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British Comedy

  • www.theguardian.com ‘Punters let me cut their hair!’ Johnny Vegas on the wild pub that launched his career

    From performing in a bin to arm-wrestling rivals, the standup cut his teeth at a Nottingham pub’s chaotic Just the Tonic nights. As the thriving comedy club chain it grew into turns 30, he remembers really letting rip

    ‘Punters let me cut their hair!’ Johnny Vegas on the wild pub that launched his career

    > From a “renegade, rundown pub” to a stately home: was rags to riches ever so clearly exemplified? When Darrell Martin founded Just the Tonic, he was “an unemployable young man, just out of university in a recession,” setting up a comedy club in Nottingham because he didn’t know how else to become a standup. Thirty years later, he is celebrating the anniversary of a now-thriving chain of clubs with a long weekend of gigs at Melbourne Hall in Derbyshire. Once home to Victorian PM William Lamb, it makes room this week for a roster of top-tier comics that includes an act closely associated with Just the Tonic and its maverick way of doing things: the potter turned standup turned glamping impresario Johnny Vegas. > > ... > > “I don’t let Johnny out of the box much any more,” his creator Michael Pennington tells me, on the phone from his native St Helens. “But if Darrell gets me on the phone, I know I’m going to agree to it.” It’s a relationship that stretches back the full span of Just the Tonic’s three decades, to a time when Vegas was just breaking out of Lancashire to make a national name for himself. “I was struggling to get anywhere outside of the north-west,” says Pennington now. “It was like a no-go zone. But Darrell booked me. He got what I was about.” > > What Vegas was about, as anyone who saw him gig in the 1990s will recall, was havoc and disruption. In Just the Tonic, then a startup in Nottingham’s unglamorous Old Vic pub, he found a spiritual home. “They let you off the leash,” he remembers now. “There was very little, ‘Here’s what we want you to do.’ It was much more, ‘We want to see what you’re going to do.’ You were given carte blanche. It didn’t feel like a business, it felt like a night of fun.” > > Martin says: “I was an encourager of a free-form approach to standup. A lot of clubs look at the clock. But I just used to say, ‘Do what you want. If it’s fun, keep on going.’ I didn’t really know what the rules were. And my nights would be utter chaos because of that.” > > You want examples? Johnny has examples. The night he arrived after closing time so staged the gig in the car park. The Christmas Eve when Martin shepherded him on stage, crying in a Santa outfit, after his tour van burst into flames. “It was always that thing of, ‘How can we make tonight unique?’” he recalls. “I’ve done gigs with the Tonic where I’ve sat in a wheelie bin and they’ve passed it around the room. And I’m like, ‘When I stop singing, the table I’m next to wins a round of drinks.’ > >“One time, me and Ross Noble got into an argument over who’d make the best barber – and punters got up on stage and let us cut their hair. Another night, we had a band playing downstairs, they were so loud. So I went down, brought the singer back upstairs, and we had an arm-wrestling match on stage: if we lost, we had to stop the gig and listen to them playing; if we won, they had to come upstairs and watch our gig. And I beat him! And all their audience came upstairs. It just wouldn’t happen anywhere else.”

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  • Brighton's Comedy Garden returns

    www.chortle.co.uk Brighton's Comedy Garden returns : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Brighton's Comedy Garden returns - The week's best live comedy

    The week's best live comedy !

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  • Read all about it!

    www.chortle.co.uk Read all about it! : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Read all about it! - Norhtern News and the rest of the week's best live comedy

    Norhtern News and the rest of the week's best live comedy !

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  • www.theguardian.com ‘And today’s news is … I’m cancelled’: Hugh Bonneville, Alex Kingston and Steven Moffat on their cancel comedy

    As Douglas Is Cancelled prepares to air, Moffat talks about career implosions, Bonneville relives past nude scenes – and Kingston recalls the ‘wandering hands’ warnings she used to be given

    ‘And today’s news is … I’m cancelled’: Hugh Bonneville, Alex Kingston and Steven Moffat on their cancel comedy

    > As Douglas Is Cancelled prepares to air, Moffat talks about career implosions, Bonneville relives past nude scenes – and Kingston recalls the ‘wandering hands’ warnings she used to be given

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  • Dave Gorman to return to TV

    www.chortle.co.uk Dave Gorman to return to TV : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Dave Gorman to return to TV - 'I can't tell you what they're called or who they're for...'

    > Dave Gorman is making a return to TV.

    > Details of his new show are under wraps, but he will be doing some work-in-progress gigs next month to shape the programmes.

    > In an email to fans, he explained: ‘Well, this is exciting. Unfortunately it's so exciting that a man in a suit won't let me tell you all of it - so, with apologies for being a click-tease, here's the bit I can tell you:

    > ‘I'm in the process of making some more telly shows. I can't tell you what they're called or who they're for... but I can tell you that I'm getting the band back together. And when I say 'band', I mean, my laptops, screen and clickers. Because it's me doing stand up. Simple.

    > ‘As with previous projects, being at a desk, making powerpoint only gets me so far... to shape it, I need to get on stage with it. And so we've put a few warm up dates together.’

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  • Netflix celebrates the LGBTQ+ comedians who changed the world

    www.chortle.co.uk Netflix celebrates the LGBTQ+ comedians who changed the world : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Netflix celebrates the LGBTQ+ comedians who changed the world - The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • Chris Fleming starts a UK tour

    www.chortle.co.uk Chris Fleming starts a UK tour : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Chris Fleming starts a UK tour - The week's best live comedy

    The week's best live comedy !

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  • Alan Partridge filming spotted in city

    www.bbc.com Alan Partridge's Steve Coogan spotted filming new show in Norwich

    Steve Coogan's fictional character returns to a Norwich cheese stall for some dairy-inspired comedy.

    Alan Partridge's Steve Coogan spotted filming new show in Norwich

    > Paula Taylor, who has run The Cheeseman at Norwich Market for 24 years, said Coogan visited "about eight or nine years ago, but it was lovely to see him come back to smell my cheeses - he's such a nice man."

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  • ‘A Touch of Cloth’: Charlie Brooker’s magnificent ode to ‘Airplane!’

    faroutmagazine.co.uk Exploring Charlie Brooker’s magnificent ode to ‘Airplane!’

    With his satirical detective TV show 'A Touch of Cloth', Charlie Brooker gave a brilliant ode to the disaster comedy movie 'Airplane!' starring Leslie Nielsen.

    Exploring Charlie Brooker’s magnificent ode to ‘Airplane!’

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/13120670

    > > While Charlie Brooker might be best known by a wider audience for his science fiction anthology series Black Mirror, the English writer and satirist has a back catalogue that spreads far and wide. Amongst his writing credits on the likes of Brass Eye and Nathan Barley is a hidden gem, a satirical take on the detective genre, A Touch of Cloth. > > > > Arriving a year after Black Mirror first aired on Channel 4, A Touch of Cloth was written by Brooker and Daniel Maier, who had previously worked on Harry Hill’s TV Burp. With the two comic writing masters behind the show, A Touch of Cloth sees John Hannah play police detective Jack Cloth, and Suranne Jones play his colleague Anne Oldman. > > > > ... > > > > “It’s a gag-packed spoof of dark British detective serials in the sort of Messiah, Wire in the Blood mould,” Brooker had once told The Guardian around the time A Touch of Cloth was being released on Sky One back in 2012. “The idea was to do something that was just outrageously stupid as opposed to dark or satirical.”

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  • Inside No 9's final twist

    www.chortle.co.uk Inside No 9's final twist : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Inside No 9's final twist - The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • Bristol Comedy Garden back for 2024

    www.chortle.co.uk Bristol Comedy Garden back for 2024 : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Bristol Comedy Garden back for 2024 - The best of the week's live comedy

    The best of the week's live comedy !

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  • www.theguardian.com ‘We had to cut Rik Mayall’s ejaculation scene’: Adrian Edmondson and Ed Bye on Bottom

    ‘We had wanted to call it My Bottom, so that people at work the next day would say, “Did you see My Bottom on television last night?”’

    ‘We had to cut Rik Mayall’s ejaculation scene’: Adrian Edmondson and Ed Bye on Bottom

    > Ade and Rik worked by knowing what you could get away with – and then pushing the boundaries. I did have some problems with BBC executives at the end of the whole process, and had to cut a scene where Rik pre-ejaculates. Well, I didn’t cut it out, I just chose different shots so that you could see less of Rik.

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  • Paula Vennells school censors sock puppets' Post Office musical

    www.chortle.co.uk Paula Vennells school censors sock puppets' Post Office musical : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Paula Vennells school censors sock puppets' Post Office musical - Luckily her links with Bedford School will remain secret, jokes creator

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/12830476

    > > A daft comedy musical about the Post Office scandal has been cancelled by the school where the company’s beleaguered former boss used to be a governor. > > > The show was scheduled to be performed by sock puppets at the Bedfringe comedy festival in July. However, the event takes place at the Quarry Theatre, which is owned by the school where Paula Vennells was a governor until 2021. She quit after 39 former postmasters had their convictions quashed.

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  • www.spectator.co.uk An exclusive look at Graham Linehan's Father Ted musical

    The tree-lined streets of Rotherhithe are an odd place to unveil a West End musical. But this is a suitably odd situation. Graham Linehan – lauded comedy writer turned culture warrior – is about to unveil what he calls ‘a musical that may never be seen’. For much of the past 30 years, the idea

    An exclusive look at Graham Linehan's Father Ted musical

    > The tree-lined streets of Rotherhithe are an odd place to unveil a West End musical. But this is a suitably odd situation. Graham Linehan – lauded comedy writer turned culture warrior – is about to unveil what he calls ‘a musical that may never be seen’. > > For much of the past 30 years, the idea of turning Father Ted, cult sitcom of the 1990s, into a West End musical would have seemed a hot prospect – certainly to the legions of nerdy, largely male fans who still stream episodes decades later. Once upon a time, it looked destined for Shaftesbury Avenue, backed by one of the biggest names in theatre. Now it might be going nowhere. > > The company which produced Father Ted offered Linehan £200,000 to take his name off the project > > When we meet at his east London apartment, Linehan concedes that, by doing an impromptu read-through, I may end up as one of the last members of the small club of people who have ‘seen’ the show. Father Ted: The Final Episode may be almost oven-ready – songs included – but a Mexican stand-off between Linehan and his former producers means it’s stuck in purgatory. > > Never one to hold his tongue, Linehan is eager to air his side of the story. Last month, he launched a social media campaign calling on his former backers to #FreeFatherTed and allow the show to be performed. But before we get to that, I have a bigger question: is it any good? > > ... > > So why, then, is this musical stuck in limbo? Like many things in the culture war, it is a long and contested story. But both Linehan and his detractors would agree it largely boils down to one thing: his decision, in 2018, to take a public (and strident) position on questions around limiting access to single-sex spaces for transgender women. > > Within months, Linehan’s public image had changed. No longer the affable comic who used social media to say fashionable things about the NHS, he was now – in the eyes of his detractors – a bigoted transphobe seeking to sow division. Naturally, this became a point of concern for the musical’s two major backers – West End supremo Sonia Friedman and the comedy mogul Jimmy Mulville. > > Early in 2020, Linehan recalls being summoned to Friedman’s office for a discussion about toning down his social media positions. ‘I had already been getting a lot of pressure at this point about what I was saying,’ he tells me. ‘Then she said something that really triggered me and we ended up having a full on row. She said I was on the wrong side of history – and that really irked me.’ > > ... > > But there are questions, too, about why the project would have been so difficult. As Linehan points out, similar controversies around J.K. Rowling (who is also routinely branded a Terf, or ‘trans-exclusionary radical feminist’) haven’t dented the success of the Harry Potter stage play. > > Could the show have been disrupted by demonstrators? Probably not: the West End has ramped up its security after protestors from Just Stop Oil managed to halt a performance of Les Misérables last year. The activists have since been convicted of aggravated trespass, having cost the show’s producers £60,000, and are due for sentencing. > > Linehan has a more cynical assessment of it all. He thinks that Hat Trick Productions, Mulville’s multi-million-pound comedy company, pulled the show due to industry politics. ‘He doesn’t want to have the Derry Girls walking out in protest,’ he says. The show was a huge hit for Hat Trick, and one of its lead actresses, Nicola Coughlan, is a big advocate for gender politics. ‘I don’t think Jimmy actually believes any of this stuff about gender,’ he says. Instead, he suggests, Hat Trick is looking after its bottom line. > > Speaking over the telephone, Mulville gives his assessment of the situation. ‘If you’d have told me six years ago, this would happen then I wouldn’t have believed you,’ he says with a sigh. The decision to pull the plug wasn’t anything to do with Linehan’s views, he insists, but due to the relationship with his former partners souring. Friedman confirmed that her company was no longer looking to produce the show, but declined to offer any comment.

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  • www.theguardian.com Love him or loathe him, James Corden is back in the UK. So will the sniping now stop?

    After massive TV success in the US, the creator of Gavin & Stacey is about to appear on the London stage. But why do British audiences find him so hard to love?

    Love him or loathe him, James Corden is back in the UK. So will the sniping now stop?

    > James Corden is back in the UK and characteristically busy. Last year, the 45-year-old left his job as Los Angeles-based chat show host of The Late Late Show on CBS. A Christmas special is planned for Gavin & Stacey, the acclaimed BBC sitcom he created with co-star Ruth Jones. There’s talk of reviving One Man, Two Guvnors, the National Theatre’s critically lauded hit ­comedy that transferred to Broadway, winning Corden a Tony award in 2012. > > And later this month, Corden will appear at London’s Old Vic in a short run of Joe Penhall’s new play, The Constituent, helmed by the ­theatre’s artistic director, Matthew Warchus. Corden’s first stage role since One Man, Two Guvnors, it’s seen as ­something of a departure (a gamble) for Corden – a serious work about the escalating risks of public service in politics. > > All this, but in the UK at least, a question seems to dangle eternally above Corden’s head, like a public relations sword of Damocles. > > Put bluntly, why don’t you like him? Why do sizeable swathes of the British public appear to have it in for him?

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  • Chloe Petts' toilet humour

    www.chortle.co.uk Chloe Petts' toilet humour : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Chloe Petts' toilet humour - The best of the week's comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The best of the week's comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • We Are Lady Parts is back... as are The Outlaws

    www.chortle.co.uk We Are Lady Parts is back... as are The Outlaws : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    We Are Lady Parts is back... as are The Outlaws - The best of the week's comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The best of the week's comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • www.bbc.co.uk The Brockmans return to BBC for Outnumbered Christmas special

    In a moment of adversity, Sue and Pete gather all their offspring (including one grandchild) to try and celebrate a traditional family Christmas...

    The Brockmans return to BBC for Outnumbered Christmas special

    > In a moment of adversity, Sue and Pete gather all their offspring (including one grandchild) to try and celebrate a traditional family Christmas...

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  • LEE MACK'S NOT GOING OUT RENEWED FOR NEW SERIES ON BBC ONE

    > Lee Mack’s much loved, multi-award-winning studio sitcom will return for a new series on the BBC in 2025. Not Going Out is the UK’s longest running UK sitcom currently on air and recently joined an elite group of sitcom centenarians when the 100th episode aired during the BBC’s 2023 Christmas schedule.

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  • www.bbc.com Filming commences on And Did Those Feet... with Alan Partridge

    Alan is settling into life back in Norfolk after a year working in Saudi Arabia, but the adjustment has left him with a deep sense of unease

    Filming commences on And Did Those Feet... with Alan Partridge

    > Alan is settling into life back in Norfolk after a year working in Saudi Arabia, but the adjustment has left him with a deep sense of unease

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  • www.theguardian.com ‘It’s all been preposterous’: Stephen Merchant on fame, standup and the pressures of cancel culture

    From The Office sidekick to standup legend and a serial killer, the multitalented Stephen Merchant is impossible to pin down. He talks about cancel culture, why pubs are more interesting than outer space and hanging out with Christopher Walken

    ‘It’s all been preposterous’: Stephen Merchant on fame, standup and the pressures of cancel culture

    > Stephen Merchant has always been obsessed by the idea of the ordinary man “thrust into extraordinary circumstance”. Since he was a kid in Bristol, the son of a plumber and a nursery nurse, those were the kinds of films he sought out and the stories he wrote, about normal people who experience something that “jolts them out of their life and gives them a way of reframing it”. He’s talking to me from his office in Nichols Canyon, LA, in a house once owned by Ellen DeGeneres, where he lives with his partner of seven years, actor Mircea Monroe. It’s early morning there, the white light offering shadows of shifting leaves, and he wears a black baseball cap and speaks thoughtfully without pause. Is he, I ask, that ordinary man? “Well, possibly,” he says, slowly. “Maybe. Yeah.” > > Merchant’s early career is perhaps better known than the success that followed. He met Ricky Gervais when he got a job as his assistant on the radio station XFM and the two went on to write and direct The Office in 2001, quietly changing expectations of British comedy for ever. Then there was some acting, a lot of very popular radio and standup. In his 2011 show, Hello Ladies, which later became a sitcom, he talked about his height: “6ft 7in is too big… Growing up I spent as much time as possible in the distance.” > > In 2019, he wrote and directed the feature film Fighting With My Family, a wrestling comedy starring Florence Pugh, and in 2022 played serial killer Stephen Port in the shocking BBC drama Four Lives. Today, we’re meeting to talk about the third series of The Outlaws, a comedy thriller about a disparate group of offenders on community service, which he stars in and co-wrote with film-maker and ex-convict Elgin James. It’s about normal people who experience something that jolts them out of their lives. > > For Merchant, the route to his extraordinary circumstances felt “like that frog in the pan of water. It slowly heats up and you don’t realise you’re being boiled alive. It wasn’t like I was an X-factor contestant.” Was there a moment when he realised his life was changing? “I guess there were sort of staging posts along the way,” he says. “Like, you do your first interview for the Guardian, and they spelt my name wrong. I think that was ‘Stephen Mitchell’?” Then there’s an award show. “Then you’re on, like, Graham Norton, and that all seems very exciting.” Then you’re having a meeting in Hollywood, dating a string of beautiful actresses, moving to LA. “And each of the stages seem preposterous in a new way.” Where does it culminate? “I guess, going to Stonehenge with Christopher Walken [a co-star on The Outlaws] on a day trip? Christopher’s a very quiet man. A reflective man. He didn’t say a lot for about an hour, then eventually, as the sun was setting, he said: ‘The bluestones have healing properties.’ It was all very surreal. And yet at the same time, weirdly ordinary.” That was one point where: “You’re just like, OK, now I’m boiled.” > > ... > > Last month, Seinfeld joined comics like Ricky Gervais and John Cleese in condemning “cancel culture”, blaming the apparent death of TV comedy on “the extreme left and PC crap and people worrying so much about offending other people”. (Cleese was a childhood hero: “He went to school in Bristol and he was a tall person who was funny, so at some point I was like, well, if you need tall people who are funny from the West Country, I’ll give it a go?”) > > Merchant approaches the subject of cancel culture cautiously, as if walking barefoot on stones. “Well,” he says, “it seems to me that there’s always been policing of comedy, of there being… guardrails. I think the difference is that it used to feel like it was the Right that was policing it. It feels like it’s the Left that’s doing it now, and it’s allowed the Right to become the arbiters of free speech. Which does feel like quite a significant shift.” > > There are, he adds, carefully: “Sensitivities that seem out of all proportion with the joke. I’ve noticed it in standup, how you’re more cautious because you don’t want to spend weeks on Twitter trying to justify a joke you were just experimenting with. Because putting out the fires is exhausting. But” – and perhaps this is where he differs from Gervais – “I’m also aware that sensitivities shift over time and that people are allowed to criticise and query things, and we do look back at old comedy and think we wouldn’t do that any more.” He takes a breath. “I have no objection to the sands shifting. I think that makes sense and I’m loth to become a kind of ‘old man of comedy’, railing against the younger generation. But you do feel like there’s a sensitivity to the words before they’ve even heard the joke or the context. And that is inevitably a straitjacket of sorts – it quashes experimentation.”

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  • Why isn't Jim Davidson cancelled yet?

    www.chortle.co.uk Why isn't Jim Davidson cancelled yet? : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Why isn't Jim Davidson cancelled yet? - The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • Comedians set to storm the castle

    www.chortle.co.uk Comedians set to storm the castle : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Comedians set to storm the castle - The best of the week's live comedy

    The best of the week's live comedy !

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  • Radio 4 makes Room for Michael Spicer

    www.chortle.co.uk Radio 4 makes Room for Michael Spicer : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Radio 4 makes Room for Michael Spicer - The best of the week's comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The best of the week's comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • The beginning of the end for Inside No 9

    www.chortle.co.uk The beginning of the end for Inside No 9 : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    The beginning of the end for Inside No 9 - The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • Life after The Now Show...

    www.chortle.co.uk Life after The Now Show... : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Life after The Now Show... - The best of the week's live comedy

    The best of the week's live comedy !

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  • www.bbc.com The Gang is Back…New pictures released ahead of series three of Stephen Merchant’s critically acclaimed BBC comedy-drama The Outlaws

    The series follows a group of strangers from different walks of life forced together to complete a community payback sentence in Bristol

    The Gang is Back…New pictures released ahead of series three of Stephen Merchant’s critically acclaimed BBC comedy-drama The Outlaws

    > The BBC has released new pictures from the brand-new series of comedy-thriller The Outlaws, from creator, star, and award-winning writer and director Stephen Merchant, ahead of its return to BBC One and BBC iPlayer next month.

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  • Stewart Lee announces new live show, The Man-Wulf

    www.comedy.co.uk Stewart Lee announces new live show, The Man-Wulf - British Comedy Guide

    Stewart Lee is to tour a new show titled Stewart Lee vs The Man-Wulf.

    Stewart Lee announces new live show, The Man-Wulf - British Comedy Guide

    > Stewart Lee is to tour a new show titled Stewart Lee vs The Man-Wulf. > > Beginning with a run at Leicester Square Theatre in December 2024, the show will then tour the UK across 2025. > > The blurb explains: "In this brand new show, Lee shares his stage with a tough-talking werewolf comedian from the dark forests of North America who hates humanity. The Man-Wulf lays down a ferocious comedy challenge to the culturally irrelevant and physically enfeebled Lee. Can the beast inside us all be silenced with the silver bullet of Lee's unprecedentedly critically acclaimed style of stand-up? > > "Stewart Lee ("the world's greatest living stand-up comedian" The Times), is in danger of being left behind. He's approaching sixty with debilitating health conditions, his TV profile has diminished, and his once BAFTA award-winning style of stand-up seems obsolete in the face of a wave of callous Netflix-endorsed comedy of anger, monetising the denigration of minorities for millions of dollars. But can Lee unleash his inner Man-Wulf to position himself alongside comedy legends like Dave Chappelle, Ricky Gervais and Jordan Peterson at the forefront of side-splitting stadium- stuffing shit-posting?"

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  • A Mammoth undertaking

    www.chortle.co.uk A Mammoth undertaking : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    A Mammoth undertaking - The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • Rachel Parris starts her new tour

    www.chortle.co.uk Rachel Parris starts her new tour : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Rachel Parris starts her new tour - The week's best live comedy

    The week's best live comedy !

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  • www.theguardian.com Joe Lycett discloses four fake stories he planted in UK media

    Stories include man with bruise in shape of Prince Harry and statue of H from Steps being erected in Wales

    Joe Lycett discloses four fake stories he planted in UK media

    > In the first episode of his new Channel 4 show, Lycett said four stories that were covered by newspapers and television news were fabricated. > > Speaking on Late Night Lycett on Friday evening, he said the fake stories were: a five-a-side footballer from Birmingham having a bruise on his thigh that resembled Prince Harry’s face, research showing men from Birmingham have the longest penises in the UK, a mural of Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz in Birmingham that was declared to be a Banksy, and a statue of H from Steps being erected in Cowbridge.

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  • Jon Richardson and Lucy Beaumont split

    www.chortle.co.uk Jon Richardson and Lucy Beaumont split : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Jon Richardson and Lucy Beaumont split - Couple set to divorce after nine years

    > Jon Richardson and Lucy Beaumont have announced their separation.

    > The couple have an eight-year-old daughter, Elsie, and the news comes a week after the fifth season of their mockumentary Meet The Richardsons began on Dave.

    > They have also hosted the panel show Odd Couples on Channel 4 and made numerous TV appearances together on shows such as 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown.

    > In a statement they both posted on social media they said: 'After nine years of marriage we would like to announce that we have separated.

    > 'We have jointly and amicably made the difficult decision to divorce and go our separate ways.

    > 'As our only priority is managing this difficult transition for our daughter, we would ask that our privacy is respected at this sensitive time to protect her well-being.

    > ''We will be making no further comment.'

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  • Richard Gadd's Baby Reindeer begins – and Curb Your Enthusiasm ends

    www.chortle.co.uk Richard Gadd's Baby Reindeer begins – and Curb Your Enthusiasm ends : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Richard Gadd's Baby Reindeer begins – and Curb Your Enthusiasm ends - The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming

    The week's best comedy on TV, radio and streaming !

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  • Rosie Holt goes out on the stump

    www.chortle.co.uk Rosie Holt goes out on the stump : News 2024 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide

    Rosie Holt goes out on the stump - The week's best live comedy

    The week's best live comedy !

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  • variety.com Comedian’s Copyright Lawsuit Against Steve Coogan’s Company Baby Cow Heading to Trial

    Comedian Harry Deansway's infringement case against Steve Coogan's production company Baby Cow is going to trial in October.

    Comedian’s Copyright Lawsuit Against Steve Coogan’s Company Baby Cow Heading to Trial

    > Comedian Harry Deansway’s infringement case against Steve Coogan’s production company Baby Cow is going to trial, Variety can confirm. > > Numerous attempts to reach an out of court settlement collapsed and a trial date has been tentatively set for Oct. 2024. > > Deansway, whose real name is Joshua Rinkoff, filed suit against Baby Cow last year in the U.K. High Court, claiming that the prodco’s head of comedy Rupert Majendie had copied the format of his YouTube show “Shambles” to develop the stand-up series “Live at the Moth Club.” > > Majendie is the creator of “Live at the Moth Club,” which aired on UKTV in December 2022, and is also credited as an executive producer and director. > > “It is extremely disappointing that my friend Rupert Majendie, head of comedy at Steve Coogan’s Baby Cow should have copied my original work like this without so much as courtesy call,” Deansway told Variety in a statement. “That it was done by a friend and collaborator in the industry is just deeply saddening. What makes it so much worse is that by standing up for my principles I am having to go head to head with every comedian’s comic idol Steve Coogan, I can’t help wondering how he would have felt if someone had copied one of his early characters when he was just starting out and then tried to allege that this was perfectly legal. I’ve been shocked and appalled by Baby Cow’s strategy of denial when in my opinion the the show has been so obviously copied.” > > ... > > The production company, which Coogan set up with producer Henry Normal in 1999, is also currently defending another lawsuit brought by historian Richard Taylor. Taylor is suing Baby Cow, Coogan and Pathe Productions over what he claims is an unflattering depiction of him in 2022 film “The Lost King.”

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