I am so blown away by this clip -- apparently it was the second and last performance of this tune; the other is also on YouTube. Even as satire and (rather heavy-handed) commentary, and despite the salutory point it was trying to make, it wouldn't make the cut today, for obvious reasons. My jaw falls open that this aired on TV, anytime, anywhere. This and other YouTube clips make me wonder -- where on Earth can I see more of TW3? What a show it must have been. And how about the U.S. version?
@eriks74342 There are several OTHER clips from this very last episode of TW3 on THIS CHANNEL (I would have uploaded the whole show, but YT didn't permit long uploads when I uploaded these). However, the clips sorta work best separately anyway.
The clip where they SHRED the then-Home Secretary is a classic - and I love the climax - TV at its best.
wow. I cant imagine something like this getting anywhere near a TV screen nowadays they simply wouldn't have the bottle. I'm not sure if thats a good thing given the subject, or rather sad we cant take this kind of brutal honesty anymore without going apoplectic.
@ajay999999 - Sorry - as an OLD BRIT, I forget that not EVERYONE could KNOW (also, the title was too long to get onto YT's heading!) It's "That Was The Week, That Was" - it pioneered British TV political satire. It was pushed off the air, when a General Election loomed, citing "possible bias" - but it never returned! And it took YEARS for such programmes to return (the '80s, really). But thankfully, today, British political satire is alive and WELL.
This strikes me as one of those occasions when I think you needed to be an adult in 1963 to really appreciate this. I was born in 1970, long after this show ended, and I have to work hard to imagine a cultural context in which the racist murders of civil rights activists seemed like something you could do a funny song about. Nowadays, it's obvious that the racists were criminal but perhaps then, it needed something like this to point up the racism of sentimental songs about the old South.
This isn't a funny song, it's satire, which may be funny sometimes, but frequently is not. There was a large studio audience there that night & I didn't hear a single laugh, giggle or snigger.
I was allowed to stay up as a child to watch this & it made my blood run cold then as it did today. I'm afraid back then they did need to sneak anti-racist opinions under most people's radar, as even here in Britain, racism was still considered the 'respectable' point of view.
I am so blown away by this clip -- apparently it was the second and last performance of this tune; the other is also on YouTube. Even as satire and (rather heavy-handed) commentary, and despite the salutory point it was trying to make, it wouldn't make the cut today, for obvious reasons. My jaw falls open that this aired on TV, anytime, anywhere. This and other YouTube clips make me wonder -- where on Earth can I see more of TW3? What a show it must have been. And how about the U.S. version?
eriks74342 1 month ago
@eriks74342 There are several OTHER clips from this very last episode of TW3 on THIS CHANNEL (I would have uploaded the whole show, but YT didn't permit long uploads when I uploaded these). However, the clips sorta work best separately anyway.
The clip where they SHRED the then-Home Secretary is a classic - and I love the climax - TV at its best.
disparatedan 1 month ago
wow. I cant imagine something like this getting anywhere near a TV screen nowadays they simply wouldn't have the bottle. I'm not sure if thats a good thing given the subject, or rather sad we cant take this kind of brutal honesty anymore without going apoplectic.
Minirizla 11 months ago
Why was it called TW3?
ajay999999 1 year ago
@ajay999999 - Sorry - as an OLD BRIT, I forget that not EVERYONE could KNOW (also, the title was too long to get onto YT's heading!) It's "That Was The Week, That Was" - it pioneered British TV political satire. It was pushed off the air, when a General Election loomed, citing "possible bias" - but it never returned! And it took YEARS for such programmes to return (the '80s, really). But thankfully, today, British political satire is alive and WELL.
disparatedan 1 year ago
I recall watching this on New Years Eve 1963. It propelled me from teenage apathy to political awareness. Thanks for posting it!
monstersoftheid 1 year ago
This strikes me as one of those occasions when I think you needed to be an adult in 1963 to really appreciate this. I was born in 1970, long after this show ended, and I have to work hard to imagine a cultural context in which the racist murders of civil rights activists seemed like something you could do a funny song about. Nowadays, it's obvious that the racists were criminal but perhaps then, it needed something like this to point up the racism of sentimental songs about the old South.
lexo30 1 year ago
@lexo30
This isn't a funny song, it's satire, which may be funny sometimes, but frequently is not. There was a large studio audience there that night & I didn't hear a single laugh, giggle or snigger.
I was allowed to stay up as a child to watch this & it made my blood run cold then as it did today. I'm afraid back then they did need to sneak anti-racist opinions under most people's radar, as even here in Britain, racism was still considered the 'respectable' point of view.
AnElephantsChild 1 year ago
This must be a lyric written by Tom Lehrer -- no one else could have written satire anything close to this brilliant
davidkaplan7 1 year ago
@davidkaplan7 This was all British; much as I love Tom Lehrer, he wasn't the only satirist in the world.
shakeypitt 1 year ago
@davidkaplan7 The lyrics were written by Herbert Kretzmer.
sf1987a 10 months ago
Great Song great words
rockinmusicman 1 year ago 4
I gather hat the US ambassador almost had a stroke when he saw this!
WJCairns 2 years ago 6