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Jude Law reading Fred Allen's letter to the State of New York Insurance Dept. 

Letters Live
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Jude Law reads Fred Allen's 1932 letter to the State of New York Insurance Department.
Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1894, it was during the Golden Age of Radio in the 1930s that American comedian and radio host Fred Allen became a household name. His success on the airwaves is undisputed, as at the peak of its gag-filled, 17-year run, The Fred Allen Show boasted upwards of 30 million listeners. But it wasn’t until a decade after his death, upon publication of a collection of his greatest letters, that the public learnt of Allen’s devotion to this altogether more private form of communication, one which allowed him to practice his comedy in front of an audience of one. Arguably his most amusing letter was a complaint, written in 1932, most probably never sent, and addressed to the State of New York Insurance Department.
Originally performed at the Freemason's Hall, London in March 2016.

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30 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 638   
@justin.booth.
@justin.booth. 2 года назад
This is the best variant and reading of this story I have ever heard, Jude Law's accent and deadpan delivery is just sublime
@e32b61
@e32b61 Год назад
He just went with the easiest accent he could think of, and does merely an ok job at it. And he sounds nothing nothing like Fred Allen. I doubt he knows who Fred Allen was.
@langdalepaul
@langdalepaul Год назад
Gerard Hoffnung told this story (known as the Bricklayer’s Story) to the Oxford Union in 1958. I don’t know if it was his original, or if he just retold it, but it’s the best rendition I’ve heard. Look it up on RU-vid.
@bk1147
@bk1147 Год назад
Wonderful
@squattingheads
@squattingheads Год назад
Nah I find his timing really lackluster. Other readings have the next accident come more on a surprise note and make the escalation feel more intense
@davidbrennan2889
@davidbrennan2889 Год назад
Paddy's sick note, it's an old irish song
@mr.pavone9719
@mr.pavone9719 Год назад
That same thing happened to my dad but the order of events was in a reversal of this calamity.
@jimpomac
@jimpomac 9 месяцев назад
Wonderful version of the old Barrel-o bricks yarn. I believe this dates back to 1958 attributed to Gerald Hoffnung. Will be happily corrected however
@Randallsilver
@Randallsilver Год назад
Straight out of Looney Tunes. I love this story every time I hear it
@Baribrotzer
@Baribrotzer Год назад
A classic. And as soon as he mentioned the bricks, I knew where this had to be going.
@salamandastron90
@salamandastron90 11 месяцев назад
Unfortunately, Fred didn't lol
@Whiteythereaper
@Whiteythereaper 8 месяцев назад
Straight to the 5th floor & back down again
@PoseyLane
@PoseyLane 7 месяцев назад
Jude did an amazing job nailing not only a NY accent, but so many of the hand gestures we in the tri-state area (ny, ct, nj) area use, which I am sure they used back then. Jude transformed himself into someone else. Wow. Great job.
@leongatha6
@leongatha6 6 месяцев назад
See above note as to the wrong accent for Fred Allen.
@Vesnicie
@Vesnicie 4 месяца назад
Nah, the accent is a noticeable fake, but it could be worse.
@JBaxter-pi8oj
@JBaxter-pi8oj 11 месяцев назад
Whoever wrote this letter missed their calling in comedy. It's so well written that one has to laugh regardless how painful that experience must have been for the person experiencing it! Thank you to Jude Law and Letters Live for this gem.
@DavidZaslavsky
@DavidZaslavsky 10 месяцев назад
According to the video description he actually was a very successful professional comedian, so... I'd say he no more missed his calling than he missed that barrel
@andrewvelonis5940
@andrewvelonis5940 9 месяцев назад
You don't know who Fred Allen was?
@JBaxter-pi8oj
@JBaxter-pi8oj 9 месяцев назад
Sorry, no. But I really like to learn at least one new thing every day. If you'd care to educate me, I'd appreciate it. And I really mean that!@@andrewvelonis5940
@laupernut
@laupernut 9 месяцев назад
​@@andrewvelonis5940 1930's USA radio show hosts don't come up in world history very often.
@justayoutuber1906
@justayoutuber1906 8 месяцев назад
Fred Allen was a top comedian in his day.
@paveltolz6601
@paveltolz6601 3 года назад
Many variants of this story have circulated around newspapers, social groups and, now, the internet; all are a delight to revisit. Jude Law's reading is one of the more refreshing.
@Halkin85
@Halkin85 2 года назад
I know it as an Irish pub song.
@35flexo98
@35flexo98 Год назад
Irish brick layer, heard it at my brothers wedding years ago, recited by a boozed up priest lol.
@kaywolf1520
@kaywolf1520 Год назад
@@Halkin85 yup, "Why Paddy's not at work today", i believe
@Andrewthegreatish
@Andrewthegreatish Год назад
@@kaywolf1520 the sick note,by the Dubliners
@nimeryaspawnbrd1049
@nimeryaspawnbrd1049 Год назад
There's also an hilarious italian version, in the dialect of Friuli, from our brilliant comedian Marco Paolini
@Missjunebugfreak
@Missjunebugfreak 6 месяцев назад
Sometimes i forget just how charismatic Jude Law is.
@childcrone
@childcrone Месяц назад
Oohh, I never forget that
@CloudHindlen
@CloudHindlen Месяц назад
Shame on you😂
@nickroberts1596
@nickroberts1596 2 года назад
There's a version of this story told in an Irish song "The Sick Note" or "Why Paddy's Not at Work Today." Fantastic version by The Dubliners.
@altasilvapuer
@altasilvapuer 2 года назад
I'm disappointed to not see more references to it in the comments, here. I was singing the song in my head during the entirety of Law's truly excellent delivery here.
@mcz5874
@mcz5874 Год назад
There's also a brilliant version of the song by the Lancashire band Houghton Weavers.
@kevinnimmo2621
@kevinnimmo2621 Год назад
I know 'The Corries' version. Has me in stitchies every time 🤣😁👌
@VelourYeti
@VelourYeti Год назад
@@altasilvapuer Same! I commented about the song and then scrolled through the comments and was delighted to see Nick's comment!
@seanoreiley48
@seanoreiley48 Год назад
Fantastic song!
@veganleigh4817
@veganleigh4817 Год назад
I love Jude Law's reading. A typical New York accent and delivery. Bravo!
@adamjeffries7235
@adamjeffries7235 Год назад
it is a ny accent but not that of fred allen who worked on tv and did not on the docks as jude law seems to think (imagine cinfusing cockey with a bbc reporter)
@anthonymcandrew529
@anthonymcandrew529 11 месяцев назад
I was thinking the same thing. Fred Allen was a very witty, urbane New Yorker. Too bad that Law is unaware of this!@@adamjeffries7235
@curtmanners01
@curtmanners01 7 месяцев назад
@@adamjeffries7235 Fred Allen was from Boston, and his delivery was slightly Bostonian and somewhat slower.
@leongatha6
@leongatha6 6 месяцев назад
Except Fred Allen was from Massachusetts and had a New England accent, not one from Brooklyn. Poor preparation I'd say.
@leongatha6
@leongatha6 5 месяцев назад
It's both funny and sad that so many people have liked this when they clearly have no idea who Fred Allen was nor have ever heard him speak. Jude Law has not done his homework, the silly Brooklyn accent he used was nothing like Allen. Fred Allen was born and raised in New England, around the Boston area. His accent remained a Boston/New England one his entire life. This reading sounds as silly as doing President FDR with the same bad Brooklyn accent.
@IntrospectorGeneral
@IntrospectorGeneral 3 года назад
It would be interesting if this was actually from a letter from June 1932. I think that the earliest written version of this story was supposed to have been in a 1940 Readers Digest purported to have been written by "a naval officer". I first heard it as a 1958 recording of Gerard Hoffnung addressing the Oxford Union. Hoffnung said he had read the story in the Manchester Guardian and had been using it as a warm up or his radio audience. While George Burns would be a fine candidate to have been the original author of the story it wouldn't be surprising if the story started with some Roman working on the Colosseum.
@CraigerAce
@CraigerAce 3 года назад
It's been around for ages and probably could be traced back to ancient Egypt. But I do get your meaning kind sir.
@snowsnz3976
@snowsnz3976 3 года назад
This actually first appeared in the Beardsden & Mulngavie Herald on August 3rd 1947 and was written by an Indian Gentleman to his insurance company. If you listen again to Jude Law's reading of it a lot of the phraseology is very Indian. My father was working in India at the time and obtained a copy.
@felipreguantfontova7999
@felipreguantfontova7999 3 года назад
@@snowsnz3976 what phrases are very Indian?
@glenhill9884
@glenhill9884 2 года назад
I heard a similar story about an Irishman entitled something like, "Why Paddy can't come to work today". But I enjoyed Jude's NY accent just the same.
@drooplug
@drooplug 2 года назад
@@glenhill9884 "The Sick Note"
@lairddougal3833
@lairddougal3833 3 года назад
Oh Jude! Brilliantly rendered! And posthumous respect to the wit of Mr Allen.
@lw9837
@lw9837 Год назад
About 40 years ago I used to work for an insurance company in Montreal, Canada. A written version of this story circulated in our claims department. It was written in broad French slang (it was written phonetically, so it was REALLY badly spelled); frankly the only way to understand it was to read it out loud. One of the older adjustors laughed so hard he almost fell off his chair! He said what made it so funny was that, having dealt with workman’s compensation claims before, he could actually see this type of claim being made. As a side note, I always thought that was what made the movie 9 to 5 so funny: it described office events with a twist, so that you could actually imagine it happening just that way. Of course the movie was written from a female worker’s perspective, so many men failed to see the humour-the women in the theatre were laughing like mad but a lot of men left just looking puzzled and/or offended!
@barefootcontessa3112
@barefootcontessa3112 Год назад
Brilliant. One of the funniest letters I’ve heard and excellently delivered by Jude Law.
@Mary-mr4jr
@Mary-mr4jr Год назад
This is a take on the similar Gerard Hoffnung story known in Britain in particular as The Bricklayer. Ever funny in whatever guise, but Hoffnung’s rendition is the best of the lot.
@alidabaxter5849
@alidabaxter5849 2 месяца назад
Absolutely! Gerald Hoffnung read it to the Oxford Union in 1958!
@YouTubeallowedmynametobestolen
@YouTubeallowedmynametobestolen 3 года назад
There is a folk song telling a version of this story called, "Why Paddy's Not at Work Today."
@carlwitt3934
@carlwitt3934 3 года назад
I believe it's called "The Sick Note".
@Lordofthecows
@Lordofthecows 3 года назад
Sick Note - The Dubliners
@yepnowletussee6702
@yepnowletussee6702 3 года назад
I so remember listening to this.. years ago.. 😱
@stevenr6397
@stevenr6397 3 года назад
the song is way funnier
@MargaretPinard
@MargaretPinard 3 года назад
Hilarious done by the Corries!!
@nonosays
@nonosays 3 года назад
What a delight to hear Jude Law with a Brooklyn accent!
@user-zh4vo1kw1z
@user-zh4vo1kw1z 3 года назад
He sounds exactly like Jason Alexander
@AeroGold1
@AeroGold1 3 года назад
​@@user-zh4vo1kw1z George is getting upset!
@user-zh4vo1kw1z
@user-zh4vo1kw1z 3 года назад
@@AeroGold1 well, from what I remember... There was never any 'getting'
@randallstewart175
@randallstewart175 2 года назад
If you ever actually heard Fred Allen, you can only imagine how funny this would sound if he read it.
@Just_Sara
@Just_Sara 2 года назад
@@user-zh4vo1kw1z No no, Jude Law sounds sexy in any accent. He couldn't sound like George Costanza any more than Benedict Cumberbatch could sound like Mr. Howell from Gilligan's Island!
@cmtippens9209
@cmtippens9209 3 года назад
Whether the content was original or even true is of little consequence to me. I found it amusing and enjoyed the "turn of phrase" the writer used, as well as the actor's portrayal. The scenario sounded like something that could have been part of "Home Alone". A little slapstick, especially when written well, can be fun.
@unseelie63
@unseelie63 Год назад
I love this.Hilarious,and I'm impressed by his accent!
@Myacckt
@Myacckt День назад
the accent was not bad but nog good. you definitely hear he's not American
@kmw4359
@kmw4359 2 года назад
I adore Jude Law … that was perfectly done. And thank you (in years gone by, of course) to Mr Fred Allen for such a great letter. I can only imagine how that letter must have been received. I hope it was framed and placed in a prominent spot for decades.
@morrigan908
@morrigan908 7 месяцев назад
This story definitely didn't originate with Fred Allen and wasn't him writing an actual letter to an insurance company. It seems to be loosely based on "How Paddy Stole the Rope" by Fred Albert and dated 1885. It might go back further, but I'm not interested in trying to chase it further.
@geoffsmith6230
@geoffsmith6230 10 месяцев назад
I seem recall Gerard Hoffnung reading this over fifty years ago, rather well if memory serves, used to listen to it on a radio request session!!😂😂
@alidabaxter5849
@alidabaxter5849 2 месяца назад
You did! Gerald Hoffnung read it to the Oxford Union in 1958.
@tonyduncan9852
@tonyduncan9852 3 года назад
This is indeed an old funny story, told half a century ago by Gerard Hoffnung.
@GabrielRobinson1991
@GabrielRobinson1991 3 года назад
I was just thinking that - I didn't realize anyone else was listening to it these days, he's somewhat washed from history sadly
@RobCartwright
@RobCartwright 3 года назад
It's possible Fred Allen originated it as he read it on his show also.
@898792
@898792 3 года назад
i like the dubliners version in song
@davidtuer5825
@davidtuer5825 3 года назад
Gerald Huffnung was the classic teller of this story. And his replies from Austrian hotel owners to British clients are truly brilliant. They are on you tube, well worth the effort to find them.
@triciajumonville7741
@triciajumonville7741 3 года назад
Half a century ago would have been 1971. This says Fred Allen did it in 1932, 99 years ago.
@zeitgeist5134
@zeitgeist5134 3 года назад
It's always so much fun for an American to hear a British actor doing an American accent.
@mooseandspade6251
@mooseandspade6251 3 года назад
how would you rate his accent?
@elizabethchoymoorman6381
@elizabethchoymoorman6381 3 года назад
7 out of 10
@wellesradio
@wellesradio 3 года назад
I would have given it a 6 out of 10 - it was all over the place, but since Fred Allen was a famous person whose voice is easily found in many recordings (he was a famous radio comedian) and Law doesn’t even try to imitate it (imagine someone reading a letter by Christopher Walken and sounding like Sylvester Stallone trying a cowboy accent), I give it a 4/10.
@zeitgeist5134
@zeitgeist5134 3 года назад
Everybody's a critic (as I'm sure Fred Allen himself would agree).
@wellesradio
@wellesradio 3 года назад
@@zeitgeist5134 Someone literally asked what we would rate the accent. So we answered.
@GlenHallstrom
@GlenHallstrom 3 года назад
As I watched I tried to hear it in Fred's nasal delivery and also thinking what a glorious routine this would be for Laurel and Hardy.
@bloodgrss
@bloodgrss 3 года назад
Indeed, their boat 'repairing' short and in the factory (where Hardy gets plunged through the sawdust flue) are classic interpretations of just such a thing as Fred wrote here.
@pacificostudios
@pacificostudios Год назад
Fred Allen was a fantastic writer; It's hard to believe someone so erudite was a household name in the U.S.
@lindabuck2777
@lindabuck2777 9 месяцев назад
He was hilarious !!!
@morrigan908
@morrigan908 7 месяцев назад
This story definitely didn't originate with Fred Allen and wasn't him writing an actual letter to an insurance company. It seems to be loosely based on "How Paddy Stole the Rope" by Fred Albert and dated 1885. It might go back further, but I'm not interested in trying to chase it.
@SarahB1863
@SarahB1863 Год назад
This is a variation of "The Bricklayer's Lament", which has been around for decades. Classic!
@AFiasco
@AFiasco Год назад
@PlasmaStorm73 [N5EVV] It's also an old Irish song titled 'The Sick Note' or 'Why Paddy's not at work today', but that song was based on the 1958 speech by Gerard Hoffnung to the Oxford Union which was a story that first appeared 1930s. No one is quite sure where it really came from.
@jdos2
@jdos2 3 года назад
Fred Allen was one of the funniest people I've ever heard - his radio show, his feud with Benny, all his characters, wonderful. His appearances on What's my Line all amusing.
@graemebrumfitt6668
@graemebrumfitt6668 3 года назад
This a new channel to me. But one I will continue to watch! TFS, GB :)
@supertramp6011
@supertramp6011 Год назад
The Scottish singing duo ‘ The Corrie’s’ did a fantastic version of this tale, I believe it was called the builders song, or the bricklayers song or some such. I highly recommend a listen!🤣🤣🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
@judithrivera7857
@judithrivera7857 3 года назад
When Jack Benny imitated Fred Allen on his Radio Show, he would say, "First I need to put a clothespin on my nose" because Fred Allen had a very nasal voice with elongated vowels - "Portlaaaaaand"!
@judelaw5437
@judelaw5437 3 года назад
Hello my beautiful great fans , thanks for your support, how are you doing, I hope everything is fine, you can write me in the hangout app with my email🌹lawjude473@gmail.com
@johnblack1061
@johnblack1061 3 года назад
This is also a song called the sick note by the dubliners
@zogzog1063
@zogzog1063 3 года назад
Yes there is wonderful song about this in an Irish accent. The Dubliners sound about right. The song is prefaced about an excuse why someone (Paddy, I suppose) was trying to explain why he did not turn up for work.
@tonidozier4573
@tonidozier4573 Год назад
I can imagine Fred Allen telling this story in his deadpan manner😂. I love hearing him add his asides during What’s My Line.
@gwarlow
@gwarlow 3 года назад
This letter reads like some production notes written by Buster Keaton as he prepared one of his seemingly dangerous stunts that he is now famous for.
@radioactivehalfrhyme
@radioactivehalfrhyme 3 года назад
*“Seemingly”* dangerous?
@derekchristenson5711
@derekchristenson5711 Год назад
"Seemingly dangerous"? He really did do all his own stunts, all with little or no safety... uh, anything, and he DID sustain some pretty serious injuries from at least one of them... and then proceeded to continue acting for some time before treatment because he didn't realize how serious it was. Pretty alarming / impressive stuff! Also a man of comic genius. 🙂
@JCYoung-ni4cy
@JCYoung-ni4cy Год назад
A hilarious reading. Fred Allen's own speaking voice was a bit more denasal but Jude adding the NY accent definitely made it funnier.
@kenny66901
@kenny66901 2 года назад
I've heard several variations of this story over the years (Laurel and Hardy done a bit in one of their short films) but imagining Fred Allen narrating this "letter" in his nasal, dry tone had me laughing till the end!
@retroboomer3197
@retroboomer3197 2 года назад
"I can't be held responsilbe for creating the conditions in where you all ate each other" "All I did was create those conditions" "You're the ones who ate each other"
@DaraghOwens
@DaraghOwens 2 года назад
First time I heard this was about 30 years ago as a song from The Dubliners, "Why Paddy Is Not At Work Today", worth searching on YT for, an alternative take.
@junelondon1703
@junelondon1703 Год назад
I don´t want to know how the poor man looked after that accident, but it would be hilarious to watch this incidence in a comedy show. XD And I think Judes accent is on point.
@detassler1299
@detassler1299 3 года назад
Fred Allen said of Jack Benny that “Benny was born ignorant and he’s been losing ground ever since.”
@parus6422
@parus6422 3 года назад
well ya, but can Fred Allen make a coin roll back to him..I think not.
@kirinrex
@kirinrex 3 года назад
The Dubliners have a great song called "Sick Note", that tells the same story.
@annemadison7258
@annemadison7258 3 года назад
It's about the same type of accident but the accident happened to an Irish Labour in London
@samsowden
@samsowden 3 года назад
Me body is all black and blue, me face a deathly grey
@skalmelid
@skalmelid 3 года назад
Never heard that one, but the Corries have one called the bricklayer's song.
@CraigerAce
@CraigerAce 3 года назад
Props to Hey Jude, but you're right and the song is much funnier than his rendition here.
@Erizou90
@Erizou90 3 года назад
Thanks! I didn't know about it and now I'm listening to it on repeat!
@philobrain
@philobrain 6 месяцев назад
The song, "The Sick Note" by The Dubliners, is a hilarious musical rendition of this story.
@ImranMt.
@ImranMt. 2 года назад
Why? Why’re you doing a Rosamund? And, jonsing her, too? This Is Letters Live not some bit for your career!
@fredsmith-kingofthelunatic7810
@fredsmith-kingofthelunatic7810 3 года назад
Not sure who ripped off who but for me this sounded funnier when the Dubliners sang it. Goddam hilarious.
@tristerfalm
@tristerfalm 3 года назад
Fred Allen was born in the 19th century and died in the 1950's, so I'm guessing the Dubliners' song is based on this anecdote.
@fredsmith-kingofthelunatic7810
@fredsmith-kingofthelunatic7810 3 года назад
@@tristerfalm Cheers, thankyou for the clarification 👍
@mariannegeraud6318
@mariannegeraud6318 3 года назад
I just couldn't stop laughing... although I am pretty sure the author of this letter didn't feel much like laughing!! What a way to describe an accident both by the author and of course by Jude law!!
@VeaKrea
@VeaKrea 2 месяца назад
"The dubliners" sings this. It's called "the sicknote". It's hilarius😂
@auntbutton905
@auntbutton905 2 года назад
This is a hysterical Irish song. Called 'Why Johnny can't come to work today', I believe. Letter is funny. The song is hysterical.
@sapphoculloden5215
@sapphoculloden5215 Год назад
My mother was a builder. I played Murphy and the Bricks - the song version - at her funeral. A laugh track is uncommon at a funeral, but it was perfect.
@AndreaCrossett
@AndreaCrossett 3 года назад
I feel like there was a Looney Toons skit based on this story. I’ve heard this letter a couple of times and the story seems very familiar to me.
@beautifulidiot4323
@beautifulidiot4323 3 года назад
I thought it sounded like a cartoon...
@petebarnstrom1495
@petebarnstrom1495 3 года назад
Looney Toons ripped off Fred Allen all the time, and all the old radio shows. Probably because Mel Blanc did all the voices (both on radio and in the cartoons). Foghorn Leghorn, as I recall, was a character on Fred's show, under a slightly different name (and not a rooster).
@emm6064
@emm6064 3 года назад
@Real Thailand Except this letter is from the 30s
@judelaw5437
@judelaw5437 3 года назад
Hello my beautiful great fans , thanks for your support, how are you doing, I hope everything is fine, you can write me in the hangout app with my email🌹lawjude473@gmail.com
@HomerChiotakos
@HomerChiotakos Год назад
Jamie! Adam! We need you back. (Those that know, will know)
@stevenburke2691
@stevenburke2691 3 года назад
Sounds like the Paddington 2 window cleaning skit
@_Everyone__
@_Everyone__ Год назад
So they just read urban legends? I have heard 100 different versions of that one, doubt any of them are real.
@zero1onezero908
@zero1onezero908 Год назад
There is a song/poem about this incident called The Sick note. Well worth a look
@nicholaslawton7206
@nicholaslawton7206 3 года назад
Listening and not looking I thought this was Jason Alexander and was mightily confused when i tab back and see it was Jude Law. good on ya' mate.
@Anil18834
@Anil18834 10 месяцев назад
I love this letter and Jude's performance. I laugh from beginning to end every time.
@brentfisher6484
@brentfisher6484 2 года назад
Hilarious. Funny. Love Jude Law, but...to be fair Jude's rendition of Fred's wonderful voice and New Yorker accent is completely off. Plentiful examples of Fred's voice exist here on You Tube and elsewhere. Still a funny, funny letter.
@captainidge
@captainidge 6 месяцев назад
AKA Sick Note by The Dubliners
@hungrysoles
@hungrysoles 3 года назад
Jude Law is one of the few British actors that can do a believable American accent. He should have watched or listened to a tape of Fred Allen to get the particular whine in his voice that made his remarks rather funny. Allen was from Boston, and didn't have a New York accent.
@spiralpython1989
@spiralpython1989 3 года назад
And yet, most Americans can’t even hear the difference, let alone speak the significant differences, between any British accents, between any Australian accents or even between any Australian and any New Zealand accents... so perhaps be thankful that Law was able to do a fairly decent American accent from more or less the same region...
@nickmaclachlan5178
@nickmaclachlan5178 2 года назад
@@spiralpython1989 There is a very great difference between Bostonian and Brooklyn English too........ this from a displaced Scot in England.......
@sitcomchristian6886
@sitcomchristian6886 Год назад
@@spiralpython1989 Boston is pretty distinct, I think most people would recognize it, American or not. Further, we have to factor that this letter is from the 30s, almost 100 years ago. Accents were different then, so that muddies the water.
@Vesnicie
@Vesnicie 4 месяца назад
I know this old yarn as "Why Paddy's not at Work Today ".
@scotsam7590
@scotsam7590 3 года назад
The Bricklayer's Lament. Girard Hoffnung. 1950s.
@AbsurdCats
@AbsurdCats Год назад
Uh…can we talk about the preparation? He’s reading this accent as a true accent of the time, the coil is purrrfect.
@dr.pradnyamalgundkar7779
@dr.pradnyamalgundkar7779 Год назад
Simply Hilarious! Tears streaming down my cheeks and clutching my painful sides, just hilarious!
@leafwhite6376
@leafwhite6376 8 месяцев назад
That Barrel got a TRIPLE KILL
@smc1942
@smc1942 Год назад
The best version of this joke I've ever heard is set to music in the song... _Why Paddy's not at work today..._ Give it an ear, and be ready to laugh! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@elloco1996
@elloco1996 2 года назад
You might want to listen to the song "The Sick Note" by The Dubliners.
@Ater_Draco
@Ater_Draco 2 года назад
The 1985 song by the Dublin era, which was a cover of the 1980 song by the corries, which was based on this 1932 letter?
@carlwitt3934
@carlwitt3934 3 года назад
"The Sick Note" from an alternate universe.
@CRtrain
@CRtrain 3 года назад
Man he’s good.
@butchbinion1560
@butchbinion1560 29 дней назад
Thanks, good job. ✌🏻👊🏼
@loraineriddell7157
@loraineriddell7157 Год назад
Welcome to the world of "insurance" 😏. Jude was brilliant 👏.
@Sunjoy1
@Sunjoy1 Год назад
Love this Brits NY accent 😂
@mchapman6835
@mchapman6835 3 года назад
Probably based on a bit of history. Gerard Hoffnung did this sort of thing better. His version was probably based on a 1940's letter. "It was published in Reader's Digest in 1940 as a letter from a naval officer who had supposedly received it from an enlisted man explaining his late return from leave." Wikipedia ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-OOGfg1B3ZMw.html
@jameshumphrey2345
@jameshumphrey2345 2 месяца назад
An inspiration for dozens of Road Runner/Coyote cartoons over the years.
@notatallheng
@notatallheng 6 дней назад
I was just thinking the same thing. There's a definite Looney Tunes sensibility to the physical comedy.
@edeledeledel5490
@edeledeledel5490 2 месяца назад
The earliest version of this story appearing in print was in 1895 in the Cedar Rapids (Iowa) Evening Gazette. 11 January 1895 (p. 6). There have been many others over the years since then.
@sabatino1977
@sabatino1977 3 года назад
That’s a great impression of George Costanza.
@billharris1847
@billharris1847 3 года назад
It is Funny since he didn't intend that
@KrisSanders
@KrisSanders 3 года назад
I have no idea why I keep watching these.
@pam0626
@pam0626 3 года назад
I love when English actors speak with American accents.
@RylanStorm
@RylanStorm Год назад
So much better than when Americans speak with English accents.
@Comicsluvr
@Comicsluvr Год назад
Otherwise known as 'Why Paddy isn't at work today.'
@jamjarr8808
@jamjarr8808 Год назад
Yes.... Sick note indeed!
@HarryBarrow-e3u
@HarryBarrow-e3u 21 день назад
The story was originally told by Gerard Hoffnung at the Oxford Union in 1958. I think his presentation is a lot funnier: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zZUJLO6lMhI.html
@Ellen24493
@Ellen24493 3 года назад
Excellent read by Law. Does a much better New Yawk accent than an American actor doing an English accent.
@Bethi4WFH
@Bethi4WFH 2 года назад
Dick van Dyke’s cockney accent is famous in England. We had never heard anything like it! 😄
@pjaj43
@pjaj43 7 месяцев назад
There are 3 at least RU-vid videos of the late Gerard Hoffnung's 1958 reading of the story under the title "The Bricklayer's Lament" ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vFUj6LH4FSI.html ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-LOy2GuaP8Mo.html ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zZUJLO6lMhI.html
@irinabocharova746
@irinabocharova746 3 года назад
That was read in our country about 30 years ago and we always thought that is our story. Russia is a weird country :)))
@gavinhill3164
@gavinhill3164 3 года назад
Search for the bricklayers song by the corries. It's a much older story than 30 years. No idea where it originated though
@RobCartwright
@RobCartwright 3 года назад
@@gavinhill3164 It's possible that Fred Allen originated it as he read it on his show in the 30s (probably why they gave him credit to the letter also).
@sherrybirchall8677
@sherrybirchall8677 2 месяца назад
That's a variation, quite a close one, of the song, with words by Pat Cooksey, based on the traditional melody, "In the Garden Where the Praties Grow". The title of the song is "The Sick Note", and may be found in the Work section of Rise Up Singing.
@AndrewVelonis
@AndrewVelonis Год назад
I have heard many versions of this story before, even one put to song.
@traveller5212
@traveller5212 5 месяцев назад
Jude Law’s delivery doesn’t hold a candle to Gerald Hoffnung’s 1958 Oxford Union address. Look it up and make your own judgement.
@kingoftape
@kingoftape 2 года назад
Ok I love Jude Law but couldn’t he have tried an actual Fred Allen impression? In fairness many in the audience wouldn’t have known if he got it right or not if he had, but for those who are familiar with Fred Allen’s pattern of speech it would’ve been less distracting
@morrigan908
@morrigan908 7 месяцев назад
I enjoy all the variations of the brickleyer's tale that have been circulated in newspapers, magazines, and now the internet, but my favorite is the song version that has been performed by several folk and Celtic singers and groups. Rather than writing a letter to the insurance company, Murphy, the poor sod, is composing a sick note--presumably addressed to his foreman's boss because the foreman "is an awkward sod"--in the hopes that he will understand why poor Murphy' is not at work today after yesterday's ordeal. My favorite version is "The Bricklayer's Song," performed by John McDermott. Check this version out and you'll be rolling in the floor laughing.
@meredithgreenslade1965
@meredithgreenslade1965 Год назад
Well read. Totally pictured this poor soul. So funny
@cibertronx
@cibertronx 2 месяца назад
I came across this story like 25 years ago. It was in Spanish, and a few hilarious descriptions were added to it. It was one of the funniest things in that time.
@lisastenzel5713
@lisastenzel5713 3 месяца назад
So even then it was true: Always think about physics before doing anything!! 😆😆😆😆😆 i can't...this is too brilliant
@eileenheath1968
@eileenheath1968 Год назад
DAMN! I listen to old time radio and Jude NAILED Fred Allen's voice. edit - @1:15 oh crap, is this going to be a retelling of Why Paddy's Not At Work Today? edit: YUP.
@jeffjames4064
@jeffjames4064 4 месяца назад
I know it's off topic, but I kept hearing and seeing Ralph "Norton" Cramden from The Honeymooners.
@bc2578
@bc2578 Год назад
He screwed it up though. Instead of saying, "I received one $25 payment," he said, "I received one dollar twenty-five payment." I'm not gonna write a complaint letter about it, but still.......
@rabbitracer79
@rabbitracer79 Год назад
Apparently a true story. Was tested on mythbusters and confirmed if I remember correctly. Buster went thru one chaotic mess lol
@fundymentalism
@fundymentalism Год назад
If anyone wants to see the original, The Bricklayer's Lament by Gerard Hoffnung ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zZUJLO6lMhI.html This should have been credited.
@leongatha6
@leongatha6 6 месяцев назад
It's both funny and sad that so many people have liked this when they clearly have no idea who Fred Allen was nor have evert heard him speak. Jude Law has not done his homework, the silly Brooklyn accent he used was nothing like Allen. Fred Allen was born and raised in New England, around the Boston area. His accent remained a Boston/New England one his entire life. This reading sounds as silly as doing President FDR with the same bad Brooklyn accent.
@interestedbystander196
@interestedbystander196 11 месяцев назад
"A house which was being built for me..." "Five floors..." Yeah, it doesn't seem like you are in desperate need of that $25 a week.
@billc.4584
@billc.4584 2 года назад
Very nice. Heard the same gag involving an Army workman in Vietnam but Jude Law had a great delivery.
@pierremainstone-mitchell8290
@pierremainstone-mitchell8290 2 года назад
A priceless retelling of Gerard Hoffnung addressing the Oxford Union in 1958 (8:36 to 16:01) - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-OOGfg1B3ZMw.html
@Rennies-World
@Rennies-World Год назад
Dear Boss, I write this note to you to tell you of my plight. For at the time of writing I am not a pretty sight. Me body is all black and blue, me face a deathly grey, And I hope you'll understand why Paddy's not at work today. Everything is funnier when it's an Irish song. 🤣 Shame they're presenting it like it's a real thing, though.
@scientious
@scientious Год назад
This story is fake. In reality, wooden barrels were extremely sturdy and the bottom wouldn't simply "break out". A variation of this rather ridiculous story was used in the second "Babe" pig movie.
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