British Comedy Guide
The Vaccum pilot. Natasia Demetriou
Natasia Demetriou

Natasia Demetriou

  • 38 years old
  • British
  • Actor, writer and comedian

Press clippings Page 3

TV review: Stath Lets Flats, C4

The triple-BAFTA-winning comedy starring creator/writer Jamie Demetriou as hapless lettings agent Stath returns for a third series and the first episode suggests that this is going to be a very good one. Particularly if you like watching language-mangling Stath be as useless as ever (with a hint of sentimentality thrown in for good measure).

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 26th October 2021

Stath Lets Flats series 3 review

One of the funniest half-hours of TV in a long time.

The Independent, 26th October 2021

Stath Lets Flats, Channel 4, review

A heartfelt return for the daftest show on TV.

Emily Baker, i Newspaper, 26th October 2021

Stath Lets Flats, series 3 review

Powerful without being political and rip-roaringly funny.

Chris Bennion, The Telegraph, 26th October 2021

Stath Lets Flats Series 3 guest stars revealed

Stath Lets Flats Series 3 has finished filming, ahead of broadcast later this year. Guest stars in the new series will include Julia Davis and Charlie Cooper.

British Comedy Guide, 3rd September 2021

Review: Why you should be catching up with Pls Like

Written by and starring comedian Liam Williams, BBC Three's underrated, brilliantly observed mockumentary Pls Like is now on its third series of lampooning the sort of online culture that's baffling to anyone older than Gen Z.

Sophie Davies, The Custard TV, 1st February 2021

Big Zuu Series 2 line-up announced

The line-up of guests appearing in the forthcoming second series of Big Zuu's Big Eats has been announced by Dave.

British Comedy Guide, 15th December 2020

Stath Lets Flats returning for Series 3

Hit sitcom Stath Lets Flats is to return to Channel 4 for a third series.

British Comedy Guide, 21st October 2020

How Stath Lets Flats became TV's smartest stupid comedy

A lot of comedy is people acting stupidly. And, for years, this has caused a certain amount of internal conflict among critics. Because critics are in the business of being (or at least seeming) smart, they tend to have an inherent aversion to stupidity. The often low-brow nature of comedy has long cast the genre as a lesser art form. Usually, when critics do like a work of comedy, it is the kind of thing that can be coded as "smart," either because it is focused on a particular social issue or includes some sharp political satire. But this is slowly changing. And one hilarious example of that change is Stath Lets Flats, the British sitcom about a family-owned leasing agency filled with the dumbest people.

Jesse David Fox, Vulture, 13th October 2020

Stath Lets Flats future 'up in the air'

Natasia Demetriou says it's unclear whether the cult estate agent sitcom will return for a third series - but she's glad they managed to create a mini-episode for fans in lockdown.

Huw Fullerton, Radio Times, 14th May 2020

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