Press clippings Page 22
Happy Shopper Russell Brand, Noel Fielding has had a pop at Simon Amstell for "ruining" Never Mind The Buzzcocks by being too rude to the guests, which suggests that he hadn't watched any of the series before Amstell was on. Or after. Or even tonight's episode in which Jack Dee describes Jedward as the "greatest musical meeting since Chapman met Lennon".
TV Bite, 4th November 2010Catherine Tate grated on Buzzcocks
The music quiz show was this week hosted by sketch show queen Catherine Tate on typical grating, nasal form. Come back, Simon Amstell, all is forgiven.
Rachel Tarley, Metro, 29th October 2010There was life before Simon Amstell, though Never Mind the Buzzcocks doesn't seem to know it. A full series after the catty, facetious quiz host left to write and star in Grandma's House, programme-makers are still fumbling around without a replacement.
Instead, they have stuck with a rota of guest-hosts who, if not the most adept at cracking jokes, at least offer punchlines for some. The concept worked last series: Amstell was so strong in his role that a revolving door created a pleasing sense of differentiation. By now, though, they should have settled on their candidate. No longer novel, the post-Amstell gimmick just seems like a compromise. Which, most of the time, it is.
Last night, particularly so. Mark Ronson - a previous contestant on the programme - took centre stage, offering a (fairly) amusing line about his hair (recently peroxided a ghostly white-blond, it boasts, observed one contestant, an uncanny resemblance to the style favoured by Tintin). Aside from the opener, he wasn't up for much. Not his fault; he's not a comedian.
The team captains did rather better: Phill Jupitus is still there, alongside newer arrival Noel Fielding. One of the big successes of the post-Amstell era has been Fielding's recruitment. Not just because he is hilarious - which he is - but also because he brings in some of the funniest guests. The format dictates that each team captain brings a guest to their benches: Fielding, like a naughty child at show-and-tell, produced fellow funnyman Paul Foot who, it transpired, would provide the biggest laughs of the whole thing.
Elsewhere, offerings were rather less lively: rapper Tinie Tempah, Mollie King of The Saturdays and safe-bet Alesha Dixon (she's been here before). No one was made fun of quite as they once were; when they are, the joke remains snugly PR-friendly. The competition rounds are much the same as they ever were; everyone knows what obstacle they'll face. Never Mind the Buzzcocks might be back, but - from the 'slebs' point of view - there's not that much to mind.
Alice-Azania Jarvis, The Independent, 22nd October 2010The pop quiz is back for its second series without Simon Amstell - it coped just fine last year. On Phill Jupitus's team tonight: syntax-mangling Strictly judge Alesha Dixon, and Mollie King of the Saturdays - a girlband so nondescript, Mollie could appear in the line-up round. With Noel Fielding, it's rapper Tinie Tempah and comic Paul Foot. Even the guest host has something to promote: it's Mark Ronson, who has a new album out. But if he's still got the bleached hairdo he sported on Later, that's one laugh in the bag already.
Jack Seale, Radio Times, 21st October 2010Simon Amstell's angst is just not funny
Simon Amstell seems to be having a crisis and is attempting to flog it for laughs.
Deborah Orr, The Guardian, 16th September 2010It's the last episode of Simon Amstell's carefully crafted sitcom in which he stars as himself. The series has seen some superb performances from its sparkly cast, most notably Rebecca Front as Amstell's onscreen mother Tanya. Tonight, Tanya and Clive's (James Smith) plans to get married are disrupted when Grandpa (Geoffrey Hutchings) becomes ill.
The Telegraph, 13th September 2010Complicated family relationships can be played for laughs, which brings me to Grandma's House, now approaching the end of a series that has provoked catcalls and bouquets in roughly equal measure. I'm with the bouquet-throwers, and while I'm aware that you'd have to sit through quite a lot of amateur dramatics before encountering an actor quite as wooden as Simon Amstell, I think he gets away with it, which may indeed be part of the conceit.
The rest of the conceit is that Amstell more or less plays himself, a gay, Jewish comedian called Simon who used to host a TV panel show (Never Mind the Buzzcocks in Amstell's case), and whose mother and grandmother (Rebecca Front and Linda Bassett) are desperate for him to get back on the telly being rude. Last night, they were horrified that he could find nothing funny to say about Peaches Geldof or even Peter Andre, and I was with them all the way; no comedian should ever fall so low.
Brian Viner, The Independent, 7th September 2010Simon Amstell is like marmite. Some love his acid tongue while others think he's just a bit nasty. But we all laughed at the 'Preston' incident on Buzzcocks - it was hilarious. His self-penned sitcom, Grandma's House, in which he stars as himself, however, isn't. Simon's not a natural actor. He's stilted, awkward and constantly sarcastic. It's like he never left the Buzzcocks set.
Sky, 2nd September 2010"Look at us all cooped up in here," grumbles awful aunt Liz. "Sitting around all day, talking a load of rubbish... If this was on telly, people would switch over." It's a brave sitcom that includes such a cheeky line, but Grandma's House can carry it off, just. Tonight the family watches clips of Simon's precocious stand-up efforts, which are in fact clips from star Simon Amstell's own early shows as a kid, complete with squeaky voice and zany waistcoat - prepare to cringe. But the highlight is Simon's mother (Rebecca Front) trying to bully him into doing an ITV charity balloon trip. "Why can't you go in a balloon for your mother?" she urges. "You'd look lovely in a balloon!"
David Butcher, Radio Times, 30th August 2010Simon Amstell, Larry David and the rise of the 'simcom'
From Simon Amstell to Steve Coogan to Trinny and Susannah, today's stars simply play exaggerated versions of themselves. Does it count as acting? Mark Lawson on the 'sim-com'
Mark Lawson, The Guardian, 29th August 2010