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Adam Buxton
Adam Buxton

Adam Buxton

  • 55 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer, director, animator, comedian, presenter and podcaster

Press clippings Page 13

An audience with Adam & Joe's Adam Buxton

Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish have carved themselves a small but cherished niche of homespun pop-cultural comedy. Their 6 Music radio show, with its film-and-music banter, call-and-response catchphrases ("Stephen! Just coming") and "Song Wars", in which they compose rival ditties on the same theme (Ikea meatballs, climate change), has the same quirky informality and cut-and-paste creativity as the movies they re-enacted with Star Wars figures on The Adam & Joe Show (1996-2001). They've been a double act since Westminster School but, as Cornish polishes the script for Spielberg's Tintin and their radio show enters what Buxton - the shorter, cuddlier one - hopes is a temporary hiatus, he is picking up his acting career (Stardust, Son of Rambow) this week as a hapless exec in The Persuasionists (BBC Two, Wed, 10pm) a sitcom that takes a broadly comic aim at the world of advertising. It's a world, he concedes, that is almost beyond parody because "it's so stuffed with morons and t***s and people who are behaving in a ridiculous way." He should know, because voiceover work has long paid his bills, as have more ill-fated advertising adventures (see below).

Ed Potton, The Times, 9th January 2010

The year's defining moments in culture, politics and television are cut up into a thousand pieces, then reassembled for our amusement, in a spoof of the traditional list show. Miranda Hart guides us through re-imagined versions of party leaders' conference speeches, George Bush issues a semi-musical apology for his time in office, and even Jeremy Paxman gets a light ribbing. Guests include Stephen K Amos, Duncan Bannatyne, and Adam Buxton with a uniquely suburban take on Ed Wardle's Alone in the Wild documentary adventure.

Emma Sturgess, Radio Times, 30th December 2009

BBC Radio 4 wins comedy awards at Sonys

BBC Radio 4 show Count Arthur Strong's Radio Show has taken gold in the comedy category, beating Miranda Hart's Joke Shop on BBC Radio 2 and Adam and Joe on BBC 6 Music.

Matthew Hemley, The Stage, 12th May 2009

Get Me Back In The Box

A blog post from creator Adam Buxton in which he reveals that BBC Three have dropped the project. He also gives his thoughts on this.

Adam Buxton, 9th July 2008

Considering The Adam and Joe Show is one of the TV shows we miss most, we were bound to like a Joe-less Adam Buxton's return to TV. And we did. With a few reservations.

The funniest item featured a fervent choir singing nonsense as if their lives depended on it. Their rousing hymn featured lines such as 'there's a naked czar in my mouth'.

But the ragbag approach didn't serve MeeBox well, with some ideas repeated throughout; and others appearing in one-offs in a TV evocation of YouTube culture.

The Custard TV, 24th June 2008

MeeBOX, a comedy sketch show created by Adam Buxton, half of Adam and Joe (the first half), is a bit of a muddle.

It has a lot to do with internet video clips (I think the name MeeBOX is a nod to YouTube). There are all sorts of knowing nods to the modern world, sometimes so knowing I don't really know what they're nodding at, if you know what I'm saying.

Hit and miss, I think you'd call it - obviously, the phrase was invented to describe comedy sketch shows. BBC3 certainly doesn't seem convinced, putting it out at 11.45pm on a Sunday night.

But I do like the spoof of a TV show called 10,000 Things That Are Sooo Crap, in which 'journalists', 'comedians', a token posh bloke and a token Scot sit on sofas, or on the stairs, and talk bollocks about bollocks. They swim, that's about it, says journalist Manthea Shringleton, about fish, at number 1,245 in the list of crap things.

Sam Wollaston, The Guardian, 23rd June 2008

MeeBox was supposed to be some sort of YouTube mickey take, a fictional website where all kinds of things happened.

The first sketch was all about an actor (or pretender as he called himself) called Famous Guy, who had starred in films like The Exploding Car. There were clips from the film to demonstrate how awful his cockney accent was. I was chuckling. Good sign.

Then it sort of dipped a little bit. There was an unchuckly sketch called 10,000 Things That Are Sooo Crap (fish and buildings were on the menu last night), and Ken Korda (a vacant and smiley independent film interviewer) was ok.

MeeBOX then upped the chuckle stakes with a very funny version of Songs Of Praise, where Adam just scrolled across new words to the hymn (there's a naked czar in my mouth), and a very neat pastiche of a nerd and his new film making software.

Like most sketch shows, there was a hit and miss element to all this, but half of the content was funny. Not a bad ratio.

MeeBOX was a pilot, let's not forget. I think Adam Buxton is funny and clever and at his best when he's mucking about with video and music and stuff. I hope he gets a full series because, on this evidence, he just about deserves it. And it'd be nice to see Adam on telly more often.

Paul Hirons, TV Scoop, 23rd June 2008

Adam Buxton takes a break from working with his comedy partner Joe Cornish with this 'DIY sketch show' pilot. It's a bit like YouTube or MySpace, except it's all stuff I've made myself, says Buxton.

Especially funny is the software tutorial about movie-making, a re-subtitling of Songs of Praise and a sketch about why fish are rubbish. Some of Buxton's best-known characters, Ken Korda and Famous Guy, do video blogs, and the title music is by Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood (Buxton co-directed the video for the band's single Jigsaw Falling into Place).

Simon Horsford, The Telegraph, 22nd June 2008

MeeBOX news from Adam Buxton

A blog post from MeeBOX creator Adam Buxton, posted in 2007, in which the writer talks about the development of the pilot.

Adam Buxton, 19th August 2007

There'll come a point when Adam and Joe get too old for all this, and it'll be a sad day when that happens, though at the moment they still look as young as they did when they first appeared. Their bedsit's safe for a while, and there's always a career as a full-time professional talking head on a Saturday evening TV nostalgia package once they turn 35.

Ian Jones, Off The Telly, 25th April 2001

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