British Comedy Guide
How Not To Live Your Life. Don Danbury (Dan Clark). Copyright: Brown Eyed Boy
How Not To Live Your Life

How Not To Live Your Life

  • TV sitcom
  • BBC Three
  • 2007 - 2011
  • 21 episodes (3 series)

Sitcom about an arrogant single twenty-something man who is struggling to navigate his way through life. He is not helped by his bad instincts. Stars Dan Clark, David Armand, Sinead Moynihan, Finlay Robertson, Leila Hoffman and more.

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Press clippings Page 2

How We Met: Dan Clark & Noel Fielding

'I used to say, "Dan, you're so funny at a party, you've got to try to get that into your comedy"'

Hugh Montgomery, The Independent, 7th November 2010

Dan Clark interview

""One time a guy in a wheelchair started shouting abuse and an entire crew of 30 people were too scared to do anything. That's how scary this guy was - a guy in a wheelchair..."

Paul English, Daily Record, 6th November 2010

How Not To Live Your Life Series 3, Episode 1 review

Starting a new series with a double bill is never a positive sign.

Cameron K McEwan, Last Broadcast, 3rd November 2010

Filming Diary Part 4

Week four of filming How Not To Live Your Life was the musical episode. I don't want to give away too much information about this episode but Don joins the local theatre club that Eddie belongs to and they put on a musical.

Dan Clark, BBC, 29th October 2010

Filming Diary Part 3

Scene complete. It's about 3 minutes of screen time. Only took 5 days to do!

Dan Clark, BBC, 20th October 2010

Filming Diary Part 2

Firstly here's a treat for you, your chance to be the first to see some photos from the new series...

Dan Clark, BBC, 15th October 2010

Filming Diary Part 1

I ended my first day on the set of How Not To Live Your Life Series 3 tied up in S&M gear, running around outside, barefoot, freezing my breasticles off.

Dan Clark, BBC, 8th October 2010

Video Interview: Dan Clark

An interview with How Not To Live Your Life star Dan Clark.

Channel Bee, 29th September 2009

Men don't emerge very well from How Not to Live Your Life either, though the specimens on show in BBC3's sitcom are too timid and childish to represent a threat to anybody but themselves. I have a faint memory that I gave a charitable review to Dan Clark's series on an earlier occasion, for which I can offer my apologies, because whatever virtues I detected in it then have entirely evaporated. The gimmick is an occasional break for an animated Letterman list gag - "Five Things You Shouldn't Do in the Theatre", for example - with the narrative action pausing as Clark acts out the alternatives. There are moments when the lips twitch fitfully during these sequences, but they're restored to default mode (frozen into a kind of appalled wince) by the startling charmlessness of the central character in all the other bits. Oddly, my technology continues to try and tell me things. The DVD player stalled at one point and flashed up a message: "There was an error reading from disc. It might be scratched or dirty". Dirty, I think, given that our hero had just extricated himself from an awkward relationship by pretending to be a gerontophile: "You don't need someone to wipe your bum after you've been to the toilet," he explained apologetically, "...and that's the kind of thing that gets me going." "Are you sure you want to quit?" the DVD software asked me as I finished watching and closed it down. There are days when it crosses my mind, I thought.

Tom Sutcliffe, The Independent, 23rd September 2009

An immature 20-something blunders through life, narrating his every impolite thought - remind you of anything? This is a Peep Show rip-off with a gimmick: our protagonist likes to stop the action and fantasise about different ways of misbehaving - as if he isn't rude enough in real life. Yes, it's puerile; but there's something fun about watching the irredeemable Don misinterpret the world around him. He began this series heartbroken after his beloved (understandably) fled the country and in this episode seduces an older woman...with a little too much success.

Claire Webb, Radio Times, 22nd September 2009

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