Press clippings Page 8
Charlotte Ritchie interview
"I think there are a lot of unexplained things. I think people's brains are really powerful. I won't go into it as it's unfounded but there is a lot of very energetic stuff that happens. People are connected and there are lots of reverberations of people's energy that gets left behind. So it must be kind of possible for ghosts to exist," she says.
Charlotte Cripps, The Independent, 21st September 2020Ghosts Series 2 review
It's been more than a year since Ghosts were on our screens - but it seems like they have never been away, such is the way these spooks from down the ages already feel so familiar.
Steve Bennett, Chortle, 21st September 2020Ghosts Series 2 review
Ghost-hunters descend on beleaguered couple Mike and Alison's country pile, as the grown-up comedy from the Horrible Histories team returns for more crude yet clever laughs.
Rebecca Nicholson, The Guardian, 21st September 2020Ghosts, BBC1, review
A pleasingly daft comedy fit for the whole family.
Sarah Hughes, i Newspaper, 21st September 2020Ghosts review: good fun, but it can't beat Rentaghost
This knockabout sitcom from the Horrible Histories team feels like a kids' show at times, but it sure beats the BBC's 'topical' comedies.
Anita Singh, The Telegraph, 21st September 2020Charlotte Ritchie: 'I feel so lucky to be in Ghosts!'
Charlotte Ritchie reveals all about the spooky thrills to come in the second series of Ghosts.
Caren Clark, What's On TV, 17th September 2020Dead Pixels review
From what I've seen of Dead Pixels, I can assure you this is an inviting import with plenty of promise. Bawdy, incisive, timely, and inventive, Dead Pixels is exactly the kind of show we need to pep up the summer TV lineup.
Allie Gemmill, Collider, 18th August 2020Review: 'Feel Good' is the pick me up we all need
Channel 4's Feel Good, written by Mae Martin and Joe Hampson, is a captivating modern rom-com that ruminates on matters from love and addiction to sexuality and gender identity.
Sophie Davies, The Custard TV, 1st April 2020Feel Good: Dramedy lacking in drama and comedy
The characters are likable enough, but it's just not very funny.
Adi Tantimedh, Bleeding Cool, 29th March 2020Mae Martin's quietly charming comedy Feel Good
A comedy tackling drug addiction and coming out, Feel Good is neither patronising nor fluffy.
Anna Leszkiewicz, The New Statesman, 25th March 2020