|
|
A Short History Of Everything Else - In The PressMain News Stories About 'A Short History Of Everything Else': The ubiquitous Griff Rhys Jones's comedy panel series reaches its final episode tonight. Captains Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker are joined by journalist Grace Dent and comedian Rob Rouse. As ever, their knowledge of recent history - and ready wit - are tested via a bewilderingly broad range of archive footage. Although its derivative format and focus on the relatively recent past makes it feel at times a little like Have I Got Some Really Very Stale News for You, when it hits its stride this Griff Rhys Jones-chaired comedy quiz can provoke an occasional belly laugh. Tonight, comedians Robin Ince and Andi Osho join the reliably acerbic team captains Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker, attempting to answer random questions on a wide range of tentatively historical topics. Comedian, TV presenter and 'renaissance man' Griff Rhys Jones on getting rich, his desire to be liked, and the 'love of a good woman'. Written by Griff Rhys Jones. Big Issue, 19th June 2012 Yes, it's yet another panel game, although given that this series is only four episodes long rather than the conventional six, you can't help but think Channel 4 don't have much faith in it. Review: A Short History of Everything Else There's currently a bit too much quiz in the mix and not quite enough banter, though Marcus Brigstocke warmed up nicely and the clip researcher had done a pretty decent job. Written by Tom Sutcliffe. The Independent, 14th June 2012 A Short History of Everything Else, Channel 4, review If A Short History... is really to catch fire, the questions and clips definitely need to contain more surprises. Written by James Walton. The Daily Telegraph, 14th June 2012 The last time I saw Griff Rhys Jones on television was during the Jubilee pageant, when he was meandering up the Thames in a motor launch. I thought he looked miserable then, but that was nothing compared to how fed up he appeared presenting the first episode of the comedy panel quiz show, A Short History of Everything Else (Channel 4). Griff's script opened with: "We're off down memory lane without a seat belt ... because we didn't have to wear them in those days" and went downhill thereafter. His rictus smile throughout was almost certainly pain, though it would be more charitable to put it down to professionalism. A Short History of Everything Else review It's not quite as good as the 'Big Three' of quiz 'banter' - Have I Got News For You, QI, and Never Mind the Buzzcocks, but it's still early days. Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker have yet to establish a comedic rapport as team captains, but this does take time. Written by George Wilkinson. On the Box, 13th June 2012 Griff Rhys Jones: When exactly was that, then? The past catches up with the present for Griff Rhys Jones as host of a panel show that grapples with recent history. Written by Griff Rhys Jones. The Daily Telegraph, 13th June 2012 The nation's apparently endless appetite for panel shows might just be tested to destruction by this retro news quiz helmed by Griff Rhys Jones. It's not appalling as such; at the very least, you'll crack a smile at a few of the clips. But the format's beyond tired and the premise - remembering the news of the recent past - seems like little more than an excuse to ransack the vaults for lazy comic effect. Didn't the smug funnymen of Britain have their fill of taking the piss out of Swampy back in 1996? Haven't we been encouraged to laugh at the drunken hi-jinks of the 2005 Ashes winners often enough by now? Anyway, joining Griff for this opening episode are Marcus Brigstocke, Charlie Baker, Kirsty Wark and Mickey Flanagan. They do their best, but silk purses stubbornly refuse to materialise. Phil Harrison, Time Out, 13th June 2012 A sort of Have I Got News for You from Yesterday, this comedy panel game hosted by Griff Rhys Jones must have sounded a winner when it was first pitched. The idea is for panellists to identify past events (such as the Newbury Bypass protest, the furore over Cabbage Patch dolls) from archive footage and then make witty remarks that will win them random points. It takes a while to warm up (as the teams get into the swing of it, the f-word rate rises), but even then it's more of a wry smile than a guffawing kind of show. Jane Rackham, Radio Times, 13th June 2012 Ubiquitous Griff Rhys Jones hosts this new comedy panel show, in which players are challenged to give "a short history of everything else". If that sounds slightly vague, then it's appropriate for the programme's rather nebulous concept. Each week, team captains Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker and their guests watch varied clips of archive footage, and try to prove that they remember more about the stories behind the films than the other team. But they're really competing for points which are nonsensically allocated according to the drollness of their observations. The guests for this week's opener are broadcaster Kirsty Wark and comedian Micky Flanagan. It's about time that someone devised a lighthearted panel show involving a bunch of British comedians - and, thankfully, Channel 4 have stepped in to fill the gaping void with this new series. Hosted by Griff Rhys Jones, with Marcus Brigstocke and Charlie Baker as regular captains, it is, as Jones admits, a "nostalgia fest", in which the teams are presented with clips of archive news footage from decades past, with all their attendant horrors of industrial strife and terrible haircuts, and attempt to show off their memories of current affairs past - both momentous and trivial. Griff Rhys Jones talks to TV Choice magazine. Written by Martina Fowler. TV Choice Magazine, 5th June 2012 |
