Hamish Andy S04e05
In Hamish and Andy’s Perfect Holiday, which premieres on Channel 9 on November 17, the two comedians travelled to America and took it in turns plan activities for the other person.“A lot of this show was going to lengths to try and hide the activity from the other person,” Andy told news.com.au. “Sometimes there was a lot of work put in behind the scenes as misdirection.“I had something planned that I thought he’d be suspicious of if we went to South Carolina where it actually was, so instead we took him to Las Vegas and I pretended that he was in a boxing match.”. Hamish and Andy's Perfect Holiday starts on November 17 on Channel 9. Source:Channel 9Hamish, convinced he was about to go a few rounds with a professional fighter, hired a trainer to teach him some moves.
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But on the day of the fight, the actual challenge was revealed and it was far worse than he ever imagined.“He was all fired up for the boxing match and then he found out at the last minute that his opponent was actually the hottest chilli in the world,” Andy said.Hamish had a “sportsmanlike” reaction when told of the challenge, Andy said, but he got more and more nervous as he was told about the chilli.“It’s called Pepper X,” Andy told news.com.au about the chilli. “It’s from South Carolina. No one had ever eaten it raw, Hamish was the first person.”. “The lengths to get this chilli were extraordinary,” Andy told news.com.au.“I asked Ed Currie, who bred Pepper X, if could get it to Vegas for us because that’s where I wanted to set up the ‘boxing match’ for Hamish. He said travelling with them was really difficult. Because of its power, it’s like travelling with a weapon.”Currie worked with quarantine and customs officials to get the chilli from South Carolina to Las Vegas and had to put Pepper X in an ice box.“Gloves had to be worn at all times when handling the chilli,” Andy told news.com.au.
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“If you get some on your skin, it basically burns and causes blisters. It can get really bad really quick.”Which begs the question: how did Hamish go in the challenge which required him to eat Pepper X?“During the ‘boxing match’ I said, ‘I think there’s saliva coming out of his eyeballs!’” laughed Andy. “And that was amongst panic and laughter. I was going, ‘Holy s.t!’”. Hamish looks like he struggled a bit. Source:Channel 9Andy assured news.com.au that Hamish held no grudges after the insane challenge and said that his offsider “got his own back” with a challenge he arranged for Andy a few days later.“I was asking the cameraman at the time, ‘Was this organised before the chilli challenge or after?
Is this payback?’” Andy told news.com.au. “But apparently he had pre-planned it so it made me feel better about what I had done.”Hamish and Andy’s Perfect Holiday will premiere on Sunday, November 17 at 7pm on Nine.
The British detective drama revolves around Detective Chief Inspector Barnaby's efforts to solve numerous murders that take place in the fictional English county of Midsomer. The current lead character is Detective Chief Inspector John Barnaby (Neil Dudgeon), who is the younger cousin of former lead character Detective Chief Inspector Tom Barnaby (John Nettles). The Barnabys have worked with several different Sergeants throughout the run of the show, including Sergeant Gavin Troy (Daniel Casey), Sergeant Dan Scott (John Hopkins), Detective Sergeant Ben Jones (Jason Hughes), Detective Sergeant Charlie Nelson (Gwilym Lee), and Sergeant Jamie Winter (Nick Hendrix). John Nettles plays the perfect detective as Chief Inspector Barnaby in Midsomer Murders, unlike so many other British Dicks he doesn't have a problem with the bottle, family hassles at home, nor is he unhappily single and suffering manic depression.
Not only that his diction is near perfect and he has the stiff upper lip so necessary in rural England when murders are more common than haystacks. Teamed up with a new sidekick DC Ben Jones (Jason Hughes) resembling the much put upon Sgt. Lewis of Inspector Morse fame. The series also has the advantage of using some of the best character actors available, for example Simon Callow, and reasonably well written plots that hold interest. Although usually a number of people get dispatched before our Barnaby can nab the culprit he gets his man in the end.
But that's life in the villages. Better than average production values and consistency of performance by the main cast members keeps this show top of the list. A pleasant change from the plethora of cheesy forensic investigations headed up by gorgeous female doctors brandishing scalpels over deceased body parts.