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Going Down Like A Lead Balloon

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Booldawg | 14:04 Wed 09th Sep 2015 | ChatterBank
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I've never quite got the grasp of that saying.

When used in something going well you could say 'It went down like a lead balloon' that's means its successful right?

But when you use it in a negative context, like giving someone bad news eg; 'I had to make someone redundant today - it went down like a lead balloon' that surely indicates something unsuccessful?
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it is always negative in meaning.
Never heard it used in the context of something good.
I don't think it's ever used to describe something going well, Booldawg?
A lead balloon won't ever go up Booldawg.
///When used in something going well you could say 'It went down like a lead balloon' that's means its successful right?///

^That idea went down like...........
I've only ever heard that expression in the context of a bad joke.
It is unsuccessful Boldawg.

If you think about the image - a balloon made out of a heavy metal - it is only ever going to go down, and never float, so comparing something going down 'like a lead balloon' means it had a negative impact.

Of course, when Keith Moon told Jimmy Page that his 'New Yardbirds' project would go down 'like a lead balloon', it gave Jimmy the idea for a name for a brand new band.

Of such exchanges are history made.
Your Faux-pas must have led to some amusing exchanges, booldawg.
'Thanks for the present, went down like a lead balloon in my house' says our hero, all happy like.
And the other bloke thinking, 'Cheeky basket, that's yer last'
Never heard that Led Zep story before. I bet I repeat it though.
I've only ever or seen or heard it as "It went over OVER like a lead balloon", and always in a negative sense.
there was one after that disaster in Luxor, two years ago.....

"Have you heard the one about the tourists in Egypt?

It went down like a lead balloon."
Well, I garbled that up, didn't I?:)
Andy, Led Zepplin I so hope that's true... his quote.
Now I understand: your version is a Britishism. http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/lead-balloon.html
Towards the end of this section

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Yardbirds#The_Yardbirds.2C_The_New_Yardbirds_and_Led_Zeppelin

///Entwistle said of forming a band with Jimmy Page and Steve Winwood and he would name it "Lead Zeppelin" because it'll go over like a lead balloon". The spelling of "lead" was changed to avoid confusion over its pronunciation.///
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What confused me was if something went 'down well' then it was good. I can imagine a lead balloon going down well!
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but thanks all. Situation clarified!

I'd heard that Led Zep story before but still didn't understand if he meant they'd be successful or not.
Only to expand on postings offered herein, this site does explain the difference in wording applicable to the phrase referenced: http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/lead-balloon.html

As usual, it comes down to the difference betweenor (US) vs UK) shared and supposedly common language...

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