Alf was horrified by this and he and Mike rarely got along, the only time they did was when they both went to the 1966 World Cup Final, England vs. West Germany.
ALF (TV series) | Alf Landon | Alf Clausen | ALF | Angelica Garnett | Kevin Garnett | Alf | Alf Garnett | Tony Garnett | David Garnett | Alf Kirchen | Alf Dubs | Tommy Garnett | Tay Garnett | Robert S. Garnett | Garnett, Kansas | Garnett Brown | Garnett | Alf Tupper | Alf Ramsey | Alf Morris | Alf Kjellin | Alf Eivind Saxlund | Alf Common | Alf Bayrle | Alf Andersen | Shaun Garnett | John Alf Brown | Carlos Garnett | Alf Ward |
Unlike the families of Archie Bunker and Alf Garnett, however, the Beltráns in the first episode are moving up from their working-class digs to a nice, middle-class duplex in Burbank, which they've bought thanks to some lottery winnings.
The phrase "Randy Scouse Git" came from the 1960s British BBC-TV sit-com Till Death Us Do Part, in which the loudmouthed main character Alf Garnett, played by Cockney actor Warren Mitchell, regularly insulted his Liverpudlian ("Scouse") son-in-law, played by Tony Booth.
As a free-lance cartoonist he produced work for the New Statesman and for illustrated books: Alf Garnett's Little Blue Book (1973), The Thoughts of Chairman Alf (1973), Alf Garnett Scripts (1973), and Dick Emery's In Character (1973).