These are my videos (although some may not be, any copyrights infringed was done for entertainment rather than cash and any infringees need only ask for me to remove it) Visit www.myspace.com/gsmokeyjoe for my words if you can be arsed. I don't mean to offend, but occasionally I do, so soz, tara, smokeyjoe
He does it better at a secret policeman's ball concert. The crowd react better with shouts of Waheeeeeeey as well. Not to say this is bad, I just prefer the other one.
Here is my take. Adults shouldn't swear in front of kids, and kids shouldn't swear in front of adults, but both kids and adults should swear with peers. It makes the words feel 'forbidden' as there are times and places you can't use them. And as the cold water experiment Fry did elsewhere in this programme shows, saying forbidden words is cathartic. So parents should not let their kids swear or swear in front of them, as them finding out they can and should swear is part of their development. The thrill of doing something you shouldn't, the shock of hearing your friends say it when they are very emotional, and the pleasure and relief of saying them yourself is a big part of growing up. They need to feel like the words are forbidden so they can use them when they feel they really need to.
I remember a Tabloid rag running to Dean Friedman's Agent and printing a tale of how the "Liverpool Punks" were in "big trouble" Disappointingly for them it turned out that Friedman was a good sport and thought it was funny.
The fact that some long dead individuals decided many years ago that a small handful of words - out of all the thousands of words in the English language - were prohibited but everything else was perfectly acceptable in the right context is a bizarre enough thought when you think deeply about it.
The film maybe longer & little bit more boring then its predecessor, however the film’s still A well acted, effective, thrilling & stylish sequel. (77%) (4/5 stars) (positive)
I’m only here because I was working had stuff fall. And I cursed. Few minutes later the manager comes up to me and said a customer heard me cursing. Old people are so soft
Ne pleure pas mon bébé d’amour ! Va t’en La petite fille trop mimi de Boucle D’or qui chante " la chanson d’amour de Selena Gomez en aiguë " en version berceuse trop lente qui a du chagrin et qui te fait pleurer en sol majeure comme it’s a small World ! Bravo ! Il est parti ! Parce que nous on te fait un petit cadeau pour ariel, ce sera la chanson nord américaine qui est très joyeuse et très rapide et très festif qui donne le sourire et très rigolote qui te fait rire et qui s’appellera 12 days of christmas en version polka qui va danser avec un ours, mais qui va chanter la chanson joyeuse qui te fait rire qui s'appelle "12 Days Of Christmas" interprétée par elton john en grave mais qui ressemble à la musique que c’est comme let it be des Beatles! Bien fait pour eux ! On ne pleure plus ! Parce que nous on te fait twelve days of christmas qui ressemble à let it be des Beatles ! Bien fait pour eux ! Hallelujah !
My Dad's side of the family love swearing, my Mum's side hate it. They do find it offensive. I laugh every time my Mum tells me she wishes Billy Connolly wouldn't swear so much. He worked in Scottish shipyards, I'm surprised he doesn't swear every other word😂
I've always considered swearing to be one of the greatest pleasures of language. I have been swearing since I was about ten to eleven years-old, as did most of my other classmates at the time. It is humanising, relieving, expressive, emphasising, and comforting. It may be used in conjunction with humour and in a moment of lightheartedness, as a product of frustration and anger, or as a means to curse the existential challenges and injustices of living. In concurrence with Stephen Fry, it most certainly should not be taken as an indicator for the depth of one's vocabulary, nor the measure of their intellectual capabilities; That's just fucking stupid.