Play to the Whistle

(Bullard consistently listed in credits under "guests".)
 
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Team captains: [[Bradley Walsh]] and Frank Lampard
Team captains: [[Bradley Walsh]] and Frank Lampard
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Scorer: Seann Walsh
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Regular panellists: Jimmy Bullard (2015) and [[Romesh Ranganathan]]
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Regular guests: Jimmy Bullard, Romnesh Ranganathan
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Scorer: [[Seann Walsh]]
== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
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Hungry Bear Media for ITV, 11 April 2015 to present<!--6 June 2015 (8 episodes in 1 series-->
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Hungry Bear Media for ITV, 11 April 2015 to 4 April 2017 (20 episodes in 3 series)
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</div>
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Seann Walsh (comedian) sat in a tennis umpire's chair, to referee (or commentate on) the games. Jimmy Bullard (footballer) appeared in each show, and Romnesh Ranganathan (comedian) was on Frank Lampard's team each week.
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Seann Walsh (comedian) sat in a tennis umpire's chair, to referee (or commentate on) the games. Jimmy Bullard (footballer) appeared in each show, and Romesh Ranganathan (comedian) was on Frank Lampard's team each week.
Points are awarded, a winner is declared, and everyone continues as though nothing had happened. The show was very slight: something to watch between [[Britain's Got Talent]] and ''Match of the Day''. Reviewers suggested that it wasn't as funny as it might have been.
Points are awarded, a winner is declared, and everyone continues as though nothing had happened. The show was very slight: something to watch between [[Britain's Got Talent]] and ''Match of the Day''. Reviewers suggested that it wasn't as funny as it might have been.
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Made by Dan Baldwin's company Hungry Bear Media. Dan is married to Holly Willoughby.
Made by Dan Baldwin's company Hungry Bear Media. Dan is married to Holly Willoughby.
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The show's booking policy was representative of television at the time: of seven slots for sportspeople, precisely one was taken by a woman.
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The show's booking policy was representative of television at the time: only ten of the nineteen non-compilation episodes contained a woman other than Holly.
Three weeks prior to broadcast, sponsorship for this programme (60 seconds of accreditation per 45 minutes) was available for £316,000 (excluding Scotland). Now we know how much Flamingoland paid.
Three weeks prior to broadcast, sponsorship for this programme (60 seconds of accreditation per 45 minutes) was available for £316,000 (excluding Scotland). Now we know how much Flamingoland paid.
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[[Category:Comedy Panel Game]]
[[Category:Comedy Panel Game]]
[[Category:Sport]]
[[Category:Sport]]
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[[Category:Current]]
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[[Category:Hungry Bear Media Productions]]

Current revision as of 22:42, 6 June 2023

Contents

Host

Holly Willoughby

Co-hosts

Team captains: Bradley Walsh and Frank Lampard

Regular panellists: Jimmy Bullard (2015) and Romesh Ranganathan

Scorer: Seann Walsh

Broadcast

Hungry Bear Media for ITV, 11 April 2015 to 4 April 2017 (20 episodes in 3 series)

Synopsis

A sports panel show.

Holly, Bradley, and Frank are joined by guests from the worlds of sport, comedy, and ITV entertainment programmes. They are given daft things to do, such as drive a golf ball round the studio before getting it in a hole.

A recurring skit was "Gooooooooooooooooal", players pronounce the word for as long as they can without drawing breath.

Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Dermot O'Leary celebrate.

Seann Walsh (comedian) sat in a tennis umpire's chair, to referee (or commentate on) the games. Jimmy Bullard (footballer) appeared in each show, and Romesh Ranganathan (comedian) was on Frank Lampard's team each week.

Points are awarded, a winner is declared, and everyone continues as though nothing had happened. The show was very slight: something to watch between Britain's Got Talent and Match of the Day. Reviewers suggested that it wasn't as funny as it might have been.

Theme music

Paul Farrer

Trivia

Made by Dan Baldwin's company Hungry Bear Media. Dan is married to Holly Willoughby.

The show's booking policy was representative of television at the time: only ten of the nineteen non-compilation episodes contained a woman other than Holly.

Three weeks prior to broadcast, sponsorship for this programme (60 seconds of accreditation per 45 minutes) was available for £316,000 (excluding Scotland). Now we know how much Flamingoland paid.

External links

Wikipedia entry

Bother's Bar discussion

British Comedy Guide entry

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