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Would I Lie To You?. Image shows from L to R: David Mitchell, Rob Brydon, Lee Mack. Copyright: Zeppotron
Would I Lie To You?

Would I Lie To You?

  • TV panel show
  • BBC One
  • 2007 - 2025
  • 160 episodes (18 series)

Panel show in which believable lies and unbelievable truths must be identified. Stars Rob Brydon, Angus Deayton, Lee Mack and David Mitchell.

  • Due to return for Series 19
  • Series 12, Episode 7 repeated at 7pm on U&Dave
  • JustWatch Streaming rank this week: 212

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Press clippings Page 19

The impressive thing about this featherweight panel game (apart from how funny it manages to be) is how hard it often is to tell when the panellists are lying and when they're telling the truth. I know they're all professional performers, so we shouldn't be surprised, but even so. There are exceptions, of course: at one stage Frankie Boyle, famous as a comedian red in tooth and claw, finds it hard to pretend that he once wrote a collection of love poems, but it's still fun watching him try - not very hard.

David Butcher, Radio Times, 18th July 2008

The team leaders on this Call My Bluff-style show - Lee Mack and David Mitchell - are on sensationally good form. Unassuming and immensely accomplished, once again it is the comic highlight of the week. Honestly.

David Chater, The Times, 18th July 2008

The truth is greatly over-rated, I reckon. Especially when the porkies this show dreams up are so much more entertaining. Its consistently hilarious off-the-cuff banter is perfect for a Friday night.

Jane Simon, The Mirror, 18th July 2008

It may be as lazy a format as you'll find on television at the moment, but that doesn't stop Would I Lie To You? from being thoroughly enjoyable.

Some comedians dislike Mock The Week as it is - quite obviously - heavily scripted, but the whole point of this show is that the panelists have to make up stories (or make the truth sound implausible) on the spot. What's also quite cool, of course, is that we do find out funny little facts about the panelists every week.

annawaits, TV Scoop, 17th July 2008

David Mitchell is fast becoming king of the panel game. He's scarily good at them, so it's no wonder he's called on to lend his wits to shows from QI to Mock the Week, and from Have I Got News for You to a Radio 4 show called The Unbelievable Truth that's not a million miles from this.

This is the one where he and Lee Mack are team captains and Angus Deayton is chairman. The contestants have to bluff their way through various tales while their opponents work out which are true. So, for instance, did Gabby Logan really once steal red liquorice from Madonna's dressing room? Under close questioning from Rob Brydon it looks less and less likely. And is the mystery guest really Logan's former gymnastics rival, Mack's swimming teacher or, in fact, Robert Webb's ex-girlfriend?

Brydon and Mitchell make a great pair and what could be a stilted format is saved by some brilliant interplay and Brydon's flights of fancy.

David Butcher, Radio Times, 11th July 2008

Back for a new series, this hugely entertaining panel show is a variation on Call My Bluff based on the simplest of ideas. Each team member reveals a peculiar or embarrassing personal fact. The other team is allowed to cross-examine him or her to decide whether or not it's true. It features an A-list of good-humoured and quick-witted liars. With Angus Deayton caught in the crossfire, it couldn't get much better.

David Chater, The Times, 11th July 2008

The producers made particularly good choices in terms of the team captains, as having David Mitchell pitched against Lee Mack brings a certain class and north vs south element into the show, which Mack especially is always happy to exploit.

annawaits, TV Scoop, 10th July 2008

For an extra point, why are panel games so popular?

Serena Davies, The Telegraph, 10th July 2008

Angus Deayton and a host of guests return this Friday with a second series of Would I Lie To You? the comedy panel gameshow that constantly evokes memories of the Charles and Eddie hit from 1991.

If you haven't seen it before, think Call My Bluff without the archaisms and with laughs.

Quintessential Comedy, 7th July 2008

Team Captain Interview

The Sun interviews team captains Lee Mack and David Mitchell.

Keeley Bolger, The Sun, 27th June 2008

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