Press clippings Page 3
The Beeb's new comedy signing is about as edgy as Lorraine Kelly's guide to budget family dinners. There's more than a whiff of nostalgia in Lorna Watson and Ingrid Oliver's debut comedy sketch show, and if you long for the cheekily innocent days of French & Saunders, Watson & Oliver looks set to satisfy that itch. Expect period drama pastiche, Wills and Kate jokes, and live studio audience laughter aplenty.
Clare Considine, The Guardian, 20th February 2012Mark Dolan presents this ambitious new comedy panel show about the world of advertising. The set-up is as follows: each week, the two team captains - comedians Micky Flanagan and Mark Watson - are joined by an advertising industry insider and a celebrity guest. The teams are then quizzed about adverts from past and present, as well as being challenged to film their own advert, with the studio audience voting for the best. This first edition focuses on public information films, with ITV's bubbly daytime host Lorraine Kelly and the award-winning stand-up Josh Widdicombe as guests. Sadly, no preview discs were available.
Pete Naughton, The Telegraph, 16th February 2012Daniel Sloss on how loss of his sister led to comedy
Rising Scots comic Daniel Sloss wants to marry Lorraine Kelly's daughter because he's smitten by the breakfast telly queen.
Rick Fulton, Daily Record, 21st January 2012The great Barry Cryer, stalwart of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue and one of the best comedy script-writers Britain has ever produced, takes his place on Lee Mack's team in the last episode of the series (next week's is a best-bits compilation).
He remains convincingly po-faced as he tells some incredible tales. Does he really hail a local bus by saying, "Hello, darling"? Did he ever write romantic novels under a female pseudonym?
Sue Perkins just about manages to get a word in edgeways, and Lorraine Kelly is a giggly good sport on David Mitchell's team with Dara O'Briain. But, as ever, it's Mitchell and Mack's banter that steals the show.
Alison Graham, Radio Times, 28th October 2011The Marriage Ref was too dreary for primetime
The Marriage Ref appointed Jimmy Carr, James Cordon and Lorraine Kelly as 'marriage refs' in a prizeless, pointless and punishing hour of television.
Christopher Hooton, Metro, 3rd July 2011The ubiquitous Claudia Winkleman presents a third episode of King Of, the chat show with a difference. Not a very big difference, but a difference nonetheless. The idea is that the panellists pick who or what is the "king of" various things: the best cheese, the best Chelsea midfielder, the best whatever. Like Room 101, then, but backwards. Today's guests are Lorraine Kelly, daytime TV sofa-dweller, and the comedian Jack Whitehall.
Tom Chivers, The Telegraph, 30th June 2011Dermot O'Leary leads Comic Relief desert trek
Celebrities including Lorraine Kelly and Dermot O'Leary are to trek across the Kaisut Desert, in north Kenya, for Comic Relief.
BBC News, 7th February 2011This irreverent panel show makes merry tonight with a seasonal special in which host Jimmy Carr asks contestants to guess the results of holiday-themed surveys. If you like your Christmas cheer with a large helping of sarcasm and a dollop of misanthropy, you'll like this. Reliably funny team captains Sean Lock and Jason Manford are joined by guest panellists Jack Dee, Christopher Biggins and Lorraine Kelly.
Vicki Power, The Telegraph, 23rd December 2010Funny or easy-to-mock guests booked to provide tonight's festive repartee and laughs include dour comedian Jack Dee, Lorraine Kelly and camp sweetheart Christopher Biggins. Irritatingly, at the time RT went to press, the episode hadn't been filmed, so we can only speculate - wildly - as to its contents. It's Christmas-themed, so expect host Jimmy Carr and contestants to have dressed for the occasion: sparkly antlers; nylon beards; necklaces made of mince pies - that kind of thing. And if Biggins isn't wearing a pantomime dame outfit and lashings of rouge then I'm going home.
Ruth Margolis, Radio Times, 23rd December 2010I'm not even sure it can be described as a comedy: it wasn't even vaguely funny. Jason Manford made a few valiant attempts to shore up the laughter quotient but, on the whole, no luck. The basic premise was that two teams of two (in this instance, regulars Manford and, inexplicably, Peter Andre versus guests Lorraine Kelly and Julian Clary) compete to see who was better able to spot the "odd one in" of four strangers. For instance: who here really is a cockney? Which animal can actually skateboard? Who's not just pretending to hula-hoop? A bit like spotting the odd one out, except the other way around. Clever! Not really: Never Mind the Buzzcocks has been doing this for years, only for them it's a throw-away round, not the basis of the entire programme.
Alice-Azania Jarvis, The Independent, 9th August 2010