Very British Problems
- TV comedy
- Channel 4
- 2015 - 2016
- 7 episodes (2 series)
Just why is it so hard being British? Because we have Very British Problems. Stars Stephen Mangan, Romesh Ranganathan, Bob Mortimer, Catherine Tate, Danny Dyer and more.
Press clippings
Interview with Very British Problems author
"I'm a very awkward person. From getting up in the morning to coming home at night, to my mind, at least five or six terrible situations have occurred."
Jonny Cooper, The Telegraph, 24th October 2016Very British Problems - very funny!
This summer I am on the lookout for funny shows to help balance the rest of my responsibilities. At the same time, I have expanding my viewing options by looking into programs from abroad. I have recently run across the perfect mix of the two in Very British Problems.
Pat Jackson, TV Equals, 4th July 2016The new series of Very British Problems began this week but seems to have lost its purpose. The show began life as a very witty, observant Twitter account which would blurt out panicked and appalled little tweets about the difficulties of being a repressed British person who's trying frantically to avoid embarrassment in a world full of boors and idiots.
The humour lay in not knowing who was sending the tweets and so we could imagine it was an uptight Englishman in a suit and bowler hat, catching the 8.09 to Waterloo, perhaps resembling a stern-faced John Cleese. Or maybe it's a kindly old lady who makes jam for the Women's Institute and crochets bootees for the church jumble sale, and is quietly horrified at the manners of today's young people. We could imagine what we liked, or slot ourselves into the situations described. But transferring the concept from Twitter to TV has ruined that. Our imaginary and oh-so-typical Brit has been replaced by celebrities. James Corden, Catherine Tate and David Tennant now share their awkward moments and social embarrassments, and there is no longer room for us. We've become observers not awkward, agonised participants.
We all love Christmas but wouldn't like it every day - contrary to what the song says. The luxury of all that food, wine and excitement would soon wear off and leave us longing for an uneventful day at work or a quiet potter around the supermarket. We can only take so much wonder and joy - and that must be the reason why Charlie Brooker is relatively rare on TV.
If I was in charge, he'd be on TV constantly. BBC News 24 would be Brooker 24 and watching would be mandatory. But, as with too much turkey and Prosecco, maybe we'd soon start to groan and wilt: no more, please. I'm full! I can't take another joke. I'm woozy with these witty observations. Another gag will make me gag.
Julie McDowall, The National (Scotland), 14th May 2016This harmless take on the Grumpy Old Men-style talking heads show enters a second series. The thesis of the series is this: comedians and celebrities celebrate the social awkwardness that is held to be representatively British. This opening episode focuses on school: unfathomably enduring nicknames, playground meanness and the difficulties of fitting in. Stand-up comic Romesh Ranganathan nails the latter with his account of attending a comprehensive school - but doing so with a public school accent.
John Robinson, The Guardian, 9th May 2016A seasonal episode of the show that - like the Twitter account it grew from - does pretty basic observational comedy, but does it pretty well. On TV, it helps that the status of the contributors is bewilderingly high: sitting in various lovely interiors tonight are David Tennant, James Corden, Rich Hall, Romesh Ranganathan, Catherine Tate and Danny Dyer. Among the agonies wryly shared are how much to pay carol singers and when to abandon a bad party.
Jack Seale, The Guardian, 17th December 2015Very British Problems returns to C4 for second series
Following on from the success of the first series in summer 2015, Channel 4 has ordered a brand new 3x60 series as well as a one off festive special of Very British Problems.
Channel 4, 9th November 2015In which mostly grumpy and sometimes quite old celebs reflect on the problems that ensue when leaving the house to go to work or the shops, or even to head out on holiday or for a jolly. In more detail, that means the likes of James Corden, Jonathan Ross, Ruth Jones and Stephen Mangan discussing the guilty thrill of buying a cheap round down the pub, the seething anger that underpins making tea for office colleagues, and performance anxiety - when packing shopping at the supermarket.
Jonathan Wright, The Guardian, 20th August 2015Very British Problems review: self-indulgent and dull
The Brits are pretty bad at a lot of things - including, it seems, making programmes about how bad they are at things.
Esther Addley, The Guardian, 14th August 2015Review: Very British Problems, Channel 4
C4's attempt to turn tweets into telly had too much to live up to.
Barney Harsent, The Arts Desk, 14th August 2015Very British Problems review
Very British Problems was suffering from a very British problem: this whole show had apparently been dreamed up, researched and written by under-25s. Or possibly teenagers.
Christopher Stevens, Daily Mail, 14th August 2015