Kev F
Monday 22nd September 2008 11:35am
Bristol
689 posts
Er, everyone's slagging off sitcom here on the so-called Sitcom Forum. Has no-one seen two great new sitcoms that started this week - Massive and No Heroics? NH may have been a bit slow to get into, but I like its attitude from the start and it's kept it very simple. And Massive is pure laugh out loud genius.
And with new series of IT Crowd and Peep Show to look forward to, as well as Gavin and Stacy, Not Going Out and Lead Balloon, not to mention the mass audience sitcoms that people like us don't like but that the millions of people who watch do (ie My Family, After You've Gone and Last Of The Summer Wine), I'd say sitcom today is in a ridiculously healthy state.
Some people here are falling into that dreadful trap of looking back with rose tinted glasses and imagining a golden era when there were wall to wall sitcoms and they were all great all the time. Well I'm very old, and I can tell you from first hand experience that that wasn't the case.
Look at my second paragraph, listing 8 good and/or popular sitcoms from just one season of 2008. Now, Google the sitcoms of, say, 1975 and try and find a list as good as that. Not so easy is it?
Because the classic sitcoms are on in rotation, and play in our memories ad nauseum, a lot of people are guilty of compressing time and misremembering that Fawlty Towers (1975 and 79) was on alongside Open All Hours (just 24 episodes between 1973 - 85), and Porridge (21 eps 73 - 77), and Rising Damp (28 eps 74 - 78), and Steptoe (ended 74) and so on.
Statistically (and this is a bold stab in the dark, I'd love someone to actually back me up with facts) I'd bet there is more good comedy on TV now than there ever has been.
However I agree with Jon Plowman, there should be more. (And it should include a series for The Scottish Falsetto Sock Puppet Theatre).