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That Mitchell & Webb Sound. Image shows from L to R: Robert Webb, David Mitchell. Copyright: BBC
That Mitchell & Webb Sound

That Mitchell & Webb Sound

  • Radio sketch show
  • BBC Radio 4
  • 2003 - 2013
  • 29 episodes (5 series)

Radio sketch series starring David Mitchell and Robert Webb. Also features Olivia Colman, James Bachman and Sarah Hadland.

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Episode menu

Series 4, Episode 1

Sketches include a very unusual interview about how to count whales, an adventurer who claims to have found a man raised by wasps, and The Old Ladies discuss whether a cosmetic surgeon is a proper job.

Sketches

- Caesar
- iReckon
- Stargate 1
- Top Cat
- Counting Whales
- Bleach
- New Formats
- Ghost Charity
- Institute of Extraordinary Creatures
- Brains over Beauty
- The Old Lady Hearings 1 (Doctor)
- Tycoons

Broadcast details

Date
Tuesday 25th August 2009
Time
6:30pm
Channel
BBC Radio 4
Length
30 minutes

Cast & crew

Cast
David Mitchell Various
Robert Webb Various
Olivia Colman Ensemble Actor
James Bachman Ensemble Actor
Sarah Hadland Ensemble Actor
Writing team
David Mitchell Writer
Robert Webb Writer
Jesse Armstrong Writer
Sam Bain Writer
John Finnemore Writer
Jonathan Dryden-Taylor Writer
Simon Kane Writer
Toby Davies Writer
Carrie Quinlan Writer
Madeleine Brettingham Writer
Ed Bradshaw Writer
Ollie Simpson Writer
Simon Blackwell Writer
Matthew Stott Writer
Production team
Gareth Edwards Producer

Press

Peep Show? Brilliant. David Mitchell on any of the roughly 795 radio and TV panel games he's adorned with his presence? National treasure-in-waiting. But if his reputation rested on his TV sketch shows with Robert Webb, the two of them might well be known as the Anna Kournikovas of comedy: famous, but useless at the thing they're famous for.

The problem with the sketches in That Mitchell and Webb Sound (which the lads mostly write), as opposed to Peep Show (which they mostly don't) is that they're clever but not very funny, a slight handicap for a comedy programme. Each situation is replete with comic possibilities and progresses with savage twists of absurdity. It should be drop-dead hilarious. It's the kind of thing, though, you watch with an expectant grin - but no belly laughs.

So I listened to the new series of the radio version with some trepidation, but although not everything was a palpable hit, there was enough to be going on with. Some of the ideas were spot-on, such as the orthopaedic suppliers with an inter-dimensional portal on the shop floor ("gentlemen, the stargate is not a bin"), or the iReckon, Apple's new gadget ("I can download all my thoughts from the internet!"). And Caesar being coached in referring to himself in the third person was pure The Two Ronnies.

Chris Maume, The Independent, 30th August 2009

Radio Review: That Mitchell and Webb Sound

Mitchell and Webb are back on the airwaves, and very funny with it, says Elisabeth Mahoney.

Elisabeth Mahoney, The Guardian, 26th August 2009

Good to have them back on radio in a sketch show. Mitchell on his own as a game show host has not exactly proved a whizz though Webb, as a fine performance in a Friday Play on Radio 4 showed, is a very good actor. But together they're funnier than anything in this slot has been for months (not difficult, I grant you) because, combined, they achieve and maintain genuine momentum and their taste in scripts is first-rate. I only hope when you read this you haven't heard the same bit trailed so often you'd rather expire than listen.

Gillian Reynolds, The Telegraph, 25th August 2009

How nice to see that, despite an increasing television profile for their sketch show, David Mitchell and Robert Webb have not turned their back on Radio 4. This new six-part series also includes something that was dearly missing from the last TV series - the effortless comic delights of Olivia Colman.

Scott Matthewman, The Stage, 21st August 2009

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