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"'''Spam'''" is a [[Monty Python]] [[sketch comedy|sketch]], first televised in 1970 on ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' (series 2, episode 12, "Spam") and written by [[Terry Jones]] and [[Michael Palin]]. In the sketch, two customers are lowered by wires into a [[Cafe (British)|greasy spoon café]] and try to order a
The excessive amount of Spam was probably a reference to the ubiquity of it and other imported [[Potted meat|canned meat products]] in the
The televised sketch and several subsequent performances feature [[Terry Jones]] as the waitress, [[Eric Idle]] as Mr. Bun and [[Graham Chapman]] as Mrs. Bun, who does not like Spam. The original sketch also featured [[John Cleese]] as [[Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook|The Hungarian]] and Palin as a historian, but this part was left out of the audio version of the sketch recorded for the team's second album ''[[Another Monty Python Record]]'' (1971). A year later this track was released as the Pythons' first [[Single (music)|7" single]].
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The three-and-a-half-minute sketch is set in the fictional Green Midget Cafe in [[Bromley]]. An argument develops between the waitress, who recites a menu in which nearly every dish contains Spam, and Mrs. Bun, who does not like Spam. She asks for a dish without Spam, much to the amazement of her Spam-loving husband. The waitress responds to this request with disgust. Mr. Bun offers to take her Spam instead, and asks for a dish containing a lot of Spam and [[baked beans]]. The waitress says the beans are not available; when Mr. Bun asks for a substitution of Spam, the waitress begins reading out the new dish's name.
At several points, a group of [[Vikings]] in the restaurant interrupt conversations by loudly singing about Spam. The irate waitress orders them to shut up, but they resume singing more loudly. A [[
The sketch abruptly cuts to a historian in a
==Production notes==
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*[[Lobster Thermidor]] aux [[Prawn|crevettes]] with a [[Mornay sauce]], garnished with [[truffle]] [[pâté]], [[brandy]], and a [[fried egg]] on top, and Spam. (Television broadcast)
:* Lobster Thermidor aux crevettes with a Mornay sauce, ''served in a
==Impact==
The phenomenon, some years later, of marketers drowning out discourse by flooding [[Usenet]] newsgroups and individuals' [[email]] with junk mail advertising messages was named [[Spam (electronic)|spamming]], due to some early internet users that flooded forums with the word ''spam''<ref name="autogenerated2">{{cite web|url=http://www.templetons.com/brad/spamterm.html |title=Origin of the term "spam" to mean net abuse |publisher=Templetons.com |access-date=5 July 2013}}</ref> recounting the repetitive and unwanted presence of spam in the sketch. This phenomenon has been reported in court decisions handed down in lawsuits against spammers – see, for example, ''CompuServe Inc. v. Cyber Promotions, Inc.'', 962 F.Supp. 1015, n. 1 (S.D.Ohio 1997). Furthermore, it has been referenced in an [[Electronic Frontier Foundation]] ''[[amicus curiae]]'' brief to the [[Supreme Court of the United States]] in 2014.<ref>[https://www.eff.org/files/2013/11/05/eff_amicus_brief_fortres_grand.pdf
The [[Python (programming language)|Python]] programming language, named after Monty Python, prefers to use spam, ham, and eggs as [[metasyntactic variable]]s, instead of the traditional [[foobar|foo, bar and baz]].
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{{Monty Python}}
{{Spam (food)}}
{{Hormel}}
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