As an American I'm struggling through seasons one and two of a rewatch of Last of the Summer Wine. It is nice from the perspective of getting more of Clegg and Compo's background but I don't get the Blamire character at all and struggle to understand his words. The shows themselves don't seem as amusing as later episodes will be.
It seems more class based comedy from a very different time and place that I'm missing. Foggy seemed more the frustrated authority figure and Clegg the bemused middle man between him and Compo rather than the upper, middle and lower class dynamic. I wonder if for those of us who are not blessed to be British subjects, what with a bit of a war in the late 1700s and all, and have to rely on the BBC and PG Wodehouse for our understanding of the culture of the Emerald Isle, this dynamic is easier to comprehend and more amusing?
It seems more class based comedy from a very different time and place that I'm missing. Foggy seemed more the frustrated authority figure and Clegg the bemused middle man between him and Compo rather than the upper, middle and lower class dynamic. I wonder if for those of us who are not blessed to be British subjects, what with a bit of a war in the late 1700s and all, and have to rely on the BBC and PG Wodehouse for our understanding of the culture of the Emerald Isle, this dynamic is easier to comprehend and more amusing?

) Remember at THAT stage the show was new and no-one knew what it would become. It was dark and very sarcastic, as was life in general at that time. The actors didn't have a clear understanding of the characters and were still developing them. My main problem with the Blamire years is that everyone seems to be shouting their lines for some reason.