How Not To Live Your Life. Don Danbury (Dan Clark). Copyright: Brown Eyed Boy
How Not To Live Your Life

How Not To Live Your Life

  • TV sitcom
  • BBC Three
  • 2007 - 2011
  • 21 episodes (3 series)

Sitcom about an arrogant single twenty-something man who is struggling to navigate his way through life. He is not helped by his bad instincts. Stars Dan Clark, David Armand, Sinead Moynihan, Finlay Robertson, Leila Hoffman and more.

Press clippings Page 4

Pity poor Sinead Moynihan. Okay, don't pity her too much, because she's drop dead gorgeous and clearly in demand as an actor. But it must have been galling to get the second lead in sitcom How Not to Live Your Life, only to discover that the full extent of your contribution would be to look pretty and provide a sensible foil to the show's writer/star Dan Clark. Would it have killed Clark to throw the show's only female character the occasional funny line to deliver?

This grump notwithstanding, I rather like How Not to Live Your Life. Clark stars as the self-centred, cheerfully odious Don, who inherits his grandmother's house, the debts that come with it and her live-in carer. By a twist of sitcom fate, his advert for a lodger is answered by his childhood sweetheart Abby (Moynihan), who unfortunately comes with boyfriend in tow.

Episode one was something of a slow starter, but the show hit its stride by episode two which saw child-hating Dan try and impress schoolteacher Abby by accompanying her and her class on a camping trip.

Clark's unorthodox delivery, combined with Dan's almost wilful unloveability, takes some getting used to, but this is consistently amusing, frequently hilarious and totally addictive.

Harry Venning, The Stage, 22nd August 2008

Written by and starring Dan Clark as Don, this was a real hit and miss effort - with laugh out loud lines interspersed with behaviour by Don that left you wishing someone would give him a bloody good hammering. We'll probably give it a second chance.

The Custard TV, 15th August 2008

Don Danbury drinks and cusses his way through the second episode of this buffoonery celebratus new sitcom. For those new to the drill, the show features a refreshingly unique format whereby scenes cut to a list of alternative life lessons, courtesy of Don's imagination. Waddling along with decent jokes in tow, Danbury offers entertainment and a character worthy of our hate-to-love affection. There's definitely room to grow, so let's see where he takes it next.

Time Out, 14th August 2008

August is when TV companies bury the shows they have no faith in. Which is the only possible explanation for BBC3 to try to slip the excruciating How Not To Live Your Life past us. It's a showcase for the comedy talents of writer/star Dan Clark. Which would be fine if he had any.

To distract myself from this excuse for a sitcom in which Cark, who looks 30, behaves like a charm-free hormonally rampant teenager, I tried to work out who he looked like. Finally, I cracked it - Jason Merrells from Cutting It. You're really in trouble when even your lookalike isn't interesting.

Metro, 13th August 2008

It's a dead cert that How Not to Live Your Life will attract no prizes at all. A great deal of humour can be squeezed from observing the lives of stupid men. But Don Danbury is no David Brent and this new sitcom offers nothing except sound evidence that the BBC has now got more airtime than it can fill. This show is an insult to the intelligence of stupid men everywhere.

The Independent, The Independent, 13th August 2008

Donald, the star of this new sitcom, is not a well-liked chap. Not even by his grandma, who has left him an indebted house in her will as proof. The ensuing farce isn't exactly laugh-a-minute, but comes with handy lists such as: Things You Shouldn't Do When Fired.

Claire Webb, Radio Times, 12th August 2008

BBC3 hasn't exactly got a great pedigree when it comes to home-grown comedy but this new sitcom, written by up-and-coming star Dan Clark, is worth a look. Following the hapless 20-something who is left a house in his grandmonther's will, it blends farce, gags and nice characterisation with some sublimely silly fantasy sequences.

Metro, 12th August 2008

New sketch comedy series written by and starring Dan Clark. Luck never seems to smile on Don although fantasy sequences show that in his mind life would be very different. In the opener he finds he's been left a house by his recently deceased grandmother but it comes with a mountain of back payments. When he decides to get a lodger, a girl he was in love with as a teenager replies. Rarely more than mildly amusing.

Simon Horsford, The Telegraph, 12th August 2008

After a pilot last year, BBC Three has commissioned a series of the sitcom created by Dan Clark, who plays Don Danbury, a morally vacant cretin who inherits his Nana's house on the same day he is fired from his job.

The USP for this series are the narrative pauses in which Don offers instructions on what not to do in the given situation. This device creates some absurd situations that generate the odd laugh, but the whole thing is really a bit of a rip-off of Peep Show, but not as good. The character of Don looks like a drug-free Super Hans, with a personality modelled on Jeremy. But where Peep Show succeeded by making you love flawed characters doing horrible things, Don Danbury is just a git.

Joe Clay, The Times, 12th August 2008

Dan Clark - who writes and stars in this new sitcom - isn't one of those comedians you instantly warm to. He comes across as a bit of a prat to be honest.

And if he offered to buy you a drink down the pub you'd probably mumble some excuse about having to rush home because you've left the iron on.

Even so, after a weak opening, things look up a bit after his equally charmless character Donald loses his job, inherits his nan's big house and advertises for a sexy lodger.

Awash with fantasy sequences - a favourite gimmick of comedy writers - the ones here come in handy list-form offering tips on such topics as Things Not To Do When You're Fired and Things Not To Say After A One-Night Stand.

The Mirror, 12th August 2008

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