The sketch appears in the 1971 spin-off feature film,
And Now for Something Completely Different and the 1982 concert film
Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl. It was also performed when the Pythons appeared on
The Midnight Special and was recorded for the 1976 concert album
Monty Python Live at City Center. In its original airing on ''Monty Python's Flying Circus'', the sketch was preceded by a short link in which Idle,
Terry Jones and
Michael Palin portray schoolboys being interviewed for television by
John Cleese. During the interview, Palin and Jones say they would like to see the sketch that Idle has written. In
And Now for Something Completely Different, the sketch is followed by a cut to a scene in a gym, where Terry Gilliam dressed as a nun on an
ergometer replies (dubbed by a female voice), "I think it's overrated." Then, the "Self-Defence Against Fresh Fruit" sketch is played in the setting. Idle's character in the pub makes several cameo appearances in later episodes, referred to as "Arthur Name". In
Monty Python Live (Mostly), the sketch segues from "
Albatross". In the background, a piano version of "
Never Be Rude to an Arab" is heard. Eventually the sketch segues into a new opening title song for
Blackmail which incorporates samples of Idle's
Nudge, Nudge dialogue. ==History==