Captin Pugwash Urban Myth

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Captin Pugwash Urban Myth

Postby Raymond-Bergman » Wed May 25, 2005 9:49 am

I am right in saying that the "hidden" gags in Captin Pugwash were an urban myth?
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Postby Lexanni » Wed May 25, 2005 10:02 am

Captain pugwash? isn't that the name of the canine grooming place on the corner of 5th and 27th ST.?
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Postby Lexanni » Wed May 25, 2005 10:02 am

Captain pugwash? isn't that the name of the canine grooming place on the corner of 5th and 27th ST.?
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Postby Raymond-Bergman » Wed May 25, 2005 10:07 am

Lexanni wrote:Captain pugwash? isn't that the name of the canine grooming place on the corner of 5th and 27th ST.?


So good you named it twice?
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Postby Seamen Stains » Wed May 25, 2005 11:38 am

ROGER the Cabin boy!!!
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Postby ffaddict » Wed May 25, 2005 11:52 am

Seamen Stains wrote:ROGER the Cabin boy!!!


:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Postby Username taken » Wed May 25, 2005 2:14 pm

All that Seaman Stains and Master Bates is all an urban myth, there was never a Seaman Stains in Captain Pugwash, but there was a Master Mate.
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Postby Guest » Wed May 25, 2005 4:21 pm

I've seen a documentry about Captian Pugwash & his creator, who was a raving poof. These characters WERE in the Pugwash series & they were put in there on purpose & nobody else noticed at the time.

Also, an ex girlfriend worked in television & knew the creator. She confirmed to me that it was all true.
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Postby Raymond-Bergman » Wed May 25, 2005 4:53 pm

. wrote:I've seen a documentry about Captian Pugwash & his creator, who was a raving poof.


Where did you see that in Jail?
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Postby Guest » Wed May 25, 2005 11:25 pm

Raymond-Bergman wrote:
. wrote:I've seen a documentry about Captian Pugwash & his creator, who was a raving poof.


Where did you see that in Jail?


No, your momma's house. :mrgreen:
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Postby Raymond-Bergman » Fri May 27, 2005 12:58 pm

. wrote:No, your momma's house. :mrgreen:


Arf
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Postby Guest » Wed Dec 14, 2005 1:25 pm

Urban Myth
Contrary to popular belief, the names of his crew were not particularly smutty. 'Master Bates', 'Seaman Staines' and 'Roger the Cabin Boy' (plus the later addition of 'Simon the Bar Steward') being the names often quoted as proving the programme's dodginess. The Guardian was not the only publication which had to make an apology after printing the story that the BBC had withdrawn the program after finding out the dodgy names. It is a shame, but unfortunately John Ryan did not choose these names. They would have made the program even better, though.
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Postby Guest » Wed Dec 14, 2005 1:28 pm

The
Captain Pugwash cartoon, which originally ran on the BBC between 1958 and 1967, is widely believed to have featured characters with risqué maritime names such as Master Bates, Seaman Staines, and Roger the Cabin Boy. In fact, the crew of the famous Black Pig ship included sailors with no such names: present on board were Master Mate, Tom the Cabin Boy, and Pirates Barnabas and Willy. (No character with the designation of 'Seaman' appeared in the show.) Series creator John Ryan successfully won retractions and settlements from the Sunday Correspondent and the Guardian after both newspapers claimed that the show's characters did indeed have smutty names, and that the BBC had taken it off the air as a result. The Guardian's statement ran as follows:


In the Young Guardian of September 13 [1991] we stated that the Captain Pugwash cartoon series featured characters called Seaman Staines and Master Bates, and for that reason the series had never been repeated by the BBC. We accept that it is untrue that there ever were any such characters. Furthermore, the series continues to be shown on television and on video. We apologize to Mr. Ryan, the creator, writer and artist of the Captain Pugwash films and books. We have agreed to pay him damages and his legal costs.
Evening Standard correspondent Victor Lewis-Smith wrote several years later:


'It'll never stand up in court,' I hear you cry, but stranger cases have flourished. I remember voicing much the same opinion a decade ago when John Ryan's solicitor threatened legal action against the newspaper I was then working for, after I had erroneously (and I stress erroneously) suggested that the characters he'd created for his Captain Pugwash series weren't quite as innocent as they'd first seemed back in the 1950s.
Unwittingly repeating a folk myth that had been passed down through generations of schoolboys, I'd stated that the dramatis personae included such nautical naughties as Master Bates, Seaman Stains and Roger the Cabin Boy, and that 'Pugwash' was Australian slang for a form of oral sex. The matter seemed trivial, but an apology was made, Mr Ryan's honour was satisfied and two sets of parasitical, low-life libel lawyers thus pocketed yet more easy (and thoroughly ill-deserved) dosh.

Puns that play on the homophony of masturbates-Master Bates and seamen-semen are quite old (recall the "What's long and hard and filled with seamen?" joke), and it was probably only a matter of time before someone made the obvious jokes about the names of sailors in a long-running television series, especially since — as with the sexual messages allegedly hidden in several Disney animated films — people seem to find this type of humor particularly titillating when it is ascribed to the creators of children's programming. However, as this audio clip demonstrates, the exact pronunciation of certain Captain Pugwash character names could (perhaps deliberately) be difficult to discern.

The British comedy duo of Victor Lewis-Smith and Paul Sparks has claimed credit for starting and spreading the Captain Pugwash rumors, and the double entendre names have also been attributed to a sketch by "seventies folkie comic" Richard Digance as well as a "1970s rag mag."
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Postby Guest » Sat Dec 17, 2005 10:24 am

whatever the names,pugwash wasb top
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Pubic Enemies trailer

Postby freakertom » Thu Jul 16, 2009 4:47 am

The old day gangsters are so cool, that makes Public Enemies a big hit.
While waiting for the DVD Rip, let's watch Pubic Enemies trailer in high quaity
Public Enemies movie trailer
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