The Goodies: Difference between revisions

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[[File:goodies.jpg|frame|We do anything, anywhere, anytime.]]
 
{{quote|''Goodies! Goodie goodie yum-yum!''}}
 
A groundbreaking 1970 British comedy series, not nearly as well-known outside of the UK as its contemporary, ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]].'' (Some view it as ''[[The Monkees]]'' to the Pythons' Beatles -- while others view it as the Beatles to the Pythons' ''[[The Rolling Stones|Rolling Stones]]''.) Born from the same generation of comic talents that infused British TV in the 1960s and 1970s with such innovative work, ''[[The Goodies]]'' was far more plot-oriented than ''Python'' (it was nominally a [[Sitcom]] when it premiered), but at the same time it was also far more anarchic and surreal.
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'''Tim:''' You...you've been using people! ...And Donny Osmond! }}
* [[The Apartheid Era]]: The South Africa episode!
* [[Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking]]: From ''"Kung Fu Kapers''", where Tim and Graeme are trying to provoke Bill.
{{quote|'''Tim:''' You nasty, spotty, unpleasant little dwarf!
'''Graeme:''' Weirdo! ...''Chelsea supporter!'' }}
** ::[[I Take Offense to That Last One|(Note that the latter is the remark that comes closest to pushing Bill over the edge...)]]
* [[Asbestos-Free Cereal]]: On "It Might as Well Be String" (a spoof of the advertising industry), their ad campaign for Sunbeam Sliced Bread claims that "nine out of ten doctors agree that people who eat Sunbeam Sliced Bread are less likely to be trampled to death by elephants". Graeme does mention that it was a struggle to find [[Mad Doctor|the right nine doctors]], however. And the elephants.
* [[Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever]] ([http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2J6uUMeAVW8 Kitten Kong] and later [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKcApI6uiSY Dougal and Zebedee] from ''[[The Magic Roundabout]]'')
* [[Baguette Beatdown]]: ''Kung-Fu Kapers'' has Tim briefly make use of a French martial art called Oh-Hon-Hee-Hon that involves hitting the opponent with a baguette... it has no effect whatsoever!
** Ecky Thump: it's a "martial art" Bill learned when he was younger that basically revolves around hitting people with black pudding.
* [[Banana Peel]]: In the episode ''"Cunning Stunts''", Bill is seen throwing several banana peels on the floor just so he can slip all over them as part of his entry in the Eurovision Loony Contest. Graeme and Tim also slip all over the skins.
** And a mimed banana peel causes a nasty accident in "Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express".
* [[Bar Slide]]: Occurs in ''"Bunfight at the O.K. Tearooms''". The surly barmaid slides two dainty teacups down the bar to Tim and Bill, who fail to catch them.
* [[Bawdy Song]] (in "Wacky Wales")
* [[Big "Shut Up!"]]: Graeme does one ''in "Kitten Kong''", to quiet down Tim and Bill bickering [[Like an Old Married Couple]].
* [[Biting the Hand Humor]]: The Goodies contains numerous swipes at the BBC, most notably in the episodes ''"Alternative Roots''" and ''"The End''", during which a service announcement warns of "cutbacks of a hundred percent" - and the screen immediately goes black!
** And in one episode they blew up the BBC Television centre!
* [[Bitter Almonds]]: In ("Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express").
* [[Blackface]]: Tim in ''"South Africa". It''.s Aa somewhat unusual example in that it was being used to criticise racism (the joke was that no actual black people would be in a pro-apartheid PSA).
* [[Blood Sport]]:In ("2001 and a Bit").
* [[Boomerang Comeback]]: In the infamous scene in ''"Ecky Thump''", where Bill is proving "Ecky Thump" is superior to other martial arts. Graeme misses with a boomerang, but later when Tim has disarmed Bill with some bagpipes, it comes back and clouts Tim from behind.
* [[Bonnie Scotland]]: In ("Scotland" and "Alternative Roots").
** Lampshaded somewhat by having the boys, in "Scotland", speak in ludicrous Scottish accents to avoid being discovered as being English. One amassment of slang and a song-and-dance number later, cue the tourist bureau owner saying "You must be English touristry".
* [[Bottle Episode]]: ("The End" and "Earthanasia" feature no special effects and no guest stars, and are performed entirely on the one set. The latter episode in fact consists of one real-time 25-minute scene, and both are regarded as among the series' best moments.)
* [[Broke Episode]]: (severalSeveral occasions).
* [[Buccaneer Broadcaster]]: ("Radio Goodies").
* [[Butt Monkey]]: (Tim becomes this on occasion).
* [[By the Lights of Their Eyes]]: In the episode ''"South Africa''":
{{quote|'''Tim:''' Look at those stars. They look like hundreds of tiny little eyes.
'''Graeme:''' They ''are'' hundreds of tiny little eyes... }}
* [[By Wall That Is Holey]]
* [[Calvin Ball]]: "Spat", which seemed to be made of rules that led to Bill always losing and being injured.
** Bill mentions in the commentary that he really didn't have any idea what the other two were doing.
* [[The Cameo]]: Plenty of celebrities spoofed themselves, and the series virtually invented the [[Newscaster Cameo]]. Averted with Prince Charles who considered it but had to decline, and Rolf Harris who was never asked to appear in the episode spoofing him, much to his disappointment.<ref> Bill Oddie, whose personal contempt for Harris was part of the motivation behind the frequent mockery of him on the programme, assumed Harris would refuse if asked to appear in the episode, and so didn't bother to ask.</ref>
** In one episode, [[John Cleese]] cameos, deriding the Goodies as a "Kidkids's show.". (In real life, the [[Monty Python|Pythons]] and the Goodies were (mostly) friendly rivals.)
* [[Camping a Crapper]]: In "Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express", the Shafts are killed when the lavatory on the train blows up while they're using it.
* [[Captured by Cannibals]]: One episode had the lads placed in a native cooking-pot. They got out of it by encouraging the natives to cook "human clear soup" - the point being that when cooking clear soup you remove the meat before serving.
* [[Cardboard Pal]]: (The fake Graeme in ''"Bunfight at the O.K. Tea Rooms".)
* [[Cargo Ship]]: Graeme's relationship with his computer was a [[Running Gag]] that popped up occasionally, starting in ''"Women's Lib''". In ''"2001 And A Bit''", it's mentioned that Graeme was put away for having an "unnatural relationship" with his computer -- also, this is scribbled on a note in ''"The Goodies Book Of Records''":
{{quote|Dear Computer -- have gone out for an hour or so. Your programme is in the safe. Love you! Graeme
P.S. Hope your transistors are feeling better. }}
* [[The Cast Showoff]]
* [[Catapult Nightmare]]: In ''"Kitten Kong'", Tim returns home determined to wreck vengeance on [[Fluffy the Terrible|Twinkles the kitten]] after his disasterousdisastrous attempt to walk the over-active purrball. Graeme and Bill caution him that it's not a very good idea, then open the door to reveal that thanks to Graeme's growth formula the kitten has [[Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever|grown to enormous size]]. Tim screams hysterically, and then wakes up in bed crying: "Get it off me! Stop licking me!" (Bill: "I'm not licking you!") Unfortunately it's not [[All Just a Dream]].
* [[Cave Mouth]]: In "The Stone Age" Thethe Goodies go caving. They find a remarkable [[Cave Mouth]]. They note the curving rows of stalagmites and stalactites and treat the odd red thing <ref>uvula</ref> like a punching bag. The giant dinosaur, naturally, closes its mouth on them.
* [[Central Theme]]: While there is no real lesson to any episode, an overall antiauthoritian streak runs through the program. Antagonists are frequently characters who have [[Drunk with Power|let power go to their head]], usually one of the trio.
* [[Clown Car Base]]: In ''Skatty Safari'' the Rolf Harris plague has a take-off of the Pied Piper of Hamlin, which includes the Rolf Harris "attacking the babies in their cradles". Later when the Goodies draw them out of the city by playing "Waltzing Matilda" on didgeridoos, an endless stream of Rolfs are seen clambering out of the one baby carriage.
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* [[Computer Equals Tapedrive]]: Graeme's computer, naturally. Spoofed in the 2005 "Return of the Goodies" documentary where a now middle-aged Graeme tries to insert an enormous disk in his computer.
{{quote|"I'll pop it on the laptop. Hang on, it's not compatible. I shall give it an upgrade. ''([[Percussive Maintenance|hits it with a mallet]])''}}
* [[Continuity Cavalcade]]: In ''"Change Of Life''", the Goodies feel old and useless, and decide to do a Goodies standard test. It's filled with references to classic episodes, including Ecky Thump, Kitten Kong and even the old gag of getting on the trandem and falling over.
* [[Corpsing]]: Bill was especially prone to this, pointing it out on the commentary tracks.
* [[Costume Inertia]]
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* [[Creator Provincialism]]
* [[Credits Gag]]: ''It Might as Well be String'' ends with the camera looking through the backwards credits on the TV screen at the Goodies, who are sitting on a couch making snide remarks about the episode they've just watched.
* [[Cross DresserCrossdresser]]: Tim in "Cecily".
* [[Cruella to Animals]]: The EndngeredEndangered Species Club from "Dodonuts". They only hunt endangered species because their small numbers make them hard to find. Common species of animals and birds are too abundant and therefore too easy to hunt.
* [[Dance Sensation]]: Spoofed in ''"The Music Lovers''" where they were being tasked — by a musical Mad Hatter, no less — with writing a hit song. They belted up a squaredancesquare dance tune, and Bill improvised fairly ordinary squaredancesquare dance lyrics which were being followed exactly by the Mad Hatter's goons, ending with this (paraphrased):
{{quote|''Back to the windows, turn about,
''Are you ready, all jump out }}
** In universe there is "The Bounce" from ''"Goodies Rule - Ok?''"
** And Dr. Demento listeners will remember "The Funky Gibbon".
* [[The Danza]]: All three leads.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Bill and Graeme. Tim would snark occasionally, but he's usually playing it up too much for it to be deadpan.
* [[Dem Bones]]: In one episode the Goodies are operating their own hospital. Graeme gets a patient to step behind an X-Ray screen, which naturally displays his skeleton. The skeleton then walks out from the other side of the screen, causing Graeme to flee in terror (this scene is included in The Goodies opening montage).
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'''Leader:''' ''[stunned silence]''
'''Graeme:''' ''[just outside, stopping and [[Oh Crap|staring into open space, realizing]]]'' ...''WHAT'VE I DONE?!'' }}
* [[Die Laughing]]: ''"Kung Fu Kapers''" caused Alex Mitchell to laugh non-stop for nearly a half-hour. The strain on his body was too much and he suffered a fatal heart attack. His widow sent a letter to [[The Goodies]] thanking them for making her husband's last moments so happy.
* [[Dodgy Toupee]]: Several appear in ''"Scoutrageous''" when Graeme and Bill are trying to earn their Wig Spotter's Badge.
* [[Dog Walks You]]: In ''"Kitten Kong''" Tim gets dragged along by a kitten (and over some dog poo that happened to be there when they were filming the scene, what makes it worse is that that shot was filmed with stop motion, so Tim was dragged through the dog poo slowly).
* [[Don't Touch It, You Idiot!]]: This is played with in the very first episode, as the Crown Jewels have a sign placed by them reading "Please Do Not Steal". It doesn't do much good.
* [[Don't Try This At Home]]: "We would like to point out that Ecky Thump is the ancient Lancastrian art of self defence. When practised by the untrained, it could be dangerous."
* [[Dope Slap]]: Frequent -- often in the visual gag sequences, one or two characters will make a mistake with comedic results, stand around looking sheepish for a while, and get slapped or shoved (usually on the arm or shoulder) several times by whoever of them watched the mistake happen.
* [[Double Entendre]]
* [[Driving a Desk]]: ''"Punky Business''" parodied this and then subverted it, the three Goodies are in the back of a van and we see the road in the vans back windows via backscreenrear-screen projection, then it starts playing footage of punks. The subversion comes when Bill shoves Graeme and Tim out of the back of the van and we see a screen being watched by several policemen with the punk footage projected onto it.
* [[Dropped a Bridget On Him]]
{{quote|'''Bill:''' ''Tell you something, I'd rather have Edna Everage. [[Cross DresserCrossdresser|At least she's a real woman.]]''}}
* [[Drop What You Are Doing]]: Parodied. Bill's not really shocked, he's just into loud noises.
* [[Drunk with Power]]: In ''"Radio Goodies''" Graeme's plan to set up a pirate radio station (and pirate post-office) and the resulting success soon turns him into a raging fascist dictator, complete with uniform and ranting Germanic accent, and he develops a mad plan to drag the entirety of Britain outside of the five-mile limit so that he can rule over it as a 'pirate state'. When Bill and Tim walk out on him in disgust, he eventually resorts to trying to tow Britain away single-handedly in a rowboat.
** In fact this sort of thing happens rather a lot in ''The Goodies'', for instance it happened to Bill in ''Kung-Fu Capers'' episode, Graeme AGAIN''again'' in ''"Bunfight at the OK Tearooms''" and ''all three of them'' in ''the"The Movies''".
* [[Early Installment Weirdness]]: Seasons 1 and 2 have a much different feel, with episodes revolving around the lads having to help someone in need, and most villains being played by guest stars. From season 3 onwards, they started working more for their own benefit, until Season 4, where the "Anything Anytime" agency had almost been completely faded out, and the boys simply did whatever took their fancy (or [[Get Rich Quick Scheme|whatever was profitable]]).
* [[Eek! aA Mouse!]]: Referenced in ''"Kitten Kong''", where a black housekeeper (suspiciously similar to the one in ''[[Tom and Jerry]]'', we even hear her shouting for "Thomas") jumps on the table and shrieks at the sight of the team dressed as mice.
* [[Edible Ammunition]]: (The ketchup squeeze bottles in "Bunfight at the OK Tearooms".)
* [[Egomaniac Hunter]]: "Dodonuts" has Tim and Graeme as leaders of the Endangered Species Club who hunt down endangered species, including a dodo protected by conservationist Bill Oddie.
* [[Eleventy-Zillion]]: In the episode "Culture for the Masses" Tim buys a painting at an auction for "one million billion quintillion zillion pounds and two and a half new pence", which it goes without saying that he does not have. They leave thirteen pence as a deposit. By [[Contrived Coincidence]], the National Gallery have all their paintings insured for exactly one million billion quintillion zillion pounds. [[Hilarity Ensues]].
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* [[Enemy Mime]]: "Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express"
* [[Everything's Better with Monkeys]]: ''The Funky Gibbon'' — the greatest novelty hit of The Goodies.
* [[Expository Theme Tune]]: (inIn the later seasons; the earlier ones had a [[Surreal Theme Tune]] instead).
{{quote|''G (Gee) You need a helping hand
''O (Oh!) You know we understand
''O -- We'll be there to the end
''Everyone needs a friend! }}
* [[Fable Remake]]
* [[Facial Composite Failure]]: ''"Lighthouse Keeping Loonies''" has two identikit pictures of suspects for some crime who resemble some high-up members of the Royal Family.
* [[Fatal Family Photo]]: Parodied and Lampshaded: in an episode of The Goodies. Whenwhen one Nazi sentry starts showing his partner a photo of his girlfriend in Dusseldorf, the other starts telling him to put it away and ends up screaming at the top of the lungs to the British commandos he is certain are about to leap and murder them that he is not with this guy.
* [[Fauxtastic Voyage]]: ''"Daylight Robbery On The Orient Express''".
* [[Fingertip Drug Analysis]]: Played for laughs with smell instead of taste.
{{quote|'''Tim:''' Hang on a minute--''(sniffs)''--dang! That's certain substances, that is! How stupid...Graeme, have a sniff of that.
'''Graeme:''' Huh? Oh, that's--''(sniffs -- collapses, then gets up, looking completely spaced out)''--hooh! Where'd you get the stuff, man? Cool, baby, cool... }}
* [[Food Slap]]: In ''[["The Goodies]] and the Bean Stalk''", Bill has gone to sell the beloved trandem -- however, it's rated as worthless by the bike buyers, who jokingly buy it for a tin of beans. When he comes back, Tim and Graeme inspect it, surprisingly calm, before pouring all the beans over Bill's head.
** Also, in "Punky Business", Graeme has gotten to work as a waiter in a punk restaurant. When Tim orders the sauce, he gets it all over his head.
** ''Also'' also, in ''"Black And White Beauty"'', there's a literal food slap. Exposition: Graeme's running a place that takes care of old animals. Bill, after watching some of their behavior (nothing), starts doubting that they're alive. Bill watches a very unmoving cat, then this ensues:
{{quote|'''Bill:''' Alright, Graeme. ''(produces a fish)'' I want to see that cat eat that kipper.
''(nothing happens)''
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* [[Football Hooligans]]: ''[[The Goodies]]'' had an episode about soccer hooliganism, in which ''ballet'' eventually replaced soccer as the national pastime but was then ruined by - yep - ''ballet hooligans''.
** This was quite probably a reference to ''[[The Rite of Spring]]'', which actually did have hooligans beating each other and gendarmes called in to quell the riot on its premiere.
** They also had a milder parody in one episode, where Tim and Graeme ran in, cheering, chanting, and dressed in red-white scarves and woolywoolly hats.
{{quote|'''Bill:''' [[Sarcasm Mode|So where've you two been?]]<br />
'''Graeme:''' ''[[Smart People Play Chess|The chess championships!]]'' }}
* [[Footprints of Muck]]: In ''"Kitten Kong''" episode the [[Comic Trio]] follow the huge paw prints of Tinkles the Kitten across London on their three-seater bicycle, and keep running into things because the giant purrball can just step over objects they can't.
* [[For the Evulz]]: A rather light example in ''"Gender Education''": Bill's just signed up to do a row of extremely violent shows for the BBC. Graeme and Tim, bewildered, simply ask why he'd join up for such 'immoral, gratuitous violence'.
{{quote|'''Bill:''' Oh, don't worry, I have a perfectly good reason.
'''Graeme:''' Oh really? What's that?
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* [[Free Prize At the Bottom]]: One of the spoof ads was for Goodies Plastic Spacemen, which came in a cereal box with a free corn flake.
* [[Friend to All Living Things]]: After Tim Brooke-Taylor becomes Bigfoot (his right foot has swollen from walking around the sides of mountains, looking for legendary creatures) he retreats to the wild (so people will stop laughing themselves to death over the sight of his enormous foot) and becomes friends to all the animals, who join him in a rendition of the "Bigfoot" theme song.
* [[Funny Background Event]]: In ''"U-Friend Or UFO''", Tim and Graeme discuss their sensitive UFO -sensing equipment. Meanwhile, Bill is abducted.
* [[Gadgeteer Genius]]: (Graeme. Sometimes verging into [[Mad Scientist]] territory as well.)
** [[Lampshade Hanging|Lampshaded]] after a fashion in "The Race". (Granted, he makes more of a simulation, but still...)
{{quote|'''Bill:''' There's still one problem. We don't have a car, do we?
'''Graeme:''' That's no problem -- get me a plate, a spoon, and a mirror.
'''Bill:''' [[Deadpan Snarker|This is]] ''[[Deadpan Snarker|no]]'' [[Deadpan Snarker|time for juggling.]]<br />
'''Graeme:''' ''(annoyed)'' Get them. }}
* [[Gaussian Girl]]: Parodied, Bill and a woman are in soft focus whilst kissing, when he suddenly stops, runs up to the camera and wipes the petroleum jelly off the lens.
* [[Gay Cowboy]]: (Tim as the Rhinestone Cowperson in "The Goodies Almost Live".)
* [[Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!]]: Played for comedy in an episode of The Goodies. Tim is in hysterics. Graeme lightly slaps him. Tim is silent for about two seconds...and then slaps back much harder, sending Graeme tumbling into a nearby pile of boxes.
* [[Giant Foot of Stomping]] / [[Dead Line News]]: In ''"Kitten Kong''" a newsreader is squashed by Kitten Kong's huge paw.
* [[Gibberish of Love]]: The first time ''[[The Goodies]]'' meet their dancing partners in the episode "Come Dancing", this ensues. Simultaneously. To both trios. How else to explain this exchange?
{{quote|'''Girls:''' We are Norma. We are a hair artiste.
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'''Girls:''' ''[awkwardly]'' Our vision is to own our own hair dressing salon.
'''Goodies:''' How interesting. Our ambition is to own our own bank. }}
* [[The Girl Who Fits This Slipper]]: In "Punky Business", Graeme turns Tim into a punk by cutting his leg off. After reattaching it, he warns Tim that the catch won't last much past midnight. Tim goes to the TrensetterTrendsetters's Ball, where he loses his leg at midnight. Caroline Kook vows to marry the man whom the leg fits. Cue punks cutting off their own legs.
* [[Glass-Shattering Sound]]: Cilla Black's singing in "The Stolen Musicians".
* [[Goofy Print Underwear]]: Tim's union jack boxers make several appearances in The Goodies, most notably in ''"The End''" and ''"Scoutrageous''".
** And in ''"Saturday Night Grease''" he dons a pair of underpants that have a large carrot on them.
* [[Hilarious Outtakes]]: Included on the first DVD, showing several takes of the "breaking the record" scene from ''"The End''". Notable among them is the one where Bill takes the record off and smashes it against the desk, and...it doesn't break. He smashes it against the desk ''four more times'', until Tim takes it from him...and attempts to smash it himself.
* [[Hive Mind]]: In "Sex and Violence" all three Goodies disguise themselves as one person...all at once...and talk in synch. Something similar happens with both the Goodies and their dance partners in "Come Dancing".
* [[Homoerotic Subtext]]: Frequent. In one episode, Tim and Graeme replace Bill with a robot, which they treat like a son, and end up acting like a dysfunctional married couple.
** And lampshaded, notably in ''The End'', when they're concreted into their office.
{{quote|'''Tim:''' We shall make a new world...a better world for our children.
'''Bill:''' What d'you mean, children--we're not going to have any children, are we? I mean, think about it, y'know...face it, from now on we three are doomed to be [[Have a Gay Old Time|bachelors gay!]] ''(puts his hand on Tim's shoulder while Graeme starts stroking his hair)'' That's, uh...that's an idea, innit?<br />
'''Tim:''' ''(thoughtful pause)'' ...No! Get off! }}
* [[Hospital Hottie]]: Spoofed in ''"Hospital For Hire''", where the nurse turns out to be a bearded man. Then they're informed she's not a man.
* [[I Can't Believe It's Not Heroin!]]: (Bill's 'lemon sherbet' in the early seasons).
* [[Identical Grandson]]: In ''2001 And A Bit'', and done with an uncle in ''Hunting Pink''.
* [[I Know Kung Faux]]: Ecky-Thump, the ancient Lancastrian art of self-defence. It involved the use of black puddings as weapons.
* [[Implausible Deniability]]: In "Scoutrageous", Graeme and Bill have been terrorising the country as 'the Lone Scout, Plus One'. When they are finally cornered by Tim and the Salvation Army, Tim orders them to take off their masks. Upon seeing their faces, Tim lets out a shocked "It was you all along!". Graeme and Bill look sheepish and Bill mutters "No". Tim then says "Oh well, that's alright then" and starts to leave.
* [[Inept Talent Show Contestant|IneptTalentShowContestants]]s: In ''"Hype Pressure''" Graeme and Bill form a folk duo called 'the"The Twofolk'". They appear on Tim's cruel talent show '"New Faeces'" and perform a hideous song called "The World Is Full Of Women and Men". Despite being booed by the audience, they are a hit with the supposedly unscrupulous panelists, who admire the song's naivety and purity. Tim's theatre of cruelty series is cancelled as a result.
* [[Institutional Apparel]]: The arrow variation uniform can be seen in the episode ''"Goodies in the Nick''".*
* [[Instrument of Murder]]: ("The Stolen Musicians").
* [[Interrogation by Vandalism]]: In the episode ''"Scoutrageous''", the two renegade Scouts whittle Tim's staves until he relents (they also damage his hat).
** Oh, it's not just that. They also threaten to take a Brillo pad (steel wool) to Tim's shiny shoes. ''[[Serious Business|They threatened the shiny shoes.]]''
* [[ISophagus]]
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{{quote|'''Ms. Heffer:''' He doesn't want you! You're fat and old and ugly!
'''"Mitzi":''' Fat and old I may be, but ugly--''(hissing)--ugly...'' ...you're absolutely right, that's why he loves me. C'mere... }}
* [[It Makes Sense in Context]]: Graeme pulls this in ''"The Clown Virus''" due to his less-than-helpful explanation of what's going on.
{{quote|'''Bill:''' ''(seeing the first signs of Tim's transformation into a clown)'' Hey, Gray, Gray...he looks like Coco the Clown!
'''Graeme:''' Good grief, of course...that's it!
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'''Tim & Bill:''' ...No, it doesn't. }}
* [[Keep Circulating the Tapes]]: Less than half the total number of episodes have been released on DVD in the UK, allegedly due to the controller of the BBC not liking the show.
** Due to ABC in Australia pretty much playing the episodes on constant repeat, where the show has a ''huge'' following, most of the material is now obtained from Aussie pirates, where the show has a HUGE following.
* [[Kill the Poor]]: An annual cull of the poor was one of Tim's policies when running for Prime Minister.
* [[Larynx Dissonance]]: Tim in "Cecily", talking on the phone. It might not be convincing, but, credit where its due, he slips into the voice like an evening gown.
** It's his Lady Constance (from ''[[I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again|I'm Sorry Ill Read That Again]]'') voice. He's had plenty of practice.
* [[Last Breath Bullet]] ("Bunfight at the OK Tearooms")
* [[Le Film Artistique]]: Parodied in "The Movies". The film of a nun stripping to a frenzied cello accompaniment, but revealing a whiteface mime, is especially bizarre.
** It was a parody of Ken Russell's films, specially ''Mahler''.
* [[Left the Background Music On]]: Tim's habit of giving inspirational speeches to a background of patriotic music -- which he is seen starting up himself on a tape deck before beginning his speech.
* [[Lighthouse Point]]: ("A Little Light Housekeeping").
* [[Like an Old Married Couple]]: In ''"Kitten Kong''" Tim and Bill bicker about dinner in this fashion, complete with snarky hissing and turning their backs on one another. Context: Bill was giving a gourmet meal to a guinea pig ([[It Makes Sense in Context|It Makes Sense In...uh...]]further...[[Buffy-Speak|contexty...things...]])
{{quote|'''Tim:''' ...Ruddy 'ell!
'''Bill:''' ''Surely'' you're not resentful toward a little kindness for one of our dumb friends?
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'''Bill:''' ''[turns his back]'' Temper, temper...
'''Tim:''' Well, since when have we eaten that well!
'''Bill:''' Since when indeed, yes...what did we get last time ''you'' cooked supper, eh? ''[Tim turns his back as well] A bowl of corn flakes!'' Yes, and [[Epic Fail|they were burnt]]...<br />
'''Tim:''' Well, better than your soggy lettuce and potato peelings...<br />
'''Bill:''' ''[turns back around, snapping]'' On the money you give me you're very lucky to get anything at all, I can tell you! ''[turning his back, hands on hips]'' Oh, I've a good urge to go back to mother's...<br />
'''Tim:''' Well go.<br />
'''Bill:''' I shall.<br />
'''Graeme:''' ''Now listen!''<br />
'''Bill and Tim:''' ''AND YOU KEEP OUT OF THIS!''<br />
'''Graeme:''' Tim, you are being very, very silly!<br />
'''Tim:''' Oh, you always take sides with ''him'', don't you... }}
* [[Limited Wardrobe]]: Played straight with Tim and Graeme but averted with Bill, who had the same outfit for the first two seasons but went through several groovy outfits after that.
* [[Lipstick and Load Montage]]: (Tim getting ready for the disco in "Saturday Night Grease").
* [[Locked in a Room]]: ''"The End''"
* [[Martial Arts and Crafts]]: ("Kung Fu Kapers").
* [[May Contain Evil]]: (The '"tomato soup'" in "Clown Virus").
* [[Meadow Run]]: Done between Bill Oddie and his new gal. Then done in the same meadow between Graeme Garden and...his computer. He also tries to push it on a swing, which...doesn't work so well.
* [[Media Watchdogs]]: (Parodied in the form of Mrs. Desiree Carthorse, an obvious [[No Celebrities Were Harmed]] Mary Whitehouse, in the episode "Sex and Violence". The real Mrs. Whitehouse had said how much she liked the show, and the boys [[Compliment Backfire|took offense]].)
* [[Mega Neko]]: ("Kitten Kong)".
* [[Merit Badges for Everything]]: The ''"Scoutrageous!'' episode of [[The Goodies]]" features the World Domination badge (up to that point only ever awarded to Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar and David Frost. But Frost stole his.).
** It also features a montage of two of the characters earning badges they are blatantly making up as they go, including the Wig Spotters Badge, the Stealing A Pair Of [[Margaret Thatcher]]'s Bloomers Badge, and the [[Cheating with the Milkman|Cheering Up Lonely Housewives Whose Husbands Are Away At Work]] badge.
* [[Miracle-Gro Monster]]: ("Kitten Kong)".
* [[Monumental Damage]]: (The episode ''"Sex and Violence''" concludes with the [[Crosses the Line Twice]] climax of Bill (accidentally) ''blowing up the BBC Television Centre''.)
** <s> Legend</s> Stories have it that this scene was repeatedly screened at BBC parties, where it attracted huge cheers every time.
** Kitten Kong took down the Post Office Tower (now known as the BT Tower) in a clip that ended up in the [[Title Sequence]] of later seasons.
* [[Most Definitely Not a Villain]]: (In one episode, the Goodies ran a pirate radio station inside a submarine attached to a rowboat. The rowboat itself had a sign saying '"Not A Pirate Radio Station'".)
** And earlier on, in "The Greenies", there was a military base with a sign saying (paraphrased): "Not A Germ Warfare Station Or A Nuclear Weapon Testing Site Or A Place Where People Are Hurt In Any Way". And below it, a small sign saying "So There".
* [[Mushroom Samba]]: In some of the early episodes Bill Oddie's hallucinations are crucial plot points. They are induced by
{{quote|'''Graeme:''' LEMON SHERBET?
:: Whenever the [[G-Rated Drug|sherbet]] comes up, it's often mentioned that his ''grandmother'' sends him it. It's also described as "Not dangerous, but it turns him on". }}
* [[Musical Assassin]]: (Cilla Black at the end of "The Stolen Musicians".)
** ''Everyone'' at the end of "The Stolen Musicians". Don't forget the organ cannon. Or the orchestra using their violins as bows.
*** And their bows as arrows.
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** Regulars of note were Corbet Woodall and Michael Barratt (who hosted ''Nationwide'').
* [[Nice Hat]]: In "Kung Fu Kapers", mastery in the Lancastrian martial art of Ecky-Thump is shown by the size of the flat cap worn by the fighter.
* [[Nine Out of Ten Doctors Agree]]: Parodied when The Goodies go into the advertising business in ''"It Might As Well Be String''".
{{quote|'''Tim''': Look at this! Nine out of every ten doctors agree that people who don't eat Sunbeam sliced bread will get squashed by elephants!
'''Graeme''': That's right. Mind you, it did take us a long time to find the right nine doctors, woo hoo hoo ''(makes loony signal)'' ... and the elephants! }}
* [[No Celebrities Were Harmed]]: There were several thinly-disguised parodies of media personalities, usually with punny names such as Bill Grumpy, Michael Aspirin, and so forth.
* [[No More for Me]]: In ''"Frankenfido''" a man walking out of an optometrist takes off his new glasses after seeing the giant mutant pup...and promptly walks into a lamppost.
* [[No Party Like a Donner Party]]: ("The End").
* [[No Pronunciation Guide]]: ''"Bunfight at the OK Tea Room''" has an [[Overly Long Gag]] about the pronunciation of the word "scone". The joke is that both the long-O and short-O pronunciations are correct, and it's slightly region-dependent which one is favoured.
** Also done in ''"The Clown Virus''" when they're meeting with an American general.
{{quote|'''General:''' Gentlemen, we want to employ you to dispose of this small canister of harmless substance.
'''Graeme:''' Oh, no, no, no. We're not dumping your...poison gas or whatever it is.
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* [[Orgy of Evidence]]: "Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express" where the evidence left behind by the murderers includes a Union jack waistcoat, a pair of glasses and a beard...which Bill proceeds to put on.
* [[Overly Long Name]]: When The Goodies travel to Wales via train, the name of the station is seen outside the window continuing for the entire journey to their destination. This is a parody of the railway station at [[wikipedia:Llanfairpwllgwyngyll|Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch]] (usually abbreviated to Llanfair PG), which is the longest train station name in the world.
* [[Painted Tunnel, Real Train]]: Taken to a truly ''manic'' extent in ''"The Movies''": Characters jump in and out of the cinema screen, then in and out of the cinema screen which is on ''another cinema screen'', then running off screen, appearing in the cinema screen inside the cinema screen, then jumping through all the cinema screens. The amazing thing is that they avoid [[Special Effect Failure]] despite the episode being from 1975, and ''live action television''.
** Done earlier in ''"Invasion Of The Moon Creatures''", when Bill, dressed as a rabbit ([[It Makes Sense in Context]], promise) runs next to a hole and jumps down the rabbit hole to get rid of Graeme, who is chasing him. Graeme attempts to jump in also, but hits the ground. Confused, he touches the hole, and manages to ''pick it up'' -- it's just a piece of round, black paper. Frustrated, he throws the hole away as he stomps off-screen. When the hole lands, Bill crawls out of it again.
* [[Paper-Thin Disguise]]: At one point, all three Goodies disguise themselves as one man. No, they aren't wearing identical disguises -- they're wearing one very large mustache and speaking all at the same time. When they take it off:
{{quote|'''Man''': Good Lord! There are three of you in there!}}
** This is inverted in another episode when they attempt to bluff a villain's henchman by pretending to be the villain disguising himself as all three of them at once.
* [[Parody|Parodies]] -- Too many to list, so I'll list ''Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World''
* [[Parody Commercial]]: From the start of season 1 to the end of season 4, episodes were split into two parts, divided by parody commercials. They made a return in the season 6 episode ''"It Might As Well Be String''", which was a parody of the advertisement industry in general.
* [[Pin -Pulling Teeth]]: (In reference to this trope, while on a desert island Graeme bites the top off a pineapple which then explodes [[Rule of Funny|for no apparent reason]].
* [[Pixilation]]
* [[Poke the Poodle]]: (When the end of the world is nigh, Tim panics, worrying about his sins and the possibility he may go to hell. His sins, in the order he confessed them to Bill and Graeme: Forgetting to put the turkey in for Christmas, tucking his shirt inside his underpants, and making little bubbles in the bath between his knees. When he has a [[Freak-Out]] and tries to be sinful, he wears a t-shirt showing-off his belly button (and mocks Bill and knees him in the groin, which actually ''is'' pretty douchey.).
* [[Political Stereotype]]: Not a major part of their characters, but the three Goodies each had elements of being stereotypical members of the three main political parties in the UK at the time: Bill for Labour, Tim for the Conservatives and Graeme for the Liberals.
* [[Pressure Point]]: Spoofed in ''"Kung Fu Capers''": Reading from a book of martial arts instructions, Graham delivers a large number of light taps and pokes to various spots on Tim's body. After several seconds of nothing happening, Tim suddenly spasms and jerks back and forth before collapsing unconscious.
* [[Power Trio]]
* [[Ridiculympics]]: "A Kick in the Arts''" had Tim converting the Olympics from sports alone to a combination of sports and arts, leading to such events as the 'Snatch and Limerick' (combining poetry and weightlifting).
* [[Pressure Point]]: Spoofed in ''Kung Fu Capers'': Reading from a book of martial arts instructions, Graham delivers a large number of light taps and pokes to various spots on Tim's body. After several seconds of nothing happening, Tim suddenly spasms and jerks back and forth before collapsing unconscious.
* [[Ring Ring CRUNCH]]: Hilariously spoofed in ''"Lighthouse Loonies''". Seeing the fog closing in around the Jolly Rock lighthouse Graeme switches on the foghorn, startling an over-sensitive Tim who yells at him to turn it off. Graeme does so but the foghorn continues to blare, even after they repeatedly flick the switch, pull out the power cord, rip the foghorn to bits and jump up and down on it. Finally in desperation Graeme swallows the part emitting the most noise, whereupon silence ensues. Until he opens his mouth to speak.
* [[Ridiculympics]]: "A Kick in the Arts'' had Tim converting the Olympics from sports alone to a combination of sports and arts, leading to such events as the 'Snatch and Limerick' (combining poetry and weightlifting).
** Also present in the second episode, ''"Snooze''", with a radio. It seems that Graeme has built a hammer into his wall for the primary purpose of smashing his radio.
* [[Ring Ring CRUNCH]]: Hilariously spoofed in ''Lighthouse Loonies''. Seeing the fog closing in around the Jolly Rock lighthouse Graeme switches on the foghorn, startling an over-sensitive Tim who yells at him to turn it off. Graeme does so but the foghorn continues to blare, even after they repeatedly flick the switch, pull out the power cord, rip the foghorn to bits and jump up and down on it. Finally in desperation Graeme swallows the part emitting the most noise, whereupon silence ensues. Until he opens his mouth to speak.
* [[River of Insanity]]: ("The Lost Tribe").
** Also present in the second episode, ''Snooze'', with a radio. It seems that Graeme has built a hammer into his wall for the primary purpose of smashing his radio.
* [[Running Gag]]: Many. Bill's "lemon sherbet" in early episodes, for example. They also had several that only lasted for one episode, such as Graeme always adding a deadpan '"boom'" to their radio station's theme song ([[It Makes Sense in Context]]...ah...sort of...) in "Radio Goodies".
* [[River of Insanity]] ("The Lost Tribe")
* [[Running Gag]]: Many. Bill's "lemon sherbet" in early episodes, for example. They also had several that only lasted for one episode, such as Graeme always adding a deadpan 'boom' to their radio station's theme song ([[It Makes Sense in Context]]...ah...sort of...) in "Radio Goodies".
** The Heenz Meenz Beenz add, featuring Tim as a [[Butt Monkey]] boy who keeps messing up an add for baked beans.
* [[The Runt At the End]]
{{quote|'''Head Dwarf:''' Sleepy. Happy. Grumpy. Soppy. Grotty. And Tim.}}
* [[Sad Clown]]: Years after the show had ended, Bill Oddie [http://www.stuff.co.nz/sunday-star-times/features/profiles/637257/An-Oddie-but-a-Goodie revealed that he had a lifelong battle with depression].
* [[Screwed by the Network]]: (Apparently the controller of the BBC hated the series, but was unable to kill the show off due to its popularity. So while it had a good long run, there have been very, ''very'' few repeats of the show on British TV, even in recent years, this changed in December 2010. And Tim, Bill and Graeme had to take matters into their own hands to get the show out on DVD.)
** The BBC eventually ''did'' cancel the series (or rather, failed to continue it; there was never a formal contract), and it moved to ITV, where it was subjected to [[Executive Meddling]] and died. Ironically, this is the season that [[Comedy Central]] UK is allowed to show it.
*** Apparently the show was canceled so that the special effects budget for ''The Goodies'' could be reallocated to the effects heavy and very expensive TV version of ''[[Series/ptitlegvxThe 5Hitchhiker's tmGuide 34to kThe 7Galaxy kq(TV series)|The Hitchhiker's Guide to theThe Galaxy]]''.
** Although then -BBC controller Jane Root is on record as saying she would allow no more episodes to be made and would permit repeat screenings ''only over my dead body''. Something of a hate figure among Goodies afficionadosaficionados, fans are patiently waiting for news of her funeral.
* [[Shoot Out the Lock]]: In ''UF"U-Friend or UFO''" Bill is being chased by what he thinks is an alien, but Tim won't let him in the door, so he orders Graham's robot to open it. The robot promptly disintegrates the door, so Bill can't lock it after him.
* [[Shout-Out]]: In "Invasion Of The Moon Creatures", there's a shout out to ''[[Doctor Who]]'' ("''(while in space)'' I'll just step outside to the telephone booth." "What telephone booth?" "That one! ''(points to the TARDIS)''"), ''[[Star Trek]]'' (Spock shows up on their screen briefly, and Graeme records his thoughts in a captain's log á la Kirk), and ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]''.
{{quote|'''Graeme:''' Captain's log...stardate, February 18th...time, 10:15...It is with deep regret that I--10:15?! Hey! ''[turns TV on, the opening titles to Flying Circus roll]'' [[Take That|Ah, blast! ...Missed Maura Anderson.]]}}
** Also, the cast of ''[[Sooty]]'' leading a '[[Incredibly Lame Pun|puppet government]]'. And the giant [[The Magic Roundabout|Dougal and Zebedee...]]
** They had another ''Python'' reference at the end of the beanstalk episode; after rubbing the empty bean tin that started the havoc, a genie (played by [[John Cleese]]) rises out and proclaims it to be time for Something Completely Different, before realising that he's in a "[[Take That|Kids' Program!"]] and disappearing.
** In ''"Kitten Kong''" Thethe Goodies Rushrush into an office Dresseddressed as Micemice, Thethe Cleaningcleaning Ladylady [[Tom and Jerry|Leapsleaps up onto a Nearbynearby stool and Startsstarts Shoutingshouting "Thomas"]].
** Also, ''"Saturday Night Grease''" is filled with references to musicals. At first, it's just ''[[Saturday Night Fever]]'' and ''[[Grease]]'' with Tim striking John Travolta's famous pose and a brief rendition of "Summer Lovin'". Then, at the end, there's ''[[West Side Story]]'', ''[[Singin' in the Rain|Singin in The Rain]]'', and even a bit of ''[[The Wizard of Oz (film)|The Wizard of Oz]]''.
** ''"U-Friend Or UFO''" has ''[[Close Encounters of the Third Kind]]'', ''[[Superman]]'', ''[[The Flying Nun]]'' and ''[[Star Wars]]''.
* [[Showdown At High Noon]]: ("Bunfight at the OkOK TearoomsTearoom").
* [[Snake Oil Salesman]]: In ''"Hospital For Hire''".
{{quote|'''Graeme:''' My friends, this here bottle contains a guaranteed all-purpose remedy for prostration, inflation and frustration! Pneumonia and old monia! Distemper, dat temper and bad temper! Sunburn, heartburn, and [[Take That|Tony Blackburn]]!}}
** Tony Blackburn, in fact, portrays one of the onlookers.
* [[Something That Begins With Boring]]: ( While encased in concrete).
* [[Spin-Off]]: At the height of their fame, they had a comic series in ''Cor!!'' magazine -- although it wasn't penned by them, it got their yea or nay as the '"final test'" before publishing. A well-known fansite has [http://www.goodiesruleok.com/gallery.php?gallery=cor some scans.]
* [[Spiritual Successor]]: (''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]'', to some extent, especially the earlier episodes where Bill was a regular along with Tim and Graeme).
** Which, in turn, would make ''[[The Goodies]]'' itself a [[Spiritual Successor]] to ''[[I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again]]''.
* [[Spot the Imposter]]: In ''"The Baddies''", where robot doubles of the lads were made by someone trying to give them a bad image. Tim eventually yells that they should try and unscrew the doubles' heads, to which the inventor of the doubles panicked, revealing them, The Goodies then begin to chase the duplicates. [[Hilarity Ensues]].
* [[Start My Own]]: The basis for several episodes, including "Radio Goodies" and "Hospital for Hire".
* [[Stop Motion]]: The Goodies often used the live action version of this effect during the action scenes.
Line 329:
'''Graeme:''' Surrealism.
'''Bill:''' Suh--what?
'''Tim:''' [[Incredibly Lame Pun|'Suh lot of rubbish.]]<br />
'''Bill:''' Oh. }}
* [[Take That]]: Frequently to Rolf Harris. In "The Stolen Musicians", being locked into a cell with Rolf Harris is considered a [[Fate Worse Than Death]]. (Also, they took a few playful shots at ''[[Monty Python]]''.)
Line 336:
*** The episode also includes a swipe at Tony Blackburn, the safari park's former main attraction. Tony (who appears as himself) doesn't do well in captivity, and after Tim can't bring himself to put the poor fellow out of his misery ("I couldn't do it! Those big brown eyes looking up at me. I swear he could understand every word I said!"), they decide to release him into the wild, and he makes his glorious run for freedom... at which point he is promptly shot dead by a hunter.
** Other favourite targets: singers Max Bygraves and Des O'Connor, journalist/comedian David Frost (fondly<ref> Frost having given the Goodies some of their first breaks as television writers</ref>), "Clean Up TV" and "Festival of Light" campaigner Mary Whitehouse, actress and political activist Vanessa Redgrave, and television presenter Nicholas Parsons.
* [[The Tape Knew You Would Say That]]: (Practically a [[Characteristic Trope]]. Every time something is being read out or listened to, somebody (usually Bill) will pass a [[Deadpan Snarker|smartarse]] or confused comment, for which the tape, record, TV show or piece of paper will have a response. The height of the trope is reached when the characters are learning kung fu -- Graeme is reading aloud from the book, Tim is trying what it says.)
{{quote|'''Graeme:''' ''Now lift up your index and middle finger and make a V.''
''Tim makes the rude V sign.''
Line 342:
''Tim flips his hand around to a less rude gesture''
'''Graeme:''' ''Yes, like that.'' }}
* [[Tandem Parasite|Trandem Parasite]]: The Trandem is a three-man variation of a Tandem. The original version was an ordinary (sic) tandem with an extra seat at the back. Tim and Graeme pedalledpedaled, Bill being shortest was at the back in the non-pedallingpedaling seat. Later on the BBC prop department actually built a version with three sets of pedals.
* [[Team Title]]
* [[Ten Little Murder Victims]]: Parodied in ''Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express''
Line 348:
* [[Thief Bag]] ("Alternative Roots")
* [[This Is No Time to Panic]]: Usually Graeme will say calmly, "Who votes that we should panic now?" followed by everyone putting up their hands, then Bill and Graeme start running about shouting hysterically while Tim pretends he's a Teapot.
* [[Thriller on the Express]]: ("Daylight Robbery on the Orient Express").
* [[Title Montage]]: Updated almost every series with new clips from the preceding series, or with a new theme tune (or version of the existing one).
* [[Today X, Tomorrow the World!]]: Played [[Nightmare Fuel|chillingly]] straight by Graeme in "Radio Goodies", after he went [[Drunk with Power]].
{{quote|'''Graeme:''' Today...the post office...tomorrow...''the worrrld.''}}
* [[Totem Pole Trench]]: In ''"South Africa''" with a mannequin.
* [[To the Batpole]]: (The Quick Change Cabinet).
* [[Trouser Space]]: (Tim in "Scoutrageous").
* [[True Art Is Incomprehensible]]: Mocked in "The Goodies and the Movies", where Tim eventually fires all the film directors for making films of this type.
** Specifically, he says 50% of them are either "very boring or extremely pretentious", and the rest are unnecessarily violent or sexy.
* [[Uncanceled]]
* [[Universal Adaptor Cast]]: In those episodes inexplicably set in alternate times or places, where the trio play different characters.
* [[Visual Pun]]: (''All the time.)''
{{quote|'''Graeme:''' They'll probably send us a message on the drums.
''Promptly has a drum thrown at him with a message written on it.'' }}
* [[Waxing Lyrical]]: ''"Scoutrageous''" started off by quoting the White Rabbit's song from Disney's version of ''[[Alice in Wonderland]]''. Bill and Graeme are sitting around the office:
{{quote|'''Graeme''': He's late.
'''Tim''': ''(walking in)'' I'm late.
Line 377:
* [[Wearing a Flag on Your Head]]: Tim's Union Jack waistcoat and boxers.
* [[We Help the Helpless]]
* [[What Do You Mean It's Not for Kids?]]: A source of great fustration for the team. The concentration of cartoon -like visual humour led the BBC to labellinglabel ''The Goodies'' as a children's show, and then getting uptight about any '"unsuitable'" material.
* [[Widget Series]]: (orOr, more accurately, Wid''brit'' Series).
* [[William Telling]]: (The boys are challenged to a medieval battle by a team of black knights. One of them successfully shoots a melon off of Graeme's head, nailing it to the tree behind him. Bill then has to one-up them by shooting an olive off Tim's head — he does, but nails most of Tim's hair to the tree as well.)
* [[Write Who You Know]]: (Averted, despite all three characters being Danzas, their real personalities had little similarity to the characters on the show. Bill the character was a [[Heroic Sociopath]], Bill the guy was an [[Actual Pacifist]], for example.)
** Both Bills were keen ornithologists, though, because that was something he was known for. Tim would later say that the characters were exaggerations of how the public percieved them; so Bill's passionate outspokenness became heroic sociopathy, Graeme's medical degree made him a [[Mad Scientist]], and Tim's posh accent and name made him an [[UpperclassUpper Class Twit]].
* [[Your Approval Fills Me with Shame]]: When Moral Guardian Mary Whitehouse praised the show, they retaliated by making an episode mocking her.
* [[Zany Scheme]]: (What the boys do when there's no helpless to help!)
 
{{reflist}}
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[[Category:Double Acts and Groups]]
[[Category:Britcom]]
[[Category:The Goodies]]
[[Category:TV Series]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Goodies, The}}
[[Category:The Goodies{{PAGENAME}}]]