Genius With Dave Gorman. Dave Gorman. Copyright: BBC
Genius With Dave Gorman

Genius With Dave Gorman

  • TV panel show
  • BBC Two
  • 2009 - 2010
  • 13 episodes (2 series)

A TV version of Dave Gorman's radio series, in which he and celebrity guests decide which of the public's ideas are "Genius". Stars Dave Gorman.

Press clippings Page 4

London Paper Review

It's Dragons' Den for dimwits. Of course, that's not the point. It's meant to be fun. But, well, you kind of want there to be some logic to the crazy people's ideas.

Stuart McGurk, The London Paper, 20th March 2009

Dave Gorman asks members of the public to write in with "inspired" ideas, which he and a celebrity guest examine in depth. Some of the best ideas don't even make it onto the shortlist. Cold-air ballooning ("all the fun of hot-air ballooning for people who are afraid of heights") was rejected out of hand, as was the suggestion that everything should be made out of leaves. But three equally crazed ideas make it onto the programme, and in each case the people who dreamt them up are subjected to a rigorous cross-examination. One of the ideas is for a bus service that operates on democratic principles, going where the majority of passengers tell it to go. Or there's the taxi driver who takes his passengers' shoes as surety. It's a harmless enough show and the aspiring geniuses are an entertaining lot, but it is little more than a pub game.

David Chater, The Times, 20th March 2009

Not sure if this new show - despite the title - is genius. It's entertaining enough but it feels a bit wrong. Every week a celeb guest listens as loonies present a bizarre idea and then they judge whether it is genius or not. Host Dave Gorman is good though and this week's guest, Catherine Tate, gamely takes part. It's like a very silly Dragons' Den.

Anila Baig, The Sun, 20th March 2009

If you aren't familiar with the Radio 4 series, the best way of describing this format is Dragons' Den meets Room 101.

Members of the public pitch their ideas for useful inventions or innovations to the host Dave Gorman and a celebrity guest - tonight it's Catherine Tate - who then debate with increasing hilarity whether their idea is truly worthy of the label genius.

To give you some idea, the sort of brainwaves that got the thumbs-up on the radio in the past ranged from the eminently practical - selling socks in threes, rather than in pairs - to the surreal: running the House of Commons to the same rules as the panel show Just A Minute.

The advantage of TV, of course, is that we can see what prototypes of these ideas might look like and get some idea of how well - or not - they would work.

For instance, a bus whose journey gets decided by a democratic vote by the passengers sounds ludicrous enough on paper but, in practice, it's completely round the bend.

Jane Simon, The Mirror, 20th March 2009

Comedian Dave Gorman hosts this quirky new series, which was first 'seen' on Radio 4. This is how it works - viewers submit bonkers ideas in the hope of being declared geniuses, and tonight, special guest Catherine Tate helps Dave consider - and sometimes road test - some of the revolutionary notions. They include a fully democratic bus with passenger steering wheels and cold-air balloons for those who hate heights. Brilliant stuff.

What's On TV, 20th March 2009

BBC2 attempts to fill the void left by the plundering of QI for BBC1 by bringing Radio 4's sort of comedy panel show, sort of not comedy panel show, to television. The ever likeable Dave Gorman invites members of the studio audience to pitch ideas for fantasy inventions, which a special guest each week will decide if it's 'genius' or not. It's all very lovely, but will it be a hardy enough format for the glare of television?

Mark Wright, The Stage, 20th March 2009

Dave Gorman: 'Being a twin is fun'

Dave Gorman, 38, moved from stand-up to TV with the show Are You Dave Gorman? in which he had to find people with the same name. His Radio 4 show, Genius, where suggestions for a better world are judged by Dave and a celebrity guest, transfers to BBC2 tomorrow night.

Metro, 19th March 2009

Dave Gorman on genius and beards

It was the great philosopher Noel Gallagher who once declared: "I'm equal-part genius, equal-part buffoon." He had a point. For every great idea that emerges from the abyss of madness, there are a thousand "genius ideas" born out of buffoonish banter down the pub.

Just ask Dave Gorman - comedian, ideas man, regaler of eccentric global challenges and one of that elite group of small-screen faces who sport the full-beard look. His whimsical Radio 4 show Genius - in which he and a celebrity guest mull over the absurd inventions of the public - makes the transfer to BBC Two this week, and he has spent weeks sifting through speculative brilliant ideas sent in by hopeful participants.

James Jackson, The Times, 14th March 2009

Dave Gorman: What makes a genius?

Genius. It's a much abused word these days - describe everyone and everything from Charles Darwin to round tea bags. But what exactly is it? And how easy is it to be one these days anyway? The comedian and film-maker Dave Gorman looks at two shining examples of genius to see if he could have thought of them first (if only it hadn't been for those pesky Babylonians)

Dave Gorman, The Independent, 14th March 2009

On Location: Why bonkers ideas are pure TV genius

Producer Simon Nicholls on transferring a successful radio comedy series to television.

Simon Nicholls, Broadcast, 11th March 2009

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