Press clippings Page 30
Jason Manford hosting panel show pilot from HIGNFY producers
The production company behind Have I Got News For You is working on a new topical panel show format called Good News, Bad News, hosted by Jason Manford.
British Comedy Guide, 25th February 2013Justin Timberlake, who has spent the past few years focusing on becoming an actor, is now back to his day job as a pop star. He has a new single out, Suit and Tie - the video for which is by The Social Network's David Fincher, who directed Timberlake in the 2010 movie. The singer will be talking to Jonathan Ross alongside Jason Manford, who is also featuring on Let's Dance.
The Telegraph, 22nd February 2013Jason Manford to host Sky1 pilot 'You And Whose Army?'
Jason Manford is to host the pilot episode of You And Whose Army?, a comedy entertainment show for Sky1 involving 'outrageous and ridiculous challenges'.
British Comedy Guide, 20th February 2013Comedy gold: Jason Manford's Live at Manchester Apollo
Perhaps there should be more respect for comedians who do the same old thing extremely well. For truly, you won't find a less innovative standup currently at work than Jason Manford.
Leo Benedictus, The Guardian, 14th February 2013Jo Brand, Jonathan Ross & Jason Manford for new ITV panel show
Jo Brand, Jonathan Ross and Jason Manford are to star in the pilot episode of Oh What A Week!, a new topical panel show for ITV1.
British Comedy Guide, 29th January 2013Frank Skinner pulls back his magic joystick to reveal another set of extreme dislikes. While the delightfully offbeat Paloma Faith would give Ugg boots the boot and merrily accuses Skinner of voting Tory, she's disconcerted by the tendencies of her fellow guests, blokey comedian Jason Manford and Dragons' Den moneybags Deborah Meaden, who can't bear it when she has to wait behind people rummaging for change in a shop. Like she does her own shopping.
Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 25th January 2013"I think they're both a bit uptight," trills the one and only Paloma Faith as Deborah Meaden and Jason Manford air their grumbles. Has nobody told her that being uptight is a pre-requisite for this show? Here, uptightness is as essential as a plausible way with an anecdote on Would I Lie to You? or a skimpy swimsuit on Splash!
The fact that Meaden and Manford quake with fury when people at checkout queues don't have their money ready to pay might be worrying in some quarters; here it's the stuff of comedy. And Faith has her own hang-ups: she hates Ugg boots so much she fires anyone who comes to work in them.
David Butcher, Radio Times, 25th January 2013Your average comedian can earn serious money these days. Your very good one can earn a fortune. Michael McIntyre's latest tour, for example, netted him £21m. But there's more than one way for a stand-up to rake in the cash.
As we'll see in BBC2's new documentary series Funny Business, corporate gigs and telly commercials are huge earners. You want Jason Manford? That'll be 25 grand.
With contributions from the likes of Jo Brand, John Cleese and Rhod Gilbert, the programme also poses the inevitable awkward question. Namely, is a comic selling their soul by doing this stuff? Some people clearly think so. Carmarthen's Rhod Gilbert points out that the only ad he's ever been willing to do is for Visit Wales.
Mind you, I personally reckon he sells it better, sloganwise, in a clip from Live At The Apollo: "Wales is all right! It's not s**t anymore! We've done it up!"
Mike Ward, Daily Star, 16th January 2013Funny Business, BBC Two, review
Michael McIntyre: £40,000. Ricky Gervais: £25,000. Jason Manford: £25,000. Jo Brand: £10,000-£25,000. Barry Cryer - who after that lot looks an absolute steal - is £2,000-£5,000. This, according to Funny Business, is what it costs to hire the above to tell some jokes at a corporate event.
Michael Deacon, The Telegraph, 16th January 2013John Bishop's new vehicle is a resolutely family-friendly throwback to the days of The Comedians, when TV standup was a relentless stream of "fella-walked-into-a-bar" jokes that steadfastly avoided any reference to life as actually lived. A cast of thousands are involved, including celebrities from Ricky Hatton and Robbie Williams to ordinary folk, telling creaky jokes that at least crease them up. All this is peppered with occasional pellets of non-abrasive observational humour from smirk-merchants such as Jason Manford.
David Stubbs, The Guardian, 11th January 2013