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[TV] King Danny Dyer



stewart12

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2019
2,174
Liked his interview on The Assembly. Came across well unlike Lineker who was monosyballic. Honest about his rehab. Not really my cup of tea normally but thought him and Tennant were good on that one programme.
Absolutely love that programme. Danny Dyer came across as very warm and personable as did Tennant. Very little pretense to either man and you can tell they went into it with their eyes open and with humility as did the lass from Little Mix. As a Scot I found it very emotional when they sang Sunshine on Leith to Tennant. I think Lineker found it quite challenging but grew into it towards the end but was clearly uncomfortable at the start.
 




JBizzle

Well-known member
Apr 18, 2010
6,764
Seaford
Smart guy, Danny Dyer. He knows it’s all a character and he has fun with it.

And occasionally comes out with something very funny.

He doesn’t often do stuff I’d watch but he’s alright I reckon.
I'm on this track. Mr Big Stuff (for which he just won a Bafta) was enjoyable, and he was very good in Rivals too. Ultimately, he has his niche and leans into it hard, so fair play to him for making the most of it.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
51,371
Gloucester
I know it's all an act, the whole cockerney geezer personnae, but, the programme tonight was laugh out loud funny in p!aces. They should have told him about King William Rufus, who met his demise by having a red hot poker inserted in his 'bottle' (authentic cockerney rhyming slang)
No they shouldn't - it didn't happen. The red hot poker was inserted into a different person altogether.
 
















BN9 BHA

Flakey fanbase member 🙄
NSC Patron
Jul 14, 2013
23,625
Newhaven
Danny Dyer in the park Lewes Road / Robinson Road Newhaven from the film The Great Ecstasy of Robert Carmichael (2005), not a good film but mostly filmed in Newhaven.

Image-1.jpeg
 


GT49er

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2009
51,371
Gloucester
He was almost certainly murdered one way or another. For a number of obvious reasons, there's absolutely no evidence that he had a red hot iron poker shoved up his arse, and there are good reasons to think it's a nonsense story made up several years later.
There really aren't. Did it really happen? More than likely, given his....err....lifestyle. Balance of probability applies.
Jumping back a few posts, I'm pretty sure I've been to the site where William II was killed (by an arrow), and in my recollection it's very much just a clearing with a plinth in it that may or may not be somewhere near where he died. Apparently the reaction of everybody present was just to leave him and ride off as quickly as possible.
I've been to the room where it happened too (again allegedly, but convincingly). You can no more disprove it than you can disprove that the landings on the moon were real (or prove it - but again, balance of probability prevails).
 


Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
31,618
He was almost certainly murdered one way or another. For a number of obvious reasons, there's absolutely no evidence that he had a red hot iron poker shoved up his arse, and there are good reasons to think it's a nonsense story made up several years later.

Jumping back a few posts, I'm pretty sure I've been to the site where William II was killed (by an arrow), and in my recollection it's very much just a clearing with a plinth in it that may or may not be somewhere near where he died. Apparently the reaction of everybody present was just to leave him and ride off as quickly as possible.
The House of Normandy certainly knew how to die in mysterious ways. Rufus's young brother Henry I rules for 35 years but died eating "a surfeit of lampreys".
 








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