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Go Now: A cover of The Moody Blues hit

By on January 3, 2014

The show’s team is also responsible for the famous video for “Land of Confusion” by Genesis, which features puppets of noted personalities (and the three members of the band) similar to those featured on the show. I’ve Never Met A Nice South African: Musical number about the apartheid regime’s abuses (and the West cosying up to it). The B side of The Chicken Song. Go Now: A cover of The Moody Blues hit, sung by the entire House of Commons, The Queen and eventually the entire country to Margaret Thatcher to tell her that she should resign in the middle of a deep recession. It wasn’t long before the real Thatcher did, because of this. Every Bomb You Make, to the tune of Every Breath You Take from Synchronicity by The Police (and actually featuring Sting on vocals) served as a massive “The Reason You Suck” Speech to the major political figures of the era. Thatcher’s Cabinet at the Restaurant: Mrs Thatcher’s cabinet eat at a restaurant; she orders a raw steak, and when asked “What about the vegetables?” replies “They’ll have the same as I’m having.” (This line entered her legend, and people later thought she had really said it.) According to Private Eye, one Cabinet minister not only thought he was there when she said it http://rogersfarmsupply.com/2013/07/20/talabani-unlike-the-members-of-the-cabinet-of-dr/, but totally screwed up the punchline (“And the waitress asked ‘what will the vegetables have?’”) The President’s Brain is Missing: A series in which Ronald Reagan’s tiny brain makes a bid for freedom, at one point crawling into the dead Premier Chernenko’s head and reanimating him to try and run the Soviet Union on American Republican lines. Half the jokes it coined were later lazily recycled by Spiritual Successor 2DTV for George W. Bush. John Major and the Peas: Captured the public vision of John Major as dull and boring by literally giving him grey skin and having him indulge in inane conversations over peas with his wife Norma. The Two Davids: The Liberal SDP Alliance was portrayed as an unequal partnership between the dominating SDP leader David Owen and the shy, literally smaller Liberal leader David Steel. Steel later blamed his depiction for ruining his career Steel was taller! In fact, this was subverted in real life as most historical sources confirm Steel was the more influential of the two (he also maintained a longer career in the House). David Owen was also portrayed as a cynical opportunist, to the extent that he was sometimes seen on both sides of the House of Commons at the same time. Herr von Willcox: Margaret Thatcher’s neighbour is an aged Adolf Hitler living under the alias “Herr von Willcox”, who gives her advice on governance.”Wiz you zere, I feel like I already run ze place.”.

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