Credits; Biggles dictates a letter `Algy, are you gay?'; animation- flying things; climbing the north face of the Oxbridge Road; sailors mistake #24 Parker street for a lifeboat; two ladies spy on neighbors using high tech equipment `bring her up on the 6 inch Gladys'; housewife finds herself on lifeboat; Storage Jars around the world; animation- television is bad for your eyes; the Show So Far..., giant hammer hits announcer; the Cheese Shop sketch; review of `Rogue Cheddar' and Peckinpah's `Salad Days'; reviewer is shot as the credits roll; an apology; news about storage jars; Interlude: conquistador apologizes for short show.
s03e01 - Whicker's World
s03e02 - Mr. & Mrs. Brian Norris' Ford Popular
s03e03 - The Money Programme
s03e04 - Blood, Devastation, Death, War and Horror
s03e05 - The All-England Summarise Proust Competition
s03e06 - The War Against Pornography
s03e07 - Salad Days
s03e08 - The Cycling Tour
s03e09 - The Nude Organist
s03e10 - E. Henry Thripshaw's Disease
s03e11 - Dennis Moore
s03e12 - A Book at Bedtime
s03e13 - The British Showbiz Awards
And now for something completely different: Monty Python's Flying Circus was simply the most influential comedy program television has ever seen. Five Englishmen, all working under the constraints of conventional TV shows such as The Frost Report (for which the five Englishmen wrote), gathered together with an expatriate American in the spring of 1969 to break the rules. The result, first airing on BBC-1 on October 5, 1969, has influenced countless future men and women in the media and comedy since.