glaikit
Friday 11th July 2008 12:34pm
Newcastle Upon Tyne
159 posts
Studio sitcoms also have a kind of security blanket quality to them - there's a three-walled set, people saying funny lines, you know what to expect. From there, the writers can often go as surreal or dark or weird as they like without alienating the audience, because at the end of the day its still a studio sitcom. If the studio audience finds it funny, then quite often the viewer will laugh out of a kind of 'shared experience' mentality.
Single camera sitcoms don't have that quality to them, so they sometimes have to work harder to get the laughs. On the plus side, you can sometimes lure the viewer into a false sense of security and spring the laughs on them - like those people that thought The Office was a real docudrama. (NOTE: did this actually happen or am I just believing an urban myth?) Single camera sitcoms also allow the programme-makers to be more creative with the visual style, like with Spaced.
Personally speaking, since I've got back into sitcom writing, I've made a conscious decision to scale back my projects (as far a sets and characters are concerned) so that they may work equally well as studio-bound or single camera sitcoms.