Originating in 16th-century English, hurly-burly appears in Shakespeare’s Macbeth (Act I, Scene I): “When the hurly-burly’s done, / When the battle’s lost and won.” It describes noisy disorder. In sports, a "hurly-burly foursome" would be a deliberately disorganized or high-pressure match, perhaps with multiple balls in play, rotation of players, or chaotic scoring.
is a lost or obscure video file from the late 2000s, likely:
“There are no flags,” I said. “You hear the pin. It’s a shepherd’s bell, hung six feet high. You’ll know it when you ring it.”
The file might have been part of a series (TS01, TS02…) and "foursome" refers to four comedians or athletes engaging in a chaotic competition.