried on regardless without treatment (I think). After all, they do say that sometimes it's the treatment that kills you.
It looks like he may have been reading his speech from notes on his desk, but if so, who could blame him?
John Cronin He got nominated for several BAFTAs for this... but Nigel kept winning!
@@mattpollard86 He was starting to lose his hair, because one of the last times I saw him on tv in an interview, he'd lost his hair & his skin was 'patchy' for want of a better word!
I love it when Bernard gets the punch line. Derek Fowlds always pulled that deadpan off brilliantly. This trio are one of the finest comic teams of all time. Never a missed note.
I love his "grief did I just say that aloud" expression in the reaction shot.
Bernard's irregular verbs are classics
Derek Fowlds will forever line in my memory for two things:
One: this great punchline in Yes Minister.
Two: Hissing the word ‘Greengrass!’ through gritted teeth in absolute contempt.
I know Bernard's line is coming, but it still cracks me up every time.
And the look on his face right is one of the great "Oh, my God-Did I just say that out _loud?_ " moments of all time
Perfect delivery.
IF ONLY the same scriptwriters👏👏 could/WOULD update to a @UKLABOUR GOVERNMENT………..EVEN A ONE-OFF ‘Special’ (if not entire series) might suffice ? 🤔💭💭💭😁😂🤣👍
At 1:35 you can see Nigel Hawthorne containing his laughter because he has the line that sets up Derek Fowlds' punchline and he knows what it is going to be. Lovely stuff.
The pm OWNING that scene all the way till the end......until Bernard stole the whole thing away.
Wooley always got the best lines
@@Sylvander1911 Given he had the fewest lines, it was sort of his job to be the straight man delivering the exclamation point at the end of a scene.
... and lowering his head to avoid being seen as about to laugh aloud himself! 😂
@@christinevickers1457 Every one of the actors was on the verge of laughter throughout the whole scene. They knew exactly how funny it was. XD
@@schroecat1 Give credit to Paul Eddington for staying in character throughout the whole exchange, even Bernard's punchline.
The professors used to show clips of this series to us when we studied Political Science in University to illustrate concepts taught in the classroom. As relevent and hilarious now as ever. Total gem of a show.
One of the best-written (and delivered) bits in British sitcom history. Nigel Hawthorn obviously enjoyed it - you can see him desperately trying not to corpse after Paul Eddington delivers his lines.
Paul's the only one not to break. Bernard looking down at his papers looks a lot like Derek trying to hide a laugh
When Fowlds delivers his punchline, you can see the reflection in the brass on the door of Hawthorn tossing his papers away. I guess he couldn't hold it in any longer. 😆
Nigel Hawthorne almost losing it there... :D
Cracking series and STILL as relevant...
+Chris Addison And Derek Fowlds does lose it, supposing from how he lowers his head.
I wonder if he didn't ad-lib that line, then a few tenths of a second later, realized what he'd said.
@@RexKarrs No it was scripted, but the lines were just so classic that both of them almost couldn't help themselves. The timing was perfect and they all knew it.
@@Cynwidion I wonder how many times they had to rehearse/shoot that bit before they could get reasonably close to getting through without completely breaking up (I think you're right, that Hawthorne is starting to break in anticipation, probably of both the line itself and what he could predict would be the audience reaction).
@@insertclevername4123 And uses the brush of his nose to pull himself back into the scene, as a true professional.
This is the kind of output that the BBC used to excel at. Brilliant at every level.
Distant past.
Whether the BBC will admit it or not, sitcoms like this, plus Doctor Who were the only real moneymakers they ever really had in the eighties.
RIP Derek; this show was a masterpiece and you were magnificent.
Basil read a poem at his funeral.
Yes minister and yes prime minister have to be one of the best satires ever broadcasted on British TV.
*on TV
David Wilson-Holmes Considering what I know of politics it sometimes comes across as a documentary more than a satire.
Or any other global tv for that matter!
Best writing of any show anytime ant place.
What makes you think they're satires?
Bernard's line finishes a wonderful build with an exquisite punchline. Still one of the highlights of such an underrated series.
I can't imagine anyone underrating it, unless they've never heard of it at all.
This series presented some of the best dialog every written for tv and was beautifully delivered by a great cast.
The look on Derek Fowldes' face: "Did I really just say that?!!"
This is just so good.
yea i found it interesting how he himself doesn't believe what came out of his mouth
@@ariavachier-lagravech.6910 Dude they are actors
Basil would never believe it of Mr Derek.
"In my out-loud voice?"
What was so good about Yes, Minister and subsequently Yes, Prime Minister was the writing and acting was so spectacularly good. All three actors clearly thoroughly enjoyed working with each other, and also crucially all 3 actors really enjoyed playing their respective given characters.
It was that rare entertainment alchemy, the perfect conjunction of premise, writing, and cast.
I absolutely love it how Sir Nigel Hawthorne almost cracks up after the newspaper monologue.
What writing ✍. What a cast. The 80's. What a decade for British comedy. RIP Paul Eddington, Derek Fowlds and Nigel Hawthorne. 💐. You are missed 😢 but never forgotten.
Wonderful comedy. List still relevant today. You can see Nigel and Derek trying to hold back the laughter. Nigel even says prime twice, before the killer joke by Derek. They don't make this standard of comedy's anymore. May these three legends rest in peace. Never forgotten.
every sitcom always hopes for a moment or episode where a routine is scripted and performed so perfectly that everyone remembers it even 40 years on. This is arguably the funniest and best remembered bit from Yes (Prime) Minister. For good reason.
Probably the finest political satire sitcom ever written and we Brits have written a few.
The other one for me is the reinforcements of good will line.
Just like the why Britain was in the common market episode
That right there is pure British humor. Very reserved and understated like its an airplane flying below the radar and then out of nowhere ....amusing, amusing, amusing, bam zinger
The ‘who reads which British newspaper’ joke has been around since the 1960s.
It was posted up on a lot of office noticeboards, and when fax machines arrived, it was one of the most-faxed inter-office memos.
(Faxed humour was a precursor to social media.)
The satirical comment wasn’t written for this show, but it has never been better delivered for a laugh.
Oh, it’s much older than that. Joseph Clayton Clark did a series of cartoons in the late 19th century that was typical readers of various newspapers. The Daily Mail reader, for instance, is a man in a padded cell.
@@GolumTR An accurate depiction to this day
People used to fax each other memes?! That's incredible! There really is nothing new under the sun
@@cartertheunstoppablefaxmac902 In the early 1500s, the Spanish emperor Carlos Quinto (Carlos V), who lived in the Flemish city of Mechelen, exchanged memes/cartoons/jokes with a friend in the French royal family at the palace in Paris. I know this from a PhD thesis about mail delivery because the fastest mail delivery between Mechelen and Paris (315 kms) took three days in 1518 and longer than that by 2018.
@@cartertheunstoppablefaxmac902 Except new pair of tits every day.
The calibre of dry wit here is brilliant, splendid scene gentlemen, simply splendid!
"The Scots are grumbling about their independance".
" EVERYONE wants their independance minister.......until they run out of money!"
As relevant today as it was then.
More so today.
randomguy8196 4 months and waiting
@ Randomguy, no. Why? Because lots of History and political science journals, books, and papers that's why.
The UK has actually always been unstable. For God's sake man, a huge chunk of it doesn't even want to BE in the UK, it's very polarized over Brexit etc. I could go on.
There's half of NI, 23% of wales(according to a uGov poll), at this point over 50% of scots...that must add up to around 5 million yes which is a lot. It's not just people: it's a lot of land and natural resources too.
Whenever I see this show I'm quite fascinated how well the role of Bernard Woolley is written. As a supporting actor his time on this show is limited. But when his time comes, his sentences are the cherry on the cake.
I don't think it's fair to characterize Bernard as a supporting character. Yes, the primary conflict is between Hacker and Humphrey, but Bernard is the their go-between, the one often caught in he middle, and the substitute for the audience in questioning what they say and do. His total screen time rivals the other two.
@@danieldickson8591 I'm actually suspicious that if you tallied it, especially after the first half of the first series where the amount of time Hacker is shown at home is greatly reduced, Bernard might have *the most* screentime, as he typically features in scenes as a duo or a trio, but scenes with only Hacker and Humphrey are relatively uncommon.
My favorite part is at 1:33 when Paul talks about the Daily Telegraph. Nigel tries not to laugh, but gives a smile like "that was funny."
A precious moment indeed
I thought that was trying to stifle a giggle at the line coming next.
I can confirm. I read The Guardian and I think I ought to run the country.
Morning Star reader here and I can confirm that I think the government of New Zealand should take control of the UK.
@@BethB90 and back then they thought it ought to be run by Russia!
@@si-5814 I'm fairly sure the previous comment was a joke.
@@clairenoon4070 I’m fairly sure it was a joke. I’m also fairly sure mine wasn’t.
@@si-5814 wasnt that the daily telegraph readers thinking Russia was actually the ruler.
The genius that was Hawthorn and Eddington may have done the heavy lifting in YM/YPM but Fowlds held it together with so many beautifully delivered punchlines, some of the best ever in British Comedy . RIP Mr Derek.
Bernard's "Did I really just say that?" look is the best.
Seems Bernard checks out Page 3 more often than he'd like to admit.
@@cisium1184 Either that, or he just remembered that at the time, a woman did run the country - Margaret Thatcher - and that the punchline, which was aimed at the page three stunna could just as well work for her...
Only just heard, Derek Fowlds has passed away!
Now all these three talented Gentlemen have been taken from us.
Thank you Bernard.👏👏😥
Derek Fowlds.
@@thecommission6662 Yes, I know. I'll blame auto-correct.
I love how they spread the good lines around on this show.
"Only a Civil Servant could have made that remark." Priceless! The best comedy/documentary series ever, in the English language (Who knows what other countries have produced? The French have some hilarious series). It's timeless.
I think Bernard is the most relatable, most identifiable, and also the most underrated character of the three. He is the sort of chap who genuinely means well but is also either unable, or unwilling to do something about it. His predicament as exclaimed by him in his own words, the exact line escapes me, but related, to grabbing the bull by its horns. Like someone genuinely stuck between a rock and a har d place.
That exchange was bordeline autistic, better Sheldon Cooper :D
When I was in law school, an Oxford-educated friend introduced me to this show. It was the highlight of my day to go home with him, grab a ruby and a pint, go to the flat, fire up the box, and watch Yes PM on the telly. Well, this is how he put it.
I discovered that this show is perhaps the best written show I ever saw. It hold so true to the US, as well. Thank you, UK, for giving the world this show.
This episode aired on December 31, 1987. 37 years later, we still come back periodically to watch this particular scene. The writing (as well as delivery) truly has stood the test of time.
I love the way Nigel Hawthorne stops from laughing (just) but repeats the word "Prime" twice near the end before crossing it for Derek Fowlds to bang the punchline joyously into the net.
Decades later, this show teaches all of us the understanding of government dealings without boring us to sleep. May Sir humphrey and PM Hacker Rest In Peace
As well as Bernard!
Just the funniest but absolutely cuttingly true analysis of the British media
RIP Derek Fowlds. I loved you when I was a child watching Basil Brush and really enjoyed you in Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minister.
meanwhile the daily express readers want to resurrect Dianna so she can run the country.
The Independent readers have no official political bias, i readers are young and Metro readers are bored on train and bus journeys.
When they can't get a diana story there's always the latest weather scare story to fall back on. The weather will always be with us!
+ejcmoorhouse The Independent is read by people who don't know who runs the country but are sure they're doing it wrong.
JESK1985 I like that.
@@JESK-lx4js And let us not forget the independent is owned by KGB officer Alexander Lebedev.
As a Daily Telegraph reader, the writers got it spot on.
Nothing has changed in 40 years...Amazing.
We're leaving the EU/EEC. Now THAT's progress.
You could watch that scene over and over again and it never fades. Wonderful.
My late father's favourite show. He knew people in politics and they said the series was spot on about pretty much everything from the characters to the situations.
And that, that’s how you do comedy.
A classic sketch made even funnier because Nigel Hawthorne and Derek Fowlds were both on the absolute edge of corpsing.
“I decided to be decisive” 😂
Such an underrated line.
RIP Mr Derek Fowlds, lovely man and brilliant actor, thank you for all the happy memories.
Bernard is the quintessential comedy straight-man, done to perfection.
Wow...30 years latter and it is still accurate and topical comedy...
Now almost 40 years on it still holds true, but the sun no longer has page 3.
@@nathanparry8315that was the only bit I read. I just wish it had been in braille
This is still fresh and relevant comedy.
Still better than most comedies on TV today, no contest.
Notice in the last few seconds there’s a reflective pushbar on the door behind Bernard. See the script falling after his punchline? That’s one of the other two laughing his rear end off because that’s the first time he’s heard it delivered - they always did things in one take
'Sun reader' that famous oxymoron.
Sun looker-at-er.
It’s actually a contradictio in terminis since it consists of 2 words.
I didn't know you read photos.
@Shahid Khan Bit like Guardian and Daily Mirror then , bigger morons they are Love the Sun and they were right about Sniverpool Anything that winds lefties and Labour voters up is good with me #thesun
@Shahid Khan seems you are ok with being racist then ? is it cos im white
I love Bernard's delivery of that line. Brilliant :-D
If you watch carefully you can see a certain Sir Humphrey trying not to crack up in anticipation of the punchline.
Even the great Nigel Hawthorne almost corpses during this scene.
I just love the way Bernard occasionally butts in with some (maybe inappropriate!) but utterly hysterical quip.
I actually remember when this series run on TV.
Sadly it's still relevant.
And, of course hysterical funny.
RIP Derek Fowld’s. Thanks for one of the greatest lines ever.
This show hasn't aged, even after all these years. Comedy at its finest.
I'd say it's aged, it's just aged extremely well like a fine wine or cheese.
@@jesseberg3271 Absolutely it's aged. A modern comedy series couldn't get away with telling the truth *and* poking fun at people the way this show does. All of the best comedy was made between the 60s and 90s, everyone becomes too precious after that.
And the Express is read by people who think that the EU runs the country, but would prefer to let Princess Diana do it.
The daily Star is read by people who can't understand what the EU is and The metro is neither read by anyone but by people who do the crossword bored on a Bus or Train
SIMPLY ONE OF THE VERY BEST SATIRE/COMEDY SERIES EVER MADE. MY FAVOURITE SCENE IS WHEN THE PM IS MADE TO CHOOSE A BISHOP AND MEETS A VERY CYNICAL ANGLICAN ADVISER.
Spectacular from Nigel Hawthorne. He is on the very edge of corpsing there and holds it together at the last second.
I love the way Bernard looks so abashed.
Bernard's actor was about to break character and burst out laughing at the end xD
Can't blame him at all.
I always go back to this video when I'm trying to figure out which British newspapers are which.
Oh how painfully but brilliantly relevant this segment is 30+ years on!
To find the vocabulary to describe the greatness of this show I would undoubtedly have to employ the services of Sir Humphrey. 😀 I believe the writers must have had within their possession a crystal ball that showed the future of politics. It is uncanny to say the least how politically relevant this Brit masterpiece is in today's world of politics.Thank you for the laughs but more importantly the education.Cheers.🙂
Absolute full on unstoppable genius!
I know its coming but the last line always makes me laugh, its so well delivered.
This show was spot on, I wish I saw more of it when I lived in the UK.
Fowlds was able to provide one of the greatest punchlines in television history. He shall be missed.
I bought the whole set of all the series. Brilliant script, brilliant acting.
I don't know how many times I have seen this, it never fails to crack me up.
Brilliant and still relevant after so many years! I love how towards the end their all trying not to ruin the take by laughing. I doubt I'd be able to.
Love how Derek Fowlds couldn't keep a straight face at the end! :D
That has to be difficult in a comedy.
The overlooked gem here I think is ' _The Guardian_ is read by people who think they ought to run the country'. So many chips, so many shoulders.
@TheSmithersy I don't think there are many of them. Most elites in this country own amounts of wealth you couldn't imagine. And the disparity is too high. There are many rich people in London. But those people aren't Liberal left voters. They're conservatives.
I have a privately educated friend, he's a working class guy got in on a scholarship - all his rich friends are conservative.
In short - You've been lied to by the Murdoch press/ Right-wing media.
@TheSmithersy "metropolitan liberal elites" is such a meaningless phrase now, it gets thrown around as a buzzphrase to make a point which doesn't exist...
TheSmithersy then say something to that effect, instead of a phrase which was distorted and biased from the start, and has lost much of its meaning
TheSmithersy anyway, that’s wonderfully ironic, since the Tory mantra seems to be wealthy upper middle class (conservative) elites forcing the more left wing working class to do what they want
TheSmithersy oh god, ‘SJW’ another meaningless buzzword. Can you point out how vicious Tory austerity was ‘shouted down’? Or are these ‘left leaning SJWs’ the UN, when they criticised the thousands of poor and disabled people who died on Universal Credit due to Tory cuts? I’m not sure if you think criticising human rights abuses is a bit lefty...
1:38, there it is, one of the greatest lines in comedic history.
They literally couldn't keep a straight face! Comedy gold!
As a 14 year old I had a crush on Bernard. As a 19 year old I had a crush on Humphrey. As a 25 year old I can only hope that I have acquired some sense. But it seems unlikely.
I watched them as a teen too. Sir Nigel, you will be happy to know, was either outed or came out a good ten-plus years ago. So there's hope for you.
Both...he was outed (pretty much against his will, he was a VERY private person) and then he came out publicly when he couldn't avoid it.
I always felt that was most unfair - what does his sexuality matter? He was paid to act, not sleep with anyone in particular.
He was a great actor and played a blinding role in things such as "The Madness of King George", as well as Yes, Minister. And Demolition man, of course.
I met the man the character Sir Humphreys was satirizing. He is actually even smarter in real life.
"Sir Nigel" died in 2001. So unless you're into necrophilia...
The reason why this joke works so well is because this show was G-rated, family-friendly viewing for the most part, so when you hear something that makes you do a double-take it works incredibly well. Same goes for the episode about the English channel tunnel where Hacker says "The president is not to bring that bitch with him!" It's actually a trick more tv writers should be aware of while they're writing scripts with overt crude humour.
Yes Minister/Prime Minister was always a sitcom with 3 main characters.
Bernard was essential as the buffer between Jim and Sir Humphrey as well as a conduit of knowledge, whether received or given.
Derek had so many good lines, and this may be the best of them.
And to think, he used to work with his hand up a foxes arse!
This writing is pure gold😂
OMG. I grew up watching this sitcom. A masterpiece in its genre. If you ask me, these guys should be running the country.
What newspapers do you read then?
@@yakunatsnone
I remember watching this episode... I couldn't stop rolling on the floor laughing my heart out!!! 🤣🤣🤣
Possibly my favorite clip of one of my favorite shows ever
Outstanding actors all. I remember an interview with Derek Fowlds where he talked about what a thrill it was to be able to sit in between Nigel Hawthorne and Paul Eddington while they tossed out these great lines. YM and YPM are wonderful shows. I wish American TV was half this clever.
OMG, laughing out so loud.."the only way to understand the press is to remember they pander to their readers prejudices.."
This has to be one of the best comedies ever made. Whatever your political views, you've got to love the word play, the innuendos, and the pure simplicity of role acting.
This show is definitely on my top ten ...
Masterful timing, Bernard was always underrated in Yes, all three were comic geniuses.
I can go back to this sketch time and time again. Probably one of the funniest ever written imo
This one, "Don't tell him, Pike" and "what, with these feet?" from Porridge
Best joke of the whole series... and still accurate today!
Awesome humor of the Brits.
YM & YPM - the days when phones had cords & people read newspapers. Brilliantly written by Antony Jay & Jonathan Lynn, & superbly portrayed by Paul Eddington, Nigel Hawthorne, & Derek Fowlds, et alia.
+misterfunnybones
I'm sure that I saw Nigel Hawthorne suppressing a chuckle ! Stuff of its time I guess but lovely all the same !!
+Eugene Morice Yes I wonder if thats an in character suppress though as the actor would have known the lines already
Don't think its entirely "in character" on this occasion. Either they're improvising a bit here and Nigel's getting the giggles or he simply knows what's coming !
+Eugene Morice Then again Sir Humphrey was always fond of wit, his position made him have to conceal it but he would acknowledge it a little bit. A wry smile etc
Have a look at the bloopers from Star Trek TNG, they constantly have the giggles and cannot shot.
Sir Humphrey stifles a smile and laugh as the PM describes the readership of various newspapers. Whether it’s planned or extemporaneous on Nigel Hawthorne’s part, I’m glad it remains.
Excellent! What a perfect way to break down the customers of the print Media businesses!
This is the most accurate analysis of British papers I have ever heard!
gotta love yes Minister and yes Prime Minister.