Press clippings Page 7

Let's make feminism the biggest joke in town

Two weeks ago Caitlin Moran ordered me to stand on my chair and shout 'I AM A FEMINIST!' Gleefully, I climbed up alongside the rest of the 2000-strong audience. Grabbing each other for balance, we precariously boarded our theatre seats, everyone loving this chance to misbehave. Why? Because it was funny. And if there's one thing I'm bored of hearing when I ask to be treated equally to a man, it is 'you take yourself too seriously'.

Rachel Stroud, The Huffington Post, 31st July 2014

Raised By Wolves given a full series by Channel 4

Raised By Wolves, a sitcom by Caitlin Moran and her sister, which focuses on their upbringing in Wolverhampton, has been given a full series by Channel 4.

British Comedy Guide, 4th February 2014

Caitlin Moran, journalist and best-selling author of How To Be A Woman, joins forces with her sister Caz for this raucous comedy pilot based on their unconventional childhood in Wolverhampton. The mighty Rebekah Staton is the mum of the piece, waywardly presiding over a house raging with teenage hormones, pop-culture references and a clutch of kids glorying in names such as Germaine, Aretha and Yoko. No wonder the neighbours look at them a bit funny...

Carol Carter and Larushka Ivan-Zadeh, Metro, 23rd December 2013

Caitlin Moran interview

The Raised by Wolves writer discusses her childhood in Wolverhampton and why she decided to start writing for television.

Claire Webb, Radio Times, 23rd December 2013

Caitlin Moran wrote Raised by Wolves with her sister Caz, reimagining their teenage selves as contemporary kids on a Wolverhampton council estate.

Germaine Garry (Helen Monks) and sister Aretha (Alexa Davies) are the eldest of six, home educated and in disagreement about gardening, the correct way to eat Battenberg and the sexual magnetism of local lout Lee Rind. Their lunch looks like a bad food table from You Are What You Eat and their beloved Grampy likes "mellow jazz smokes" and climbing through windows. It sounds miserable, but the effect is pretty joyful.

The parallels with Paul Abbott's Shameless are obvious and Raised by Wolves has the same warmth as early drama from the Chatsworth estate, but with the sharp cultural cleverness (and excellent music) you'd expect from Moran.

Emma Sturgess, Radio Times, 23rd December 2013

Caitlin Moran's media profile continues to rise; it's just as well she's such a likeable presence. This sitcom pilot is a reimagining of her Wolverhampton childhood, co-written with her sister Caroline. In Raised by Wolves, Caitlin and Caroline are Germaine and Aretha. Germaine moons over local lout Lee Rind ('He's sensitive. I saw him shoplift an Adele CD.') while Aretha rolls her eyes and dreams of escape.

The pair are engaged in a long-running, low-key sororicidal war but, even when they're attacking each other with lawnmowers or locking each other in spider-infested sheds, the love is palpable.

There are obvious debts to Shameless, particularly in the shape of the stoner grandad. But it's gleefully profane and full of brittle energy - we'd welcome a series.

Phil Harrison, Time Out, 23rd December 2013

Playing Moran: how Caitlin's alter-ego came to life

Raised by Wolves, Caitlin Moran's semi-autobiographical pilot, is due to air this Christmas; so how did undergraduate, Helen Monks, get to play her idol?

Fiona Parker, The Telegraph, 20th December 2013

Sally Philips & South Park writer to make sitcom pilot

Sally Phillips has high hopes for Distinguished Ladies, which revolves around a revealing picture of the Duchess of Cambridge and features a cameo from Caitlin Moran.

Ben Dowell, Radio Times, 9th September 2013

Caitlin Moran pilot Raised By Wolves - Details revealed

Additional details have been revealed about Raised By Wolves, the Channel 4 sitcom pilot co-written by Times columnist Caitlin Moran.

British Comedy Guide, 29th May 2013

Caitlin Moran co-writing Raised By Wolves sitcom

Times columnist Caitlin Moran has penned Raised By Wolves with her sister, a sitcom pilot about a family home-educating six children.

British Comedy Guide, 2nd May 2013

Share this page