The comedy podcast for the discerning listener. It's pure pleasure for your ears as veteran media men Max and Terry sort out the mess of modern telly and offer ideas for the next generation of programme makers.
Along the way lose weight with the bacon diet, learn hypnosis for sharks and discover the mystical secrets of the serious acting beard.
Max and Terry get all political this week as they work out how to teach kids about Politics with the Chuckle Brothers, and also re-invent Election Night coverage thanks to Ainsley Harriot's Political Pie.
Max and Terry get all political this week as they work out how to teach kids about Politics with the Chuckle Brothers, and also re-invent Election Night coverage thanks to Ainsley Harriot's Political Pie.
Max and Terry remember variety's own Bobby Peaks and the
Saturday night entertainment show they were going to do; before discussing a brand
new magic show idea - ‘Smoke and Mirrors’.
Direct download: 7c.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 12:23 AM
Max and Terry discuss Soap Operas and recall their failed 1980's one called "Falklanders" and so set about to create another brand new one for the year 2009 - "Full English"; set in Max's home town of Newendyke.
Sorry folks, but even dedicated media dynamos such as us have to go on our holidays at some point. We'll be back soon with more knowledge biscuits for you to crunch on. But while we're off have a rummage in the archive, drop us an email (max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk), or just be patient. We love you all. Cheerio for now!
Thanks to a fan letter Max and Terry revisit their moderately successful 'What a ..!' comedy film series. They take a look back to Giant Haystacks' big cinema break in What a Grapple! And look forward to reinvigorating the series for a whole new generation of fans. If it can work for your Bat Man it can work for cheap'n'cheerful bawdy Brit flicks.
You don't have to go all the way to Africa to find orphans. Max and Terry help childless couples and Saturday night TV in one instructional podcast. There's more troubling listener mail, another of Terry's uncanny impressions and a new catchphrase for Max. So join us and wet yourself laughing. Thank you.
Max and Terry realise that there's money to be made from a TV show about conspiracies, as support and denial both lead towards the same outcome - viewers!
Your favourite TV podcast returns with all the fun of the fair. Expand your cheese horizons, marvel at Comic Relief controversy and moisturise your mind with a dollop of informed media know-how.
A letter of complaint. If you've got something you'd like to get off your chest you can write to either Max@ or Terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk. Max and Terry will be back with more wit and wisdom in a couple of weeks.
This is the infamous controversial banned podcast where Max and Terry reminisce about Top of the Pops and the unforgettable, but sadly now forgotten, dance troupe Fruitee Lipz.
It's been in the grubby paws of some legal people who have now made it safe for posting with a few adjustments to save the embarrassment (and possibly marriages) of a few select people.
Meet the real heroes of the hospital in The Consultant Specialists as Max and Terry explain the science behind gastric bands, homeopathy and supermarket bargains.
Put down that burger and pick up your mp3 player to begin your TV diet today. Max and Terry take you on a fantastic food voyage revealing the secrets of the bacon diet, rumours of celebs cheating at pub quizzes and just what that bloke from Bucks Fizz is up to now. Join us in roughly a fortnight for more, or follow the chaps on twitter: @MaxBuffer and @TerryBland.
Terry takes you back to the Seventies and the adverts he and Max produced promoting the town of Newendyke. Join us for fondue, fake blood and frolics in the sitcom world.
We haven't forgotten you but events have conspired against us including killer colds, more trouble with Babs' mother and the TV channel dedicated to dogs and all things dog-related that will never be (see Terry's Twitter for more details). We'll be back very soon and hope that you enjoy our rather weighty back catalogue as well as the daily musings of Max and Terry over at twitter.com/MaxBuffer and twitter.com/TerryBland.
Terry calls in from his cruise to let you know that he and Max are thinking of you. Thanks for all the programme suggestions, fan letters and various foodstuffs. We're getting closer to completing that trifle. Get in touch by writing to either max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk. You can now follow Terry on Twitter! http://twitter.com/TerryBland
Max is on his own this week as Terry is spending some quality time with Babs. So settle down this New Year for a slice of wisdom cake as Max takes you through another course of BiteSized Buffer. Learn the autumn leaves approach to life, its uses for cake making and more importantly script writing. Max and Terry will be back very soon after their respective post-seasonal holidays. In the meantime check out any episodes you may have missed, pop over to the website http://www.mediamuseum.co.uk (there's a picture of a lady's bottom there) or email max @ mediamuseum.co.uk to offer him your thoughts.
Be a demon in the sack under the guiding hand of Fraser Hines. You too can be a manly man with Max and Terry's helpful instructions for hapless husbands and hopeless singletons. Also this week naked wrestling, sexual confusion and rubbing one off. All for research. Now stop that, you'll go blind!
Issues galore are spread across the podcast in a reboot of the one-off
TV play. Shopping telly is replaced with a cake-based bartering system hosted by Sarah Greene, there's trouble with a yorkshire terrier and
heartrending chicken drama with a young Dexter Fletcher.
Max thinks back to the late 70s, a time of space robots, bad music and a decent cod fillet. Join him for dinner with Blake Edwards, the man behind the Pink Panther films, as he tries to re-energise the Clouseau franchise with some intergalactic punk magic.
Brrr! It's cold out there, the perfect time to think of jetting off to a Holiday Hotspot. Max and Terry bring you a world of variety on the cruise ships with cheeky comedians, ladies with feathers and a choice of chips or mash at the captain's table. The trifle gets a step closer to completion, Terry does more impressions and advises you on how best to approach Brian Conley. Send your love to either max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk.
Max and Terry chuck their keys in the fruit bowl and spend an evening romancing a new TV dating show idea. From the shock of inappropriate listener mail to a family friendly way to find love on the box, telly's top producers return with more tips and tricks. Increase your reach, find love and get a bunch of single men to do your ironing for free.
Art for the masses! Bored of toffs and know-it-alls trying to pass off pickled wildlife as art? Max and Terry are and they have just the solution for making arts TV fun again. So pop along to the Media Museum for nuns with norks, darts legend Ted Hankey and uncanny impressions.
Max returns with another portion of BiteSized Buffer. This taster from Max's lecture tour instructs would-be TV producers in striking emotional notes through pet death. Email Max with any scripts you want reading by pointing your mouse in the direction of max @ mediamuseum.co.uk.
Get the fire going, curl up on the sofa, snuggle up to a loved one (or the dog) and settle down for death and cocoa. Max and Terry explore the world of genteel murders and find a variety of ways to bump off sleepy villagers. This week's podcast features an important message to a certain actor, biscuits for cheese and the benefits of being a busybody. Send email to either max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk.
Terry gets misty with memories of working with Linda Lusardi on a circus-themed quiz show. Listen for a tale of video shop mix-ups, transvestite magicians and a tiger named Sharon. Send any thoughts, fan mail and complaints to terry @ mediamuseum.co.uk.
There's a super secret evil out there and so Max and Terry create a super secret spy team to combat it. So up step Hunter from Gladiators, angel-voiced Martine McCutcheon, and man-off-the-telly Ralf Little to save the day with edgy action TV but in an ITC-style for the 21st century. We'll also find out about Terry's friendship with former head of MI5 Dame Stella Rimington, cheesy mozzarella bites and how to anger Robert Powell.
Welcome to the first in a semi-regular series of bite sized lectures
from Max Buffer. A taste of what you can expect should you hire him to
speak at your college, university or polytechnic. This week Max
discusses the Yogi Bear Effect, a well known storytelling trick
employed by masters of the media to create complex characters where
what is a good guy is a bad guy and what is a bad guy is a good guy.
So, get your pencils and jotters at the ready to begin your media
education.
It's Autumn. And you know what that means. Yes, new TV budgets. Max and
Terry advise on how best to spend the cash. So, roll out the cobbles,
cover the kids in authentic dirt and prepare your cap for doffing as we
enter a world of costume drama serials set in your actual interwar
period. Along the way we'll meet the Snow brother that Jon and Peter
don't like to mention, stumble around Gary Wilmot's blanket and enjoy
some lovely scones sent in by Melina Hope.
Are you sick of shows such as What Not to Look Like, Laughing at Poor People, and How Fat is Your Wife? Max and Terry are and they have the perfect entertainment solution. Enter the Media Museum for a round of Cribben's Cribbage and Sherrie's Skittles as the veteran telly experts create a pub-quiz-sitcom-costume-drama gameshow where members of the public and top celebs, including Nicky Berry and Don Estelle, can mingle and have a jolly knees up. And this week Max and Terry would like to thank the lovely Sandra Virgin for sending in the jaffa cakes.
Max accidentally lands on some filthy channels on his Sky box and
discovers that for £1.50 a minute you can speak to a woman in her pants
for sordid phone sex while a nation watches on. Shocking stuff, I'm sure
you'll agree. And so Max and Terry deconstruct this terrible,
exploitative phenomenon and then turn it into a bleak ITV drama series.
Join them to learn the horror of being forced to waggle your bits
around 9 nights a week, secrets of the serious acting beard, and how
media studies can help turn lives around.
Max casts his mind back to a Norman Wisdom film that never was. His tribute to the Marx brothers, in the form of a Karl Marx biopic, had all the makings of a classic slice of cinema comedy. Be astounded at the cavalier approach to historical accuracy and marvel at what could have been. Subscribe today, visit the website (www.mediamuseum.co.uk) and tune in next week for a shocking view of the seedier side of satellite television.
Give the neighbours something good to talk about as you invite a TV crew to transform your garden into extra living space. Max and Terry show how the life of a poor family can be enhanced by Brian Dowling and Robson Green tramping through their backyard. Add thousands to the value of your house in this tricky time of the credit crunch. Along the way find out secrets of the wheelchair, Alan Titchmarsh off camera and Robson Green's new catchphrase.
Prepare your ears for genius as Max and Terry search for a more talented, and less litigious Ross Kemp settling on the people’s actor Robson Green. Robson is mooted as the star of their action-packed, genre-crossing TV treat ‘Surf Doctor’, a show already described as ‘having one over Lovejoy.’ Dare to imagine a surfing-doctor-detective foiling the plot of an evil Leslie Grantham and his just-as-evil hypnotised sharks.
Bookings are now being taken for Max's lecture tour. Hear about a 78% surefire hit that never got past the pilot stage, Charity Begins in Hove. Max takes you behind the scenery (left over from another show) to give you a first hand insight into the creation of comedy gold.
How do you get the kids to stop all that stabbing and pull themselves off away from the internet? Max and Terry create a world of wonder, full of wondrous things in your actual olden days, in the shape of a classic drama serial for kids. Find out why Max and Terry feel obligated to Cilla Black, the going rate for Joe Pasquale and how to defeat evil moth creatures from another realm. And just who is Ted Monroe?
Alien shenanigans in the far-off future of 1998 are recalled by Terry. Find out how Gareth Hunt got the part as Space Agent John Granger, why Morty Vicker's double act 'Vicker and Tart' dissolved, and why you should use non-toxic glue in monster masks. All this and how clever use of an egg sandwich can help you get the best performance from your actors.
Crime! It's one hot spud of a topic. This week Max and Terry lament a lack of decent police procedurals on the telly and devise a surefire hit that'll get Parky reaching for his Sky+ box. Also find out why Max is miffed with the Chuckle Brothers, and why Terry isn't too chuffed with that fella from Eastenders (not Ross Kemp, the other one, he was in it years ago, you remember him don't you?). Where to buy drugs, what kids get up to in jail and what you'd never name a child - all covered in great detail and oh so much more.
Ronnie Corbett's boxer shorts! Yes Max returns for another remembering session. The hilarity of men dressing up as women is taken to hysterical new heights of humour in the pilot for 'Life's a Drag'. But where did it come from? How was it made? Why was it never released? All these issues and more are addressed along with a performance of the show's jokes by Max himself.
Max and Terry roast some old chestnuts and give the Fanny-joke an airing in this instructive episode about cookery shows on TV. Get their sometimes damning verdicts on modern TV chefs and find out how they can reinvigorate a moribund genre using Ross Kemp, marmalade and a pinch of media magic.
Direct download: Food.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:36 AM
Max gets all remembery about the lost, and almost forgotten, celebrity panel show 'How Much is an Arab Worth?'. So join us for tales of stubbornness, real desert sand and a quick round of 'Woman or Ass'.
The latest show has veteran men of the media, Max Buffer and Terry Bland, in conversation as they tell you just
what's wrong with reality TV and how it can be fixed with a celebrity
version of Are You Being Served? Along the way find out about Merlin
the Psychic Dog, horses on drugs, Clive Dunn's Portugal hideaway and
why Ross Kemp would make the perfect Captain Peacock.
This is a bit of a tasty teaser for you to share with your friends. Thanks to everyone who's downloaded so far. It's hopefully persuaded Max to take a break from his busy lecturing schedule and join in with his memories. Anyway, better go. Babs has been baking and I promised I'd help by sticking some cream in her buns. Terry.
Terry remembers working on forgotten gem of the 1970s - 'Lush Face!'. Hear how the game shifted from the intellectual philosophy of the original board game to a bawdy, gurning knockabout quiz show that caused serious injury to Lionel Blair. And, coming soon - Terry Bland and Max Buffer in conversation!
Subscribe today to hear more from Max Buffer's Media Museum. Coming soon - 'Lush Face!', the board game that led to the quiz show that led to misfortune for Lionel Blair.
Terry remembers working with Les Dennis on this controversial classic. Ever wanted to make sure you're left something decent by Gran? Get into her good books and pick up some tips from 'Where there's a will. . .'.
Welcome to the audio version of Max Buffer's Media Museum. Max and his friend Terry Bland 'remember' classic shows such as crossdessing comedy 'Life's a Drag', Jimmy Nail's chip shop loving detective 'Shepshed' and the aborted TV quiz 'How Much is an Arab Worth?'. This week 80s action spectacular M.O.O.S.E gets the remembering treatment. Visit http://mediamuseum.wordpress.com for the written down versions.
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Max and Terry remember variety's own Bobby Peaks and the
Saturday night entertainment show they were going to do; before discussing a brand
new magic show idea - ‘Smoke and Mirrors’.
Direct download: 7c.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 12:23 AM
Max and Terry discuss Soap Operas and recall their failed 1980's one called "Falklanders" and so set about to create another brand new one for the year 2009 - "Full English"; set in Max's home town of Newendyke.
Sorry folks, but even dedicated media dynamos such as us have to go on our holidays at some point. We'll be back soon with more knowledge biscuits for you to crunch on. But while we're off have a rummage in the archive, drop us an email (max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk), or just be patient. We love you all. Cheerio for now!
Thanks to a fan letter Max and Terry revisit their moderately successful 'What a ..!' comedy film series. They take a look back to Giant Haystacks' big cinema break in What a Grapple! And look forward to reinvigorating the series for a whole new generation of fans. If it can work for your Bat Man it can work for cheap'n'cheerful bawdy Brit flicks.
You don't have to go all the way to Africa to find orphans. Max and Terry help childless couples and Saturday night TV in one instructional podcast. There's more troubling listener mail, another of Terry's uncanny impressions and a new catchphrase for Max. So join us and wet yourself laughing. Thank you.
Max and Terry realise that there's money to be made from a TV show about conspiracies, as support and denial both lead towards the same outcome - viewers!
Your favourite TV podcast returns with all the fun of the fair. Expand your cheese horizons, marvel at Comic Relief controversy and moisturise your mind with a dollop of informed media know-how.
A letter of complaint. If you've got something you'd like to get off your chest you can write to either Max@ or Terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk. Max and Terry will be back with more wit and wisdom in a couple of weeks.
This is the infamous controversial banned podcast where Max and Terry reminisce about Top of the Pops and the unforgettable, but sadly now forgotten, dance troupe Fruitee Lipz.
It's been in the grubby paws of some legal people who have now made it safe for posting with a few adjustments to save the embarrassment (and possibly marriages) of a few select people.
Meet the real heroes of the hospital in The Consultant Specialists as Max and Terry explain the science behind gastric bands, homeopathy and supermarket bargains.
Put down that burger and pick up your mp3 player to begin your TV diet today. Max and Terry take you on a fantastic food voyage revealing the secrets of the bacon diet, rumours of celebs cheating at pub quizzes and just what that bloke from Bucks Fizz is up to now. Join us in roughly a fortnight for more, or follow the chaps on twitter: @MaxBuffer and @TerryBland.
Terry takes you back to the Seventies and the adverts he and Max produced promoting the town of Newendyke. Join us for fondue, fake blood and frolics in the sitcom world.
We haven't forgotten you but events have conspired against us including killer colds, more trouble with Babs' mother and the TV channel dedicated to dogs and all things dog-related that will never be (see Terry's Twitter for more details). We'll be back very soon and hope that you enjoy our rather weighty back catalogue as well as the daily musings of Max and Terry over at twitter.com/MaxBuffer and twitter.com/TerryBland.
Terry calls in from his cruise to let you know that he and Max are thinking of you. Thanks for all the programme suggestions, fan letters and various foodstuffs. We're getting closer to completing that trifle. Get in touch by writing to either max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk. You can now follow Terry on Twitter! http://twitter.com/TerryBland
Max is on his own this week as Terry is spending some quality time with Babs. So settle down this New Year for a slice of wisdom cake as Max takes you through another course of BiteSized Buffer. Learn the autumn leaves approach to life, its uses for cake making and more importantly script writing. Max and Terry will be back very soon after their respective post-seasonal holidays. In the meantime check out any episodes you may have missed, pop over to the website http://www.mediamuseum.co.uk (there's a picture of a lady's bottom there) or email max @ mediamuseum.co.uk to offer him your thoughts.
Be a demon in the sack under the guiding hand of Fraser Hines. You too can be a manly man with Max and Terry's helpful instructions for hapless husbands and hopeless singletons. Also this week naked wrestling, sexual confusion and rubbing one off. All for research. Now stop that, you'll go blind!
Issues galore are spread across the podcast in a reboot of the one-off
TV play. Shopping telly is replaced with a cake-based bartering system hosted by Sarah Greene, there's trouble with a yorkshire terrier and
heartrending chicken drama with a young Dexter Fletcher.
Max thinks back to the late 70s, a time of space robots, bad music and a decent cod fillet. Join him for dinner with Blake Edwards, the man behind the Pink Panther films, as he tries to re-energise the Clouseau franchise with some intergalactic punk magic.
Brrr! It's cold out there, the perfect time to think of jetting off to a Holiday Hotspot. Max and Terry bring you a world of variety on the cruise ships with cheeky comedians, ladies with feathers and a choice of chips or mash at the captain's table. The trifle gets a step closer to completion, Terry does more impressions and advises you on how best to approach Brian Conley. Send your love to either max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk.
Max and Terry chuck their keys in the fruit bowl and spend an evening romancing a new TV dating show idea. From the shock of inappropriate listener mail to a family friendly way to find love on the box, telly's top producers return with more tips and tricks. Increase your reach, find love and get a bunch of single men to do your ironing for free.
Art for the masses! Bored of toffs and know-it-alls trying to pass off pickled wildlife as art? Max and Terry are and they have just the solution for making arts TV fun again. So pop along to the Media Museum for nuns with norks, darts legend Ted Hankey and uncanny impressions.
Max returns with another portion of BiteSized Buffer. This taster from Max's lecture tour instructs would-be TV producers in striking emotional notes through pet death. Email Max with any scripts you want reading by pointing your mouse in the direction of max @ mediamuseum.co.uk.
Get the fire going, curl up on the sofa, snuggle up to a loved one (or the dog) and settle down for death and cocoa. Max and Terry explore the world of genteel murders and find a variety of ways to bump off sleepy villagers. This week's podcast features an important message to a certain actor, biscuits for cheese and the benefits of being a busybody. Send email to either max@ or terry@ mediamuseum.co.uk.
Terry gets misty with memories of working with Linda Lusardi on a circus-themed quiz show. Listen for a tale of video shop mix-ups, transvestite magicians and a tiger named Sharon. Send any thoughts, fan mail and complaints to terry @ mediamuseum.co.uk.
There's a super secret evil out there and so Max and Terry create a super secret spy team to combat it. So up step Hunter from Gladiators, angel-voiced Martine McCutcheon, and man-off-the-telly Ralf Little to save the day with edgy action TV but in an ITC-style for the 21st century. We'll also find out about Terry's friendship with former head of MI5 Dame Stella Rimington, cheesy mozzarella bites and how to anger Robert Powell.
Welcome to the first in a semi-regular series of bite sized lectures
from Max Buffer. A taste of what you can expect should you hire him to
speak at your college, university or polytechnic. This week Max
discusses the Yogi Bear Effect, a well known storytelling trick
employed by masters of the media to create complex characters where
what is a good guy is a bad guy and what is a bad guy is a good guy.
So, get your pencils and jotters at the ready to begin your media
education.
It's Autumn. And you know what that means. Yes, new TV budgets. Max and
Terry advise on how best to spend the cash. So, roll out the cobbles,
cover the kids in authentic dirt and prepare your cap for doffing as we
enter a world of costume drama serials set in your actual interwar
period. Along the way we'll meet the Snow brother that Jon and Peter
don't like to mention, stumble around Gary Wilmot's blanket and enjoy
some lovely scones sent in by Melina Hope.
Are you sick of shows such as What Not to Look Like, Laughing at Poor People, and How Fat is Your Wife? Max and Terry are and they have the perfect entertainment solution. Enter the Media Museum for a round of Cribben's Cribbage and Sherrie's Skittles as the veteran telly experts create a pub-quiz-sitcom-costume-drama gameshow where members of the public and top celebs, including Nicky Berry and Don Estelle, can mingle and have a jolly knees up. And this week Max and Terry would like to thank the lovely Sandra Virgin for sending in the jaffa cakes.
Max accidentally lands on some filthy channels on his Sky box and
discovers that for £1.50 a minute you can speak to a woman in her pants
for sordid phone sex while a nation watches on. Shocking stuff, I'm sure
you'll agree. And so Max and Terry deconstruct this terrible,
exploitative phenomenon and then turn it into a bleak ITV drama series.
Join them to learn the horror of being forced to waggle your bits
around 9 nights a week, secrets of the serious acting beard, and how
media studies can help turn lives around.
Max casts his mind back to a Norman Wisdom film that never was. His tribute to the Marx brothers, in the form of a Karl Marx biopic, had all the makings of a classic slice of cinema comedy. Be astounded at the cavalier approach to historical accuracy and marvel at what could have been. Subscribe today, visit the website (www.mediamuseum.co.uk) and tune in next week for a shocking view of the seedier side of satellite television.
Give the neighbours something good to talk about as you invite a TV crew to transform your garden into extra living space. Max and Terry show how the life of a poor family can be enhanced by Brian Dowling and Robson Green tramping through their backyard. Add thousands to the value of your house in this tricky time of the credit crunch. Along the way find out secrets of the wheelchair, Alan Titchmarsh off camera and Robson Green's new catchphrase.
Prepare your ears for genius as Max and Terry search for a more talented, and less litigious Ross Kemp settling on the people’s actor Robson Green. Robson is mooted as the star of their action-packed, genre-crossing TV treat ‘Surf Doctor’, a show already described as ‘having one over Lovejoy.’ Dare to imagine a surfing-doctor-detective foiling the plot of an evil Leslie Grantham and his just-as-evil hypnotised sharks.
Bookings are now being taken for Max's lecture tour. Hear about a 78% surefire hit that never got past the pilot stage, Charity Begins in Hove. Max takes you behind the scenery (left over from another show) to give you a first hand insight into the creation of comedy gold.
How do you get the kids to stop all that stabbing and pull themselves off away from the internet? Max and Terry create a world of wonder, full of wondrous things in your actual olden days, in the shape of a classic drama serial for kids. Find out why Max and Terry feel obligated to Cilla Black, the going rate for Joe Pasquale and how to defeat evil moth creatures from another realm. And just who is Ted Monroe?
Alien shenanigans in the far-off future of 1998 are recalled by Terry. Find out how Gareth Hunt got the part as Space Agent John Granger, why Morty Vicker's double act 'Vicker and Tart' dissolved, and why you should use non-toxic glue in monster masks. All this and how clever use of an egg sandwich can help you get the best performance from your actors.
Crime! It's one hot spud of a topic. This week Max and Terry lament a lack of decent police procedurals on the telly and devise a surefire hit that'll get Parky reaching for his Sky+ box. Also find out why Max is miffed with the Chuckle Brothers, and why Terry isn't too chuffed with that fella from Eastenders (not Ross Kemp, the other one, he was in it years ago, you remember him don't you?). Where to buy drugs, what kids get up to in jail and what you'd never name a child - all covered in great detail and oh so much more.
Ronnie Corbett's boxer shorts! Yes Max returns for another remembering session. The hilarity of men dressing up as women is taken to hysterical new heights of humour in the pilot for 'Life's a Drag'. But where did it come from? How was it made? Why was it never released? All these issues and more are addressed along with a performance of the show's jokes by Max himself.
Max and Terry roast some old chestnuts and give the Fanny-joke an airing in this instructive episode about cookery shows on TV. Get their sometimes damning verdicts on modern TV chefs and find out how they can reinvigorate a moribund genre using Ross Kemp, marmalade and a pinch of media magic.
Direct download: Food.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 3:36 AM
Max gets all remembery about the lost, and almost forgotten, celebrity panel show 'How Much is an Arab Worth?'. So join us for tales of stubbornness, real desert sand and a quick round of 'Woman or Ass'.
The latest show has veteran men of the media, Max Buffer and Terry Bland, in conversation as they tell you just
what's wrong with reality TV and how it can be fixed with a celebrity
version of Are You Being Served? Along the way find out about Merlin
the Psychic Dog, horses on drugs, Clive Dunn's Portugal hideaway and
why Ross Kemp would make the perfect Captain Peacock.
This is a bit of a tasty teaser for you to share with your friends. Thanks to everyone who's downloaded so far. It's hopefully persuaded Max to take a break from his busy lecturing schedule and join in with his memories. Anyway, better go. Babs has been baking and I promised I'd help by sticking some cream in her buns. Terry.
Terry remembers working on forgotten gem of the 1970s - 'Lush Face!'. Hear how the game shifted from the intellectual philosophy of the original board game to a bawdy, gurning knockabout quiz show that caused serious injury to Lionel Blair. And, coming soon - Terry Bland and Max Buffer in conversation!
Subscribe today to hear more from Max Buffer's Media Museum. Coming soon - 'Lush Face!', the board game that led to the quiz show that led to misfortune for Lionel Blair.
Terry remembers working with Les Dennis on this controversial classic. Ever wanted to make sure you're left something decent by Gran? Get into her good books and pick up some tips from 'Where there's a will. . .'.
Welcome to the audio version of Max Buffer's Media Museum. Max and his friend Terry Bland 'remember' classic shows such as crossdessing comedy 'Life's a Drag', Jimmy Nail's chip shop loving detective 'Shepshed' and the aborted TV quiz 'How Much is an Arab Worth?'. This week 80s action spectacular M.O.O.S.E gets the remembering treatment. Visit http://mediamuseum.wordpress.com for the written down versions.