Mock the Week

(Synopsis)
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[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mock_The_Week Wikipedia entry]
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mock_The_Week Wikipedia entry]
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==Pictures==
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<div class="image">[[Image:Mock the week series 1 gang.jpg]]<br/>''The original gang, including [[Rory Bremner]] (left). Note Boyle looking in completely the wrong direction!''</div>
[[Category:Comedy Panel Game]]
[[Category:Comedy Panel Game]]

Revision as of 12:19, 23 August 2007

Image:Mock the week logo.jpg

Contents

Host

Dara O'Briain

Co-hosts

Regular panellists: Rory Bremner (series 1 and 2), Frankie Boyle and Hugh Dennis

"Frequent guests" (series 3 onward): Andy Parsons, Russell Howard

Broadcast

Angst Productions for BBC2, 5 June 2005 to present

Synopsis

A topical panel game from the creators of Whose Line is it Anyway?.

The similarity to the late, great Whose Line is enough to be obvious, but not such that it looks like a straight revival. In fact, this is a pretty neat adaptation of a classic format to a different style of humour. Rather than the off-the-wall surrealism of WLIIA, we have games based on current affairs, and there's more of a straight stand-up comedy feel to some of them rather than actorly improv. A few games are carried through from the previous show - celebrity dating videos work just as well in this format as they did in the original - but it's mostly a new show using only the basic template of the old. There's no real scoring system, and it's obvious that the show we see on TV is edited down from a much longer performance. An obvious reference point is Have I Got News for You, though in truth we suspect the real influences come more from the countless topical shows that seem to be crammed into every available space on Radio 2 and Radio 4 these days (even the title has a distinctly Radio 4 ring to it). There also seems to be a hint of If I Ruled the World..., the short-lived panel game hosted by Whose Line's Clive Anderson and featuring Jeremy Hardy, also a guest on the first episode of this show.

But enough of comparisons, the important thing is that this is a lot of fun. The show really got into its stride once the more rigid Whose Line-style games were sidelined, allowing the participants to riff off each over in a more relaxed fashion. The loss of Rory Bremner, who was not only sharp but also clearly loved doing the show (as was obvious from how often he cracked up laughing at other people's jokes) actually didn't impact on the show as much as we expected, and indeed the trend is now toward using younger comedians from the stand-up circuit, which works very well. Meanwhile Dara O'Briain is both sharp enough to contribute to the general banter, and astute enough to know when to let the panellists get on with it.


For those about to mock, we salute you: Boyle and Parsons (standing), Dennis, O'Briain and Howard.

A quick run-down on the main games is surely in order, so in brief they are:

  • Headliners, in which the panellists suggest captions for a picture given the first letter of each word.
  • The news wheel round, which has a different name each week ("Dara's Topical Gag Wheel.. Of Death!") but asks the players to be funny on "randomly"-selected topics.
  • If This Is The Answer, What Is The Question, wherein questions are suggested to fit a provided answer.
  • Scenes We'd Like To See, similar to the old Whose Line game of "Worst in the World", wherein the panellists provide one-liners in response to a given theme, such as "Things You'd Never Hear The Queen Say" or Rejected Opening Lines For The Next Harry Potter Book".

When it's on form, it's one of the funniest half-hours on television, and when it's not, it isn't. Nevertheless, we declare Mock the Week a winner and will now ask the entire cast to present the credits in a style of our choosing. Except they don't do that on this show. Pshaw!

Trivia

The pre-publicity for the first series named Rory Bremner and Frankie Boyle as the team captains, but curiously Boyle didn't take the usual captain's chair in the middle of his team - instead Hugh Dennis sat there for the first show. And every subsequent show. On the fifth episode, Dennis was finally listed as one of the regulars in the end credits, and in the Beeb's publicity for the sixth and last programme in the series he had been officially promoted to actual team captain status. Ironically that week's show was replaced by a clips compilation anyway.

The last episode of the first series was pulled from the schedules in the light of the 7th July terrorist attacks in London. The recording of the programme was due to take place on the evening of 7 July but the closedown of London's transport system meant that many audience members, as well as some of those due to appear on the programme, couldn't make it. However, the Channel 4 topical comedy 8 Out of 10 Cats which was being recorded in another studio at BBC Television Centre did go ahead. Cunningly, they made use of panellists and production team members from Mock the Week who turned up to fill the panel and audience.

Inventor

Dan Patterson and Mark Leveson.

Theme music

"News Of The World" by The Jam.

Web links

Official site

Wikipedia entry

Pictures

Image:Mock the week series 1 gang.jpg
The original gang, including Rory Bremner (left). Note Boyle looking in completely the wrong direction!

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