Jolyon Rubinstein
Jolyon Rubinstein

Jolyon Rubinstein

  • Actor, writer, producer and presenter

Press clippings Page 3

From a satirical point of view, there are two ways of looking at the EU referendum aftermath. The first is that it's an inexhaustible goldmine. The second is that its absurdities render mockery redundant. Still, even if it's a pointless job, someone might as well do it. Enter Heydon Prowse and Jolyon Rubinstein, the prank-happy pair behind The Revolution Will Be Televised. Remainers and Leavers alike should expect a righteous kicking.

Phil Harrison, The Guardian, 19th July 2016

BBC Two announces Brexageddon?!

The team behind political stunt show The Revolution Will Be Televised have filmed Brexageddon?!, a new BBC Two special to tie in with Brexit.

British Comedy Guide, 7th July 2016

New topical comedy The Week That Wasn't to be piloted

Jolyon Rubinstein and Heydon Prowse will host the pilot episode of The Week That Wasn't, a new topical TV comedy format involving edited clips.

British Comedy Guide, 16th March 2015

Heydon Prowse & Jolyon Rubinstein interview

'We do The Revolution Will Be Televised because we're super-intense ourselves; we're a bit mad'

Nick Duerden, The Independent, 1st March 2015

The last time we met Conservative MP James Twottington-Burbage and Lib Dem Barnaby Plankton, they were surreptitiously fixing "Kick Me" signs to Ed Miliband's back and advising council estate residents to remortgage their children. In this spin-off from BBC Threes The Revolution Will Be Televised, Jolyon Rubinstein and Heydon Prowse return with more hidden camera pranks. Will clueless Labour MP Ewan Jeffries or prospective Ukip candidate Dennis Pound fare better with the public?

Jonathan Wright, The Guardian, 18th February 2015

Interview: Jolyon Rubinstein and Heydon Prowse

Satirical pranksters Jolyon Rubinstein and Heydon Prowse take the coalition government to task tonight - but they're optimistic about the future of politics and BBC Three.

Claire Webb, Radio Times, 18th February 2015

Written and presented by the comic Jolyon Rubinstein, best known for pranking politicians on The Revolution Will Be Televised, An Idiot's Guide to Politics started with the assertion and concomitant question "the Facebook generation is tuning out of politics. Why?" To which the obvious answer is they're all on Facebook.

This was not so much a guide to current politics as an impressively thorough analysis of its failings. Rubinstein spoke to Zac Goldsmith, Vince Cable and Len McCluskey and even one or two authentic "young people" before concluding that the reason no one trusts politicians is because politicians tell lies.

It would be easy to dismiss Rubinstein's efforts as just more anti-establishment catcalling, and I thought that the relentless pranking - taking a lie detector to Ukip's head office; taking a cartoon statue of Ed Miliband to Unite's head office - sometimes undermined his case. But this was much more than just mockery: where Michael Cockerell's documentary Inside the Commons has been trying to show us what parliament actually is, Rubinstein was looking for things about politics we might actually change. One was demanding that MPs tell the truth. Play fair and be honest - even the four-year-olds in the playground seemed able to understand that.

Benji Wilson, The Telegraph, 14th February 2015

Apparently, "young people" are completely disengaged from politics; comedian Jolyon Rubinstein attempts to find out if that's true (spoiler: it's not) in this quietly furious exposé with added pranking. He chats with everyone from Zac Goldsmith to the Newham housing campaigners, and initiates his own proper(ish) debate after discovering that it's not actually illegal for politicians to lie in parliament. If sub-Mark Thomas stunts sit slightly uneasily with the deadly serious stuff, its heart is in the right place. Recommended.

Ali Catterall, The Guardian, 11th February 2015

Radio Times review

Political prankster Jolyon Rubinstein from The Revolution Will Be Televised tries making a serious documentary. He ask why young people are not voting -- apathy, disenchantment, Russell Brand...? But what can be done to renew interest in the democratic process? While he does talk to politicos Vince Cable, Len McCluskey of Unite and, er, Peter Stringfellow, he can't resist a stunt and there are some corkers.

The game of cat and mouse with Nigel Farage is hilarious. But he wants to make a serious point: a distrust of politicians is actually feeding young people's marginalisation. His solution? Start a campaign to make lying to Parliament a criminal offence.

Hannah Shaddock, Radio Times, 11th February 2015

Heydon Prowse and Jolyon Rubinstein's targets might be sitting ducks (rightwing zealots and perplexed members of the public, mainly), but that doesn't stop their politics-themed pranks often being outright hilarious. In this third series, the pair's arsenal is as varied as ever, with spoof interviews, mock-documentaries and roadside stunts all deployed in the name of satire.

The Guardian, 8th November 2014

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