Rolling UK Comedy Thread - "Ricky Don't Lose Larry David's Number

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irony p much means having it both ways tbh -- its value and its weakness

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 12:25 (eight years ago)

it's funny because it's simultaneously true and false

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 12:25 (eight years ago)

if thou gaze long into a pub, the pub will also gaze into thee

gnaw on my meat oreo (bizarro gazzara), Friday, 5 May 2017 12:26 (eight years ago)

Everything I've heard about Al is that he's a lovely left-wing bloke

― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 5 May 2017 13:16

Definitely. He's always extremely nice whenever I see him as himself.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 5 May 2017 12:30 (eight years ago)

how well does "extremely nice in person" correlate w/politics? i think poorly

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 12:38 (eight years ago)

bingo

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 12:40 (eight years ago)

how well does "thinks of self as left wing, espouses lefty opinions" correlate with producing work which is left wing? not much better

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 12:41 (eight years ago)

aaaaaaand we're back to young Garry B

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 12:42 (eight years ago)

i agree with everyone

most relevant thing is that idk if hes known for anything other than his in character persona

and i dont know who, if anyone, is turning up ironically

and crucially its not funny on either level

s'rong, unstable (darraghmac), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:08 (eight years ago)

and crucially its not funny on either level

OTM. And that's what he gets paid for.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:15 (eight years ago)

ask Johnny Speight how many morals he corrected thru the medium of Alf Garnett

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:16 (eight years ago)

whatever promoter thought irish people would gaf about such average and quintessentially british shit needs their head examined

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:17 (eight years ago)

liverpool joke in there somewhere

Roberto Spiralli, Friday, 5 May 2017 13:21 (eight years ago)

not necessarily a good one

Roberto Spiralli, Friday, 5 May 2017 13:21 (eight years ago)

best exploration of this i've ever encountered is trevor griffiths' COMEDIANS (1975), a stage play which became a TV play in 1979

it was a (highly complex) dissection of the role and content of working class comedy as it existed in clubs and had been transferring to TV: of what was reactionary and what wasn't, of of what constituted escape from a class trap and what constituted expression of a class perspective (the setting is a group of would-bes in manchester auditioning for a talent scout who might get them onto TV, the narrative is who comrpomises and how)

it featured a proto-punk figure -- a stand-up who literally shaves his head to manifest as a skinhead, whose act is almost intolerably dark (and not, on the page, all that funny) -- who was acknowledged as an inspiration by several of the pioneer alt.comedians, and talked up as such by (for example) long-forgotten SWP skinhead/popstar/nme critic X.Moore, as a hero of non-compromise

which is odd in retrospect, bcz he was a fictional character (and played by omnipresent latterday liberal niceguy jonathan pryce)

anyway, i too basically read the play in an x.moore accent for years -- until it struck me one read-thru that griffiths' portrait of price was really *not* that sympathetic (GP is isolated -- eg split from his wife -- embittered and evidently antagonistically bite-the-hand-that-feeds, including his mentor, who he genuinely respects, and is the play's more obvious centre of sympathetic gravity: absolute absence of compromise is its own kind of escapism)

i'd be up to see a revival, actually -- sadly the topic has dated less than it looked as if it was going to in the early 80s (except that stand-up is now much more middle-class, largely as a consequence of alt.comedy)

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 13:34 (eight years ago)

(a couple of the characters in the play are manchester irish, one is manchester jewish, griffiths/price/pryce are all welsh, interestingly)

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 13:35 (eight years ago)

I don't remember the Price character as being all that sympathetic, but then X. Moore was from a public school background, so he was coming at it from a different angle.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:38 (eight years ago)

SWP too, I think.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:39 (eight years ago)

haha i love the tv version of that play! think it's on youtube.

xpost

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:39 (eight years ago)

(xp) Ooops yeah, mentioned already. Whatever happened to btw... X Moore/Chris Dean that is, not the SWP.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:42 (eight years ago)

thats a good post mark but that play sounds awful

s'rong, unstable (darraghmac), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:42 (eight years ago)

i reckon you'd like it.

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:43 (eight years ago)

It is very 70s.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:45 (eight years ago)

its got monologues from teachers about the etc i mean i dont think its me

also yermans final routine ah here

s'rong, unstable (darraghmac), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:48 (eight years ago)

it's good i think, i like trevor griffiths, he's a man to understand the dialectic blah blah

x.moore (real name chris dean) moved to paris in 1988 and was never heard of again, acc.all reports. This was news to me (except for the last sentence): "After the Redskins split Chris Dean put together a new band under the name of P-Mod. Not much is known about P-Mod but they did record some studio demos. After P-Mod Chris disappeared to France"

P-Mod! This has made me very happy (in an OMG no! kind of a way)

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 13:53 (eight years ago)

Like P-Funk I'm guessing.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:57 (eight years ago)

I saw the Redskins getting beaten up by stage-invading Nazi skinheads during the GLC's 'Jobs for a Change' festival on the South Bank in 1984 (also on the bill: The Smiths. Also beaten up: poor old Hank Wangford).

Bernie Lugg (Ward Fowler), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:58 (eight years ago)

I fancied starting a band called F-Punk for a while.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:58 (eight years ago)

also on the bill stage joining in with the Nazi skinheads: The Smiths

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:59 (eight years ago)

LOL

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 13:59 (eight years ago)

Like P-Funk except better bcz mod is better than funk

brb c/ping this^^^ to post on kerr's FB

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 14:03 (eight years ago)

keep it on there imo

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:10 (eight years ago)

Keep It On There - was that a Redskins song?

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:13 (eight years ago)

Keep On Keepin' On!

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:14 (eight years ago)

disappearing in Paris is a pretty extreme way of getting the SWP to stop sending you newspapers

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:15 (eight years ago)

Or "Town Called Malice", to give its proper title. (xp)

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:16 (eight years ago)

Redskins also had a song called "Kick Over The Statues", which a friend of mine misheard as "King Kong and the Statues".

Bernie Lugg (Ward Fowler), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:29 (eight years ago)

That's the only other one I know. Title that is, no idea what it goes like. I'd hazard a guess it might be a bit like the Jam though.

Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:35 (eight years ago)

I like that Redskins album quite a lot in all its shouty earnest 80s SWP-touting finery

The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Friday, 5 May 2017 14:41 (eight years ago)

The Ex (not to be confused with etc) described the LP "the historic compromise between the socialist international and london records"

lol it is 12 years since i last posted this info (except i got it wrong that time): The Redskins, Classic or Dud !

(why do i remember this nonsense: bcz it is a v funny* riff on the branding of the (quotes wikipedia for speed) "political alliance and accommodation between the Christian Democrats (DC) and the Italian Communist Party (PCI) in the 1970s")

*yes

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 14:52 (eight years ago)

adding, since this is the rolling uk comedy thread, that "neither washington nor moscow" is available on spotify

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 14:58 (eight years ago)

it is "angular"

mark s, Friday, 5 May 2017 14:59 (eight years ago)

I've seen Murray talk about the divide in his audience knows about him. He thinks people are overly presumptuous about what people take from his shows. I think he enjoys playing with people who don't understand the act and seeing the moment when some people realise.

I like some of his stuff but it is unsettling to see the way some of the audience responds. There's definitely a lot of people on youtube liking the Landlord's views.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 5 May 2017 17:21 (eight years ago)

Divide in what his audience knows about him.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 5 May 2017 17:23 (eight years ago)

Apparently he got some kippers angry at him after some interview and greeted the abuse he got for it on social media with a blanket spam "thanks for being a fan and joining this community! I'll keep you updated on my activities".

That being said once you do a doc series on your fave war movies you are leaning into it a little bit.

Daniel_Rf, Saturday, 6 May 2017 10:27 (eight years ago)

Detectorists appears to be on again from Monday, bbc2. Episode 1 of 6 and not marked as a repeat.

koogs, Saturday, 13 May 2017 21:05 (eight years ago)

Series 1 apparently.

kinder, Saturday, 13 May 2017 21:14 (eight years ago)

Yes, thanks.

Why could neither the guardian nor the freeview epg mention this?

koogs, Saturday, 13 May 2017 21:37 (eight years ago)

they know you've been buying a daily coffee instead of quality journalism and they want revenge

kinder, Saturday, 13 May 2017 21:54 (eight years ago)

(it was a print copy of the guardian fwiw)

Count Arthur Strong begins again on Friday too. He's very devisive though.

koogs, Sunday, 14 May 2017 05:25 (eight years ago)


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