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The Seagoon Memoirs

Chronicling a 21st century idiot's obsession with a 1950s radio comedy masterpiece.

Home: Welcome

A digital
time capsule

Welcome, dear reader - pull up a bollard.

UPDATE: JUNE 2024

I am in the process of transferring this blog to Substack. You'll find me at theseagoonmemoirs.substack.com, where you can read for free and sign up to receive new posts (twice a week) direct to your email.

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On 28 May 1951, four young men took to the airwaves on the BBC's Home Service to launch their unique brand of comedy on an unsuspecting world.


In the mid-1990s, an even younger idiot was introduced to recordings of their broadcasts - and there began a strange obsession crossing decades and generations.

The Seagoon Memoirs is an attempt to channel this obsession into something creative, chronicle the show's history, development and legacy, and in some small way contribute to preserving this masterpiece of British radio comedy.

Listen to me waffle on about the Goons on the excellent Goon Pod here. Alternatively, listen to more interesting people on other episodes of Goon Pod, including Jane Milligan, Al Murray, Dirk Maggs, and the cast of 'Spike!', the new Milligan/Goon-themed play by Ian Hislop and Nick Newman.

Home: Text

The Booted Gorilla

On 30 November 1954, the Goons investigated the mystery of ‘The Booted Gorilla’. Broadcast at 8:30pm on the Home Service, its footprints...

The Last Tram

Goonland’s last tram rolled back to the depot on 23 November 1954, as broadcast at 8:30pm on the Home Service and detailed on page 20 of...

Pull up a bollard

Seagoon: I just read your offer in the paper about the Marie Celeste. Grytpype: That was inserted in 1910, 44 years ago! Seagoon: My...

The dreaded Lurgy

Okay all you Covid-19 conspiracy nuts, this one’s for you. I’ve been looking forward to writing about this episode. Many readers will...

A mound of batter puddings

A few days ago I wrote of the Terror of Bexhill-on-Sea: 'The Dreaded Batter Pudding Hurler'. You'll remember the predicament that Neddie...

The Canal

Valentine Dyall’s distinctive baritone voice had already made him quite famous by the mid-1950s. He had become known as The Man In Black,...

‘This is my banana night!’

Fred Nurke is missing! An over-ripe banana, in a deserted Cannon Street shipping office, is the only clue to his whereabouts. Inspector...

Wallace Greenslade’s tobacco kiosk

Since joining the Goons near the start of the fourth series, BBC announcer Wallace Greenslade had thrown himself whole-heartedly into the...

The Dreaded Batter Pudding Hurler

The early episodes of the fifth series show the Goons at their best. Strong plots and settled characterisation allow Milligan’s...

Death in the desert

Ladies and gentlepong, the Goons, in direct conflict with the British Arts Council, present number 23 in their series of six: Crimes my...

Operation Explodable Boot

The crimes you are about to hear have all been specially committed for this programme. The year is 1954, and the English national...

The Radio Times never lies!

A couple of articles from the Radio Times today. Tomorrow we’ll be looking at the first episode of the fifth series – ‘The Whistling Spy...

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