Everyone else has had more sex than me!
14 years ago
General
I've noticed a lot of people linking to Youtube videos to share their discoveries. So I thought the community needed some TISM (This Is Serious, Mum!)
And whaddya know? They have one that seems to sum up a lot of fur's complaints!
And whaddya know? They have one that seems to sum up a lot of fur's complaints!
FA+

And Fishies.
The four digit ones though? C'mon, type-fucking doesn't count.
I'll probably dig up another one or two of their classics later, too.
Unfortunately, the silly melburnians broke up a few years back - and their guitarist dropped dead from cancer. Stupid bugger.
It's a shame - they were the best Aussie comedy musos since DAAS!
However they don't have the... Um... "Class" of DAAS. Let's face it, it has Paul McDermott, Tim Ferguson and Richard Fidler.
With classics such as:
I Fuck Dogs (NSFW - Duh!)
(And the immediate follow up sketch Moral Dilemmas (SHUT THE FUCK UP, LADY!!!)
Skinhead Sooty (NSFW or Foxes) If you're too young to remember Sooty, then I'm not talking to you >.>
I Want To Spill The Blood Of A Hippy (With bonus points for the Kimba the White Lion reference!)
And they didn't stop there. From Wikipedia:
Wikipedia wrote:DAAS were known for their tendency to tell outrageous lies to journalists during interviews and attempt to see them published as fact. In one of the best-known instances of this, the group told British reporters that their namesake, former Australian politician Doug Anthony, was a much-loved Prime Minister of Australia who had been assassinated on 11 November 1975, by right wing extremists. (In fact, Anthony is a former Deputy Prime Minister of Australia who had led the right-of-center National Party of Australia from 1971 to 1984.) The lie was printed in The Times, The Guardian and The Independent.
This game continued undetected until in 1990 the group told a reporter that they had been cast in Batman and had become great friends with Jack Nicholson, both lies. The story was reported as fact in newspapers around Australia and appeared as a cover story in the TV guide of Melbourne's Herald Sun before the media realised the hoax.
Oh well, it's not like it's the end of the world or anything... Or is it?
Hang on, I'll go ring a demented old prick from "Family Radio"