British Comedy Guide
Adam Buxton
Adam Buxton

Adam Buxton

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

Press clippings Page 9

Adam Buxton, Ed Byrne, Stewart Lee for Union Chapel

Stewart Lee, Ed Byrne, Mark Thomas and Adam Buxton are heading to Islington's Union Chapel over the next few months as The Invisible Dot launches its spring season of comedy.

Tim Clark, Such Small Portions, 17th January 2013

Richard Herring's podcast sends woman into labour

A woman has given birth after listening to Richard Herring's latest podcast with guest comedian Adam Buxton.

Tim Clark, Such Small Portions, 24th November 2012

Review: BUG

If nothing else, you have to marvel at the ingenuity of Adam Buxton in creating Bug, because the format means he does practically nothing beyond source appropriate videos and comments.

Dan Owen, Dan's Media Digest, 13th September 2012

In praise of Adam Buxton's BUG

With just two more episodes of Adam Buxton's glorious BUG left in the series, James tips his hat to a show that's made a successful transition from stage to the small screen...

James Hunt, Den Of Geek, 20th August 2012

Adam Buxton interview

Adam Buxton talks about his new show Bug, making a video for Gwen Stefani's Hollaback Girl and why Joss Stone should be applauded.

Andrew Williams, Metro, 18th July 2012

World of Adam Buxton, comedian and actor

The British comedian and presenter talks to Jessica Salter about art school, brushing his daughter's teeth and Joe Cornish.

Jessica Salter, The Telegraph, 14th July 2012

Q&A: Adam Buxton

'Who would I invite to my dream dinner party? The people I'd invite to my normal dinner parties'

Rosanna Greenstreet, The Guardian, 13th July 2012

BUG, a television version of Adam Buxton's very hip BFI showcases, is a triumph of personal character above all. The elements of the programme are dead simple. He shows music videos he's found on YouTube, cueing up all the visuals from his laptop. Then he reads out a selection of the comments underneath. Essentially that's it. It's not easy to capture the delicious flavour but this might help. Buxton brightly cued up one of the self-made films which each show includes like this: "Now, the video involves a lot of real explosions... all of which were very easy and fun to set up. So why not try something similar at home?" The onscreen title read: "MORON WARNING: DON'T. OBVIOUSLY". I'm laughing typing it, but not nearly as much as when I watched.

Tom Sutcliffe, The Independent, 10th July 2012

The simplest ideas are often the best and so it is with Adam Buxton's new Sky Atlantic show Bug.

Taking the received wisdom that 'the best way to form an opinion, on anything, is to go online' and spinning it into a comedy series, Bug consists of Buxton (Adam minus Joe) ripping the mick out of the nutty stuff people write under YouTube videos.

Easy pickings, you're thinking, and you'd be right. But Buxton makes it sing. By which I mean he actually does sing. I really hope he does a karaoke spin-off inspired by the daft handles people use every week.

Thus WineProneCowboy became, you guessed, Glen Campbell's Rhinestone Cowboy, Buxton mangling the lyrics with giddy oblivion.

It was such a winning idea I wasted a good half hour looking for my own but the best I came up with was Flipyodeezy - Call Me Maybe could work with that, right? Yes, I know it needs refining.

This goes to show the time and effort that has gone into an apparently simple show like Bug. Weaving your wit around a selection of music videos and then trawling through the comments section might not sound like hard work - but it's clearly a labour of, if not love, then a slightly unhealthy obsession.

Lifted by Buxton's facility for daft voices and keen eye for the absurd, Bug is probably the best fun you can have with just a laptop and a galaxy of crazy people for company.

Keith Watson, Metro, 10th July 2012

Sky's tasty trio of Alan Partridge, Veep and Walking and Talking has become a fizzing comedy fixture, now bolstered by Adam Buxton.

As well as being Alan at his wincing worst, Mid Morning Matters - highlights from 2011's webisodes - is a painfully funny dissection of regional radio. Dead air, hopeless digression, jocular over-enunciation, they're all here.

Mark Braxton, Radio Times, 9th July 2012

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