Remember seeing a comedy sketch where a character had to spell out their name over the phone. The name started with a G so they were like "G for...Gnome" 😁
Hello Monica and chandler love your videos. I live in the United Kingdom so I love watching your reactions to our british comedians they tend to swear a lot and are very explicit like Lee Evans and mickey Flanagan. You need to watch Catherine Tate as an old woman and she's talking about her latest granddaughter that's just been born and it's absolutely hilarious, best wishes Christina.
When I went to school sooo so many years ago, why weren't my teachers like you Jodi? I might have paid attention a bit more. On the subject of passwords, it's getting to the stage where we're going to have to leave an organ, and undergo a tissue match every time we want access to our account. And another thing, when we need to phone a dreaded call centre, why is it always in a foreign country where you can't understand them and they can't understand you - and the line's a shocker.
Hi Jodi & Nick! As an IT person (for my sins), it gets magnified 2 or 3 times for us, for the amount of passwords we have to use - and the restrictions placed on some of those, minimum length, whether you can/cannot use characters such as $, @, #, etc. Generally the longer a password is, the ease of hacking gets exponentially worse - so you can use say, an 8-character password - but put a load of .... on the end, you just have to remember how many! Although these days, sadly it's not just about hackers - 'social engineering' plays a large part now with 'fake' emails that will put a bug that captures everything you type onto your computer, or trick you into using a password on a fake website...
"Monika here" just flummoxed me because all I thought of was "Lewinsky here”, I didn't even hear the response or the repeated "Mr..." response either...
They say to me .." what your name please " ..I say " Ray " you would never guess how much trouble I have giving a 3 letter word ! - then they say, it's your accent ! , pardon me for being born in London !!!
In WW2 on Iwo Jima... the pass word to approach an American position to stop Japanese troops from creeping up into attack range was " lollapalooza " it was impossible for the average Japanese soldier to say. lol
Oh, Murican Elevators must be different from English Lifts, because we don't do that, just as we wait for people to get off the tube (choob, not Toob).
Yesterday I signed up to a charity, the password required 12 characters, including a number, capital letter, and a special character! With my own NATO alphabet I like to say P for pneumatic.
Brian Johnston was renowned for his on-air schoolboy humour and puns. In one incident during a Test match at the Oval in August 1991, Jonathan Agnew suggested that when Ian Botham was out hit wicket, trying to hurdle the stumps, it was because he had failed to "get his leg over" (a British slang term meaning to have sex; Botham's sexual exploits had attracted national attention). Johnston carried on commentating and giggling for 30 seconds before dissolving into helpless laughter.
When I had to answer phones a person called with the thickest Nigerian accent said his own phonetic alphabet. I nearly lost it at "K for (long pause...) KNOWLEDGE! Glad I don't have to do that anymore... nutters the lot of them...
i know every password and numbers including my phone and pc ,also passwords to emails ,i came up with a book that i first read in late sixties , i had read the book countless times and use the book and the author including his dob , where he lived and some of the chapters in the book .
The easiest way to find out your password is to type anything in and the computer will tell you "Your password is INCORRECT". Works every time - well not really.
Cecil is a usually male given name of Welsh origin. Cecil Cunningham (1888-1959), American actress. How do Brits pronounce Cecil? 2 syllables: "SES" + "uhl"
It's funny, to me anyways, I've been using the same basic password for I'd say 20 years, it has gone through iterations, never been hacked. I can't do a new password for every single thing I sign up for or into, my brain just doesn't work that way.
Lee Evans was a national treasure until we realised each show is only funny for one watch. Watch him first time and he’s hilarious, watch the same bit a second time and it loses all magic, unfortunately!
The "are you a human?" test that drives me up the wall is the one where you have to identify all the motorbikes in the picture and almost every square contains at least a BIT of just ONE motorbike - so does 10 pixels of a motorbike handle count as a motorbike? Then it makes me try again with loads of motorbikes in the image but some are SO distant and tiny it's impossible to tell if it's a child's tricycle or a push bike or a motorbike ... TRY AGAIN ... then it eventually feels sorry for me and lets me in when I deliberately get it wrong because I've lost the will to live, never mind actually see the thing I had limited interest in to begn with. Wish your reactions were just a BIT longer by the way - the actual content you're reacting to I mean. TBH I sometimes skip past all the jibber jabber although you do have some funny stories.
Alpha Beta Charlie Delta Echo Foxtrot Golf Hotel India/Indigo Juilet Kilo Mike November Oscar Pappa Quebec Romero Sierra Tango Uniform Victor X Ray Yankee Zulu.
Actually, the International (NATO) Phonetic alphabet is B - Bravo and I - India, used in aviation across the world, as well as by Radio Hams, UK military, etc..! It got confusing during WW2, as the UK and US used completely different ones (British was A - Apple, B - Beer, C-Charlie, D-Don, E-Edward, F- Freddie, etc)
@@raycardy4843 I'm surprised you haven't pointed out, I was missing Lima. Due to A being Alpha, I always think B is Beta die alphabet and the Greek alphabet. Looking on-line, I've notice other people have asked is I India or Indigo and someone mentioned, their teacher used Indigo, long before Heather Reisman became famous, someone replied, your teacher might have been a cop before being a teacher, bit aviation use India.
Its like my nickmame its spelt GEORDIE because i come from Newcastle in the North East of England, but sounds probably to you as JORDIE but that would be wrong. lol.