British Comedy Guide

Who's the greatest person ever in world history?

For me it's a toss up. Although I still find it hard to believe a Scotsman could ween himself off the heroin long enough to invent television, it's got to be John Logie Baird. Let's face, television is there for us when friends, girlfriends and jobs all go tits up.

Honoury mention should also go to Charles Darwin, who was born in the same place as me (Shrewsbury) and came up with the theory of Natural Selection, which seems just as applicable to society as it is to the natural world. A great man.

I know Leevil would say it but it has to be the Earl Of Sandwich.

I don't know what I would do without sandwiches I really don't.

If you want to learn more about the EOS I've linked his wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_of_Sandwich

Tim Berners-Lee

Quote: Paul W @ January 29 2009, 11:12 AM GMT

I know Leevil would say it but it has to be the Earl Of Sandwich.

I don't know what I would do without sandwiches I really don't.

If you want to learn more about the EOS I've linked his wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_of_Sandwich

Darwin probably and Shakespeare.

The Earl of Sandwich lost us the Americas didn't he?

Quote: chipolata @ January 29 2009, 11:08 AM GMT

For me it's a toss up. Although I still find it hard to believe a Scotsman could ween himself off the heroin long enough to invent television, it's got to be John Logie Baird. Let's face, television is there for us when friends, girlfriends and jobs all go tits up.

I know I'm going to get shit on for this but as far as I'm aware in the 1920s in Idaho Philo Farnsworth came up with the idea of using a vacuum tube to pick up moving images and then display them electronically on a screen. Then RCA stole the idea and renamed his 'image issector' the 'iconoscope' and tried patenting it but lost in court and then later had to pay Farnsworth for his original idea.
The single was John Baird.
But hey what came before television signals? Radio signals. That was a British guy named Guglielmo Marconi in Montreal sending a signal to England...but that was just a telegraphy. BUT the first actual Radio broadcast was from Canadian Reginald Fesenden who broadcast music and voices to ships at sea in 1906.
So I'll say Reginald Fessenden is the greatest.

Batman.

Quote: sootyj @ January 29 2009, 11:21 AM GMT

The Earl of Sandwich lost us the Americas didn't he?

Not to my knowledge.

And it's all worth it for sandwiches.

Quote: Curt @ January 29 2009, 11:37 AM GMT

I know I'm going to get shit on for this but as far as I'm aware in the 1920s in Idaho Philo Farnsworth came up with the idea of using a vacuum tube to pick up moving images and then display them electronically on a screen. Then RCA stole the idea and renamed his 'image issector' the 'iconoscope' and tried patenting it but lost in court and then later had to pay Farnsworth for his original idea.
The single was John Baird.
But hey what came before television signals? Radio signals. That was a British guy named Guglielmo Marconi in Montreal sending a signal to England...but that was just a telegraphy. BUT the first actual Radio broadcast was from Canadian Reginald Fesenden who broadcast music and voices to ships at sea in 1906.
So I'll say Reginald Fessenden is the greatest.

Fair point. Although I would refer you to the Isaac Newton quote: "If I have seen further it is only by standing on the shoulders of giants." (Or words to that affect)

Quote: Matthew Stott @ January 29 2009, 11:42 AM GMT

Batman.

Yep... :D

Quote: Griff @ January 29 2009, 11:47 AM GMT

cavorting fat-faced bass players.

:O

Quote: Griff @ January 29 2009, 11:49 AM GMT
Image

Those Robert Palmer Addicted to Love girls have really gone to seed. :(

Quote: Griff @ January 29 2009, 11:51 AM GMT

Didn't Marc P claim to know one of them?

Laughing out loud

(Marc P's a fantasist! He'd actually have us believe he's written for popular TV shows and knocked out a novel! The nerve of the man!) ;)

Back on topic, I'd also nominate William Gladstone, a great reformer and one of our greatest ever PM's. Benjamin Disraeli wasn't bad either.

Quote: chipolata @ January 29 2009, 11:08 AM GMT

For me it's a toss up. Although I still find it hard to believe a Scotsman could ween himself off the heroin long enough to invent television, it's got to be John Logie Baird.

My instinctive answer. (Lol at heroin.)

Quote: The Cool Mikado @ January 29 2009, 11:15 AM GMT

Tim Berners-Lee

My second instinct.

Quote: Curt @ January 29 2009, 11:37 AM GMT

But hey what came before television signals? Radio signals. That was a British guy named Guglielmo Marconi in Montreal sending a signal to England...but that was just a telegraphy.

1) Does that really sound like a British name? ;)
2) I think you'll find that the first ... Oh bugger it. *searches ... copies*

"...by March, 1897, Marconi had transmitted Morse code signals over a distance of about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) across the Salisbury Plain. On 13 May 1897, Marconi sent the first ever wireless communication over open sea. It transversed the Bristol Channel from Lavernock Point (South Wales) to Flat Holm Island, a distance of 6 kilometres (3.7 mi)." (So say Wikipedia.)

Not Canadialand at all!

My all-new nomination: John Stith Pemberton.

Zainab Salbi in my lifetime.

Pre-me :D Mary Two Axe

Woman of vision: Mary Two-Axe Earley

By R John Hayes
Windspeaker Correspondent
KAHNAWAKE, Que.

The well-known founder of Equal Rights for Indian Women, Mary Two-Axe Earley, died on Aug. 21 at the age of 84. She had been one of the leaders of the battle to repeal sections of the Indian Act that stripped Aboriginal women of their status when they married non-Natives. The changes were included in Bill C-31, passed in 1985.

Two-Axe Earley was awarded a National Aboriginal Achievement Award earlier this year "for her drive to establish Bill C-31 and her commitment to the rights of women."

Born in 1911 and raised in Kahnawake, Two-Axe Earley moved to Brooklyn, N.Y., at 18, where she met and married Edward Earley, an Irish-American electrical engineer. Under the Indian Act, she was therefore stripped of her Indian status, and could not live on the reserve where she'd been born or be buried there, even in the case of divorce or the death of her non-Native husband. She was able to move back to Kahnawake after her husband's death only because her daughter (whom she lived with) had regained her status by marrying a Mohawk man.

In 1966, at the age of 55, Two-Axe Earley entered politics as a reaction to a friend, who had lost her status through marriage, being ordered off the reserve. Within a year, her friend had died, and the band council refused permission for her burial on the reserve. Two-Axe Earley then founded Equal Rights for Indian Women.

In 1975, she was in Mexico attending an international women's conference when she heard that the band council had sent her an eviction notice. She immediately told the conference, and eventually the council gave way and rescinded the order. Ten years later, with the passage of Bill C-31, Two-Axe Earley was the first woman to have her status officially restored by then-Indian Affairs minister David Crombie.

In 1979, Two-Axe Earley received the Persons Award for contributing to the improvement of the quality of life of women in Canada; in 1981, she was presented with an honorary doctorate of laws from York University; in 1985, she was a recipient of the Order of Quebec. She received the governor general's award and was nominated for the lifetime achievement National Aboriginal Achievement Award.

In addition to a commitment of more than 20 years, Two-Axe Earley was widely recognized for her courage in the face of threats and intimidation. Her tireless efforts on behalf of Native women had been curtailed in recent years by failing health - she had been hospitalized since February. The official cause of her death was a gall bladder infection.

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