PE Lessons
For some they may have been the highlight of the school week, but all we remember is a never-ending series of punishments involving inappropriate nudity and climbing up ropes until you wet yourself.
Tell us about your PE lessons and the psychotics who taught them.
( , Thu 19 Nov 2009, 17:36)
For some they may have been the highlight of the school week, but all we remember is a never-ending series of punishments involving inappropriate nudity and climbing up ropes until you wet yourself.
Tell us about your PE lessons and the psychotics who taught them.
( , Thu 19 Nov 2009, 17:36)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread
I'm trying to pin down when exactly badgers became so humorous
I think it was some time between June 1998 and August 1999.
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 16:58, closed)
I think it was some time between June 1998 and August 1999.
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 16:58, closed)
I think they've always been faintly amusing
Try turning to the person next to you and saying to them, "SMELLY BADGER," in a stern voice. Now imagine whether that would have made you laugh before the interweb deemed them universally hilarious.
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 17:03, closed)
Try turning to the person next to you and saying to them, "SMELLY BADGER," in a stern voice. Now imagine whether that would have made you laugh before the interweb deemed them universally hilarious.
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 17:03, closed)
I don't think it was the internet
I distinctly remember saying "Aye, that's the badger!" being a hilarious way of saying "that's right" or "that's it" before any wide spread internet-based badger humour
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 17:08, closed)
I distinctly remember saying "Aye, that's the badger!" being a hilarious way of saying "that's right" or "that's it" before any wide spread internet-based badger humour
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 17:08, closed)
I heard it used in rural parts as a term for minge
'Show us your badger' in a Hampshire brogue is highly amusing.
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 17:42, closed)
'Show us your badger' in a Hampshire brogue is highly amusing.
( , Tue 24 Nov 2009, 17:42, closed)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread