ChatterBank2 mins ago
Rupert Everett: WDYTYA
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Whilst i have a quiet moment (ahem) I wondered what others who watched the show thought? Personally the content of the progtamme and the details of the research were acted into the wings by Everett's persistent misinformed comments. I must admit I have a disliking for the man which goes back to a daft chat show appearance of his way back in the 1990s. He has a sleeze about him that has not gone away with age. He seems to sexualise almost anything and make inappropriate comments. His reaction to each new bit of research consisted of attempts at emotion or humour that left me thinking he needed a good script writer.
To focus on the lives of the Everett line seemed a worthwhile idea and they certainly led interesting and confusing lives, but it took an age to get the certificates and poor Jemima was dismissed as some silly servant girl!!!
Don;t know why but there seemed to be a huge gap in the thoroughness and value of the research.
To focus on the lives of the Everett line seemed a worthwhile idea and they certainly led interesting and confusing lives, but it took an age to get the certificates and poor Jemima was dismissed as some silly servant girl!!!
Don;t know why but there seemed to be a huge gap in the thoroughness and value of the research.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I saw it and thought it relatively interesting.
The thing is that there are so many of us that have familly histories that are pretty much the same.
When you've seen a few families with 20 deaths under 5 in the Victorian generation followed by deaths at the Somme from the next generation - well it all gets a bit the same.
I do wonder how long they can keep the series up - they must be researching and rejecting loads now as too dull
I thought the Everett story was interesting because of his famillies wild swings of fortune from wealth to poverty and back again.
But people do tend to make the most sweeping generalisations as they follow one thread of their familly history back ignoring all the other branches that have equal claim to their history
The thing is that there are so many of us that have familly histories that are pretty much the same.
When you've seen a few families with 20 deaths under 5 in the Victorian generation followed by deaths at the Somme from the next generation - well it all gets a bit the same.
I do wonder how long they can keep the series up - they must be researching and rejecting loads now as too dull
I thought the Everett story was interesting because of his famillies wild swings of fortune from wealth to poverty and back again.
But people do tend to make the most sweeping generalisations as they follow one thread of their familly history back ignoring all the other branches that have equal claim to their history
Dot I thought he was a complete prat. I was annoyed about the lack of research on his great-grandmother but must admit all I could find was her on the 1881 census and her marriage. I couldn't find her on any other censuses or her death. I assume she must have died or the great-grandfather would have been a bigamist.
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I prefered it to the one on Bruce Forsyth the week before - that one was fairly boring and his great grandad or whoever it was must have been a bit of a bad character for leaving two families alone. It is a really great show in general though and makes you think about life-stories a lot. Some of the US ones are good, too.
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