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・ Bottom of the World
・ Bottom of the World (Defiance)
・ Bottom of Your Soul
・ Bottom Points railway station, New South Wales
・ Bottom quark
・ Botting
・ Bottiroli
・ Bottisham
・ Bottisham and Lode railway station
・ Bottisham Hall
・ Bottisham Village College
・ Bottle
・ Bottle (song)
・ Bottle (web framework)
・ Bottle Beach State Park
Bottle Boys
・ Bottle cage
・ Bottle cap
・ Bottle Caps (candy)
・ Bottle Cove
・ Bottle crate
・ Bottle Creek Indian Mounds
・ Bottle cutting
・ Bottle dynamo
・ Bottle episode
・ Bottle Fairy
・ Bottle garden
・ Bottle gentian
・ Bottle glorifier
・ Bottle Hollow, Tennessee


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Bottle Boys : ウィキペディア英語版
Bottle Boys

''Bottle Boys'' is a British sitcom which ran for two series on ITV in 1984 and 1985. Starring Robin Askwith as football-mad milkman Dave Deacon, the series mined comedy of the broadest sort from randy Dave's amorous adventures, in a style familiar to viewers from the ''Confessions'' films (which had also featured Askwith).
However, as well as the sexual innuendo of his earlier big-screen adventures, Askwith was equally likely to find himself embroiled in more off-the-wall exploits, and found himself at various points in the series dressing up as a cow, inadvertently engaged to Sharon the secretary, and meeting then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher (played by an actor).
The part of Dave Deacon was originally written for Jim Davidson, who was by this time already expanding into sitcom territory with ''Up the Elephant and Round the Castle'', also on ITV. It was future BBC controller John Birt, during his tenure at London Weekend Television, who suggested that Askwith take the part.
==Critical reception==
The series has acquired something of a reputation as one of the worst British sitcoms ever produced. Mark Lewisohn, writing in the ''Radio Times Guide to Comedy'' observes that "ITV sitcoms had often plumbed the depths, but this was the limit", and also notes that ''Bottle Boys'' was reputedly despised by comedy executives at ITV. Furthermore, he goes on to pick ''Bottle Boys'' as his "worst ever" British sitcom.
Writer Vince Powell was no stranger to working on shows that attracted a bad press, however, having created two of the most controversial comedy shows of the 1970s - ''Love Thy Neighbour'' and ''Mind Your Language''.
The programme also made number 97 in Channel Four's ''100 Greatest TV Moments from Hell'' list show, a retrospective of television's low points of the last fifty years.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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