Alan's reaction to the sweets, and the kiss is so adorable. He has a childish look to him. I m younger than him but i really feel older when i look at his shiny eyes :p
Yes, and he went to Australia and married, had a family then disappeared once again, just before the police went to arrest him when he was discovered. He was working in a TV station at the time.
I believe that a vast amount of alcohol was involved and we don't know what else went on between the two. Back then people still used to have duels even for silly things, calling someone an idiot could generate a family feud that would last generations.. A grand grand grand father of mine once allegedly had some of the apples in his garden stolen and I remember my grandmother still didn't talk to her neighbours who were the descendents of the presumed thieves. If you read some older reports of trials and hearings there's plenty of murders for the silliest stuff, like walking on somebody's lawn or sipping a drink too loudly.
The famous gunslinger John Wesley Hardin is reported to have shot a man for snoring. The victim was keeping him awake, so he fired a shot through the thin hotel room wall, killing him instantly.
That’s just not true, Bruce Reynolds was identified as the leader of the gang and was sentenced They recovered a small portion of the money and there is no genuine record of just 2 men taking all the money, there was infact 4 members who where never sentenced but believed to have been part of the gang according to the police
I can't work out if it was Alan being a gentleman or he was just absolutely starving, but I was very impressed that he had eyes only for her snack box at that point.
Peter Clarke “...had eyes only for her snack box” could be wildly misinterpreted, if someone read your comment before watching the video haha. All the very breast- I mean, best. 😀👍
Emily Barclay I think the first time I ever heard the term “norks”, was back in the early 90’s, on the British TV sitcom ‘Bottom’: I’m not sure where you’re from, or if you’ve ever heard of the show before; it starred Rik Mayall, and Ade Edmondson, who had previously starred in the absolutely fantastic, and at the time groundbreaking, TV show ‘The Young Ones’. If you haven’t seen ‘Bottom’, I highly recommend it; it’s full of vulgar humour, innuendos, and extreme violence, with the two main characters often resorting to either: beating the shit out of each other, beating up other people, or getting the shit kicked out of them, by other people haha. Apologies if I’ve just wasted your time, by explaining something you already know about; as I said, I have no way of knowing where you’re from, or how old you are; I just assumed that, since you were unfamiliar with the term “norks”, you must not have seen ‘Bottom’ before...which sounds wrong when I phrase it like that, but you get what I mean haha. “Funbags” is also a great euphemism; I think it’s a slightly updated version of the term “norks”, which feels a bit dated nowadays. But it’s nice to see “norks” pop up, from time to time...which again, I could have phrased better haha. Apologies for this lengthy, possibly/likely pointless reply haha. Hope you, and your loved ones, are keeping safe, and well, during these incredibly fucked up times. 🤞😀🤞 All the best. 😀👍
A note on pronunciation. Dissect is not pronounced the same way that bisect and trisect are. The difference is that there are two s’s in diSSect making the prefix of dissect DIS and not DI. BI sect is to cut in two pieces. TRI sect is to cut in three. But the prefix DIS has the meaning “”to undo” as in DIS appear or DIS like or DIS agree. So, dissect means to unsection or to take apart.
"He learnt his lesson, never did it again!" 😂 Reminds me of how I deal with my grandad's suicide- "He tried to do it twice, but only succeeded the once." Black, black humour indeed, but it helps me!
One of my mates from college was a train driver but i never asked if it was complicated, not sure if it was a diesel train if that makes any difference. After a while he got promoted and became the guy that planned the trains route or something like that.
if you think driving a diesel train is hard, try driving a steam train. Thats much more complicated. Diesel is just forward, neutral, reverse lever, brake, horn and lights.
@@simontay4851 There's a bit more to it than that such as AWS, TPWS and Vigilance warning cancellations, signals, route indications and route knowledge, braking points, low adhesion areas and mitigation techniques, line speeds, stopping patterns, emergency procedures, dangerous goods procedures, nuclear dangerous goods procedures, faults and failures, traction knowledge and thousands of safety and procedural regulations.
just for the record, I live in Canada, albeit on the far west side of it as far away from newf'ndland as possible; and here we just say "Newfies," because their name for their province is just too bloody long to bother with. (Same with mine - British Columbia - but we just shorten ours to Bring Cash...)
Give guy a break - not every woman has to be Victoria Secret model or a porn star to be considered a nice catch. And he might like women like that. The beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Agreed, she might not be according to current societies standard of "quite the looker" but those things don't need to apply to every person individually and those standards did vary greatly over the course of human history. Top models and porn industry has practically destroyed human sexuality. It is all about fitting the mold these days - the moment sex robots come around, we won't even notice the difference. Faces, hairs, makeup, body type... all things seem to converge to a single point/type, there is no variety and when you find it, it is on the way trying to fit the previously mentioned mold. Just buy a rubber doll and be done with it.
Actually Jedwood/Jeddart/Jedburgh Justice is not hanging someone without a trial, it originally refers to "hang them first, then give them a fair trial".
At first I thought Sandi said 'octogram' and proceeded to count the sides of the shape, establishing that there were, indeed, 8. Shame she said optogram, I thought I was onto something
Canadian here. Wow, you pronounced Newfoundland so wrong. The second guess was pretty much spot on. No one says "land". Also, side note, newfiew sound like the Irish and Maritimes just call it "The Rock". Not to be confused with "The Island", which is PEI.
@@benjaminmorris7159 Originating during the American revolution (1780s) deriving from the last name of two men: Charles and William Lynch (Lynch Law). The Irish story presented here is merely a legend and historians have debunked it based on length of time between its supposed happening and word appearance, and that the actual hanging from the balcony was not in keeping with what lynching means. I do love your defining: knob-teacherly!
8:10 idk what to think about the moments. To me it feels like she's trying to make a "smart witty remark" for the tv show but it makes her looks dumb and ignorant because if you're paying attention and use context she is talking in its obvious what's being spoken here. I would argue most people would know what shes talking about. IDK maybe someone else can chime in, am i just overthinking a TV show.