But I thought... #
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
...That the first place to switch to digital was Ferryside in Carmarthenshire, Wales, about 18-24 months ago!
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
...That the first place to switch to digital was Ferryside in Carmarthenshire, Wales, about 18-24 months ago!
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
How the hell can anyone forget the stupid bint's funeral when its crammed down our throats near enough every day?
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
...never actually said that.
Funny how people think he did. And it gets voted as a memorable moment.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
I was somewhat distressed that an article about TV viewers' recollections of most remembered moments is categorised as "entertainment". This distress being founded on a personal ethical notion that viewing incidents of death, destruction and violent mayhem are not entertaining. The list may be, as the author avers, somewhat predictable and this fact is also not entertaining; it is, however, informative. Perhaps the Vultures should consider introducing some further article categories: for this article I humbly propose "sociology" or "social psychology".
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
Unless I'm missing somthing (I admit I havent looked at the paper this morning) the UK is not part of the USA, so therefor the Twin Towers and the Moon landing were news form "The outside world" as you put it.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
What about the humping in the woods scene from The Singing Detective? It was indelibly etched in my mind as a child...
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 10:08 GMT
Shocking! I expected it to rate much higher!
"PININ' for the FJORDS?!?!?!? What kind of talk is that?"
Quality stuff!
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:04 GMT
"Whitehaven in Cumbria will this week become the first place to switch off its terrestrial telly signal in the run-up to the big digital switchover between 2008-12. ®"
Do you guys want to hire a proof-reader or something?
A) Switch off "terrestrial telly"? Don't you mean _analogue_ terrestrial telly?
B) They're switching over to all-digital... in the "run-up" to switching to digital? What... they're going to do it again in 2008?
Methinks the switchover from analogue to digital mayhaps begins *this year*.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:04 GMT
David Brent>
Shurely shome mishtake?
(Or do Freeviewers actually have a sense of irony?)
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:04 GMT
i remember watching live aid
i remember geldof saying "we want your fucking money"
close enough for you?
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:04 GMT
WRT 'slipping editorial standards', I have to admit that the bad link between the Entertainment category of El Reg and the WTC scenes did strike me as inappropriate. However I decided not to raise the point as I wouldn't want to be a picky tit.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:18 GMT
As commented by Ben here is what was actually said:
Many now recall that Geldof said "Just give us the fucking money." However this is not true. He did say "People are dying NOW. Give us the money NOW. Give me the money now." And later when trying to impress on the BBC TV presenter the importance of his plea, "F**k the address, just give the phone, here's the number...".
I'll put my hands up to mis-remembering the event as well.. It wasn't until i read this that i realised i was wrong
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:40 GMT
...Is because they are continually rammed down our throats!
WTC - is the rallying cry for the "War on Freedoms".
Death of Di - There's some trial or other still going on about that - and we're supposed to feel some collective guilt due the MEDIA hounding her to her death....
Kennedy Assasination - Conspiracy theorists of the world, unite!
Defining Memorable in this day-and-age of managed Media events is a truely pointless exercise. What is memorable is whatever Rupert Murdoch decides to be memorable...
El-Reg, you really do need an icon to signify "Bollocks"! Perhaps a Rupert Murdoch icon would come in handy, too.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:40 GMT
paul: what part of "Anglo-American" didn't you understand ;)
Got to say though - wheres the end of apartheid and Nelsons release ? the falklands war, gulf wars 1 and 2 ? the many IRA bombings ?....all trumped by a character in an ok sitcom doing a stupid dance...even Elvis's death and the footage of The Beatles arriving in the US surely beat that ?
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:57 GMT
Either this is all made up or I fit none of their demographics, lets see now:
1. Twin Towers collapse - Yeah, it was memorable.
2. Princess Diana's funeral - No recollection whatsoever, couldn't care less.
3. Moon landing - Wasn't even born.
4. Fall of the Berlin Wall - Yeah, alright memorable.
5. Bob Geldof telling Live Aid viewers to "give us your fucking money" - Never happened so hard to be memorable but I'd have gladly paid to not have to hear another ****ing thing out of Geldof rather than having to listen to a load of dross.
6. Two Ronnies' Four Candles sketch - Comedy genius, Mr Barker at his best.
7. David Brent's dance from The Office - Ricky Gervais is about as funny as finding out that your entire family and all of your close friends have been killed by a particularly virulent strain of STD given to them by an ex-girlfriend, so no, definitely not.
8. Monty Python's Dead Parrot sketch - Getting a bit tired now, they've done better.
9. England's 1966 World Cup win - Wasn't alive but bloody hate football anyway.
10. Assassination of John F Kennedy - Wasn't alive.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 11:57 GMT
the bar scene from only fools and horses..?
This post has been deleted by a moderator
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 12:53 GMT
Of course the Twin Towers collapse is more memorable than the Berlin Wall, it only happened a few years back!!
Surely memorability is how well you remember something, and the one remembered most will be the more recent events!
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 14:07 GMT
.....was just great to watch. I don't know about anyone else, but I just couldn't get enough of it. I even recorded it for posterity.
Shame TV wasn't around to capture Belsen and Auschwitz etc, they would have looked fantastic in High Def with a 7.1 soundtrack I'm sure....
I'll go with the bar scene from `Only Fools and Horses`.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 17:54 GMT
How about in 72, Game 8 with 34 seconds left, Paul Henderson scored on Vladislav Tretiak. Forever to be known as "The goal heard around the world".
Don't you know Hockey is the greatest sport ever invented?
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 17:54 GMT
Didn't watch the daft tart's funeral, and couldn't care less, except for the fact that on the night of her death I had stayed up til some ridiculous time of night to watch software company based sitcom "Dweebs", which was subsequently cancelled so that we could be bombarded with mind numbing looped footage of the tedious sloany bitch being carted off in an ambulance.
Two bottles of portugese pish totally wasted !
Fucking ITV. No royals had better die when I'm watching Numb3rs, or I'm reaching for the four star and some milk bottles.
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 21:42 GMT
"Unless I'm missing somthing (I admit I havent looked at the paper this morning) the UK is not part of the USA, so therefor the Twin Towers and the Moon landing were news form "The outside world" as you put it."
But not JFK's assassination, apparently, but I digress.
Do you *really* only have one sentence's worth of memory up there in your noggin? Context, buddy. Context.
To put the two sentences together, with minor editing:
"The final top 10 has a decidedly Anglo-American feel...The outside world (as in 'not anglo-american) is represented by just one historic event"
Honestly...
Posted Wednesday 17th October 2007 10:28 GMT
For me, the most memorable TV moment was easily the closing scene of _Blackadder Goes Forth_. My first thought was "What the f*** have we just been laughing at?" My second thought was "How many £10 wraps could you make out of that many poppies?"
Posted Tuesday 23rd October 2007 14:58 GMT
I do remember seeing it live. I'd remember it seeing it live for the rest of my days, even if it was never mentioned again.
I was between school and uni, without a job. I saw the whole thing play out live, from just after the first radio reports. That sort of thing will never go away.
I really wish the yanks would stop going on about it mind.