tvmince


FOUR THINGS BIG BROTHER TAUGHT ME THIS WEEK
June 26, 2008, 1:30 pm
Filed under: Big Brother, Channel 4 | Tags: ,
  1. Mario and Lisa talk to each other like they’re in those ‘Creature Comforts’ ads.
  2. Mikey could well be Scotland’s worst stand-up.
  3. It’s possible for mascara to be “natural”.
  4. Ironically, now that she’s left the house, the only thing I can remember Alex telling me is to remember she told me.


NOT TRYING TO BE FUNNY, BUT…
June 19, 2008, 1:48 pm
Filed under: Big Brother, Channel 4 | Tags: , , , ,

So the least popular “Moose-lim” since Bin Laden has been kicked out of the BB house, just days before the public were about to do the same job anyway. That means good news for not only her would-be eviction night opponent Sly LeBlanc, but also for his “massive fanbase”, who can now keep their phones on the hook until next week, when he’ll inevitably be up again.

But is Alex’s premature ejection really a good or a bad thing? With her triple standards, faux-gangsta catchphrases and impressive ability to reduce grown men twice her size to tears, she was undoubtedly making for great TV. And the other thing she was making, quite nicely, was a rod for her own back. Despite seemingly believing that by chastising the sin of fancy-dress she would somehow win the voting support of “Moose-lims” everywhere, what she seemed to forget is that, regardless of religion, nobody likes a moaner. Except, perhaps, Eminem fans, and there surely can’t be too many of them still around.

Good riddance, Alex – and remember we told you.



SUPER MARIO & THE DISAPPOINTING SPIN-OFFS

Okay, I’ll admit it – this year’s Big Brother has won me over. I can’t pinpoint the exact moment at which it happened, but it was somewhere between Sylvester LeBlanc bringing up his own mythical fan club and Mikey sneezing in the crisps. Rex’s combover and Darnell’s continued insistence on looking exactly like Ted Danson haven’t done any harm either.

Sadly though, the rest of this year’s BB package still has a long way to go to get me onside. Big Brother’s Big Mouth has become a rambling, self-important and completely humourless mess, fronted by a procession of witless randoms dragged in off the street (this week it’s presented by ‘Queens of Noize’ – I rest my case). Last night’s only saving grace was Dom Joly, wasted as a studio guest when he’d have been a far better choice as outright presenter (particularly as he took the time to jump on my Darnell-is-Danson bandwagon). Whether you loved or hated Russell Brand, there’s no denying that the format was ideal for him, and it’s deteriorated beyond all recognition since his departure.

Big Brother’s Little Brother, too, has plummeted downhill at an incredible rate of knots. Sure, Dermot O’Leary had clearly lost interest over the course of the last couple of years, and he’d long since resorted to simply going through the motions – but even that was preferable to George Lamb and Wotsherface.

Even Davina no longer seems to be making as much of an effort – she hasn’t even bothered to get preggers this year. Shame on you Davina, and shame on your skewed priorities. 



THE CURSE OF THIS MORNING

Too many terrible things have happened to the great and the good of This Morning for it to be but a coincidence:

  • John “Lezzers” Leslie forced into exile and accompanying shaggy beard after being accused of rape by pretty much everyone.
  • Fern Britton outed for wearing a fat band (that’s a fat band as in the gastric kind, rather than, say, the reformed Boyzone line-up).
  • Raj Persaud, who always seemed like such a nice man, exposed as a dirty rotten plagiarist.
  • Schofield’s Quest.
It’s cursed, I tells you – just like The Exorcist, the original Superman movie and Bovril (remind me to tell you all about Bovril some time).


BACK TO MORE OF THE SAME

So Channel 4 have unleashed yet another American sit-com upon us, in the shape of newsroom-based Back to You. With Frasier’s Kelsey Grammer and Everybody Loves Raymond’s Patricia Heaton teaming up to form something of a US comedy dream team, this one should really have laugh-a-minute written all over it. Sadly, though, even a lab-created hybrid of Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Cosby and the entire cast of Cheers wouldn’t be able to prevent this labouring show from feeling incredibly dated.

In these days of The Office: An American Workplace and Curb Your Enthusiasm, it’s hard to believe that these fake-laughter-filled, predictably punchlined, uber-generic shit-coms are still coming out of the States. Once upon a time Back to You might have worked, but in the context of today’s comedy scene this show’s entire format is the equivalent of a dodo operating a Betamax.

What’s far more depressing than this show’s very existence, though, is that the main channels here in the UK are happier to invest money and schedule time into played-out guff like this and Big Bang Theory, than they are to show the afore-mentioned Office and Curb. Why is The Office buried away on ITV 37 and Curb doomed to an eternity on More4, while this tripe is somehow deemed worthy of the wider audience?

It’s BBC’s scandalous treatment of Seinfeld and The Larry Sanders Show all over again.



BIG BROTHER‘S LITTLE DRINKING GAME: ALEX EDITION

Not trying to be funny.Following on from the Big Brother drinking game, here’s an Alex-specific version that you can all play along with at home. All you need to do is take a swig of your chosen tipple every time this year’s favourite anger management candidate utters any of the following phrases:

  • “I’m not trying to be funny, but…”
  • “Do you know what I mean?”
  • “Remember I told you.”
  • “My fings.”
  • “Deal with it.”

Alternatively, if you’re more likely to be spending your evenings watching the far more civilised Euro 2008, you can still play along. All you need to do is take a sizable gulp every time any of the commentators or pundits mention any of the following:

  • The home nations’ failure to qualify.
  • Ronaldo.
  • The Alps.
  • The Premier League.
  • Dutch “total football”.
  • Scolari’s going to Chelsea, don’tcha know.

By the way, what is the point of the current trend of cutting from the presenter and pundits in the studio, to a different presenter standing on the touchline with a different pundit? Does the touchline pundit know something that the others don’t? And, if so, why can’t they just let him sit in the studio with the rest of them? Of course, it’s understandable in situations where the touchline pundit is Gordon Strachan, because clearly nobody can bear to be in a room with him for any significant period of time. But what of the others? Answers, as usual please, on the back of one of Russell Grant’s Postcards.



BIG BROTHER? BABY BROTHER, MORE LIKE

I’m going to sound like a wrinkly old curmudgeon by asking this, but I’m going to ask it anyway: why is Big Brother always full of young people? Every year it seems to be exactly the same 18-30 crowd, and if you take Sylvester LeBlanc and Lisa out of this year’s mob then it’s the same thing again. The show’s producers seem to make a genuine effort to find a cross-section of races, sexualities, classes and backgrounds, so why not ages?

Sure, there’s been the occasional instance of an oldie slipping through the net. Sandy, the kilt-wearing bin-pisser, is the most obvious example to spring to mind. But even he wasn’t a proper oldster. I don’t want the sort of oldie who thinks they’re still “young at heart”, and wears combat pants and daft fashionable glasses to prove it. Nah, what I want to see in the BB house is some genuine, wrinkly old gimmers, clad in brown from head to toe and ready to moan, disapprove and walk incredibly slowly around the kitchen at every given opportunity.

Throwing a couple of short-tempered coffin-dodgers into the mix would add a completely new dimension to the show, and would surely also create plenty of conflict (which is, let’s face it, what we’re all looking for). To me, the wider range of ages normally found in Celebrity Big Brother has a lot to do with why that version often works so much better. John McCririck and Jackie Stallone, to name but two, were involved in the sort of vintage BB moments that the current lot can, so far, only dream of.

Of course, getting the wrinklies to take part could turn out to be the difficult bit of my plan – which is why I’m saying it’s high time Big Brother participation was compulsory. The Government should stop wasting their time yabbering on about education and housing, and pass a worthwhile law for a change: one that says if the BB producers want you to go into the house, then you have to go in, and that’s that. Let’s get rid of the audition process, because all it essentially does is attract spiky-haired cretins who start every sentence with “do you know what”. Instead, the producers should be allowed to go out onto the streets with a big net, and catch themselves some genuinely interesting people. And first into the net is you, Grandad.



ENGLAND EXPECTS…
June 7, 2008, 11:10 pm
Filed under: BBC, Euro 2008, ITV, Match of the Day: Euro 2008 | Tags: , ,

…both BBC and ITV to fail miserably in any attempt to get through today’s opening couple of Euro 2008 matches without repeatedly mentioning England. And holy potatoes, did they both live up to those expectations. Of course, none of the other home nations have qualified for the tourney either, but sometimes it feels almost as if, even after all these years, Motty and co remain blissfuly unaware that their broadcasts reach as far as Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Still, that aside, you’ve got to take your hat off to the standard of coverage both channels have kicked off with. Even allowing for the fact that ITV’s Andy Townsend could very easily be replaced with Brandon Block and nobody would notice, it’s an impressive line-up of live action, highlights, previews and talky bits that the football-loving population of England have got to look forward to. And hey – the rest of the UK can join in too, if they like.



BIG BROTHER: FIRST IMPRESSIONS
June 5, 2008, 10:29 pm
Filed under: Big Brother, Channel 4 | Tags: ,
  • Mario and Lisa: Mario’s been on TV before. I can’t remember what programme it was, but what I do remember is that it was purely for the reason that he simultaneously manages to look a bit like both Matt LeBlanc and Sylvester Stallone following an horrific industrial accident. Lisa, meanwhile, looks like the sort of woman you might see dripping from either LeBlanc or Stallone’s arm following said accident.
  • Luke: a bizarre cross between a Tory MP and a Butlin’s Red Coat. This year’s Eugene. Could be a decent bet to make it to the end.
  • Stephanie: wants to be in Nuts magazine, and is exactly the same as all previous housemates who have wanted to be in Nuts magazine. Somewhere there’s a factory churning these girls out, I’m sure of it.
  • Rachel: strangely reminiscent of one of those wind-up sets of chattering teeth. Much like said teeth, there’s a good chance she won’t last long.
  • Dale: yawn.
  • Sylvia: double yawn.
  • Dennis: looks strangely like Jade Goody.
  • Michael: says he doesn’t want to “play the blind card”, a statement sensitively accompanied by the words “blind” and “card” flashing up on the screen in large letters beside him. Nice.
  • Alexandra: says she’s “special”. You won’t get many people disagreeing with that one.
  • Rex: haven’t we already seen this bloke? It’s just Dale in a ginger wig, surely.
  • Mohamed: helpfully points out that not all Mohameds are terrorists. Jeez, everyone knows that. At least one of them is a teddy bear.
  • Rebecca: yeah but no but yeah but no.
  • Darnell: looks strangely like Ted Danson.
  • Jennifer: Jim Davidson called – he wants his opinions back.
  • Kathreya: looks strangely like Nancy Lam.