Fake a fuse, using a ceramic ( or glass) that is made very thin, and with end caps that are just a light press fit on there. Then make the element out of aluminium foil strip, and use one that fits the inner diameter, so there will be no problems with poor contact with those poor caps. Very cheap as you do not need to do any incoming QC checks or testing for conformance aside from the final part looking similar to the real one.
Then enclose in a typical UK plugtop, where the fuse is in a holder accessible from the underside, and make the pins of the plug from brass coated steel to cut cost further, and at the top use a crimped hollow section for the wires, then mould it in cheap plastic. As UK sockets are typically fed with a 32A breaker, and the supply impedance will in almost all cases be well under 100milliohms the fault current this fake must break is very high.
This current is plenty enough to turn the foil into metal vapour, and this shatters the fuse housing, blowing out the door of the holder, which is between the plugtop and the socket. This will blow it out the wall, as seen in the video. Yes, the breaker in the consumer unit will trip, but it will still take at least 2 mains cycles to completely open and break the arc inside it safely, which is 2 cycles at the short circuit current dissipated in the arc of the failing fuse, and a single cycle of the breaker arc disruptors clearing this arc. You might have the supply fuse itself blow, but this will be rare, as there typically is a 100A fuse at the point of supply, and a 60A or 80A breaker at the metering point, which are there for cable protection, so are designed to be slower acting, to clear shorted or overloaded cabling before it heats up enough to catch fire.
By me the fuse is a 400A unit, at the substation 50m away across the park, though the cable run is 500m in length. Really unlikely for that fuse to go for any fault downstream of the meter short of you going to the cable right by the meter with an axe.