Mark
Saturday 1st September 2007 11:35pm [Edited]
Hampshire
2,701 posts
Quote: LDLmedia @ September 1, 2007, 1:03 PM
I am currently writing a book, entitled the UK Sit-Com Guide (it was originally British Sit-Com Guide!) which is going to be aimed at A Level Students which considers sit-coms from a historical and theoretical point of view.
Cool, a nice angle. In my opinion all A-level students should be force fed sitcom, but then again I am a little biased on that front!
Quote: LDLmedia @ September 1, 2007, 1:03 PM
It will also contain case studies from four very different "sit-coms"
Out of interest can you reveal which four? Is it one from each decade? Actually you'd need five then. If it were me, I think the ones I would choose, based on educational grounds, would be...
1960s: Till Death Us Do Part
1970s: Fawlty Towers or Mind Your Language
1980s: The New Statesman
1990s: Men Behaving Badly
2000s: The Office
Actually, I've always thought Only Fools and Horses could be a great teaching aid - watching Del turn into a Yuppie into a modern man must be fairly educational.
Sitcoms should definitely be used more in history lessons: Blackadder, Dad's Army, Open All Hours etc could teach kids a lot about the eras in which they were set. I learn a lot about the war from Blackadder actually (hope it was accurate!).
Quote: LDLmedia @ September 1, 2007, 1:03 PM
sit-com
Yup, another vote for it being "sitcom" not "sit-com". Before naming this website I checked with the Oxford English Dictionary - "sitcom" is the recognised informal noun for a situation comedy.