British Comedy Guide
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Harry Hill
Harry Hill

Harry Hill

  • 60 years old
  • English
  • Actor, writer, executive producer, comedian, director and editor

Press clippings Page 44

There was always a risk in Charlie Brooker marrying a celebrity, particularly one at the lower, ITV2 end of television: that it would make him less willing to slag celebrities off.

The fact that he has pulled out of his weekly television column is certainly a bad sign.

The good news, however, is that Brooker is still making Screenwipe, in which he rants from a dark room that looks like it might smell vaguely of socks and takeaway pizza.

It's poking fun at television in the same way that Harry Hill does, except that Brooker is a bad, angry version of Harry; he's Harry with a hangover.

As usual, Brooker has chosen his targets well and this year he homes in on the extraordinary The Only Way is Essex, which, despite having watched it several times, I have still not been able to work out. What is it? Spoof? Reality show? If it's scripted, then I bow down to the scriptwriter, because he or she is a genius; if it's unscripted, then I despair at the empty ignorance and pointlessness of modern culture. It's just the kind of programme that Brooker loves laying into.

Another programme Brooker takes a look at this year is Sherlock, which promised so much but did the deeply illogical thing of changing Sherlock's character into an annoying, rude, know-it-all git, when anyone who has read the books knows that Holmes, despite being of infinitely superior intellect, was always polite to his inferiors (unless they were baddies).

Seeing Brooker bare his fangs and shake his fist over these programmes is always fun but there's a comforting element to this programme, too - that however nakedly hate-filled it gets, it doesn't matter, because it's obvious the hate comes from a good place: the desire for better television.

Mark Smith, The Herald, 27th December 2010

Shake off your Christmas torpor with a short, sharp hit of some of Harry Hill's best Burping bits - it's as bracing as a frosty Boxing Day walk. There's nothing brand new here, as it's a rag-bag assortment of highlights from previous festive Burps, but fans of the hit series will know what to expect. And even though it's all old stuff, we'll take what we can get. We need Harry on every week, bringing his own surreal kind of "sanity" to the crazy world of television.

Alison Graham, Radio Times, 26th December 2010

He struck many viewers as a red coat-esque practioner of a very broad style of comedy when he auditioned for Britain's Got Talent earlier this year - and indeed he is - but someone at ITV obviously saw some potential in impressionist Paul Burling and has given him his own primetime Christmas slot. Frankly, half the entertainment of his show was just in marvelling at how far he's come.

Burling's Harry Hill - for which he is best known - is very good, but sort of pointless, because he's doing an impression of a man already doing an impression. The real Harry Hill obviously doesn't speak like that naturally, so there doesn't seem to be much need to impersonate him.

The fun of impressions is picking out the grating little idiosyncrasies in a person and exaggerating them for effect; not repeating the ridiculous speech patterns deliberately adopted by someone else as part of their own act.

This aside, Burling made a likeable and surprisingly assured presenter and the show's producers had selected the perfect range of celebrities to mock and berate.

Our host was also joined by a couple of talented female sidekicks, who did an excellent job of sending up Ann Widdecombe, Stacey Solomon and Cheryl Cole, despite having to appear in some pretty weak sketches.

It was all well and good and it'd be hard to feel any ill feeling towards Burling, who was given a flattering little intro from Simon Cowell at the beginning of the programme, but the truth is that comedy as silly as this wouldn't be given a look-in were it not Christmas.

Rachel Tarley, Metro, 23rd December 2010

Harry Hill's Little Internet Show: Episode 10 - Fearbag

Episode 10: Harry has a chance to end all the hate and fear in the world.

The Guardian, 21st December 2010

Harry Hill's Little Internet Show: Episode 9 - Re-enact

Harry lets the English Civil War Re-enactment Society practice in his garden, with unfortunate results.

Harry Hill, The Guardian, 14th December 2010

Harry Hill's Little Internet Show: Episode 8 - Amy

Harry bags a Winehouse and shows his son Gary some tough love.

The Guardian, 6th December 2010

Harry Hill: 'BBC don't play along with TV Burp'

Harry Hill has revealed that the BBC don't send him previews of programmes to use for TV Burp.

Digital Spy, 2nd December 2010

Video: Harry Hill 'BBC3 for me is the biggest wind-up'

TV Burp host Harry Hill tells BBC Radio 5 live's Richard Bacon why he's not a fan of BBC Three.

BBC, 2nd December 2010

Harry Hill's Little Internet Show: Windy

Episode seven: Harry and his window cleaner are disturbed by a big cat.

The Guardian, 29th November 2010

Harry Hill's Little Internet Show: Neptune sneeze

Episode six: A walk on the beach turns into an ornithological study.

The Guardian, 22nd November 2010

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