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The Goon Show was a popular and influential British radio comedy programme, originally produced and broadcast by the BBC from 1951 to 1960 in the BBC Home Service and sometimes rebroadcast on the BBC Light Programme. The first series, aired between May and September 1951, went out as Crazy People, with Radio's Own Crazy Gang: The Goons as its subtitle.
Listeners in the United States were able to hear the show from as early as the mid-1950s when it was carried by NBC.
The scripts mixed ludicrous plots with surreal humour, puns, catchphrases and an array of silly and bizarre sound effects. Some of the later episodes feature electronic effects devised by the fledgling BBC Radiophonic Workshop, BBC Radiophonic Workshop#Sound effects and music contributions many of which were reused by other shows for decades afterward .
Many elements of the show satirised contemporary life in Britain, parodying aspects of show business, commerce, industry, art, politics, diplomacy, the police, the military, education, class structure, literature and film.
This was in effect a televised radio production of an original Goon Show script, broadcast by Thames Television. The Three Goons reunited with the addition of John Cleese as announcer. This followed two years after the Goons re-enacted "The Whistling Spy Enigma" for inclusion in a broadcast of "Secombe and Friends" (1966).





