Frankie Boyle's New World Order
- TV chat show
- BBC Two
- 2017 - 2022
- 41 episodes (6 series)
Topical comedy show presented by Frankie Boyle. Also features Sara Pascoe, Katherine Ryan, Miles Jupp, Mona Chalabi, Kiri Pritchard-McLean and more.
Episode menu
- Series 1, Episode 3
Further details
1st Motion - Hope is dead. Benjamin Zephaniah is the guest in this section of the show.
2nd Motion - Brexit will be Christmas for racists. Dane Baptiste is the guest in this section of the show.
Broadcast details
- Date
- Friday 30th June 2017
- Time
- 10pm
- Channel
- BBC Two
- Length
- 30 minutes
- Recorded
-
- Wednesday 28th June 2017, 18:45 at Pinewood Studios
Cast & crew
Frankie Boyle | Host / Presenter |
Sara Pascoe | Regular Panellist |
Katherine Ryan | Regular Panellist |
Benjamin Zephaniah | Guest |
Dane Baptiste | Guest |
Catherine Bohart | Writer (Additional Material) |
Dan Evans | Writer (Additional Material) |
James Farmer | Writer (Additional Material) |
Sarah Morgan | Writer (Additional Material) |
Shaun Pye | Writer (Additional Material) |
Christine Rose | Writer (Additional Material) |
Charlie Skelton | Writer (Additional Material) |
Aiden Spackman | Writer (Additional Material) |
Dan Swimer | Writer (Additional Material) |
Neil Webster | Writer (Additional Material) |
Lucy Prebble | Writer (Additional Material) |
Barbara Wiltshire | Director |
Christopher Barbour | Series Producer |
Tom Baker | Producer |
Peter Holmes | Executive Producer |
Ruth Phillips | Executive Producer |
Alex Moody | Executive Producer |
Ben Chambers | Editor |
Tim Ellison | Editor |
Trevor Aylward | Editor |
Michael Marden | Editor |
Alex Craig | Production Designer |
Press
Confrontational comic Frankie will be joined by regulars Katherine Ryan and Sara Pascoe plus a couple of as-yet-unnamed guests as he continues to explore, in his customarily barbed style, the bewildering election aftermath. Conversation and poetic monologues (witness Boyle's takedown of May the other week) will revolve round the continuing nightmare that is Brexit, and whatever other horrific flashpoints spring up in between.
Ali Catterall, The Guardian, 30th June 2017