Remember those riots? We ask @camdenfringe about being on the front line, read their blog here: http:/
Bill Bailey doing the BBC theme tune? That's something i'd like to read about... http:/
SSP's review of a rainy Macmillan Bix mix is now live on the site: http:/
April 26, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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shithole, streatham council, jo brand
Tim Clark, 26 April 2012
Oh Jo Brand, how could you? You’ve really put your foot in it now. You’ve joined the ranks of Frankie Boyle and Jimmy Carr in asking to be let in to the comedian hall of shame.
And your crime? You dared to cause the civic leaders of Streatham Council embarrassment by airing your views on the area they represent on a satirical comedy show.
For those of you who haven’t heard the story, here are the details. Streatham’s civic leaders have decided to hit back at Jo Brand after she called the town of Streatham - an area within the borough of Lambeth in South London - a s**thole, while on BBC One's Have I Got News For You.
Brand was speaking after a clip was played of soldiers marching in North Korea, after which she said: “They could do with that in Streatham. “Do you live in Streatham? Don’t even pass through there. It’s a shithole.”
Brand went on to point out that Streatham High Road was voted the worst street in Britain in a BBC poll in 2002.
The joke – which for some reason does not appear on the BBC iPlayer version of the show - has sparked a fierce rebuttal from Streatham Council, who accused the comedian of ‘serious damage’, ‘making their jobs ten times harder’, ‘letting herself down’, and even threatened her to ‘think twice about doing something like this again’.
In a 300-word complaint letter, councillor Angelina Purcell, the Streatham Town Centre Manager said: “You clearly do not understand the serious damage your flippant comment has had on our collective efforts to transform Streatham's image.
“Together with the committed people of this town we continue to make strides in reversing the town's economic decline.
“You've made my job ten times harder with the use of one word and I'm sure the 60,000 residents and 3,000 businesses feel just as angry as I do.
“For us, you've let yourself down badly Jo and I hope you'll think twice about doing something like this again.”
I happened to have watched the episode of Have I Got News For You the other night, had a small chuckle when the joke was said, and then thought nothing of it. There was much worse said on the show, and there usually is on many comedy shows and on TV in general.
Brand has performed a very well established and basic comedy quip, picking a place and make a disparaging remark about it. It is so common that it is barely worth explaining more. If you go to a comedy club – possibly one in Streatham – you’ll see this in action on a daily basis.
Taking for granted that Brand’s joke was a straight-forward quip which is used far and wide in comedy then it is fair to conclude that it wasn’t meant to be a political statement any more than say Nick Clegg should be found face down on Hackney Marsh (another joke which was mentioned on the show).
However, by drawing attention to the problem, making a public statement and having this issue picked up by the national press, the council has ignored the more pressing problems for Streatham Council to be handling than to go on a crusade against a comedian.
What Purcell is trying to do is hide behind a fig-leaf of political correctness. It seems that this leaf has been taken straight out of Iannucci’s book of how to be a politician.
Rather than make a sober assessment of the grain of truth in Brand’s joke, or even turning the other cheek and realise that what is said on a satirical panel show shouldn’t be considered as a serious statement, they decided to come out attacking, and make another assault on the right of free speech.
What annoys me in particular is that the civic leaders of the borough seem intent to spend their energy trying to hide behind the façade that Brand was ‘out of order’ in making comments which even the local residents of the area agree with.
Though Purcell claims that residents of Streatham are as angry as she is, currently 57% of people who have responded to a poll in The Streatham Guardian agree with Brand ‘that Streatham is a dump’.
Councillors also accuse Jo Brand of never having visited in Streatham, ignorant of the fact that the comedian lives in South London and not too far from the area.
The sheer gall of trying to turn attention away from their own failings by attacking a comedian whose remark was poignant – even if it was simply a throwaway joke – highlights inherent problems within Streatham Council.
However what worries me the most is that Jo Brand’s spokesperson was cajoled into an apology, and state that Brand ‘won't 'diss' Streatham again in this way’. Why not?
What gives the civic leaders of Streatham the right to gag a comedian, or anyone, from voicing their viewpoint it they don’t agree with it?
It is obviously the policy of a council would prefer to silence critics, and is endemic of a poorly led, unimaginative town leadership which cannot face up its own failures.
I myself have lived in Streatham for a year. The estate we lived on was so rough I was asked to be a police informant so that they could try and catch the youths which were trying to burn down the council block adjacent to where I lived.
So in conclusion to the public 'outrage' I would say this: next time you publicly accuse a comedian of being out of order for for making a joke think twice, and act with the authority which you have been bestowed with to make your area thrive rather than make cheap headlines and pointless crusades. If a comedian can damage the reputation of an area with a joke, then frankly the area’s reputation was already in need of repair.
April 26, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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only fools and horses, john leguizamo, modern family
You may have seen that ABC, the American network behind the Only Fools and Horses remake, had taken to Facebook to ask fans of its biggest comedy, Modern Family, what they should rename it.
It stars John Leguizamo, so despite the inevitable flood of British people going 'how dare you remake our British shows, you might as well just put the Queen and Stephen Fry in an NHS hospital and BURN THE LOT DOWN' it might actually be quite good.
Which is more than can be said for the likelihood of the public coming up with a good name. On the one hand, it had previously been named And Only Fools and Horses, so they clearly needed some help. On the other hand, this is what The Public came up with.
Bro-con Men
Not really sure how this is supposed to be a play of words, assuming it is. Bacon Men? Re-con Men? Americans: are these usual American expressions?
Just 4 You
If you Google this name, the first three things that come up are a sexual health advice site, a Towcester beauty clinic and a singles holiday site. Time to give it a new meaning!
Family 4 You
Maybe it's supposed to be like Cash 4 Gold, but you get to trade a family for...yourself? No, that doesn't work.
We Might Be Crazy But With Family
These last three all came from the same person, incidentally.
Did U Pay The Bills
And this one. Yes, he did send them all from a mobile.
Bros before Owls
Whenever I go on a night out I always make sure I put my male friends ahead of getting off with an owl.
kings of jack
Incredibly, this is the highlight from the entire list of 914 suggestions so far.
Scheming or Ideas' Man
Unexpected attention to grammar for Facebook. Unexpected and inaccurate, but attention nonetheless.
Bros of Ca$h
Eurgh. I mean...eurgh. Sounds more like an Entourage-style reality show from Spike.
Almost Famous
Definitely not already been used as a name for comedy purposes.
The OOPS Brothers
Not happy with ripping off Almost Famous, now ABC's viewers want to nick Chucklevision. WHEN WILL IT END?
Call it.... Strike it rich
STOP NICKING OUR BRITISH SHOWS.
Children & Fools
We'd also put good money on this having been a title touted for Rock and Chips at some point.
Luck Be a Brother
Isn't great, is it? But is it worse or better than...
Sibling Ribaldry
?
Miner issues
Obviously the suggestee had in mind that episode of Only Fools where Delboy and Rodney ride around in a three-wheeled yellow mine cart.
Kinda reminds me of Ed, Edd, and Eddy. So maybe The Ed's
This person might be on to something. Dickinson's Real Deal reminds me of Bargain Hunt, so I refer to it as 'Bargain Hunt Hunt'.
Scheme Team
It was an excellent episode of Pokemon, could it work as a prime time sitcom title?
Winklevoss
Did a little laugh at this, this probably gets our vote.
Fumbling Fools
Excellent, a gay remake of Only Fools and Horses. Arguably, Only Twinks and Stallions would be a better name.
need more information about this series.
Could do with some more work.
March 30, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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altitude festival, tim minchin, andrew maxwell, tommy holgate, steve bennet, jimmy carr, kevin bridges
Tim Clark, 30 March 2012
Tim Minchin is one cocky fella – and he's happy to admit it.
The musical comedy maestro has just hurtled himself down a run at Mayrhofen's Ahorn piste at a speed which belies a beginner's first day on a board.
A few swift turns later and the Aussie comic is on his keens while I help him retrieve his sunglasses from further up the slope. Laughing while brushing the snow off he admits 'I might have got a little overconfident there', before racing off down the mountain, eager to master this sport as well as he has the comedy genre.
Another comedian snowboarding addict has been born, you can almost hear Andrew Maxwell cackle with delight. At times you could be forgiven for thinking that Maxwell is secretly trying to lure every comedian on the circuit into part of a secret snowboarding ninja clan - if he is then he's doing well at it.
It is the third day of Altitude Festival, which began in style on Monday night with an opening Gala that would be the envy of pretty much any other comedy festival on the planet.
The festival opened with three-hour long show curated by Andrew Maxwell which included sets from Ed Byrne, Brendan Burns, Michael Winslow, Frankie Boyle and Jimmy Carr.
That trend continued into Tuesday when Minchin was joined by Milton Jones, Kevin Bridges, Terry Alderton, Marcius Brigstocke and Rufus Hound.
Yes, with Altitude even the lists of comedy talent feel endless. While the shows themselves are going to be dealt with in a separate blog post tomorrow, so far Carr was the only comic who had to speed off back to the airport, with a car waiting for him straight after Monday night's gig.
Apart from him though almost all the other comics have stayed long enough in Mayrhofen to try their hand at winter sports.
I spent my first two days mostly in the company of the up-and-coming snowboarders Carl Donnelly, Ben Norris and James Hancox from Abandoman. In between runs and talks about wedding cakes, the sporty trio seemingly enjoyed playing up in the snow.
Ben Norris gets ready to take on the blue runs on Mayrhofen's Penken slopes
It is this relaxed atmosphere which the organisers seem intent on cultivating, and is akin to the Kilkenny Cat Laughs, which receives rave reviews from comedians who venture there.
Even the journalists took part in the festive nature of Altitude, with Chortle's Steve Bennet trying his and on the nursery ski slopes and the Sun's Tommy Holgate looking like he was practicing for the freestyle gymnastics while heading down the mountain on one ski.
Kenny Cavey and Tommy Holgate share a joke before we were chased by the ski police
Even those who don't enjoy partaking in a daily routine of throwing themselves down the mountain enjoy themselves, with Tiernan Douieb seemingly intent on catching up on his writing while he is here – and Frankie Boyle spotted on frequent rambling through the town.
Monday night's headliner Jimmy Carr looked stunned at what he had flown into and though he was only in Mayrhofen for a very short period of time, he vowed to try and return next year and spend more time at the festival to soak up the atmosphere. Kevin Bridges, who had also only flown out for a short period of time, seemed equally intrigued by the Alpine town, though he didn't head up to the mountain himself.
For some the heady mix of comedy and winters sports was simply too much
Speaking to SSP Maxwell described Altitude, which is now in it's fifth year, as a child which he is saving up to pay for rehab, yet though the festival has taken a while to get off the ground it looks like it is in rude health.
Tomorrow we'll mostly be trying to explain the concept of Terry Alderton's alternative comedy universe...
March 26, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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just a minute, bbc two, paul merton, nicholas parsons, sue perkins, graham norton, phill jupitus
Just A Minute returned to our TV screens this evening for another attempt at taking radio gold and making it into TV coltan. We made some notes! Here they are!
0.00 “Welcome...to Just A Minute!” exclaims Nicholas Parsons, just like on the radio. The Minute Waltz is being played, just like on the radio. Maybe this is what the radio version is like, and we just can't normally see it? In that case, the inside of Radio 4 is made of a lot of glowing blue boxes. Unexpected.
0.08 Excellent title graphics.
0.41 Guests! Paul Merton and Sue Perkins look a bit arch. Graham Norton and Phill Jupitus look like they're ready to have a whale of a time. Come on, guests on the right!
1.06 AHAHAHAHA NICHOLAS PARSONS DID A JOKE AHAHAHAHA The audience is possibly worse than on 10 O'Clock Live.
2.00 You know that thing where this isn't the first time that Just A Minute has been attempted for TV and it's never quite worked? Well I know this is only two minutes in, but is it because on TV the guests have to perform for the audience, whilst on the radio the guests perform more to each other, and you just get invited in like a warm piece of eavesdropping? This is an early theory that I woul welcome you disregarding if I change my mind in five minutes time.
2.49 Oh shut up Sue Perkins.
3.58 While Sue Perkins seems determined to represent the worst beard-stroking excesses of Radio 4, Graham Norton seems determined to have fun. It is nice to see Graham Norton having fun and being funny. How bad do YOU think his BBC America show is going to be? Yes, you're probably right.
4.55 The set has turned purple! Goodness. Brave TV colour. Didn't pan out for Daybreak, after all.
5.33 Re: Nicholas Parsons undressing: there was a deeply disturbing episode of the National Lottery Show when I was a young'un where he appeared on the show wearing fishnet stockings.
6.05 Paul Merton may be tedious on HIGNFY but bloody hell he really is good when he's still on form, isn't he?
7.08 Oh lovely Phill Jupitus.
7.33 Sue Perkins aside, this is starting to work (please disregard the 2.00 theory). BUT (new theory) TV isn't really adding much. Maybe the set will go a really exciting new colour! Green? Cerise? Yelple?
9.00 I think we need the full story behind Paul Merton's injured finger.
9.53 'Deviation from sanity' is never funny Sue Perkins pipe down Sue Perkins
13.14 Graham Norton savaging Dragon's Den, awesome.
15.01 Set's been purple for quite a while. Was it purple the entire time? It might have been, actually, yes.
16.22 Nicholas Parsons is really basically my grandad. He's never appeared on the National Lottery in stockings, FYI.
17.07 Nicholas Parsons has been given a cheap plunger to use as the timer button #brokenbritain
18.32 This is Just A Minute, the Audience, no rogue clapping thank you.
18.40 They're clearly making a fuss of the Just A Minute 45th anniversary because they don't think Nicholas Parsons is going to make 50. Gosh, that's depressing.
23.16 The set is definitely blue now, it's definitely changing a bit.
27.00 And nothing else particularly happened for the rest of the show. Filled half an hour (almost). B+.
March 26, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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craig campbell, andrew maxwell, marcus brigstocke, altitude festival
Tim Clark, Monday 26 March, 2012
I've spent the weekend practicing my struts.
According to an app on my phone this is the best way to prepare for the bashing my knees are going to take while I attempt to keep pace with either Andrew Maxwell, Marcus Brigstocke or Craig Campbell early next week.
It's a tough challenge as Maxwell is so dedicated he has mentioned heading to Iran to snowboard, Campbell loves his snow possibly more than his comedy, and Brigstocke goes as far as calling himself a snow Nazi.
They may be able to make you laugh when they're on stage but on the mountains these comedians mean business - and if I can't keep up then i'm considered worse than that persistent heckler at Up The Creek.
This year I am heading to Altitude Festival to once again witness what I personally think is one of the best attempts to nurture comedy in a new atmosphere I have seen.
Now in its fifth year, Altitude is a little like a comedian’s house party which has spun out of control. Set up by comedians Marcus Brigstocke and Andrew Maxwell in 2008, it started life as a way of getting their comedy friends out for a free ski holiday.
The two had performed in bars across the Alps for over a decade - after discovering a shared love of snowboarding on an Edinburgh dry ski slope - but after seeing the success of the Kilkenny Cat Laughs festival in Ireland, thought it worth trying to organise their own winter sports version.
“Because Kilkenny is a tiny medieval city, we found ourselves kind of rammed in there, and there's a lot people mixing around in the streets... It has a real vibe to it,” Maxwell says. “It’s the same in a ski resort - which is essentially a village. You 've got that same vibe. You're meeting people, there's lots of hanging around and socialising.”
The festival has been a steep learning curve for Brigstocke and Maxwell. The first year Altitude operated, the duo hired a circus top which had to be rescued from collapsing in a snowstorm by the local fire brigade. After the last comedian had flown home, the two were left with a fist full of good memories and the whopping bill for their trouble.
Not to be put off, Altitude came back - and since 2011, has moved to its current home of Mayrhofen, Austria. Though the circus top may have gone and Brigstocke no longer helps organise the festival, it still has what can arguably be considered the best comedy lineup of any festival anywhere in Europe.
The names set to rub shoulders with the regular ski set this year include Jimmy Carr, Frankie Boyle, Kevin Bridges, Ed Byrne, Tim Minchin, Brendan Burns, Craig Campbell, Milton Jones, Rufus Hound, Terry Alderton, Abandoman, Phill Jupitus and many more.
But how do you get that many comedians to agree to spend a week together in a chalet?
Maxwell says it’s all down to the nature of comedy: “Comedians are, by their nature, extremely convivial people,” he says. “It's not how every dramatisation shows it, but comedians tend not to be misanthropes. But the bigger you get in comedy, the more time you spend going out and touring by yourself.
“It's a relatively isolated practice and it can be quite lonely, so that's why 'stadium names' like Frankie, Al, Jimmy and Tim are willing to do a friend a favour and play a smaller, more intimate, gig, as they get to hang out with their friends for the first time in a while.”
As with any festival, the normal rules of a comedy gig are bent and then broken. In the years I've been to Altitude, I’ve seen comedians attempt to perform in French and put on a gig on the top of a mountain.
“The first Altitude was the most stressful, busy, hectic two weeks of my life and it was the best time I have ever had in the Alps,” Brigstocke says. “People are seeing really great acts who can sell out 1,500 capacity theatres in the back of a bar.
“So tape a bit of wood to your feet and go for it. Simple as that.”
Altitude Comedy Festival runs from 26 to 31 March in Mayrhofen, Austria. For more information visit www.altitudefestival.com.
March 16, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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outnumbered, andy hamilton, guy jenkin, clare skinner, hugh dennis
You might have seen the announcement today that Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin, the writers behind Outnumbered, are looking at writing a movie that sort of is going to be like Outnumbered, but isn't going to be like Outnumbered. It IS Outnumbered in the way that a family of two harrassed parents and their kids will take a road trip to Scotland for the grandfather's birthday. It will also be filmed using the same techniques and methods as the show. It ISN'T Outnumbered because it isn't going to actually be Outnumbered.
Anyway, here are some thoughts on NotOutnumbered. Or Numbered, for short.
March 2, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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the unprofessional, living loaded, anger management, how to live with your parents, ned fox is my manny, prodigy bully, 1600 penn, malibu county, partners, the whole banana
We normally only write about British things because we're British and so it makes good British sense. But you know what? There's a lot of rather good-lookin' pilots that are coming up in America that are worth having on your radar. We've picked out the most interesting from a wide field here because hopefully it's only a matter of months before Channel 4 tries to pick them up to replace New Girl. And be sure to check out our lookover the casting of British remakes in America, because there's quite a few of them at the mo.
And the inevitable raising of Ally McBeal marks a clear sign that it's time to stop this.
Read up on British pilots here. Actually we haven't updated that since the beginning of December but most of it is still relevant.
February 22, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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rentaghost, suburban shootout, time trumpet, and only fools and horses, friday night dinner, white truck dude, white van man
There have been rather a lot of UK exports to America in comedy terms this year. Here's a round up of the casting decisions so far.
WHITE VAN MAN/WHITE TRUCK DUDE
Who starred in the UK
Will Mellor, Joel Fry, Clive Mantle, Georgina Moffat
Who's lined up for America
Kyle Bornheimer
We've not been particularly quiet about our deep love for White Van Man and Bornheimer is a fairly good fit, having already successfully led the cast of the US remake of The Worst Week Of My Life. Still, slightly odd to see the lead character so much older in this NBC version. And The Gays of America are going to be disappointed, given that he's not, well, Will Mellor.
The well-written UK version was penned by Adrian Poynton, with the US pilot being penned by Bobby Bowman, a former My Name Is Earl staffer. Mellor claimed in a recent interview that the working title is White Truck Dude, which wouldn't exactly be a great sign for its prospects.
REMAKE IDEA: White Van Man means nothing in America and the show will need retitling. So why not go for White van Man, about a Dutch racialist? Just a thought.
FRIDAY NIGHT DINNER
Who starred in the UK
Simon Bird, Tom Rosenthal, Paul Ritter, Tamsin Grieg
Who's lined up for America
Allison Janney, Tony Shalhoub, Aya Cash, Kevin Bigley, Gil Ozeri
Only two things to really know here: the mum is CJ out of the West Wing and the dad is Monk. If you've ever seen Juno or Drop Dead Gorgeous or Monk, you'll know how amazing set of comedy casting this is. The kids are fairly new on us, although this Ozeri character appears to be an 'internet sort'.
Wise words from Tom Rosenthal on the Twitters about the casting: "USA Jonny Goodman is absolutely stacked. Makes sense. #hench"
Ken Kwapis and Greg Daniels, who are The American Office veterans, are putting this one together. Internet rumours say that HAPPARENTLY the US version is near enough a word-for-word remake of the British one, so make of that what you will.
(AND) ONLY FOOLS AND HORSES
Who starred in the UK
David Jason, Nicholas Lyndhurst, Roger Lloyd-Pack
Who's lined up for America
John Leguizamo
Leguizamo is one of those actors whose diverse career means different things to different people. I say ER's Dr Victor Clemente; you say Silly Mail Bird in Dora the Explorer. He has the comedy chops, having already toured his one-man show Ghetto Klown, but for UK audiences there's a lot at stake here. ABC are the most competent US network at comedy so that works in the show's favour.
SUBURBAN SHOOTOUT
Who starred in the UK
Anna Chancellor, Felicity Montagu, Amelia Bullmore
Who starred in America last time they tried a pilot (HBO)
Judy Greer
Who's starring in America this time round (ABC)
Unknown
No news on this yet. If it was Judy Greer again then that would really be quite good actually, she seems a good fit for the skittish steel that fits the concept.
RENTAGHOST
Who starred in the UK
Audrey out of Coronation Street, some other people
Who's starring in America
Ben Stiller in a film version
Poor Russell Brand had been attached to the Rentaghost remake but was reportedly dropped after the box office failure of films like Arthur. Now it's been handed to Ben Stiller, and given how he's turned Night at the Museum into a box office monster with a similar Array Of Wacky Supernatural Characters idea, we can probably expect more of the same here.
TIME TRUMPET
Who starred in the UK
Stewart Lee, Richard Ayoade, Matthew Holness, Adam Buxton
Who's starring in America
Unknown
We don't know yet – sorry about that – but it was a pretty stellar UK line-up that's going to be difficult to match. HAVING SAID THAT Time Trumpet was put together during that mid-noughties era when the BBC's CGI always looked a bit dusty and blurry, so that one might get blown out the water. What's Walmart declaring war on Venezuela going to be like?
February 20, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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radio 1, fist of fun, blue jam, daniel sloss, matt richardson, joe lycett, cariad lloyd, late night gimp fight, idiots of ants, kieran and the joes, sheeps, pappy's, jack whitehall, holly walsh, josie long, tnt, thom tuck, humphrey ker
Dear Those People Thinking About Putting Some Comedy On Radio 1,
We’ve been thinking rather a lot about that report a couple of months ago that said you might start airing some new comedy for the first time since 1846. This is partly because BBC Three’s efforts at renewing its comedy have so far been rather underwhelming, and someone at the Beeb should be doing some youth comedy in the post-Switch era. (Russell Kane is a great comedian, but he is not the FUTURE YOUTHFUL FACE of comedy.) It’s also partly because it’s February and we don’t have much else to think about.
ANYWAY, this must feel like a bit of a brave new world after this much time, but with the right format (ie, edit the zinging tits off it and make sure it’s available on podcast when it’s inevitably scheduled at 2am on a Wednesday night), there are many a potential winner on offer.
ANYWAY, Dear Person We’re Writing This Letter To, it’s a fairly safe bet that Radio 1 and comedy are so unlinked in people’s minds that not a single person mentioned here would have even considered it a possibility. But that can be a good thing. You’ve got a blank canvas and the market pretty much to yourself.
(Just for the love of all things good on the radio, please don’t do what we think you’re going to do: retooling the review show to be fronted with Greg James and some Young Comedian panelists and think you’ve done your job.)
Kind regards and inappropriate hugs, Such Small Portions
February 16, 2012 by Such Small Portions
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lauren laverne, jimmy carr, david mitchell, charlie brooker, 10 o'clock live
When 10 O'Clock limped to the end of its first run we wrote a piece on where it needed to sort itself out. Two episodes in to the second season seems a good time to perform a stock check on how things are going. (One episode would have been the obvious point but we were on holiday. SORRY.)
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