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Why Aye, man!

Auf Wiedersehen, Pet is a comedy-drama television series from the writing team of Dick Clement and Ian LaFrenais. Season 1 (1983-1984) involved seven manual laborers from various parts of the United Kingdom. It was the mid-Eighties and there were no jobs to be found in this country, so they traveled to Germany to find work, forming themselves into a tight-knit group amid all the Culture Clash. They even used The Magnificent Seven title.

Season 2 (1986) featured the same seven re-uniting and traveling from Birmingham to the English countryside to Spain on various building projects.

British Brevity was somewhat averted by these first two seasons, which contain 13 episodes each rather than the usual six. A third season was planned but shelved after Gary Holton, one of the seven principal cast members, passed away.

It was eventually revived for a few years in 2002, Darker and Edgier. With the six remaining members, Timothy Spall (Barry), Christopher Fairbank (Moxey), Jimmy Nail (Oz), Tim Healy (Dennis), Pat Roach (Bomber) and Kevin Whately (Neville) returning and Noel Clarke filling the gap as Wayne's son, Wyman.

The strong accents (especially Geordie), including regional slang terms and the obscure British cultural references, would probably make the series almost completely unintelligible to anyone from outside the United Kingdom.

Tropes used in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet include:

Dennis: After a week they've lost their passports, they've got pissed, lost most of their money, and become ridiculously nationalistic for the country that can't even bloody employ them in the first place!

    • Much parodied in the Cuban Bridge On The River Kwai scenes, especially Barry's "Colenel Nicholson" act while locked in the metal hut.
  • Mooks: Ali Fraser and Mickey Startup both have them. Big Baz could be considered a dragon.
  • Mysterious Past: Moxey and Colin.
  • Naked People Are Funny: The skinny dip in Spain.
  • Native American Casino: The revival series had a plot involving our heroes demolishing a historic bridge in England, and rebuilding it across a canyon in Arizona to provide access to a Native American casino.
    • A Shout-Out to an urban legend relating to the sale of the old London Bridge and its re-erection in Arizona as a tourist attraction.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: Oz and Bomber.
  • Only Sane Employee: Dennis, frequently.
  • Oop North: Not Derbyshire though, which is the South as far as Dennis is concerned.
  • Pink Is for Sissies: Bomber's response when Neville wants to paint the hut pink.
  • Porn Stash: 'Last Rites'.
  • Prison Rape: Apparently almost happened to Geoffrey Granger. Luckily for him, Oz was around to help.
  • Protagonist Centred Morality: When Oz mistreats people, he's an anti-hero that you root for. When a character like Herr Grimwald or Arthur Pringle mistreat the group, then they are a villain deserving of humiliation.
  • Really Gets Around: Wayne.
  • Replaced the Theme Tune: It deliberately changed its opening and closing themes for each new series or special.
  • Right in Front of Me: Barry with Terry Leather.
  • Second Episode Introduction: Moxey.
  • Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: Wayne and Barry.
  • Sexy Secretary: Dagmar and Christa.
    • Neville has one to lust over in series three, Annie Cartwright no less.
      • Averted in several directions by Dagmar, who seems to be developing a genuine relationship with the unhappily-divorced Dennis - until their night in a hotel is spoilt when the rest of the Brits turn up, having burnt down their hut in a drunken prank gone drastically wrong.
  • Sexy Stewardess: Wayne and Barry try to pull two sexy stewardesses in Season 1.
  • Sitcom Character Archetypes:
    • The Big Mouth: Oz.
    • The Dork: Barry.
    • The Sage: Dennis.
    • Neville is both the Square and the Stick.
    • The Wisecracker: Oz and Wayne.
  • Sleazy Politician: Geoffrey Granger.
  • Smug Snake: Ali Fraser. And Geoffrey Granger even more so.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Wyman.
  • Sympathetic Adulterer: Bomber who frequently visits brothels despite being married with 5 children
  • Sympathetic Criminal: Moxey.
  • Third Person Person: Bomber.
  • Title Drop: In the closing scene of the final episode, courtesy of Neville.
  • Took a Level In Badass: Between Seasons 2 and 3, Brenda goes from a simpering housewife to a hard-nosed businesswoman.
  • Trash the Set: Takes place at the end of Season 1 when Wayne inadvertently burns the hut down.
  • Ugly Guy, Hot Wife: Barry and Tatiana.
  • The Unintelligible: Oz with his strong accent in the first two seasons.
    • Lampshaded by Moxey: "Nobody understands a tossing word you're saying."
  • The Vamp: Tatiana.
  • Villains Out Shopping: "He was only going for a Tandori chicken!"
  • What Did I Do Last Night?: How Neville ends up with the aforementioned Embarrassing Tattoo.
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