Tokyo Nambu
Wednesday 25th January 2012 9:28pm [Edited]
189 posts
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ January 25 2012, 8:10 PM GMT
Society and comedic tastes have moved on
Have they? This might be called the Hoxton Delusion: the idea that everyone is new and edgy, because six people in Hoxton are. Aside from the problem of not actually being funny, the reason why Nathan Barley flopped was because 99% of the UK population had no idea whatsoever about the context being satirised.
but the networks have gone backwards to appease the mythical 'Middle Englanders'. Instead of Alexi Sayle, we're given Michael McIntyre
Who has ratings, and sales, and mass popularity that Alexei Sayle never achieved even in his pomp. I find McIntyre crashingly unfunny, but I find the whole genre of "I was walking down the street and this implausible scripted thing that I'm going to pretend was real happened to me, or at least I'm going to say that it did" "observational" comedy incredibly tedious. But (perhaps by dint of my age) I know a lot of people who think he's the second coming of Christ Almighty. 'Lex is, in my book, the single funniest man of his generation, and I was lucky enough to see him live on several occasions when he was still doing stand-up: I can't, however, deny that I certainly wasn't seeing him in big venues, and his TV programmes got small numbers on BBC 2. Ratings aren't, of course, the sole (or perhaps even a major) measure of quality, but mass-market TV supported by a compulsory license fee has to show programmes at least some of the viewers want to watch.
You can't blame the writers because they have no freedom anymore. They're given a brief, a remit, a demographic, a star, a set of incredibly strict rules on 'decency' and told to make funnies. ...
It's an impossible situation and results in the worst kind of designed by committee comedy programmes.
Neither Tramadol Nights nor Life's Too Short had any sort of committee, and were authored rather than commissioned from a brief. They also had a tenuous link with "decency" rules, as Boyle's brushes with Ofcom attest. They were also both unmitigated shit, without any redeeming features. So the problem is not just mechanically rendered production line shlock - and let's face it, the right production line can turn out Bilko, so the concept isn't entirely without merit - but deeper than that.
Quote: Alfred J Kipper @ January 25 2012, 8:18 PM GMT
I think there's way too much comedy on now, especially in the form of cheap panel shows, which have become the modern 'light entertainment' filler show. Cut down on these drastically and most other comedy shows will seem less tired and a bit fresher. We are swamped with too much comedy, especially from sub standard stand ups wanting to cash in on TV.
The essential problem is that "quiz show as framework for pre-prepared skits" now covers hours, and hours, and hours of TV and radio (HIGNFY, QI, Unbelievable Truth, Mock The Week, the list is endless). In each case, over the course of the evolution of the format the number of questions got through falls, the editing becomes looser, the riffing becomes more riff-y and the funny leaves the building. All those programmes have an incredibly limited set of people, so the programmes become almost interchangeable. The BBC has an incredibly slim address book, and works it very hard. There's a panel game to be made, in which you're played a 30s clip of another panel show and asked to guess which one it is. Stephen Fry could chair it. Maybe Sarah Millican and David Mitchell could be on it.