British Comedy Guide
Jeremy Clarkson. Credit: Amazon Studios
Jeremy Clarkson

Jeremy Clarkson

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Press clippings Page 8

First shown in March, this was one of the comic comebacks of the year. Though best known for co-writing Jerry Springer: the Opera, which made him the focus of a national hate campaign, Stewart Lee is a gifted stand-up with a laconic style. In the first instalment, his subject is books in general and so-called "celebrity hardbacks" in particular, which allows Lee, who looks a bit like a very young, very tired Morrissey, to give Jeremy Clarkson and Chris Moyles both barrels. The sketches don't work very well, but the rest is a treat.

Alison Graham, Radio Times, 2nd November 2009

Cleverness is no more. This is a dumb Britain

Forty years ago, my dad came into my bedroom and made me get up.

I was nine and sleepy. I was snuggly and warm. I wanted to stay under the covers. But he was insistent. "There is something on television you need to see," he said. And I remember the next bit vividly: "It's going to be important."

So downstairs I went and there, in black and white, were some men talking, while nearby, various sheep fell out of trees. I laughed so much, my teddy bear's arm came off. And so it was that at the age of nine, I became Monty Python's first and youngest fan.

Jeremy Clarkson, The Sunday Times, 11th October 2009

TV Scoop Review

A lot of what Stewart Lee said irked me a little. In last night's episode, Lee turned his admittedly sharp mind to books, and in particular toilet books and celebrity hardbacks. Perhaps it is just me, but isn't it a little obvious to suggest that these genres are inherently crappy? Taking potshots at the likes of Jeremy Clarkson and Chris Moyles felt pedestrian, and to suggest that he shouldn't read Harry Potter because it's intended for kids seems close-minded.

Anna Lowman, TV Scoop, 17th March 2009

Stewart Lee is a raconteur who might remind you of Dave Allen; he's clever, discursive and very funny. Though best known for co-writing Jerry Springer: The Opera, which made him the focus of a national hate campaign, Lee is a gifted stand-up with a laconic style. In the first instalment of a new series, his subject is books in general and so-called "celebrity hardbacks" in particular, which allows Lee, who looks a bit like a very young, very tired Morrissey, to give Jeremy Clarkson and Chris Moyles both barrels. I loved his dismissal of the latter's second autobiographical volume, The Difficult Second Book, as a title that showed "a degree of irony and self-awareness largely absent from the text". The sketches that smatter the show don't work very well (they never did for Dave Allen, either), but just go with the flow, because everything else works a treat.

Alison Graham, Radio Times, 16th March 2009

It's easy to have a pop at telly executives (for example: telly is run by complete morons. See? Easy) but whoever decided that Stewart Lee was such a stand-up artist that he deserved his own show deserves much, much praise. The first ep sees him rail angrily against the modern world of publishing; Chris Moyles, Jeremy Clarkson and pity publishing all receive a marvelous dose of controlled anger. Crucially, despite the clear, genuine rage, he remains funny throughout (check out the brilliant pay off to the Asher D rant). A fantastic show.

TV Bite, 16th March 2009

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