danr
Thursday 25th July 2013 10:50pm [Edited]
3 posts
Andrew - Thanks for giving your view on this, I hope to think, even those with more negative opinions about the show, appreciate someone from the other side of the screen rationally trying to address any criticism with some additional perspective.
It's always difficult for a sitcom's opening episode to be able to tick all the boxes in thirty minutes. It has to introduce characters, scene set, be funny and set the general tone for the series, whilst trying to hook you into watching the next episode(s).
In my opinion, Spaced Episode 1 got this balance perfectly of introduction, comedy and the hook, but looking back overall at the two series that episode is, I doubt, unlikely to be anyone's favourite so it's hard thing to get right.
I wish the BBC would go back to something they sometimes used to do in airing the next episode on iPlayer of these kind of shows after the broadcast, so the keen (comedy) fans can at least base their initial opinions, positive or negative over more than 30 minutes.
Count Arthur Strong got the same kind of polarising opinions on its opening episode. There were shouts of "but wait until the next episode", well why not put it online then and shut everyone up for another thirty minutes, where if you are right, they might then think, "okay, now I get it, I see where this is going".
I wonder whether the Netflix Arrested Development model is better to launch these kind of shows. All six episodes immediately on iPlayer and they can also broadcast it every week on BBC Three. The BBC shouldn't care when we are watching it.
Slightly went off the point there.. I am going to definitely give it a chance. Pappy's are great live and work well together which you can clearly see in the opening episode. There were a few nice little bits in there and some promise if you let your guard down and give them a chance.
I would rather the BBC put money their way with a bit of an experiment than some other shows they produce. Based on no actual evidence, I bet this cost less to produce than the cost of BBC news crews blanket 48 hour coverage of a hospital door.