@@mTOXiicg Unfortunately. I remember they announced they have to cut back on gay jokes because of the back lash ever getting. It's unlike family Guy to restrict themselves. I say it's either insult everyone or insult no one, because this isn't fair.
@@arjanpatel4895 Its not just India Family Guy has roasted nearly every country on this planet, a lot of famous personalities, and even America a lot of times in their show and I don't think there is any stopping to it
Depends which part of Britain there from. If there from a city like London possibly, but If there from somewhere like Sheffield or Liverpool then not so much.
Generally if a beer is shit you serve it cold so you can't taste it, if it's good then you serve it warmer. Especially strong flavored variants like imperial stouts and double IPAs should be served quite warm.
The “ruddy nice plum puddin’” guy is Hugh Laurie. I love how they get in at least one actual British actor when they do these exaggerated British characters, even if they just have one line.
@@a.c6761 I'm gonna pretend like I know what I've talking about because I can google things; David Copperfield is a novel (no pictures) by Charles Dickens (same guy who wrote Oliver Twist).
@@a.c6761 David Copperfield is the name of both a Charles Dickens novel and a showy American magician who has been married to models Claudia Schiffer and Chloe Gosselin.
brad metcalf That's frowned upon because in America the work day is viewed as being from 9 am to 5 pm so being up at 6 am is already considered excessive, let alone doing anything at that hour.
I'm British and this is brilliant! Who cares if it's inaccurate, of course it will be, it's a cartoon comedy known for it's absurdism, when is Family Guy ever understated! I see this as actually quite an affectionate depiction of certain English stereotypes, Surely something that defines us as a nation is our ability to take the piss out of ourselves!
As a Brit, I love how all British people are portrayed as either high class or '"Londoners" with the same accent as Dick Van Dyke in Mary Poppins haha. See also any British person in Frasier.
As an Englishman, I found this really funny. I love the way that Family Guy isn't afraid to make jokes about people. People get offended far too easily these days. By the way, lager is drunk cold, not warm. Real ale is the one that we drink at room temperature.
Actually that's not true it is drunk at 5-8 Celsius compared to 2-5 Celsius for lager and other pasteurised gassed rubbish. You can chill the cellar, you can put a line chiller in(this is routine for lagers and gassed beers) or you can put a chiller jacket on the cask. If you keep your casks stored at non chilled temperatures the ale will turn faster than you can mature it for peak serving quality.
This was so offensive I spat out my tea and biscuits and telegraphed the home guard who agreed well this was proposterous what a silly cartoon for children we did say, then we calmed down and ate some Yorkshire puddings with brown gravy to soothe our nerves
The most absurd thing about this was the field that the commentator described. Cover point and a deep extra cover, with two short legs to an offspinner? The captain had better hope the bowler can keep it tight otherwise it's carnage.
@@tara34952 Very few, actually. I'm 78 and grew up in London. If I remember, there was an awful lot of cloth caps, mainly worn by working class men. I can't remember what the other classes wore, but bowlers were only really worn in the City. Hats went completely out of style in the late 50's
My preferred British House/Pub serves the most delicious Deluxe Potatoes. They prepare "English country potatoes" (a mix of red and russet potatoes) grilled with onions and bell peppers, then topped with cheddar, green chiles, tomatoes, and sour cream; served piping hot.
I'm Australian. I have played hundreds of days of cricket and love the sport, and I confirm that the terms used were legitimate (although it is nigh on impossible to have two people fielding at Short Leg simultaneously and one ordinarily would be at Forward Short Leg).
British pubs are the best! I am the guy sitting in the corner nursing some ale, reading the newspaper and smoking a pipe (or, more likely, a cigar), getting progressively more drunk as the evening wears on. Love it. 😃
@@momeara7482Variations in spelling of the same word are not uncommon in the English language, surely you're not pedantic enough that this needs to be explained to you.
@@michaelcs4183 Multiple flavours lol Cheese and onion is the most common, we call it crisps. Add me on skype or discord if you want me to answer more about it
@@Officialperrymkwii Nothing better than some chips to go with a beer. Especially onion tpye taste great for certain beers. But can a british pub keep up with German beer? If you have good beer I might go visit the UK after the rona...
Family guy makes fun of everbody and everyone, if some people honestly get`s offended by this please take this advice: Don`t be a moron. Their british stereotypes are hilarious for the most part!
Ser Bronn of the blackwater excactly. I'm British and my favourite parts of family guy are the British stereotypes. It's all just comedy and if you can't laugh at yourself you don't deserve to laugh at others
I'm English and I love it that Family Guy takes the piss out of us we do it to ourselves all the time. The stereotypes persist because that is the image we sell to the world in films and programmes like Downton Abbey.
How has no one called this out for being complete bollocks yet? Downtown Abbey is set over 100 years ago. Anyone who bases their opinion of the UK off it is an idiot. The real life Queen and Royal family would be a better example.
I am curious to know. Does downtown abbey ever change some of its words to help Americans understand? I heard that is a thing Hollywood does, which is dumb as that defeats the purpose of a British show.
My friends and I were obsessed with this episode during uni days. It was rewatched often under the influence of Mary Jane. We used to quote it all the time. We'd often say, "I say Carruthers..." before saying some random crap lmao. For me this will always be the best Family Guy episode, just one of those things, so nostalgic for it.
As a British person I can confirm this is very inaccurate. If you ate scones and drank tea at a pub while dressed like that you would get kicked out of the pub. 😂 still funny tho
Of all the reasons to get kicked out of a pub, eating scones and dressing fancy ain't likely. Depends on the pub, I suppose. I once got barred for playing too much pool and not buying enough drinks.
It’s cause nfl is only in the us, and American football is played only in us and maybe Canada. I don’t think basketball has national leagues outside of maybe USA. Cricket has leagues in many countries.
I'm English and that was funny. When your stereotypes are decent well spoken people it's actually a complement. That being said I know a bloke who asked for a beer in a pub and that's what he got - in a bottle. When he asked for a glass the barman said, 'And what part of f*CK*Ng fairyland do you come from?'
It’s funny of all the British idioms that existed, the cigarette one was the only one he claimed to understand. How is “packet of crisps” not understood for “packet of chips”?
Best thing about Family Guy is it has international appeal, the humor works for a lot of cultures and ethnic groups. The Simpsons does it great, South Park was okay for it's first few seasons but fast became american centric.
So goes the advert, ale is the "nasty warm sticky stuff with various forms of pond life". Ale ferments at the top of the tank, lager ferments at the bottom.
@momeara7482 not hard to understand if you've got a functioning brain but I suppose some people prefer not to try and instead to talk down to someone speaking a language I'm guessing isn't their native one. Only the dullest, most simpleminded people totally devoid of any ability to be funny need to make digs like that. They're saying it's funny how Americans - who are far away on a different continent, and rarely encounter them en masse - view English people as gentlemanly, while Europeans who actually see them in person in large numbers regularly view them as hooligans.
It’s cause Americans don’t want to talk fancy. Even us Australians talk fancy. 1. We say trolley instead of cart. 2. We say cinema instead of movie theatre. Theatre to us refers to live stage performances, though theatre is rarely used for the movies too. The only thing we lack fancy for is that old or middle-aged people tend to call a public restroom “toilets”. However, young people use bathroom here, and signage in shopping centres says “restrooms”.
I love how the Americans think we British are all posh and talk like the King. The reality is yeah while there are some like that, most of us don't talk posh. Another thing I find funny about Americans is that they think everyone in England has a London accent when in reality there are several English accents, example Manchester, Liverpool and yeah. The truth is that there are actually 3 types of London accents that being posh, cockney and road.
@@momeara7482 I'm a working-class lad from the West Country and I'd heard it on the internet before finally being told what it was than my girlfriend lol. Even though I'm only one year older, she's a lot more "trendy" than me