British Comedy Guide

Danny Cohen wants working-class sitcoms for BBC1 Page 3

Quote: David Bussell @ January 25 2011, 11:42 AM GMT

He works in a smoked kipper factory.

I do actually know a smoked kipper factory in the East End. In a rather remarkable example of diversification it doubles as a rather swanky conference centre.

Quote: Griff @ January 25 2011, 12:12 PM GMT

Hi-vis jackets pretty much sorts it out.

Sorry by that definition I am working class. I also have some steel-toe capped wellies. To be fair I do not have call to wear them often, but when I do I make a point of dropping my haitches and calling people mate.

I thought about walking in my father's footsteps but he worked as a firewalker so I didn't bother... he's on DLA now and I'm his carer.

Quote: Timbo @ January 25 2011, 12:09 PM GMT

That may be the chip on your shoulder interpreting their reaction for you.

Well, it was probably the chip on this forum. From a previous page. "Working class people can't even be trusted to drink sensibly or bring up their children properly, so we certainly shouldn't be spending any money making programmes for them." He isn't joking by the way.

Quote: Timbo @ January 25 2011, 12:09 PM GMT

Working class is a term fraught with difficulty; partly because education is less and less a route to social mobility; partly because self-employment has become the option of the marginalised rather then the entrepreneurial; partly because of a greater appreciation of skilled manual labour and a proliferation of poorly paid white-collar jobs without prospects; and partly because the physical and intellectual demands of how jobs are actually done has changed. Who constitutes the working class in today's Britain is a moot point.

None of the things you mention alters the defining parameters. A window cleaner who owns his own van, ladder, chamois and bucket is still working class because he is utterly dependent on the social and economic structures underpinning society remaining in place. An ex-college lecturer with a slew of post-grad diplomas who has retrained as a plumber is still middle class because he isn't.

Quote: Godot Taxis @ January 25 2011, 1:45 PM GMT

None of the things you mention alters the defining parameters. A window cleaner who owns his own van, ladder, chamois and bucket is still working class because he is utterly dependent on the social and economic structures underpinning society remaining in place. An ex-college lecturer with a slew of post-grad diplomas who has retrained as a plumber is still middle class because he isn't.

Complete and utter bollocks - and I suspect you know it. :D ;)

I'm still unclear as to how one qualifies as working class or middle class. I don't even know what I am, really.

:D

My mum and step Dad, who I lived with, worked in a pub, which they didn't own; does that mean I'm working class?? But then the man whose balls I came from is a Teacher; so am I middle class?!?!

Ummmm . . . I don't . . . . care. Yeah.

I'd like to be middle class so I shall stick with that.

I am sure Aaron will approve.

If only I was upperclass!

Quote: Tim Walker @ January 25 2011, 1:50 PM GMT

Complete and utter bollocks - and I suspect you know it. :D ;)

I guess this why most of you lot hang around in interminable threads about who you fancy and what YouTube video you're watching.

Quote: zooo @ January 25 2011, 1:51 PM GMT

I'm still unclear as to how one qualifies as working class or middle class. I don't even know what I am, really.

If you sometimes buy alcohol and don't drink it on the same day, you're middle-class.

Quote: Godot Taxis @ January 25 2011, 2:16 PM GMT

I guess this why most of you lot hang around in interminable threads about who you fancy and what YouTube video you're watching.

As opposed to all the other really worthy threads on here?

The last alcohol I bought was three years ago, and it's still in the drinks cabinet.

Quote: zooo @ January 25 2011, 2:18 PM GMT

The last alcohol I bought was three years ago, and it's still in the drinks cabinet.

Gay.

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