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
Frankie Boyle's 2017 New World Order
Frankie Boyle looks back at 2017. The programme will feature Frankie at his brilliant, satirical best with stand-up, review and discussion - all in an attempt to make mincemeat of the last 12 months.
Further details
Motion - 2017 is the year no one will look back on fondly, because we'll all be dead.
Broadcast details
- Date
- Friday 29th December 2017
- Time
- 10pm
- Channel
- BBC Two
- Length
- 30 minutes
- Recorded
-
- Tuesday 19th December 2017, 18:45 at The London Studios
Cast & crew
Frankie Boyle | Host / Presenter |
Sara Pascoe | Regular Panellist |
Katherine Ryan | Regular Panellist |
Miles Jupp | Regular Panellist |
Mona Chalabi | Regular Panellist |
Frankie Boyle | Writer |
Dan Evans | Writer (Additional Material) |
James Farmer | Writer (Additional Material) |
Shaun Pye | Writer (Additional Material) |
Christine Rose | Writer (Additional Material) |
Aiden Spackman | Writer (Additional Material) |
Neil Webster | Writer (Additional Material) |
Charlie Skelton | Script Editor |
Ben Caudell | Writer (Additional Material) |
Barbara Wiltshire | Director |
Tom Baker | Producer |
Peter Holmes | Executive Producer |
Ruth Phillips | Executive Producer |
Richard Cohen | Executive Producer |
Jodie Krstic | Series Producer |
Matt Hulme (as Matthew Hulme) | Producer |
Kate Daughton | Executive Producer |
Ben Chambers | Editor |
Michael Marden | Editor |
Jon Blow | Editor |
Ben Heather | Editor |
Alex Craig | Production Designer |
Press
The first run of Boyle's studio-bound current affairs vehicle coincided with the shock of the general election and the horror of Grenfell Tower and saw the abrasive Glaswegian catching the zeitgeist to impressive effect. He'll have plenty to chew on in this end-of-year roundup; given the absence of Charlie Brooker from this year's Christmas schedules, this is your best bet for a sceptical, scabrous take on another troubling political year.
Phil Harrison, The Guardian, 29th December 2017