@togolynn I agree with you that Craig's response indicates that this isn't a phrase much used in the US. I'll have to keep an ear out in future. Always interested in the linguistic differences.
@togolynn It's something we say in Canada too. Do Americans really not say this? I lived in the States for 3 years and never noticed one way or the other.
Yeah, I think maybe "Blow Me" because "Fuck me" is a farely common phrase. Americans, we have concocted so many different ways to use that word... uh..., but yeah, "Blow me" I think that may be a saying... other than the other saying... of course
Hugh Laurie and Craig Ferguson met each other since 2004 and 2014.
It was even early than that. I saw them together on a comedy show to raise money for aids. I think it was late 80’s or early 90’s.
@togolynn I agree with you that Craig's response indicates that this isn't a phrase much used in the US. I'll have to keep an ear out in future. Always interested in the linguistic differences.
lol, what was the phrase they couldnt say...that was bleeped out?
@togolynn It's something we say in Canada too. Do Americans really not say this? I lived in the States for 3 years and never noticed one way or the other.
Yeah it sounds like Bugger me :)
@mtnjoy
Oh I do. hahaha. And I live in the states...
I think he might have said "bugger me" after he said "sod this"--both are soooo British, definitely not American slang.
@jakesask No, we don't say "fuck me" in the States. Um....not in that context, anyway. ;-)
It's a wonderful phrase, though.
stupid enough hugh now actually does a commercial for l'oreal, whahaha
Yeah, I think maybe "Blow Me" because "Fuck me" is a farely common phrase. Americans, we have concocted so many different ways to use that word... uh..., but yeah, "Blow me" I think that may be a saying... other than the other saying... of course