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John Bishop's Britain. John Bishop. Copyright: Objective Productions / 3 Amigos Productions
John Bishop's Britain

John Bishop's Britain

  • TV stand-up
  • BBC One
  • 2010 - 2011
  • 13 episodes (2 series)

Stand-up John Bishop presents viewers with a mix of stand-up, sketches and real-life stories. Stars John Bishop.

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Episode menu

Series 1, Episode 1

Liverpudlian comedian John Bishop presents viewers with a mix of stand-up, sketches and real-life stories from members of the Great British public. Featuring James Corden discussing the topic of love and marriage.

Preview clips

Broadcast details

Date
Saturday 24th July 2010
Time
9:50pm
Channel
BBC One
Length
30 minutes

Cast & crew

Cast
John Bishop Host / Presenter
Writing team
John Bishop Writer
Mick Ferry Writer (Additional Material)
Justin Moorhouse Writer (Additional Material)
Christine Rose Writer (Additional Material)
Alun Cochrane Writer (Additional Material)
Jane Lawson Writer (Additional Material)
Production team
Peter Orton Director
Andrew Chaplin Director
Lucy Forbes Director
Tony Gregory Director
Jonno Richards (as Jono Richards) Producer
Karen Murdoch Producer
Derek McLean Executive Producer
Lee Hupfield Executive Producer
Karl Warner Executive Producer
Andrew Newman Executive Producer
Lisa Thomas Executive Producer
James Seddon-Brown Editor
Michael Pearce Editor
Nick Ames Editor
Nathan Lindley Editor
Dennis De Groot Production Designer
Shaun Burley Production Designer

Video

Chatting Up Women

John talks about how hard it is to chat up women when you have been married for a long time.

Featuring: John Bishop.

Press

It's not John Bishop's fault but every time I clap eyes on this Liverpool comedian - he's a regular on Sky1's A League Of Their Own - I keep thinking it's Bez from Happy Mondays with a new brain.

So it took me a while to focus on what was going on in John Bishop's Britain (BBC1). Were the characters giving their opinions on all things love and marriage real? Or were they comedy creations?

It was a nice kind of confusion and if fast-talking 'trainee DJ' Josh from Leyton is real, it'll be five minutes before he gets his own series. Bishop acts as a Scouse social commentator, bouncing his dry wit off the clips and splicing in some neatly bitter observations on his own life. His ex-wife, he told us, now lives in Spain. 'Not as far away as you think, to be honest.'

Keith Watson, Metro, 26th July 2010

People say the funniest things.

Well, that's the hope of Liverpool comedian John Bishop as he explores the kinds of topics that people talk about down the pub via a mix of interview snippets, stand-up and sketches. To judge by a taster DVD, which largely features members of the great British public discussing relationships, it might just work. (Joanne on partner Kevin's boy-racer years: "Him and the car didn't go together, you'd have been better off with a Mini Metro.") However, that presupposes you reckon Bishop is funny rather than irritating. He might just be both.

The Guardian, 24th July 2010

It would make an interesting study to count how many times the BBC has used the once-fashionable word "edgy" to describe a comedy programme in the 18 months since the Jonathan Ross/Russell Brand "Sachsgate" row touched ground. My bet is that you'd be able to count the instances on one hand. Instead, the Corporation has taken to producing industrial volumes of feel-good, night-out-with-your-mates-style comedy. This new bright and breezy entertainment show, hosted by Liverpudlian stand-up John Bishop, is a case in point. Bishop takes on a different theme in each of the series's six episodes - family, growing up, holidays, etc - and gives it a stand-up treatment, interspersed with contributions from celebrity guests, cheaply produced sketches and interviews with the general public. Puzzlingly, no specific information about tonight's first episode was available at the time of going to press, but I was able to watch a taster DVD for the series in which Bishop discussed the pros and cons of love and marriage in front of a studio audience. It was funny, in an easy, unchallenging sort of a way - and about as edgy as a Victoria sponge.

Pete Naughton, The Telegraph, 24th July 2010

There's a golden rule of comedy that says the less contrived the humour, the funnier it will turn out to be. Admittedly, this is a golden rule that I made up myself, shortly before I began typing the previous sentence, but that doesn't make it any less true.

Host John Bishop, Liverpool's latest big stand-up star, may be the one whose routines bind this new series together, but many of the laughs come from the clips inbetween, where members of the public simply relate their real-life experiences.

Each of the shows (also featuring sketches and celebrity guests) will tackle a different theme, such as marriage, work or holidays. "If you walk into a pub," says John, "these are the topics people talk about. It's the stuff that makes us who we are."

Mike Ward, Daily Star, 24th July 2010

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