Kung Fu Kapers


"Kung Fu Kapers" is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies. It caused a viewer to die from laughing.
This episode is also known as "Ecky-Thump". It was written by The Goodies, with songs and music by Bill Oddie.
In January 2020, "Kung Fu Kapers" was announced as the fan's favourite episode of The Goodies, during the celebration of the show's 50th anniversary at Bristol's Slapstick Festival.

Plot

and Graeme are attempting to learn kung fu in the Goodies' office, but Bill is extremely disparaging of their techniques and shows them that he knows some rather impressive martial arts skills of his own. Under pressure from the other two, Bill reveals himself as a master of the secret Lancashire martial art known as "Ecky-Thump"—which mostly revolves around hitting unsuspecting people with black puddings while wearing flat caps and braces.
With great reluctance, Bill agrees to demonstrate this "ancient Lancastrian art" in a series of bouts against Tim and Graeme. Bill wins against every "expert" merely by hitting them over the head with the black pudding, except the Scots one who is knocked out by a wayward boomerang. Tim ends up with all four limbs in plaster, in a "kung fu"-style stance, so he will be "ready" if Bill comes back. Graeme points out that Tim can't actually move. Bill has meanwhile opened a profitable Ecky-Thump class, and subsequently stars in a series of martial arts flicks, such as Ecky-Thump Meets Mary Poppins and Enter With Drag On.
The night before Bill and his Ecky-Thump "army" are to go on the march to attack with their black puddings, Graeme adds a "remote control device" to the black pudding mixture—leading to unexpected wayward black puddings for a bewildered Bill and his equally bemused Ecky-Thump followers.

Background

At the time the episode was made, kung fu was a craze which was sweeping the UK with films such as Enter the Dragon, the television series Kung Fu, many martial arts schools appearing in gyms, and even a fragrance for men called 'Hai-Karate'.

Viewer death

The episode is infamous for the documented example of a man laughing to death. Fifty-year-old Alex Mitchell could not stop laughing for a continuous 25-minute period—almost the entire length of the show—and suffered a fatal heart attack as a result of the strain placed on his heart. Alex's widow later sent the Goodies a letter thanking them for making his final moments so pleasant.
In May 2012, Alex's granddaughter, Lisa Corke, suffered a heart attack at the age of 23. She was diagnosed with long QT syndrome and the doctors caring for her believe it is likely that Mitchell suffered from the same hereditary condition.

DVD and VHS releases

This episode has been released on both DVD and VHS.