[ad_1]
"Oh my God, it was like an advertisement for the IRA."
We are Tuesday, which means we are still thinking about the episode of This Time with Alan Partridge on Monday night.
So what is the least you would expect to see on the BBC? Many things come to my mind, but one of them is certainly a touching interpretation of "Come Out, Ye Black and Tans" to celebrate St. Patrick's Day.
It is safe to say that the entire episode took an unexpected turn at the end of the series.
An Alan Partridge usually has enough squeaks to get along with, but suddenly there were two on the This Time sofa.
The doppelganger, also played by Steve Coogan, was a farmer from Sligo, Martin, who constantly mocked Partridge and listed the strange farming tactics he used.
Let's go to Partridge den dis. #This time pic.twitter.com/C25PdfiuJi
– BBC Comedy (@bbccomedy) March 18, 2019
The show ended with the Sligo peasant / Partridge lookalike singing a host of Irish rebel songs such as "Come Out, Ye Black and Tans" and "The Men Behind the Wire".
In Partridge's clbadic style, he murmured to Jennie, "Oh my God, it was like an advertisement for the IRA."
Look at it until the end …
Flight. Alan Partridge pic.twitter.com/Uk9sfTtmFq
– Son of Tam Sellics (@ gibbogibby1) March 18, 2019
[ad_2]
Source link