QI
- TV panel show
- BBC Two / BBC One / BBC Four
- 2003 - 2025
- 324 episodes (22 series)
Panel game that contains lots of difficult questions and a large amount of quite interesting facts. Stars Sandi Toksvig, Stephen Fry and Alan Davies.
- Continues on Tuesday on BBC2 at 9pm with Series V, Episode 5
- Catch-up on Series V, Episode 4
- Streaming rank this week: 187
Press clippings Page 42
QI: Quite interesting facts about lakes
A quietly intriguing column from the brains behind BBC's QI. This week: QI gets to the bottom of lakes
Molly Oldfield & John Mitchinson, The Telegraph, 29th September 2011A guide to QI. Series I, episode 3 'Imbroglio'
The research for this episode of QI was, due to some of the subjects, somewhat simpler than the previous two.
James Harkin, QI.com, 26th September 2011Alan Davies is more than QI
It took three full seasons before Alan Davies understood that he was the designated fall guy in QI.
Helen Crompton, The West Australian, 22nd September 2011QI: Quite interesting facts about sugar
A quietly intriguing column from the brains behind QI, the BBC quiz show. This week: QI gets a sugar rush.
Molly Oldfield & John Mitchinson, The Telegraph, 22nd September 2011A guide to QI. Series I, episode 2 'International'
A guide to the "International" episode of QI.
James Harkin, QI.com, 19th September 2011QI: Quite interesting facts about plants
A quietly intriguing column from the brains behind QI, the BBC quiz show. This week: QI on plants.
Molly Oldfield & John Mitchinson, The Telegraph, 17th September 2011This week QI returned to its original home on BBC Two. As part of a special night devoted to the world's most interesting (and personally I think the greatest) panel game a documentary covering the making of the show was broadcast.
Speaking as someone who knows QI back-to-front and inside-out, I already knew about much of the information mentioned in the documentary, although to most viewers it did include stuff which will of no doubt be of interest. The fact, for example, Michael Palin was to be the original host (Stephen Fry and Alan Davies were going to be team captains, with Fry the head of the clever team and Davies head of the stupid team) and that two questions were created by reading an entire Albanian dictionary cover-to-cover is interesting.
However, there were some things that even I was surprised about. While I know that the show has popular demand, I didn't know that it was the TV show with the second biggest demand for tickets in Britain (after Top Gear), thus making it the most demanded comedy show in Britain. No wonder I've only been able to see one recording at the time of writing.
The main area of interest to me is the work carried out by the show's researchers or "Elves". For me, being a QI elf would be my dream job. Just trying to find anything that would be of interest, coming across a glorious chunk of information that hardly anyone else knows about, would be a joy to behold. That's why I spend so much time on the QI forums, trying to contribute information in the hope of recognition. One day maybe I'll get that job... one day... a man can dream.
Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 12th September 2011Last night QI returned to BBC2 for another series of the incredibly intelligent quiz show hosted by the extremely knowledgeable Stephen Fry. Last night Mr Fry was joined by Lee Mack, Jimmy Carr, Sandi Toksvig and the ever-present Alan Davies. The subject was I-Spy.
To list the amount of interesting facts would take longer than watching the show itself and to list the amount of jokes, gags or hints of amusement would take almost as long. A few key points on last night's episode that ticked both boxes were the plastic mould of Einstein's face that tricks the mind and making the Queen happy or sad on a five pound note. Without giving it away I think you definitely have to watch the show in order to get the point of each.
QI is a very unique programme on the old telebox these days as it educates whilst entertaining. Maintaining the balance and keeping an audience who have flicked on for either is a tricky thing to master, but QI has mastered it with flying colours I do believe. I did learn a few things that I did not know before watching and I although most of it may be useless I do feel more confident going into next week's pub quiz.
Star of the show last night would have to go Lee Mack who isn't the cleverest of men, but is damn funny. Catch it on the iPlayer and expand your intelligence whilst having a chuckle.
D.J. Haza, What Culture!, 10th September 2011QI review
'The aye-aye has an elongated middle-finger, and his Madagascan neighbours don't like being shown it. Still, who does?'
Ash Smyth, The Arts Desk, 10th September 2011The versatile Lee Mack pops up again here to bolster the return of QI - giving Alan Davies a run for his money in the dunderhead stakes, opposite the other team of Sandi Toksvig, Jimmy Carr and his very strange giggle.
Thanks to Stephen Fry, it's possible to learn more in a single episode of QI than in an entire year at school and tonight you'll come away with your head stuffed with generally useless but quite interesting facts about lobsters, insect matter, Ye Olde Pie Shoppes and one very unlucky chap nicknamed the Durable Mike Malloy.
There are some very cool optical illusions too, much semi-intelligent banter and a bizarre moment that inspires Sandi to gasp: "I never thought I'd see Einstein in that position."
Jane Simon, The Mirror, 9th September 2011