muckefuck: (Default)
muckefuck ([personal profile] muckefuck) wrote2004-04-02 09:25 am
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BOLLOCKS!

Fair warning! I am now officially sick of hearing how the Brits in general and BBC in particular have much better humour than the Americans. I swear to Rod, the next time I hear someone say this, I will put them in restraints, clamp their eyelids open, and subject them to repeat viewings of Keeping Up Appearances, Father Ted, and Gimme Gimme Gimme until they beg for death.

Like the rest of you overeducated privileged nerds, I grew up watching lots of British TV on PBS. Naturally, when I entred my snotty snobbish Europhile teens (which happened when I was about 8), I began voicing a preference for sophistimicated British comedy and drama over lowbrow domestic product. Who knows how long this deluded mindset would've lingered if I hadn't actually gone to Europe and watched UK TV "in the raw"? Know what? They have the same bad shows we do! And this is despite the fact that for the longest time they had the same Big Brotherish media policy as other Europeans, meaning like three channels and a government monopoly.

Don't get me wrong. I love Blackadder. I love Red Dwarf. I think Absolutely Fabulous is a hoot. But Jennifer Saunders is no Joe Keenan and her best work never had me in stitches like the installments of Frasier with Keenan at the helm. Yes, they weren't all gems, but it's hard to keep something consistently hilarious for over 250+ episodes. How many British comedy series come close to matching that? You can watch the entire run of Fawlty Towers in a day; The Young Ones will take you a long weekend. The Simpsons has been running since I was an undergraduate; 270+ episodes and it's still howlingly funny at times.

I've seen The Office. Meh. I mean, I understand what they're doing and it's clever, but I'm not exactly ROTFL at any point during a show. I've watched Yes, Minister! Double meh. I've seen many episodes of both the American remake of Whose Line Is It Anyway? and the British original. Someone tried to tell me the other day how much more "sophisticated" the humour is in the latter, but, apart from the host (Clive Anderson is more understated and droll than Drew Carey), I just don't see it. At the end of the day, it's still all a lot of funny voices and sexual innuendo.

Ah! Good to get this off my chest. Now maybe I can watch BBCAmerica again tonight without wanting to go ballistic everytime I see one of those obnoxious new "I'm a BBC American" commercials in which fatuous young people on the street assure me what naturally funny people the Brits are.

Re: On a tangent...

[identity profile] muckefuck.livejournal.com 2004-04-02 01:21 pm (UTC)(link)
You'll have to TiVo it for me sometime. I never managed to sit through an entire episode of Friends. Then again, I never liked Seinfeld either, so clearly I wouldn't know good comedy if it bit me on the bum.

Re: On a tangent...

[identity profile] lhn.livejournal.com 2004-04-02 01:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I liked "Seinfeld" but didn't love it-- the general unlikeability of the characters (which was, of course, the point, not an accident) detracted from it for me. I can't watch "Curb Your Enthusiasm", which appears to be the same thing turned up to 11.

Then again, I merely like "Frasier" too. (Or liked, really. Around the time that Niles and Daphne got together, the show became almost unwatchable to me. Talk about negative chemistry: Jane Leeves looks positively uncomfortable in every scene she plays with David Hyde-Pierce. It doesn't help that Daphne's family is straight out of "Do Shut Up", and not in a good way.) They've had clever moments, but too many episodes seem to follow the "Frasier meets girl/Frasier dates girl/Frasier loses girl due to same personality flaws that screwed up the last 100 relationships" pattern.

[identity profile] muckefuck.livejournal.com 2004-04-02 01:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, it totally jumped the shark when they ran off together. Overnight, they went from my two favourite characters to my two least favourite. I also became exhausted by the formulaic nature of Frasier's relationships, which is why my favourite episodes centred around other things. (For instance, in the Feydeau homage, it turns out that none of people involved are chasing Frasier and, as a result, he is humiliated.)