Room 101. Frank Skinner. Copyright: Hat Trick Productions
Room 101

Room 101 (2012)

  • TV panel show / chat show
  • BBC One
  • 2012 - 2018
  • 56 episodes (7 series)

Frank Skinner hosts Room 101, where celebrities compete in a series of themed rounds to get their most hated item banished forever.

Press clippings Page 7

Clive Anderson's controversey putting deer in Room 101

Oh deer! Animal lovers will be baying for the blood of ex-chat show host Clive Anderson who is calling for a cull on deer.

The Sun, 15th January 2013

This is a show about gripes, so let me air mine. Room 101 is pleasant enough viewing but it never quite takes off. There are amusing bits, as Victoria Coren launches into a tirade about fancy tea or Terry Wogan rails against excess packaging ("Has anyone tried to break into a toothbrush lately?") but pretty much every episode has had a slightly desultory feel to it, with none of the comic sparks that fly in, for instance, Would I Lie to You?

Also, watching celebrities - even witty ones - grumbling about mildly annoying aspects of life (tipping in restaurants and windows that don't open are two tonight) doesn't put you in the Friday-night mood, does it? There, gripe over.

David Butcher, Radio Times, 11th January 2013

Miranda Hart popped up all over the TV at Christmas, pratfalling her way through her own Yuletide special and the start of her third series. Not to mention Call The Midwife. Yet she still has time to drop by and do verbal battle with fellow guests John Craven and Reggie Yates as they try to persuade host Frank Skinner to dump their personal pet hates into Room 101. Bluetooth gets Yates's goat, Craven loathes Kindles, while Hart would like to dispose of her own breasts, which have been known to clap at inappropriate moments. Such fun.

Carol Carter and Sharon Lougher, Metro, 4th January 2013

You can't invite Miranda Hart on this kind of panel show and not expect her to dominate. She is one of three guests hoping to convince host Frank Skinner that their pet hates should be consigned to the vault of loathing - it's the new format they launched last year, remember?

So we get the usual airing of comedy grudges, but Hart breaks new ground when she nominates not just smartphones and pineapple on pizza but, in the wildcard round, her own breasts, bemoaning all the times they have embarrassed her (once when she was rolling over in bed naked, they clapped). Skinner, whose role is normally to argue on behalf of the things the guests hate, looks floored.

Meanwhile, Reggie Yates reveals a hatred of drinking yogurt (!I don't want a cup of gone-off stuff!) as well as the ubiquitous hip-hop handshake. It's left to John Craven to play it straight. He gets the biggest cheer of the night from the studio audience when he nominates e-books.

David Butcher, Radio Times, 4th January 2013

It's not often you see Frank Skinner completely lost for words. So full marks to Miranda Hart for reducing him and her male fellow panellists to utter embarrassment with her unexpected nomination for a pet hate to consign to Room 101.

The re-imagined format is the same as it was last year when Frank Skinner stepped into Paul Merton's shoes. Three guests compete to have items in particular categories sent to pretend oblivion. Presenters John Craven and Reggie Yates also gamely do the business tonight. But it's a tougher gig than it looks.

The secret to being a really good Room 101 guest is being able to be amusingly irate about some quite trivial detail of modern life, without tipping over the edge into actual, genuine, scary anger.

The late Peter Cook calmly pointing to the mind-numbing dullness of the countryside - "has this film been speeded up?" - is still the gold standard by which all guests will be judged and Reggie Yates, bless him, is no Peter Cook. But then how het up is it possible to get about the existence of yogurt drinks?

Jane Simon, The Mirror, 4th January 2013

It's hardly a dream line-up to kick off the new series of the Frank Skinner-steered Room 101: Reggie Yates, Miranda Hart and John Craven. It's a kind of post-Cameron vision of Middle England - a well-spoken young black man, a well-spoken, sexually unthreatening woman and a well-spoken John Craven, the Hawkshead catalogue of broadcasting.

Predictably, none of this lot has anything much to get worked up about: it's difficult to imagine any of them getting worked up about much ever, but really it's the format that's at fault. Room 101 doesn't work as a panel show: it needs individuals to warm to their theme, then accidentally-on-purpose reveal a colossal, Kenneth Williams-style inner Looney Tunes life. It also leaves Skinner with little to do, though he does manage to get in a decent gag about the Nazis to remind people that there are whole dark volumes of his comedy that rarely get opened these days, especially on the BBC.

Chris Waywell, Time Out, 4th January 2013

Frank Skinner interview

Ahead of hosting a new series of Room 101, Frank Skinner says meditation and confession help him to slay his demons.

Bryony Gordon, The Telegraph, 2nd January 2013

Miranda Hart wants to put her breasts into Room 101

Miranda Hart says her breasts are so big that they are embarrassing.

Jen Blackburn, The Sun, 17th December 2012

Room 101 recommissioned for 13th series

Room 101, hosted by Frank Skinner, is to return to BBC One for a 13th series.

British Comedy Guide, 31st July 2012

Room 101 - review

It may not be cutting-edge comedy - more like comfort food, something nice and reassuring for a Friday night in. But the new format, with three guests, has certainly made it jollier and livelier, breathed new life into the old show.

Sam Wollaston, The Guardian, 10th March 2012

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