As Americans they may have missed the significance of 66 - the year England won the world cup, and Wembley - the stadium at which England play and won that world cup. The football world cup (soccer). of course.
Watching the snowman is an unofficial Christmas tradition in the UK. Love love love that Lindsey knows it and that Sophia has watched it and has been read it too ❤
Lindsey hit the nail on the head at about 7.50sec. " They are so memorable" . The entire point of an advert is to get people to remember the product. Make the advert funny or shocking and it gets remembered. Something which I think a lot of modern advertising companies these days have forgotten about.
I still remember adverts from back when I was only 4 or 5 years old.. I don't remember at all anything i used to do back then. I couldn't tell you if my parents taken me to the park or not.. But, some of those adverts, never leave..
@@pampennyworth I remember when, in the 80s and 90s, it was fine to always make the man the butt of the joke. Wasn't that 'woke'? What's your definition?
From girders? I thought it was made from old bubble gum scraped off the streets. And that colour...really natural looking. I won't touch it, and I live in Scotland.
Fanny also used to be a shortened version for Frances and I had an elderly relative as a child who was called Francis but we all used to call her Fan. There used to be a TV cook in the 60/70's called Fanny Craddock and her husband who sometimes would assist was called Johnny (a slang term for condom).
They also changed cousin Dick to Rick 😢 it’s a shame because children don’t think anything of these names. I’m a little concerned about changing older books, it’s a bit like changing history and sometimes it’s good to remember and discuss the differences.
The John Lewis Christmas ads are famous, and a lot of people like them, but personally I think they're all over-sentimental and mawkish. I do agree, you should look for collections of Christmas commercials in general. They've become a tradition, and people look forward to seeing each year's adverts. Every supermarket and most of the other big chains go all out every Christmas.
The Bear & The Hare for me - however if they do the John Lewis Xmas Ads - someone needs to make sure Lyndsey has a box of tissues at the ready! 🫣🤣 also - the McDonalds Forever Young Xmas advert was a tear jerker for me! Was so befitting of having a teenage son at the time and feeling like you’ve lost that “child bond” that you have 😢 but every now and then they do still show it! 🫶🏼
I met a Taiwanese girl whose English name was Fanny as knew it was a traditional name, and wondered why people laughed when they heard it. I politely explained, and she was horrified. She ended up adopting my Scottish name as her British one! Irn Bru adverts are legendary up here in Scotland. The Snowman ad has become like the Coke ad, we know it is almost Christmas when it airs on TV. There are two now, both show different areas of Scotland. 'Made in Scotland from Girders' was the slogan I remember from my teens.
Loraine Chase and the Campari advert. The Nicole Papa series of adverts it even had an advert with a countdown to the final advert in series as did Gold Blend Coffee ads. There was the Oxo family ads where you see them grow up and have grandkids.
The Cinzano adverts of the late 70's with Leonard Rossiter and Joan Collins, Cadburys Milk Tray Man ('All because the lady loves Milk Tray' ) adverts or Boddington Beers ('The Cream of Manchester')
The girls' name Fanny was popular back in Victorian times as it is a shortened form for Frances - one of Queen Victoria's daughters-in-law. It is also short for the popular Spanish name Estephania.
@@alanrickett2537 Possibly, although it could be another example in the tradition of giving a person's name as a euphemism for genitalia - e.g. "Dick", "Willy", "Joey" and "John Thomas" as nicknames for the penis.
I remember as a teenager reading one of the Enid Blyton Famous Five books "You have so much spunk, George". George was a girl. My late Mother said that even when she was a girl in the 1920's & 30's that the word 'spunk' had a very different meaning to what Enid Blyton had intended the word mean. Richard, UK
One of my favourite ads was the photographer at the zoo patiently waiting for the pandas to appear. Just as he takes a break and has a Kit Kat, the pandas come out and do a dance routine only to vanish again just as he finishes his break.
Irn Bru are still doing brilliant ads now. They've just released a few revolving around Scotland going to the euros(European football championships) and joking about how Scotlands hoping again 😂😂😂
@@reactingtomyroots any chance of doing some irish content.don't understand why you are so nervous about irish content.The riverdance video was probably one of your most popular reactions yet you have not revisited that topic as they are loads of videos on riverdance and lord of the dance and lindsay would probably love it.Whats stopping you
In Scotland it means you are taking your time or procrastinating, you're "fannying about" or being silly. But in England it is a slang term for female private parts.
@robertobrien5709 So Cadbury and Guinness are purely judged to be good, and are therefore successful, because some people rate their advertising highly?
"Fanny" became British slang for the female southern-district sometime in the 17th and 18th centuries as a derivation of "Veneris" - meaning "of Venus." John Cleland wrote a satirical and erotic novel in 1748 called "Fanny Hill" - the full name being a pun on "Mound of Venus".
@@Kari_B61exyeah here in Scotland they were on during the day aswell you always knew the new irn bru advert was out when the kids in school copied its content
You need to watch the old Tango ads from the UK. One of them started a slapping trend, and as far as i know they had to ban the ad because kids were slapping the shit out of each other and shouting ..... you've been Tango'd.
The ad was never banned, Rupert Howell (Tango ad exec) pulled it off the air, because a surgeon phoned him up and told him he'd performed an operation on a kid with a damaged eardrum, and when the surgeon asked the kid what happened, he said "I got Tango'd"
The Irn Bru adverts have been made for laughs for decades and they cover the 80s through to the 2010s. I've not met anyone called Fanny in years but when I was a kid I did know a couple of Fannys, today on the other hand I meet plenty of fannies😉🏴 in fact come to think of it most of our politicians are complete and utter fannies😂😂😂😂
Scotland is the only country where Coke is outsold by another soft drink - and that drink is Irn- Bru ! 🏴🏴🏴❤️❤️👍👍🏴🏴. Phenomenal!
Fanny has a long history as a name. I remember when they put Elizabeth Bennett on one of the pound notes in the UK. I think a lot of people appreciated the tribute but were still disappointed not to see a representation of Jane Austen's Fanny on the note instead. From Mansfield Park, you know.
If you want to check them out, the best UK ads in recent years are the John Lewis Christmas ads. Or going back to the 90s, the Tango adverts at least one of which was banned. They were blamed for starting the "happy slapping" craze.
I met her in real life, not a nice person But don't take my word for it, she was horrible to me, but just look at what she did to Gwen Troake She was also a bigamist, twice and left her two children to be raised by others
She was a bit of a dragon. I saw a play about her once and those poor assistants who followed after her husband Johnny's departure looked so frightened of her.
@@Spiklething My stepdad maintained Johnny Craddock's car and his yard was just up the road from their big house in Blackheath, London. We used to go there (my stepdad, Mum & me) for drinks ('cocktails before dinner' - that sort of thing, and crudités etc), but as I was just a youngster, I sat in the kitchen and ate round slices of spam - which I loved as a kid, and drank lemonade. Both Johnny and Fanny were nice to us...but then, Johnny liked my stepdad fixing his car, so wanted to keep us in side!! I was never aware of Fanny Craddock having a "not so nice" reputation...though she was definitely at least 'a tad weird'!! 🤔🏴❤️🇬🇧😏🖖
I remember the alleged Johnnie Craddock quote "May all your doughnuts turn out like Fanny's" 😂. Of course back then it didn't have the same connotation...
Enchanted wood books were originally from the 30s I believe. I know when I originally read them in the 80s, the girls in the edition I read, were called Bessie and Fanny.
They know we don't watch linear television anymore. In addition to mistrust over marketing tactics or scepticism over such practice. We have wised up as it were.
Adverts don’t work the same anyone due to streaming. Before with such few channels adverts were seen by high percentage of population. Now it costs more to advertise across more channels and few now watch adverts to make it worthwhile.
We in the UK love an advert that tells a story. One that just shouts "Here's our product that you need to buy!" is just so boring! One of the most well loved ad campaigns was the Gold Blend Coffee series that ran from 1987 - 1993. It was like a mini soap opera about a couple who met when she called round to her new neighbour to borrow some coffee for a dinner party, and then we see them gradually get to know each other through a sequence of coffee based moments - the sexual chemistry is high, but they never quite get it together (until the last ad in the series where they drive into the sunset together). They were so popular that, by the end, TV listings would flag up when a new ad was about to drop! They starred actors Anthony Head and Sharon Maughan. There are lots of YT videos of these ads.
Prescription drug commercials in the US always made me laugh - the 30 second ads that left me more qualified to suggest a course of treatment than the nonsense 7+ years of medical training that your family Doctor (GP) went through.
My favourite advert is still the one where the little girl goes into the shop to buy some chocolate and explains it's for her mum and to pay for it puts all her most precious buttons etc on the counter and finishes by putting her most treasured possession a tiny toy unicorn on the counter and the shopkeeper bless him gives her the chocolate and tells her to take her change and gives back the unicorn, she then goes outside and hands the bar to her mum and says Happy birthday mum. I've watched that Cadbury's ad for years and it still brings a tear to my eyes, if you ever get the chance watch it.
@@josiebridle1947 Well the reason the red telephone box disappears is because they used footage from the original advert th-cam.com/video/TfMt3HN8tuY/w-d-xo.html and just added NEW footage to the 200 years advert th-cam.com/video/2eO8VNjYqRM/w-d-xo.html . They also made a version for another country/language th-cam.com/video/XYejaGCjJl4/w-d-xo.html
Adverts dont work, they dont make people want to buy things, so the best anyone can hope for with adverts is to make them funny and memorable. Something alot of the UK adverts did very well in the 80s and 90s. So many little tunes come to mind. If i went out into the middle of any city centre and shouted at the top of my lungs "if you like alot of chocolate" i would get half the people around me shout the response. Response is "on your biscuit join our club"
@@Michael-u3j4g Maybe its just me then, but i have never seen an advert and thought, "Oh, i must get that". Not once have i brought anything because it was advertised. I cant remember the last time i saw a Pepsi advert, and yet their company makes billions every year. Could just be me, but im guessing im not the only one.
Adverts don't make you leap up and buy the product that instant. But they give the product a personality, an aura of emotions around it that make it appeal to its target audience. (Which may or may not include you.) Irn-Bru spends millions a year maintaining its cheeky Scottish image. The more similar the products, the more important advertising is in separating them from each other. Take energy drinks -- Red Bull and Monster will both give you a caffeine hit, but somebody who drinks one wouldn't be caught dead with the other.
@@robertadavies4236 I don't know about that, I know people who will drink both, BUT I remember when I first saw Red Bull as a teenager, I thought it was alcoholic, since that was the only way the exorbitant price would of made sense. 250ml can cost more than a 330ml can of any fizzy drink (Coke/Tango etc) Like more than 2x the price.
My great great grandfather was Robert Barr, he founded the Irn Bru. Very proud of that. Haven’t got any of their royalties ha ha but all the same, still proud.
We do still pay prescription charges, but nothing like the cost of drugs in the USA. A NHS national body sets the price that the NHS pays for drugs, usually a fraction of the price the companies charge in the USA which is why our prescription charges are so low
I don’t think they realise how big the ‘Walking in the air’ song is in the UK. Is massive Xmas song since the 80s everybody knows it really well. The context is important in the joke lol
It's fizzy, It's ginger, It's phenomenal. In Scotland, we call all fizzy drinks 'Ginger'. Kind of generic thing. We also used to be able to return glass bottles for a deposit refund. We call them 'gingies'. In the summer holidays, we used to go round the factories in the industrial estate collecting them. We made a fortune!
No, we don't call ALL fizzy drinks Ginger, that's only Glasgow I believe. I'm in my 60s, and it has always been just a can of Juice. Or just a can of IRN-Bru, or can of Coke or what ever the drink was.
@@andy70d35 I'm from Glasgow. Most of my friends are from Lanarkshire and my Wife is from Dumfries. They all call it ginger. I agree though. It's a can or bottle of whatever. I don't like fizzy drinks, so It's not an issue for me.
Well, I wouldn't say it would be considered normal these days. It would be seen as incredibly weird and old fashioned. But if you go back 50+ years ago, yes.
Our ads are not what they used to be either although there's still a limited few that are ok, should check out the old Bisto gravy adverts, they were very good plus the PGtips and Tetley tea adverts. John Lewis Christmas adverts are usually good too.
Irn Bru adverts have always been the best! So funny because they just dgaf. I loved number 3 - that’s such a throwback to my childhood 🥰 You missed the one where there’s a load of people talking, and it jumps to the next person just at the naughtiest word - very clever!
One of our first ever celebrity tv chef's was Fanny Craddock. Enid Blyton was born in 1897 and Died in 1968. However Fanny has been a slang term for Lady parts in the UK since the 1830's
Fanny. Yes, that was still our slang term when this came out too. Genuine older ladies name but also the slang genitalia term too. Also can be used to mean someone who would run from a fight. "He ran off, the little fanny"
I was in America recently and watched an hour or 2 of TV at night and couldn’t believe the amount of adverts (commercials) for medication every ad break 😅
Great choice of ads, there were some absolute corkers in there 👍. I'll give you 2 of my all time favourite adverts for you to check out, one is current the other is vintage from the 70's I believe. The current one is about a chocolate bar "TWIX" and the virtue of the bar is being discussed by identical twins, the vintage one is about a soft cheese called "Boursin" being enjoyed by two lover's having a picnic in a field of barley. I won't say anymore as I don't want to spoil either of them for you, hope you enjoy them as much as I do 🤞. Love the vids keep up the good work. 👍
I'm in my late 30's and have lived in England my entire life and the only ads I remember are the thieving granny, slurping grandad and the Fanny one. The snowman one is brilliant though!!!
The Scottish dad one was more about the ancestral rivalry between England and Scotland than the dad daughter mechanic. Clever stuff these adds.
As Americans they may have missed the significance of 66 - the year England won the world cup, and Wembley - the stadium at which England play and won that world cup. The football world cup (soccer). of course.
that one was my favourite lol
Number 2, the snow man is the Christmas advert,, there is 3,, in total, 1st of Dec is showtime
@@peterjackson4763and the English dog farting on the Scottish flag rug
I don't think any of them got the "nice rug mum" bit 😅
You mean" you do "think.😊
I certainly spotted it. It was the way she kinda moved the cover down a bit.
Best adverts ever.
@reluctantheist5224 he means "I don't think."🤷♂️🤦♂️
@@Thechampissammy Yup, makes sense now.
@@Thechampissammy I originally worded it weird and since corrected after they pointed it out
Watching the snowman is an unofficial Christmas tradition in the UK. Love love love that Lindsey knows it and that Sophia has watched it and has been read it too ❤
Lindsey hit the nail on the head at about 7.50sec. " They are so memorable" .
The entire point of an advert is to get people to remember the product.
Make the advert funny or shocking and it gets remembered.
Something which I think a lot of modern advertising companies these days have forgotten about.
That’s because of the woke mindset of some deranged individuals.
I still remember adverts from back when I was only 4 or 5 years old..
I don't remember at all anything i used to do back then. I couldn't tell you if my parents taken me to the park or not..
But, some of those adverts, never leave..
All you have to say is Gorilla - those who saw it, think of Cadburys.
@@pampennyworth I remember when, in the 80s and 90s, it was fine to always make the man the butt of the joke. Wasn't that 'woke'? What's your definition?
@@wessexdruid7598 I remember in the 70’s and early 80’s that the poor mother in law was the butt of most jokes.
"Made in Scotland, from girders" has been their main catchphrase for decades.
More like it hasnt been a catchphrase for decades. Ive never seen that in an Ad in person. Ive only ever heard people saying it
It's phenomenal was the 1 grew up on
Rusty girders,a drink for real men.
From girders?
I thought it was made from old bubble gum scraped off the streets.
And that colour...really natural looking. I won't touch it, and I live in Scotland.
G'duzz
The look on Lindsey’s face when the closing image of the Butchers shop was revealed, was worth waiting for.
Lindsay is right, the advert and lyrics are parodying High School Musical.
My 3 × great grandmother born mid 1800s, was called Fanny. When she married she became Fanny Allcock! 😮
I had a manager in the 90s when I was a teenager, and his name was Richard allcock. no need to tell you his nickname from my workmates😂
My grandad had a sister named Frances aka Aunt Fanny. When she married her name became Fanny Hedgecock
😂👏👏👏👏
😁😁😁
Fanny also used to be a shortened version for Frances and I had an elderly relative as a child who was called Francis but we all used to call her Fan. There used to be a TV cook in the 60/70's called Fanny Craddock and her husband who sometimes would assist was called Johnny (a slang term for condom).
I've usually heard it as a shortened version of Stephanie.
His vole au vents looked just like Fanny's.
I think it can also be short for Florence too. So if you are called either of those avoid getting together with anyone called Richard.
"May all your doughnuts turn out like Fanny's"
They also changed cousin Dick to Rick 😢 it’s a shame because children don’t think anything of these names. I’m a little concerned about changing older books, it’s a bit like changing history and sometimes it’s good to remember and discuss the differences.
The snowman advert is a parody of the 1982 movie "The Snowman", its about 25 minutes long and I HIGHLY recommend you react to it at Christmas
The Snowman should have been number one. As for The Snowman films there are two, and they are shown every Christmas without fail.
I agree.
Yes, I don't understand that last one at all - maybe I am too old!
Agreed. I recognised quite a few iconic Scottish landmarks.
I think this is the first time I’ve seen an American reactor understand the snowman parody ad.👍
Irn Bru ads have always been brilliant. They just dont care. It's great
Love your channel guy's....best wishes to you both from Scotland...
Thanks so much. :)
When it gets nearer the time, you should definately check out the 'John Lewis' Christmas compilations of adverts. It'sa department store
Think you'd enjoy the John Lewis ads
Yes the Elton John one was really good but really emotional
The John Lewis Christmas ads are famous, and a lot of people like them, but personally I think they're all over-sentimental and mawkish.
I do agree, you should look for collections of Christmas commercials in general. They've become a tradition, and people look forward to seeing each year's adverts. Every supermarket and most of the other big chains go all out every Christmas.
@@ajayjackson7727 I didn't care for it, was more about Elton than Christmas.
The Bear & The Hare for me - however if they do the John Lewis Xmas Ads - someone needs to make sure Lyndsey has a box of tissues at the ready! 🫣🤣 also - the McDonalds Forever Young Xmas advert was a tear jerker for me! Was so befitting of having a teenage son at the time and feeling like you’ve lost that “child bond” that you have 😢 but every now and then they do still show it! 🫶🏼
Cadbury did some fun ads. Dancing eyebrows, gorilla drums, here today goo tomorrow
I met a Taiwanese girl whose English name was Fanny as knew it was a traditional name, and wondered why people laughed when they heard it. I politely explained, and she was horrified. She ended up adopting my Scottish name as her British one!
Irn Bru adverts are legendary up here in Scotland. The Snowman ad has become like the Coke ad, we know it is almost Christmas when it airs on TV. There are two now, both show different areas of Scotland. 'Made in Scotland from Girders' was the slogan I remember from my teens.
Loraine Chase and the Campari advert. The Nicole Papa series of adverts it even had an advert with a countdown to the final advert in series as did Gold Blend Coffee ads. There was the Oxo family ads where you see them grow up and have grandkids.
The Cinzano adverts of the late 70's with Leonard Rossiter and Joan Collins, Cadburys Milk Tray Man ('All because the lady loves Milk Tray' ) adverts or Boddington Beers ('The Cream of Manchester')
The girls' name Fanny was popular back in Victorian times as it is a shortened form for Frances - one of Queen Victoria's daughters-in-law. It is also short for the popular Spanish name Estephania.
The secondary meaning comes from a NSFW book called fanny hill
@@alanrickett2537 Possibly, although it could be another example in the tradition of giving a person's name as a euphemism for genitalia - e.g. "Dick", "Willy", "Joey" and "John Thomas" as nicknames for the penis.
The first Enchanted Wood book by Enid Blyton was published in 1939
I remember as a teenager reading one of the Enid Blyton Famous Five books "You have so much spunk, George". George was a girl. My late Mother said that even when she was a girl in the 1920's & 30's that the word 'spunk' had a very different meaning to what Enid Blyton had intended the word mean.
Richard, UK
Im still laughing at the dog farting on the flag. "Cheeky wee fella" brilliant line.
fanny to a scottish person is like calling someone an idiot, but in most uk its lady parts. Its why that fanny ad even funnier
Also in England too
Yeah I think they get it 🤦♀️
And it's been referred to both since I was a child (age 54) in the UK 😂
I didn't realize that. Good to know.
The Irn Bru advert makers dinnae fanny aboot. 😼
One of my favourite ads was the photographer at the zoo patiently waiting for the pandas to appear. Just as he takes a break and has a Kit Kat, the pandas come out and do a dance routine only to vanish again just as he finishes his break.
I love the Knorr adverts with the Pandas "act natural! They'll never know" say Knorr to boring meals 👍🏿
Irn Bru are still doing brilliant ads now. They've just released a few revolving around Scotland going to the euros(European football championships) and joking about how Scotlands hoping again 😂😂😂
I've got VHS tapes full of UK ads from the 80s
The fact that you both call them adverts and not commercials proves just how British you both are.
It's funny how that has stuck with me. I never even knew the term advert before going on this journey.
@@reactingtomyroots any chance of doing some irish content.don't understand why you are so nervous about irish content.The riverdance video was probably one of your most popular reactions yet you have not revisited that topic as they are loads of videos on riverdance and lord of the dance and lindsay would probably love it.Whats stopping you
We still get adverts like this in the UK.
So funny when the English bulldog farted on the Scottish flag rug.
That wouldn't be you hating your equal partner in this union, would it?
Loved the snowman advert
The high school musical one was making fun of America. I don’t think the reference to American pop was about soda, but about pop music.
A few of the irn bru ads are parodies of American ads.
Fanny is a diminutive of Francis a French name meaning "free one" These ads were/are Brilliant.
In Scotland it means you are taking your time or procrastinating, you're "fannying about" or being silly. But in England it is a slang term for female private parts.
We have a street in Cardiff, Wales, called Fanny Street, which is from about 1908.
There is a "Fanny Street" in Saltaire, West Yorkshire also, and there is a street in Ludford, Lincolnshire called "Fanny Hands Lane".
Harry Enfield is a great comedian and he does a sketch taking the mick out of American car sales ads PLEASE WATCH IT STEVE 😂
Thanks for the suggestion. I'll bookmark it for later.
The snowman should have been no 1. Signs it's Christmas in Scotland 1. Irn bru snowman ad 2. Famous Grouse ad. Who agrees 😂
Products in the UK are often judged on how good their adverts are so many companies put the effort in.
Anything tangible to back up that assertion?
@@SpeccyHoraceyeah it’s called Marketing.
@@Looshfarmer So not particular to the UK at all then.
Few quick examples, Irn brew, Cadbury, John Lewis, Sainsbury, Guinness and a huge amount of others.
@robertobrien5709 So Cadbury and Guinness are purely judged to be good, and are therefore successful, because some people rate their advertising highly?
"Fanny" became British slang for the female southern-district sometime in the 17th and 18th centuries as a derivation of "Veneris" - meaning "of Venus." John Cleland wrote a satirical and erotic novel in 1748 called "Fanny Hill" - the full name being a pun on "Mound of Venus".
The racier/adult adverts were only screened after the watershed - after 9pm at night.
The irn bru adverts were on all through the day no matter what time inc the adult irn bru ads
@@davidmcmillan688 Really? I never saw them before 9pm.
@@Kari_B61exyeah here in Scotland they were on during the day aswell you always knew the new irn bru advert was out when the kids in school copied its content
You need to watch the old Tango ads from the UK.
One of them started a slapping trend, and as far as i know they had to ban the ad because kids were slapping the shit out of each other and shouting ..... you've been Tango'd.
Tis true. T'was all in good fun.
😂 Those sound fun. Thanks for the suggestion.
You know when you've been Tangoed.
@@reactingtomyroots The tango spoof of the Sony Bravia ad is good too.
The ad was never banned, Rupert Howell (Tango ad exec) pulled it off the air, because a surgeon phoned him up and told him he'd performed an operation on a kid with a damaged eardrum, and when the surgeon asked the kid what happened, he said "I got Tango'd"
The Irn Bru adverts have been made for laughs for decades and they cover the 80s through to the 2010s.
I've not met anyone called Fanny in years but when I was a kid I did know a couple of Fannys, today on the other hand I meet plenty of fannies😉🏴 in fact come to think of it most of our politicians are complete and utter fannies😂😂😂😂
Used to be a billboard that was a picture of a cow. It said - when Im a burger I want to be washed down with irn bru
Scotland is the only country where Coke is outsold by another soft drink - and that drink is Irn- Bru ! 🏴🏴🏴❤️❤️👍👍🏴🏴. Phenomenal!
The last time I checked, Peru was also like that. Inca Kola was also outselling Coke.
Christ knows what happened on the Mayflower when fanny became back bottom rather than front bottom! 😂
Number 13 with buxom mum was the funniest 🤣
Fanny has a long history as a name. I remember when they put Elizabeth Bennett on one of the pound notes in the UK. I think a lot of people appreciated the tribute but were still disappointed not to see a representation of Jane Austen's Fanny on the note instead. From Mansfield Park, you know.
There was another famous Fanny, it was a dog called Fanny the Wonderdog and she belonged to the British comedian Julian Clary
If you want to check them out, the best UK ads in recent years are the John Lewis Christmas ads.
Or going back to the 90s, the Tango adverts at least one of which was banned.
They were blamed for starting the "happy slapping" craze.
Some of the Specsavers adverts were comical to.
I liked the one that parodied Lynx/Axe. "The Specs Effect"
Ok, I'm waiting for the Christmas ones now.
Fanny craddock ...... The first tv chef ... Legend 😆😆😆
I met her in real life, not a nice person
But don't take my word for it, she was horrible to me, but just look at what she did to Gwen Troake
She was also a bigamist, twice
and left her two children to be raised by others
She was a bit of a dragon. I saw a play about her once and those poor assistants who followed after her husband Johnny's departure looked so frightened of her.
Omg I was terrified of her when I was a kid 🫣
@@Spiklething
My stepdad maintained
Johnny Craddock's car and his yard was just up the road from their big house in Blackheath, London. We used to go there (my stepdad, Mum & me) for drinks ('cocktails before dinner' - that sort of thing, and crudités etc), but as I was just a youngster, I sat in the kitchen and ate round slices of spam - which I loved as a kid, and drank lemonade.
Both Johnny and Fanny were nice to us...but then, Johnny liked my stepdad fixing his car, so wanted to keep us in side!! I was never aware of Fanny Craddock having a "not so nice" reputation...though she was definitely at least 'a tad weird'!! 🤔🏴❤️🇬🇧😏🖖
I remember the alleged Johnnie Craddock quote "May all your doughnuts turn out like Fanny's" 😂. Of course back then it didn't have the same connotation...
Loved all the Scottish scenes in the Snowman
Enchanted wood books were originally from the 30s I believe. I know when I originally read them in the 80s, the girls in the edition I read, were called Bessie and Fanny.
I loved and still love those books too x
Very good that! Can't believe the "train advert" wasn't in that list! You HAVE to check that one out! By far the funniest one 🤣👍🏻
Trust me.our adverts have gone downhill massively. just cheesy and devoid of humour now.modern adverts are so lame now.its not just america
They know we don't watch linear television anymore. In addition to mistrust over marketing tactics or scepticism over such practice.
We have wised up as it were.
When boring corporate automatons, who go to bed in their suits try to relate to the general public on a 'humorous' level, and fail badly.
Everyone is so afraid that they will accidentally say or do something that gets them verbally att*cked or harassed by the woke idi*ts.
I think the word you're looking for is WOKE
Adverts don’t work the same anyone due to streaming. Before with such few channels adverts were seen by high percentage of population. Now it costs more to advertise across more channels and few now watch adverts to make it worthwhile.
The Snowman one is my favourite. You should check out an old ad for 'Smash' instant potato. They did a series of them with aliens.
You Should checkout the old Carling black label Adverts or the Castlemaine xxxx🤣
Or Cresta soft drinks.
Boddingtons.
@@misterprecocious2491 Yes Melanie Skye's with Creamy Lips 😱
@@adampurcell5179 "you want a flake in that chuck"😂😍
Many of the bill poster adverts are hilarious too.
You just gotta do the Marmite adverts! ("Love it, or Hate it"). They are the funniest series ever!
The Kit-Kat adverts were really good; have a break, have a Kit-Kat!
We in the UK love an advert that tells a story. One that just shouts "Here's our product that you need to buy!" is just so boring!
One of the most well loved ad campaigns was the Gold Blend Coffee series that ran from 1987 - 1993. It was like a mini soap opera about a couple who met when she called round to her new neighbour to borrow some coffee for a dinner party, and then we see them gradually get to know each other through a sequence of coffee based moments - the sexual chemistry is high, but they never quite get it together (until the last ad in the series where they drive into the sunset together). They were so popular that, by the end, TV listings would flag up when a new ad was about to drop!
They starred actors Anthony Head and Sharon Maughan. There are lots of YT videos of these ads.
Please come over and visit Scotland.... IronBru is on us🏴🏴
Prescription drug commercials in the US always made me laugh - the 30 second ads that left me more qualified to suggest a course of treatment than the nonsense 7+ years of medical training that your family Doctor (GP) went through.
SpecSavers adverts come to mind as ones to check out, always hilarious
My favourite advert is still the one where the little girl goes into the shop to buy some chocolate and explains it's for her mum and to pay for it puts all her most precious buttons etc on the counter and finishes by putting her most treasured possession a tiny toy unicorn on the counter and the shopkeeper bless him gives her the chocolate and tells her to take her change and gives back the unicorn, she then goes outside and hands the bar to her mum and says Happy birthday mum. I've watched that Cadbury's ad for years and it still brings a tear to my eyes, if you ever get the chance watch it.
I like that ad too, but I don't understand how the red telephone box disappears when the child leaves the store.
@@josiebridle1947doesn’t the girls hairstyle change too?
@@Yukari_Yakumo Haven't noticed that. I'll check next time it's shown.
@@josiebridle1947 Well the reason the red telephone box disappears is because they used footage from the original advert th-cam.com/video/TfMt3HN8tuY/w-d-xo.html and just added NEW footage to the 200 years advert th-cam.com/video/2eO8VNjYqRM/w-d-xo.html .
They also made a version for another country/language th-cam.com/video/XYejaGCjJl4/w-d-xo.html
@@lmcgregoruk Wow! You're really good with your research. Thank you.
The snowman one is my favourite. Hi from Glasgow.
Adverts dont work, they dont make people want to buy things, so the best anyone can hope for with adverts is to make them funny and memorable. Something alot of the UK adverts did very well in the 80s and 90s. So many little tunes come to mind.
If i went out into the middle of any city centre and shouted at the top of my lungs "if you like alot of chocolate" i would get half the people around me shout the response.
Response is "on your biscuit join our club"
@@Michael-u3j4g because they are made to believe they work. To be fair there are a lot of stupid people around
@@Michael-u3j4g Maybe its just me then, but i have never seen an advert and thought, "Oh, i must get that". Not once have i brought anything because it was advertised.
I cant remember the last time i saw a Pepsi advert, and yet their company makes billions every year.
Could just be me, but im guessing im not the only one.
Adverts don't make you leap up and buy the product that instant. But they give the product a personality, an aura of emotions around it that make it appeal to its target audience. (Which may or may not include you.) Irn-Bru spends millions a year maintaining its cheeky Scottish image.
The more similar the products, the more important advertising is in separating them from each other. Take energy drinks -- Red Bull and Monster will both give you a caffeine hit, but somebody who drinks one wouldn't be caught dead with the other.
@@robertadavies4236 I don't know about that, I know people who will drink both, BUT I remember when I first saw Red Bull as a teenager, I thought it was alcoholic, since that was the only way the exorbitant price would of made sense. 250ml can cost more than a 330ml can of any fizzy drink (Coke/Tango etc) Like more than 2x the price.
My great great grandfather was Robert Barr, he founded the Irn Bru. Very proud of that. Haven’t got any of their royalties ha ha but all the same, still proud.
Yorkshire Tea adverts are good too
The PG Tips chimps were brilliant, "Dad, do you know the piano's on my foot?"
So many great ones here, but "The Snowman" parody was genius. Really funny.
I've met loads of fannys in my life. None of them were named Fanny, though.
Come to think of I have kissed one or two 😛
😂
😂
Does the US know what we call a fanny!!
Irn bru ads where the greatest ever loved them and love the drink.
Prescription drug ads are banned in the UK, but we get most of them free anyway, so it'd be pointless.
We do still pay prescription charges, but nothing like the cost of drugs in the USA. A NHS national body sets the price that the NHS pays for drugs, usually a fraction of the price the companies charge in the USA which is why our prescription charges are so low
@@grabtharshammer Prescriptions are free in Scotland for the most part.
@@grabtharshammer you pay for prescriptions? what country are you in?
I would love to see the prescription commercials here replaced by some fun adverts like the ones in this compilation.
@@alfiekelly5914 Me, bloody jealous, When will the SNP stand in English Elections ;)
They made an energy drink irn bru 32 - those ads live rent free in my memory!
Please check out a Marmite ad compilation! 😅
I don’t think they realise how big the ‘Walking in the air’ song is in the UK. Is massive Xmas song since the 80s everybody knows it really well. The context is important in the joke lol
It's fizzy, It's ginger, It's phenomenal. In Scotland, we call all fizzy drinks 'Ginger'. Kind of generic thing. We also used to be able to return glass bottles for a deposit refund. We call them 'gingies'. In the summer holidays, we used to go round the factories in the industrial estate collecting them. We made a fortune!
That wasn't yesterday! Almost 50 years ago.
No, we don't call ALL fizzy drinks Ginger, that's only Glasgow I believe. I'm in my 60s, and it has always been just a can of Juice. Or just a can of IRN-Bru, or can of Coke or what ever the drink was.
@@andy70d35 I'm from Glasgow. Most of my friends are from Lanarkshire and my Wife is from Dumfries. They all call it ginger. I agree though. It's a can or bottle of whatever. I don't like fizzy drinks, so It's not an issue for me.
@@andy70d35Glaswegianisms have spread. Round my way folk used to call babies bairns, now it's weans.
Gutted they didn't show the rest of the Snowman one where Father Christmas gets involved too 😂
Apart from its, er, anatomical meaning, Fanny is a completely normal name in the UK. It's a diminutive of Frances.
Well, I wouldn't say it would be considered normal these days. It would be seen as incredibly weird and old fashioned. But if you go back 50+ years ago, yes.
Most TVs in the UK are digitally received so most people skip ads now. Only in the cinema pre-movies that good adverts are enjoyed.
There's lots of great British adverts from the 80's and 90's Steve.
I've definitely enjoyed the ones I've seen so far.
Spot on with the highschool musical thing
Marmite adverts are funnier IMO, give them a go
🤮
@@vinnyganzano1930 😍
(Guys - watch those ads and you'll understand what we just said to each other)
Our ads are not what they used to be either although there's still a limited few that are ok, should check out the old Bisto gravy adverts, they were very good plus the PGtips and Tetley tea adverts. John Lewis Christmas adverts are usually good too.
These days people would get offended by a leaf falling and these adverts would bet banned
Bloody snowflakes these days
Irn bru have done this for a long time so you have a lot of catching up to do. Yeeheeee
Irn Bru adverts have always been the best! So funny because they just dgaf. I loved number 3 - that’s such a throwback to my childhood 🥰
You missed the one where there’s a load of people talking, and it jumps to the next person just at the naughtiest word - very clever!
watching this while drinking in bru and rum
Great video guys i hadn't seen most of those adverts 😂❤😊
One of our first ever celebrity tv chef's was Fanny Craddock. Enid Blyton was born in 1897 and Died in 1968. However Fanny has been a slang term for Lady parts in the UK since the 1830's
Fanny. Yes, that was still our slang term when this came out too. Genuine older ladies name but also the slang genitalia term too. Also can be used to mean someone who would run from a fight. "He ran off, the little fanny"
Christmas adverts are the best
Irn bru snowman add is my favourite thing at Christmas
I love the Glasgow kiss the machine gives, in the comercial before the parody of The Snowman
Fanny was a name used quite a lot by the Victorians and my paternal grandparents who were born in the 1850's were called Ned and Fanny 😊😊
I had a Great Aunt called 'Fanny' too. She was really lovely.
I was in America recently and watched an hour or 2 of TV at night and couldn’t believe the amount of adverts (commercials) for medication every ad break 😅
And with each of them featuring a voiceover talking you through the side effects, right?
Great choice of ads, there were some absolute corkers in there 👍.
I'll give you 2 of my all time favourite adverts for you to check out, one is current the other is vintage from the 70's I believe. The current one is about a chocolate bar "TWIX" and the virtue of the bar is being discussed by identical twins, the vintage one is about a soft cheese called "Boursin" being enjoyed by two lover's having a picnic in a field of barley. I won't say anymore as I don't want to spoil either of them for you, hope you enjoy them as much as I do 🤞.
Love the vids keep up the good work. 👍
Laughed so much my glasses steamed up.
I'm in my late 30's and have lived in England my entire life and the only ads I remember are the thieving granny, slurping grandad and the Fanny one. The snowman one is brilliant though!!!
Really enjoyed watching this one with you guys! great video!
The Funniest Marmites Adverts which will make you both laugh very loud enough of course.