Press clippings Page 2
TV preview: Revolting, episode 2, BBC2
Nothing here to get the media into a froth then, but maybe I've missed something.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 10th January 2017True enough, Heydon Prowse and Jolyon Rubinstein aren't always funny. However, you can't deny that they fully throw themselves into their satirical interactions (as their pal Grant Shapps might concede). Getting stuck into some city gents and ladies as Labour canvassers has its moments. And their chutzpah as they waltz into a BHS and command staff to sell stock, so Philip Green can have a "truly bedazzling" fourth yacht, is an impressively off-kilter caper.
John Robinson, The Guardian, 10th January 2017'They want Muslims to be offended, but we aren't'
BBC2 sketch "Real Housewives of Isis" has been criticised as 'morally bankrupt' but many say such satire is a British tradition and can help in fight against terrorists.
Alexandra Topping, The Guardian, 6th January 2017Revolting blasted for 'trivialising' jihadi brides
Many viewers horrified by choice of women living under brutal Islamic State regime as topic to be made fun of.
Steve Robson, The Mirror, 5th January 2017Heydon Prowse: 2017 will totally Trump 2016
Heydon Prowse, one half of the political pranksters behind sketch shows Revolting and The Revolution Will Be Televised, takes a satirical poke at 2017.
Heydon Prowse, Metro, 5th January 2017Heydon Prowse and Jolyon Rubinstein of The Revolution Will Be Televised return with another satirical sketch show. Brexiteers, hippies, CEOs, Corbynites, Blairites and millennials are all trolled on the street by characters such as rightwing journalist Dale Mailey and Ukip campaigner Denis Pound, who finds some deeply disturbing ideas for policy from folk on the streets of Loughton in Essex. There's a Day Today vibe, but with a fraction of the laughs.
Ben Arnold, The Guardian, 3rd January 2017Preview: Revolting
The stars of hidden-camera satire The Revolution Will Be Televised return with a new series, but featuring many of the same characters and ideas.
Ian Wolf, On The Box, 3rd January 2017This new series, from the creators of The Revolution Will Be Televised, offers a satirical look at the sad state of modern Britain. Jolyon Rubinstein and Heydon Prowse go out into the towns, trains and festivals of Britain to find people to mock. This is fine when the targets are corporations but the opening sketch, where one of them poses as a Ukip politician on the hunt for new policy ideas from the general public, seems rather sneering. He questions people on the streets of Loughton in Essex and subtly mocks their anti-immigrant views, agreeing that clearing out immigrants means that decent British folk can finally be "free to work in construction sites, clean toilets and work in Pret A Manger." Didn't Brexit happen because media and elitist types were scorning the views of people like this? Then they gatecrash a left-wing festival to mock the "dreadlocked quinoa-touchers" who're trying to radicalise the public with stalls selling sandalwood oil.
Choose some bigger targets, lads.
Julie McDowall, The National (Scotland), 3rd January 2017TV preview: Revolting, BBC2
This is worth watching just to see Rubinstein's Tory MP James Twottington-Burbage almost getting thumped by a disgruntled Londoner.
Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 3rd January 2017Revolting preview
YouTube has created a battalion of DIY pranksters - usually more irritating than amusing -and hidden camera stunts remain a rather too frequent go-to format for broadcasters. So it is something of a challenge to stand out against such saturation.
Steve Bennett, Chortle, 3rd January 2017